20 Years for Subway Shover: Is This Justice, or Just Another NYC Clown Show?
Dude gets two decades for paralyzing a woman. But is locking him up really gonna fix the woke cesspool that is NYC's subway system?

NEW YORK – So, this dude Kamal Semrade got 20 years for shoving a woman onto the subway tracks back in 2023, leaving her paralyzed. Emine Yilmaz Ozsoy, the victim, got to read him the riot act in court, calling him “evil” and detailing her years of pain. Good for her. But let's be real, is throwing another body into the overcrowded prison system actually solving anything, or is it just another virtue signal from the libs running this city into the ground?
Ozsoy’s paralyzed, yeah, that’s messed up. No argument there. But let's talk about the elephant in the room: the freaking revolving door justice system in NYC. This isn't about excusing violence; it's about asking why these kinds of random attacks are becoming increasingly common. You got Soros-backed DAs letting criminals walk free, woke politicians defunding the police, and a general vibe of lawlessness permeating the whole damn city. Color me shocked when someone gets shoved onto the tracks.
It happened at the Lexington Avenue–63rd Street station. Semrade followed Ozsoy from Queens during the early morning commute, then did the deed. The judge, Althea Drysdale, called it “profoundly disturbing.” No kidding, Sherlock. But instead of just slapping a label on it, maybe we should be asking why this guy felt like doing this in the first place. Was he mentally ill? High? Just plain evil? Whatever the reason, the root causes are being ignored while everyone pats themselves on the back for securing a conviction.
Alvin Bragg, the Manhattan DA, said the attack “uprooted her life.” True, but Bragg is also part of the problem. He's more interested in social justice warrior points than actual justice. Remember when he downgraded charges for armed robbery? Yeah, real tough on crime there, Al. This is what happens when you prioritize feelings over facts, and wokeness over safety.
Semrade's lawyer probably blamed society, poverty, and the patriarchy. The usual garbage. But here’s a thought: how about personal responsibility? How about not shoving people onto train tracks? It’s not that hard. This isn’t about some systemic conspiracy; it's about a guy making a terrible choice and now paying the price. But let's not pretend this one conviction is going to solve the underlying rot in NYC.
He was caught because some shelter employees recognized him from a CrimeStoppers alert. Good on them. But again, why was he even in a shelter in the first place? Is NYC just a magnet for every loser and maniac in the country? It sure feels like it sometimes.
So, yeah, Semrade is going to prison for 20 years. Ozsoy got her day in court. But the rest of us are still stuck riding the same crime-ridden subway system, wondering when it’s going to be our turn to get randomly attacked. This isn't justice; it's just another band-aid on a gaping wound. Keep coping, cucks.
The whole situation is just peak Clown World. Lockdowns, mandates, now this. You can't even ride the subway in peace anymore. Time to move to Florida, folks.


