Liz’s Quizzes Phrases/ Sayings...
Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
While reading (and sympathising with) davebro3’s understandable response on the monkey torture thread, the above quotation from Gilbert & Sullivan’s Mikado sprung to mind.
Crime and Punishment is a very complex topic, but perhaps I can spark off a serious discussion here.
What is the objective of punishment – I believe the three most cited reasons are deterrence, punishment, and revenge.
An off-the cuff (not particularly erudite or academic) explanation is :-
· * Deterrence: put other folk off committing the crime
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· * Punishment: hurt the criminal and stop them doing it again
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· * Revenge: satisfying outrage at the crime
So, to get the thread back on track, how about the Mikado’s suggestion.
One crime where I have for a long time wanted to introduce it is vandalism. I would love to go round to the vandal’s house and vandalise their possessions. To take just one example, when I see a young sapling snapped off never to grow again, I would love to snap off something from the (male, they usually are) vandal which will never re-grow – I guess you know what I refer to 😀.
And I’m sure I’m not alone in wanting the monkey torturers to suffer the same treatment as they meted out to their helpless and innocent victims. Of course, the down side of that is that it reduces us to the status of the criminals (one of my arguments against capital punishment for murder).
I’m tempted to parrot the words of Stephen Blackpool in Dickens’ Hard Times, “It’s all a muddle”.
What are your views on crime and punishment, and how can you reconcile them with common “humanitarianism“
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.rehabilitation is also usually cited as one of the aims of punishment. It seems to be a widespread belief in these parts that nobody is ever rehabilitated, once a criminal always a criminal, though statistics generally show that most crime is a young man's game: people just grow up.
And it's obviously best for everyone if they do become working, taxpaying members of society, though it requires a society that offers work and livable pay levels.
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