Trump considers reviving asylums to address street crime
President Donald Trump is eyeing a bold, controversial move to bring back insane asylums to tackle the chaos on America’s streets. In a recent Oval Office interview, he signaled openness to institutionalizing the mentally ill, a policy that’s sure to spark heated debate. The idea harks back to a time when facilities like New York’s Creedmoor and Bellevue housed those deemed unfit for society.
According to The Daily Caller, Trump sat down with Daily Caller’s Reagan Reese on Friday for an hour-long discussion. He outlined his aggressive push to clean up Washington, D.C., while floating the asylum proposal. The conversation turned heads, blending nostalgia for old-school solutions with a hardline stance on urban decay.
Trump’s focus on D.C. stems from his recent actions to curb crime and homelessness. On August 7, he deployed federal law enforcement and the National Guard, forming the D.C. Safe and Beautiful Task Force. A few days later, he moved to federalize D.C.’s police, doubling down on his law-and-order agenda.
Crackdown Yields Staggering Results
The D.C. operation has been a whirlwind of activity. By August 29, it racked up 1,369 arrests, including 12 known MS-13 and TDA gang members, many of whom were illegal aliens. The task force also cleared 50 homeless encampments and rescued five missing children, showcasing Trump’s no-nonsense approach.
Trump’s asylum pitch ties directly to his street-cleaning mission. He argued that states like New York and California shuttered asylums due to high costs, releasing the mentally ill into society. “They released them all into society because they couldn’t afford it,” he said, pointing to a system overwhelmed by progressive penny-pinching.
His nostalgia for asylums isn’t just a throwback—it’s a jab at soft-on-crime policies. Trump recalled New York’s Creedmoor and Bellevue, closed under a past governor, as examples of lost tools for managing the unstable. The implication? Woke cost-cutting has left cities vulnerable.
Urban Chaos Sparks Bold Ideas
“Yeah, I would,” Trump said when asked about reopening asylums. His bluntness cuts through the fog of political correctness, framing the mentally ill on the streets as a public safety crisis. It’s a stance that’ll rile up the left, who’ll likely cry “cruelty” while ignoring the body count of unchecked disorder.
Trump’s comments weren’t just about D.C. He’s got his eyes on cities like Chicago and New York, where crime and homelessness fester under liberal governance. His vision? A sweeping, federal-led cleanup that doesn’t shy away from tough calls.
The interview took a personal turn when Reese shared her own brush with danger. After an attempted break-in at her Capitol Hill home, she fled to Virginia, only to witness a homeless person assault a pedestrian. Trump’s response—“When was that?”—showed a president keenly aware of the human toll of urban decline.
Streets Demand Tough Solutions
Trump didn’t mince words on the dangers of unchecked mental illness. “So dangerous, so dangerous. And they can live to be 85 years old,” he said, highlighting the long-term threat of leaving the unstable on the streets. It’s a grim reality that progressive policies are often glossed over with feel-good rhetoric.
His D.C. crackdown is already a case study in results over excuses. The task force’s sweep—1,369 arrests, 50 encampments cleared—shows what happens when leaders prioritize action over ideology. Compare that to blue-city mayors who wring their hands while crime spikes.
Trump’s asylum idea, though, is the real lightning rod. He’s tapping into a frustration many feel: cities overrun by chaos, with no real plan to fix it. “You can’t have these people walking around,” he said, a line that’s both a rallying cry and a policy red flag for critics.
Balancing Compassion and Order
The asylum proposal isn’t just about locking people up—it’s about a system that’s failed the vulnerable. Trump’s point is that states dumped the mentally ill onto the streets to save cash, not to empower them. It’s a critique of a society that’s traded institutional care for open-air asylums of tent cities and violence.
Reese’s story of fleeing D.C. for Virginia only to see more chaos underscores the problem’s spread. Trump’s response—“So safe”—was laced with irony, a nod to how even “safe” areas aren’t immune. His spit-and-hit mantra—“They spit, we hit”—is a crude but clear call for law enforcement to act decisively.
Trump’s vision is divisive, no doubt. Reopening asylums will spark cries of regression, but doing nothing hasn’t exactly worked either. With a full transcript dropping Monday evening, expect this debate to heat up as Americans wrestle with safety, compassion, and the cost of inaction.





