Pubdate: Wed, 11 Aug 2010 Source: Weekly Press, The (CN NS) Copyright: 2010 Enfield Weekly Press Contact: http://www.enfieldweeklypress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/5110 Author: Paul Carlucci CREATING CRIMINALS Why the government wants you to be scared, and how it works It is the traditional duty of the steely Conservative to position him or herself (mostly himself, however, as a simple function of participation numbers) against all things criminal. Criminality is everywhere. First, it must be feared. Then, laws must be passed and police forces further empowered. Finally, prisons must be built. Perhaps in some glorious future those prisons will be private. In the interim, that billions are spent on them will have to suffice. To recap: Conservative Party: Tough on crime. Liberal Party: Likes to see innocent people savaged by the criminally insane. NDP: Criminally insane. Bloc Quebecois: Flag-burners. Green Party: Irrelevant. Although crime rates in Canada have been decreasing for years, the Conservative government feels that the time is nigh to spend $9.5 billion on the prison system. A week ago, Treasury Board President Stockwell Day convened a press conference in which he justified these costs by an apparent increase in unreported crime, at the same time acknowledging that instances of reported crime are decreasing. "We're very concerned about the increase in unreported crime that surveys clear show is happening," he said when questioned by the CBC. Headlines over the next few days rightly tussled Day. What sort of sense does it make when you spend billions on prisons for criminals that aren't in the system for crimes that haven't been investigated? It helps to remember that this is a man who once rode up to press conferences on a Sea-doo. Unsurprisingly, by the time he came to Truro last Saturday for breakfast with Cumberland-Colchester-Musquodoboit Valley MP Scott Armstrong, well, most people had grown tired of putting Day in newspapers. Although Day couldn't remember, or didn't know, the $9.5 billion represents simple, instinctual Conservative prison spending. The government has just eliminated the two-for-one credit for time served in pre-sentencing, and that alone is expected to cost $10 billion. After Day bumped his sorely-bruised head against the Peter principle, along came Justice Minister Rob Nicholson, flanked by police chiefs, to announce new laws in dealing with so-called organized crime. The hope is that now the crime rate will go back up because there are more crimes to report. It's a numbers game. Don't you and your friends be caught betting on sports; that's organized crime. And if you thought we were starting to move past the whole marijuana thing, you're wrong; if you traffic in any quantity, you are participating in organized crime. As for all the call girls making a living in the classifieds at back of The Coast, they are also criminals of the organized variety. All these infractions and more will get you at least five years in prison. "That's the whole point of being the government," says Stephen Moore's character in Pirate Radio. "If you don't like something you simply make it illegal." The sad thing here is that suppressing activity like gambling, light drug use, and prostitution actually causes more criminality and violence. The funny thing here, if you're the sardonic type, is that in that same press conference Day attributed the official drop in crime rates to preventative measures, which are NDP-esque means of catching criminals before they become criminals. Forget cops and jails; think basketball courts and jobs. Why do we put up with this? Speaking last weekend to National Post reporter Joseph Brean, sociologist Frank Furedi labelled Canada as one of the most intrusive societies in the world, which probably sounds ridiculous when we think of places like Saudi Arabia. And yet, when you think about it, how many layers and layers of law, moral and otherwise, do we butt heads with everyday? Do they make us safer? Or more fearful? Are we under siege? Or are we just desperate for purpose and structure? According to Furedi, laws give us purpose. We're like dogs who need to know where to sit while we wait for dinner. Or, from another perspective, rules are like religion; they give our lives meaning. Take the recent Ontario law forbidding drivers under 21 to have any alcohol in their systems whatsoever. The reason? Three young men died in a car crash after drinking all day. One of the fathers took out ads in the paper urging Premier Dalton McGuinty to toughen rules, and observers say the new law is a result of that lobby effort. The deceased had been drinking all day. They were drunk. Odds are, they would've been drinking all day and wound up drunk with or without Ontario's new law. The whole thing begins to smack of pretty unpalatable cynicism when you realize people like Day and other tough-on-crime advocates could just be playing politics with your emotions. From helmets to streetwalkers, it's easy to get the feeling that some people want us to be scared. Not only does it boost revenues when fines are paid, but it associates the purveyors of the rules with a greater meaning. And meaning, like money, is power. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt