- Reaction score
- 6,396
- Points
- 1,360
An outstanding article on what we will see more of in the future........and would be seeing a lot of right now if the general public had a clue about our *cough* criminal justice system.
Justifiable rage
By TOM BRODBECK
Car thief Stanley Ross is in for a rude awakening.
The 22-year-old Winnipegger, who was severely beaten following a two-car crash Saturday, has been in a medically induced coma for most of the week.
When, or if, he comes to, he's going to be in for a bit of a shock when he's told about the vitriolic anger directed -- not at his assailant -- but at him.
E-mails and phone calls continued to pour into the Winnipeg Sun yesterday from people supporting the vigilante-style beating Ross took.
Two-thirds of readers in the Sun's online poll Wednesday said Ross got what he deserved.
It's unnerving for some to hear this. But there's a very good reason why this level of rage -- from otherwise reasonable and civilized people -- has emerged.
People have lost faith in our criminal justice system.
Vigilantism, or acceptance of it, doesn't happen in a vacuum.
It occurs when the public no longer feels the justice system is holding criminals accountable for their actions.
In a civilized society, we give up our right to take justice into our own hands in exchange for a criminal justice system that, instead of beating criminals with baseball bats, takes their liberties away and segregates them from society.
We put them behind bars.
Granted, we'd often prefer to strangle the low-life who killed, raped or maimed.
But we generally accept the most humane way of dealing with the situation is to denounce the crimes loudly through incarceration and by ensuring sentences are proportionate to the gravity of the crime.
It's a reasonable trade-off. And when it's carried out properly, it generally works.
It's a social contract.
Trouble is, Canada's pointy-headed social worker types hijacked our criminal justice system some years ago and convinced lawmakers and judges that rehabilitation and re-integration into the community are far more important goals than deterring and denouncing serious crimes.
The liberal-left in this country managed to swing the criminal justice pendulum so far away from traditional sentencing principles that they broke the social contract.
Which means all bets are off.
And people want to beat car thieves with baseball bats.
It's a natural and entirely predictable reaction.
It will get worse, too, if governments and the judiciary don't start honouring the social contract again.
Look at car thieves.
We have a program in Winnipeg where young, chronic car thieves are rarely jailed for their crimes.
Instead, they're released into the community, on probation, and are supposedly monitored by justice officials.
Not surprisingly, they regularly breach their probation and often repeat their crimes, sometimes over and over again.
Cops and justice officials know who they are and where they live.
But because our justice system is so hell-bent on releasing criminals into the community, they're not held accountable for the 10, 20 or 100 cars they steal. It's extremely frustrating for the public.
How else do you expect them to react after years of this nonsense other than "let's beat the hell out of the little punk?"
The chickens have come home to roost.
Tom Brodbeck is the Sun's city columnist. He can be reached by e-mail at: tbrodbeck@wpgsun.com.
Letters to the editor should be sent to letters@wpgsun.com.
Justifiable rage
By TOM BRODBECK
Car thief Stanley Ross is in for a rude awakening.
The 22-year-old Winnipegger, who was severely beaten following a two-car crash Saturday, has been in a medically induced coma for most of the week.
When, or if, he comes to, he's going to be in for a bit of a shock when he's told about the vitriolic anger directed -- not at his assailant -- but at him.
E-mails and phone calls continued to pour into the Winnipeg Sun yesterday from people supporting the vigilante-style beating Ross took.
Two-thirds of readers in the Sun's online poll Wednesday said Ross got what he deserved.
It's unnerving for some to hear this. But there's a very good reason why this level of rage -- from otherwise reasonable and civilized people -- has emerged.
People have lost faith in our criminal justice system.
Vigilantism, or acceptance of it, doesn't happen in a vacuum.
It occurs when the public no longer feels the justice system is holding criminals accountable for their actions.
In a civilized society, we give up our right to take justice into our own hands in exchange for a criminal justice system that, instead of beating criminals with baseball bats, takes their liberties away and segregates them from society.
We put them behind bars.
Granted, we'd often prefer to strangle the low-life who killed, raped or maimed.
But we generally accept the most humane way of dealing with the situation is to denounce the crimes loudly through incarceration and by ensuring sentences are proportionate to the gravity of the crime.
It's a reasonable trade-off. And when it's carried out properly, it generally works.
It's a social contract.
Trouble is, Canada's pointy-headed social worker types hijacked our criminal justice system some years ago and convinced lawmakers and judges that rehabilitation and re-integration into the community are far more important goals than deterring and denouncing serious crimes.
The liberal-left in this country managed to swing the criminal justice pendulum so far away from traditional sentencing principles that they broke the social contract.
Which means all bets are off.
And people want to beat car thieves with baseball bats.
It's a natural and entirely predictable reaction.
It will get worse, too, if governments and the judiciary don't start honouring the social contract again.
Look at car thieves.
We have a program in Winnipeg where young, chronic car thieves are rarely jailed for their crimes.
Instead, they're released into the community, on probation, and are supposedly monitored by justice officials.
Not surprisingly, they regularly breach their probation and often repeat their crimes, sometimes over and over again.
Cops and justice officials know who they are and where they live.
But because our justice system is so hell-bent on releasing criminals into the community, they're not held accountable for the 10, 20 or 100 cars they steal. It's extremely frustrating for the public.
How else do you expect them to react after years of this nonsense other than "let's beat the hell out of the little punk?"
The chickens have come home to roost.
Tom Brodbeck is the Sun's city columnist. He can be reached by e-mail at: tbrodbeck@wpgsun.com.
Letters to the editor should be sent to letters@wpgsun.com.