Pubdate: Thu, 18 Jan 2007 Source: Carillon, The (CN MB) Copyright: 2007 The Carillon Contact: http://www.thecarillon.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2340 Author: J.D. Lees SECURITY: GOING, GOING... This week and last, the Winnipeg Sun has been abuzz with a story about a local car thief who was beaten by the driver of another car with which he collided. The thief was clobbered with a baseball bat, resulting in serious head injuries. The assailant did not know the car thief, nor did he know the thief had been involved in another hit-and-run accident only minutes before, or that he was a serial car thief, a drug dealer and a gang member. Many who read of the beating applauded the actions of the assailant, feeling the car thief got what he deserved. Others condemned what they saw as approval of vigilante justice and disregard for the rights of a fellow human being, albeit a criminal. Most of those who found satisfaction in the beating are not sanctioning vigilante justice, nor do they condone the beating of other human beings. But they are understandably pleased that someone finally punished a drug-dealing, car-thieving gang member, a duty the courts seem unwilling or unable to fulfill. In a civilized society, the initiation of force must not be tolerated, but proportionate violence in self-defence is permissible. In order to achieve uniformity in dealing with those who violate the rights of others (and, as much as possible, to avoid mistakes), citizens have delegated the legal use of force to the state. In return, the state must vigorously defend the rights of its citizens. Currently, many people do not see the state adequately defending their rights. Convicted criminals are not receiving appropriate punishment for their crimes, and deterrence is failing as a result. Gradually, insidiously, our sense of security in our own communities is slipping away. Is it a coincidence that as we have retreated from the deterrent aspect of the law and concentrated on the so-called root causes of crime, as we've focused on "understanding" instead of punishment, that crime has soared and security has diminished? The mother of the battered car thief, in a letter to the Sun, suggested her son should get credit that he's only a car thief, and not a rapist or a child molester. Her mistake is confusing a positive value with the absence of a negative. People deserve credit for the good things they do, not for the evil things they don't do. But haven't we, as a society, been conditioned to think like this mother? When we shop in Winnipeg, aren't we glad to find our car hasn't been stolen? When we return home, aren't we glad to find our home wasn't broken into? When our kids are in bed each night, aren't we glad they made it through another day without some creep doing something terrible to them? Our sense of security has diminished to the point where we ascribe positive value when bad things don't happen to us. It's a sad state of affairs, and one that we have slipped into almost imperceptibly. But the decades-long trend is obvious to all except those who refuse to see, such as the Liberals and NDP, who recently gutted the Conservatives' attempts to toughen Canada's criminal law. With all the advances in reason and technology, tolerance and understanding, brotherhood and human rights, why is our sense of personal security going in the opposite direction? When will the focus return to protecting those who obey the law, rather than those who break it? How unsafe must we feel before we fully support politicians who will take forceful action to turn the tide? - --- MAP posted-by: Elaine