Has anything been happening while much of our media
have been obsessed with a foreign contest between two mediocrities for a post
that isn’t as important as it looks?
Well, how about this blood-freezing statistic? More
than 50 rapists have been let off with cautions, without ever facing a
trial.
No doubt you thought that cautions were the sort of
thing they gave to teenagers found drunk and flat on their faces in the street.
But rape? Isn’t that important?
In fact, isn’t it – thanks to political correctness –
one of the few crimes that everyone still takes seriously, even Guardian
readers? And more than 50 rapists, who have admitted the offence, have been
given cautions for it? Shouldn’t the Government have fallen?
You might expect the Tories to make a fuss about
this but – now of course you remember – the Tories are in this Government
and, in fact, dominate it.
Actually, this is only a small part of a much bigger
problem uncovered by the Magistrates’ Association, whose members had begun to
wonder why business in their courts was getting so slack. Had crime
stopped?
No, it hadn’t. Something else had happened. Criminals,
the Government and the police were co-operating in a vast project which
benefits everyone except the British public.
The police benefit because they look as if they’re
doing something, when they’re not. The criminals benefit because they get let
off so they can go and commit more crimes. And the Government benefits because
it does not have to build the hundred or so huge new prisons that would be
needed to house malefactors if we still took crime seriously.
Actually, it’s far worse than I can fully state here,
a horrible catalogue of unpunished evil, under which severe violence, child
cruelty, burglary and even blackmail have been dealt with through the law’s
equivalent of a shrug.
I plan to put a much fuller version of this scandal on
my blog in the next few days, drawn from the jaw-dropping report by the
Magistrates’ Association which should by now have been on every newspaper front
page in the country.
When you read – as you often do – that ‘crime is
falling’, you must understand what this really means. It means that large numbers
of wicked acts are no longer considered as crimes by the authorities. If we had
the standards of 60 years ago, half the young people in the country would be
locked up.
If the police and courts of that era had judged crime
by our standards, their prisons would have been empty.
It is not crime that has fallen, it is partly our own
moral standard, our expectation of good, considerate, honest behaviour from our
neighbours that has fallen.
But it is also that the police and the Government,
seeking a quiet life, have found it easier and cheaper to ignore wrongdoing
until it gets out of control.
Like all appeasement of evil, this policy invites a
reckoning in the future.
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