JessFR
Bluelight Crew
I'm not saying jail can never ever be used in any non violent crime ever. Im sure there are some extremes where nothing else has worked and you've had more then enough second chances.
The point to me is the question of societies benefit. The use of force against someone because they've committed a crime should be justified by the benefit it provides society, or the harm that would come to society in its absence.
I do not believe deterrence works, I think the evidence has shown it to be a complete failure. Criminals just don't tend to think in a way where deterrence stops the action. It'd been tried and repeatidly failed.
So with deterrence out, the question I have is the direct benefit to society.
If it comes down to putting someone in jail, or simply giving them fines they can't pay and community service they won't do, while still committing the crime again and again, then jail becomes acceptable.
But I do not believe it should be the first resort for non violent offenses. Non violent offenders should be given a chance to change.
Ultimately the point to me is to stop the crime, not see the criminal punished (again speaking of non violent offenses). Jail is acceptable when all other measures to stop the offending has failed. But only then.
I'm sure some on the more conservative side would disapprove, but rest assured I have almost no tolerance for serious violent offenses. There are crimes that I think deserve no second chances.
The problem is societies tend to either go to one extreme or the other. Either like America where drug offenses carry jail, or like Australia where you can rape a child and be free in 10 years.
I'm very lenient to the former, and have absolutely no tolerance for the latter. For me the line is violence. Financial crimes even of the highest order can still be far behind even some milder crimes of violence.
Money is money, but human life is precious. That includes the lives of criminals. So to me, generally only crimes against human health warrant such a response as imprisonment.
So it takes a lot before I think financial crimes warrant jail. And likewise it takes a lot before I think violent crimes warrant anything less.
The point to me is the question of societies benefit. The use of force against someone because they've committed a crime should be justified by the benefit it provides society, or the harm that would come to society in its absence.
I do not believe deterrence works, I think the evidence has shown it to be a complete failure. Criminals just don't tend to think in a way where deterrence stops the action. It'd been tried and repeatidly failed.
So with deterrence out, the question I have is the direct benefit to society.
If it comes down to putting someone in jail, or simply giving them fines they can't pay and community service they won't do, while still committing the crime again and again, then jail becomes acceptable.
But I do not believe it should be the first resort for non violent offenses. Non violent offenders should be given a chance to change.
Ultimately the point to me is to stop the crime, not see the criminal punished (again speaking of non violent offenses). Jail is acceptable when all other measures to stop the offending has failed. But only then.
I'm sure some on the more conservative side would disapprove, but rest assured I have almost no tolerance for serious violent offenses. There are crimes that I think deserve no second chances.
The problem is societies tend to either go to one extreme or the other. Either like America where drug offenses carry jail, or like Australia where you can rape a child and be free in 10 years.
I'm very lenient to the former, and have absolutely no tolerance for the latter. For me the line is violence. Financial crimes even of the highest order can still be far behind even some milder crimes of violence.
Money is money, but human life is precious. That includes the lives of criminals. So to me, generally only crimes against human health warrant such a response as imprisonment.
So it takes a lot before I think financial crimes warrant jail. And likewise it takes a lot before I think violent crimes warrant anything less.