Houston Public Media has the latest on the Karmelo Anthony case: a Collin County jury found him guilty in the fatal stabbing of Austin Metcalf at a Frisco track meet, and he was sentenced to 35 years.
I am fine saying this plainly: 35 years is not some wild overreach. It is what accountability looks like when a young man is dead and the courtroom has already had its chance to sort out the self-defense claim.
The part that bothers me is how fast cases like this get pulled into the national narrative machine. Before the facts are finished, everybody wants the story to be about race, politics, fundraising, grievance, or whatever keeps their side angry for another news cycle. Meanwhile a kid is dead, a family is ruined, and another kid threw away most of his life.
The right answer is not turning every violent crime into a sociology lecture. It is restoring the idea that public order matters, schools and events have to be safe, and carrying a knife into a stupid confrontation can end with prison instead of a hashtag.
Some people will call that harsh. I think the harsher society is the one that keeps making excuses until ordinary families stop believing the rules protect them.
Thomas W. / keep the receipts