Does The Time Fit The Crime?
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My Daily Rant 7/20/2011
When I was a child, I learned from an early age about consequences. It was really quite simple. If you broke a rule, there was a consequence. If the crime got worse, so did the consequence. As a parent of two children, I've learned myself that when doling out consequences, you have to find what works. What worked for my oldest may not work on my youngest. But whatever the case may be, if the punishment or consequence is uncomfortable enough, they usually won't do it again. This seems to be such an amazingly simple concept, yet every day, we hear of another tragedy striking, and more often than not, we later find out that the perpetrator of the crime had a history of run ins with law enforcement and/or "fell through the cracks" of the system.
Last Friday, the sleepy little town I live in was rocked with the news of a high speed chase that ended in a hostage situation, a police officer being shot, and an innocent bystander murdered. As details later started to trickle in about the suspect, the local newspaper revealed that the man accused of the crime has a history of violence and arrests.
(For the sake of journalistic integrity I need to note that as of this time, Cleveland has not officially been charged with the death of the bystander, although by all media accounts was responsible.)
Cleveland's rap sheet includes a DUI only last month, carrying a concealed weapon without a license, and at least two domestic abuse cases, and while being arrested for one of those, resisted arrest, and "reached toward the center of his truck's seat before they drew their weapons on him and removed him from the truck". Can you guess what officers found lying on the truck bench where he had reached? A gun.
Is it just me, or does there seem to be a lot of instances where people commit these horrible crimes and we find out they have a history of doing so? This makes me wonder, what the heck is wrong with our judicial system that we cannot punish people appropriately enough to make them not want to break the law again? Before you all start talking to me about overcrowded prisons and understaffed agencies, let me say I don't give a rat's rump. Our history of being lenient on criminals goes as far back as I can remember and is exactly WHY our prisons are overcrowded. I personally think we need to go back to the days where the punishment for stealing was getting your hand chopped off and if you murder a little child, that child's family gets an hour in a room with you. But that's just me. I know that won't appeal to the overly PC liberals in the world who feel that criminals should have more rights than victims.
This isn't an isolated incident, either. Just this morning I read an article about a man who was arrested for DUI in my town on a Monday night with a blood alcohol level nearly three times the legal limit. He posted bond Tuesday afternoon and was arrested for DUI a few hours later with an even higher blood alcohol level. Umm....what the hell? Maybe we should revoke bond all together and start cleaning house, eh? He's obviously not too concerned with the consequences of his actions so that tells me that the consequences aren't hard enough.
And who can forget the case of Jaycee Dugard? In 1991, 11 year old Jaycee Dugard was kidnapped from a school bus stop by convicted sex offender Phillip Craig Garrido. 18 years later, Jaycee (along with two children fathered by this sicko) was finally found. Garrido had been previously charged with sexual assault, kidnapping, and diagnosed as a "sexual deviant and chronic drug abuser". Keep in mind all of this was before Jaycee was kidnapped. Garrido was let out to roam the streets, kidnap and rape. Why? There is no good answer other than a whole lot of people plain and simple screwed up. Simple answer? Don't let people like this out. Period. Seriously. Who gives a flyin fritter about their rights or chance at redemption? In my opinion, they should lose those rights the minute they violate someone else's.
Every day you year about sentencings where the person was let off easily because it was their first offense. How many offenses do you have to have before you're considered a problem? And how do the prosecutors, judges, etc sleep at night knowing they're letting these people back out on the streets?
I understand that there are logistics and money involved, but I think, as in most things in life, we are once again making this a lot more complicated than it needs to be.
Keep it simple. You do the crime, you do the time. Not you do the crime, you get fourteen chances at redemption, and then, maybe if you kill or hurt someone we might actually punish you.
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I absolutely agree with you on this topic and particularly when it comes to sexual crimes on children. I think one sexual crime against a child is enough to be locked up for life, which I know is a pretty strong view but I always read that sexual perverts don't change. Interesting hub.
A wise man (Toby Keith) sang:
Grandpappy told my pappy, back in my day, son
A man had to answer for the wicked that he done
Take all the rope in Texas
Find a tall oak tree, round up all of them bad boys
Hang them high in the street for all the people to see.
Excuse my language, but this is another fine (sarcasm) example of the pussification of America. The rules of personal accountability have been so clouded and shifted over the years that situations like this have become very normal.
It's always someone else's fault, we should always feel compassionate for people who are derelicts and give them second, third, fourth chances. Screw that. You commit a crime, you should be immediately punished.
Too many people are concerned with "why" people commit the crimes they do. That's fine, but punish first, then try to rehabilitate. But honestly, most of these dregs of society can't be rehabilitated. That's why we should buy Madagascar and ship all the criminals there. At the end of each year, drop a bomb on it. I bet the crime rate would start decreasing.
Good hub
Hi Sunflower, it isn’t surprising like others have said. If only he had more self-esteem or he wasn’t picked on in dodge ball. It’s pathetic. I just wrote a hub about the demonization of cigarette smokers and how alcohol gets a free pass. Your story is one of tens of thousands all of the USA and millions all over the world. I am sure the far left will say it was because he owned a gun that he had an inclination toward criminal behavior, lets confiscate! Good reporting, you have many hubbers here who are on board with you. Lets round’em up and toss them on some desert island like the good old days.
Nice rant, Bucky...I am of the same opinion. I grew up in a small town down south in the 50's and 60's. As kids, we played openly throughout the neighborhood and our parents never feared of our safety except for run-ins with cars and the normal scrapes and bruises. Somewhere beyond that point sicko people began to emerge from the dark places of the world and do terrible things. Like cockroaches, these acts have become more and more common until today a child hardly knows of being outside the home without a parent close at hand. There must be something in the water or some generation of parents have failed miserably in raising children with morals or the knowledge of right and wrong. Liberalism is a breeding ground for this approach for the caring is rooted in only what is PC. Well, PC needs his or her ass kicked every now and then. Maybe one of these days, we'll get it right. WB













Fullerman5000 Level 4 Commenter 10 months ago
I totally agree with you on this. I question sometimes the way our justice system works. we give criminals too many chances to commit crimes. i feel you on this one.