U.S. White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller Saturday was accused of "incitement to violence against judges."

Miller, who has been accused of making his subordinates cry at work, took to social media over the weekend to make several proclamations related to "leftist" judges.

"The Democrat Party has filled our legal and judicial system with radicals who protect leftwing terrorists," Miller wrote Saturday. "This is a very real and dire crisis for our Republican form of government."

In a separate post, Miller accused "Democrat judges" of "shielding" terrorism.

"The issue before is now is very simple and clear. There is a large and growing movement of leftwing terrorism in this country," he claimed. "It is well organized and funded. And it is shielded by far-left Democrat judges, prosecutors and attorneys general."

Miller then concluded, "The only remedy is to use legitimate state power to dismantle terrorism and terror networks."

Ex-Obama speechwriter Jon Favreau weighed in, "Is that what you call zip-tying children, smashing glass on a one-month old, shooting chemical munitions at journalists, and breaking the ribs of an 80-year old citizen?"

Former attorney Dean Obeidallah replied, "I can't wait for Miller's trial on state charges once Trump is out of office."

Ex-prosecutor Ron Filipkowski said, "This seems like incitement to violence against judges."

Journalist Jim Stewartson similarly sounded the alarm:

"Stephen Miller is going to execute a purge of the Democratic Party and the justice system based on his illegal, unconstitutional memo NSPM-7. He has collapsed Democrats, 'far-left Democrat judges' and 'Antifa' into a single domestic terror threat as a pretext for mass arrests."

NBC News Supreme Court reporter Lawrence Hurley said Miller was ramping up the rhetoric.

"Stephen Miller escalates the harsh and conspiratorial rhetoric yet again, suggesting that federal judges, prosecutors and state attorneys general are aiding and abetting a shadowy network of leftist domestic terrorist groups," Hurley wrote on X.