Duke of Marmalade
Registered User
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- 4,689
Sorry for the sarcasm, cheapest form of wit and all that.Is your post for real?
i am all for the law of 3 strikes - no matter what the crime was ....
When I was younger I used to think "we should help them" and "they're a product of their environment".
Now I just think they're scum and should be put down (why waste the money keeping them in prison for life?)
We have too many scumbags in this country. Recidivists shouldn't have a right to live in our society.
Source please?This reduced crime by 70% where it was introduced. Not because it acted as a deterant, but because the majority of crime is committed by a small number of habitual criminals. Once they get locked up, the crime rate plummets.
So how did it come to be they are 'scumbags' and you are not?
Source please?
Probably loads of reasons:
Terrible parents
Poor genetics
Possibly some sort of brain damage from fetal alcohol syndrome or some such thing
Laziness
Bad attitude
Mental illness
Complete lack of education
etc., etc. ...
Regardless, the fact of the matter is they are now pure scum and really should have no place in our society. As adults they understand they are doing wrong.
Fully agree with you there. But as long as we fail to look at the causes (not the excuses), we will fail to address the real issues.Nobody has a "right" to used their background as an excuse to commit crime and terrorise their fellow citizens.
Excuses, excuses, excuses. What's with the abdicating of responsibility? We are all human, we all possess advantageous and disadvantageous traits. There are plenty of people born in difficult environments who are model citizens. Nobody has a "right" to used their background as an excuse to commit crime and terrorise their fellow citizens.
Fully agree with you there. But as long as we fail to look at the causes (not the excuses), we will fail to address the real issues.
I've no problem with making people accountable for their actions. Crime is crime.But there comes a point where people have to be held accountable for their actions. By "failing to address the real issues" we are taking one thing and calling it something else "it's not crime, they're a product of their environment" this completly alleviates the responsibility for their own actions.
I think we are giving this guy too much credit. It is reasonably easy to chalk up convictions. Take a simple theft of a packet of cigarettes from a shop, this might involve the following multiple convictions:
Larceny
Possession of an offensive weapon
Possession of illegal drugs
Threatening bodily harm
Resisting arrest
Trying to escape Garda custody
Dangerous driving (subsequent car chase)
Driving whilst under the influence of drugs
Damage to property (when car crashes)
Using abusive language to Gardai
Obstructing the course of justice
Contempt of court
So there's 12 convictions from a stolen packet of fags.
Now it is far, far more challenging for, say, an Anglo banker to secure even one conviction
They should introduce the 'three strikes' law, same as in the States, with a very harsh penalty for the 3rd offence.
Some people say that harsh penalties don't act as a derrent, but having lived in countries whose punishments fit the crimes, such as Singapore, I don't understand why tougher mandatory sentences are not introduced here.
I've no problem with making people accountable for their actions. Crime is crime.
However, if we ever want to break out of this vicious cycle of crime in socially deprived areas, we need to address the causes.
DIsagree - it has everything to do with sentancing, and with the broader criminal justice system.But that has nothing to do with sentencing.
DIsagree - it has everything to do with sentancing, and with the broader criminal justice system.
Sorry for the sarcasm, cheapest form of wit and all that.
Just pointing out that it is very easy for an underclass kid to accumulate convictions but seemingly impossible to bring to book those who have committed economic treason on a whole nation, and by the way creamed a few 10s of millions for themselves and their families.:mad:
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