Inside Edge
Senior Member
I second CaDan's post.
One of the concepts he passes over is something I think people are polarizing over: it isn't about the system or the individual, it's about the system and the individual. Each of us, under a free system like free-market capitalism must take both into account.
Yes, a poor person with morals and strong conviction may not resort to crime - the abstract system cannot be held accountable for a given crime. However, a given privaleged individual (I believe) should consider the circumstances. We need to understand that the system does create casualties, and we must be merciful. Don't blame the system for the crime, but understand that the system created the circumstances to make the crime a serious temptation (to any given person in those circumstances). Failing to recognize this goes back to the old adage: we create the theif and then punish him for being so.
One of the concepts he passes over is something I think people are polarizing over: it isn't about the system or the individual, it's about the system and the individual. Each of us, under a free system like free-market capitalism must take both into account.
Yes, a poor person with morals and strong conviction may not resort to crime - the abstract system cannot be held accountable for a given crime. However, a given privaleged individual (I believe) should consider the circumstances. We need to understand that the system does create casualties, and we must be merciful. Don't blame the system for the crime, but understand that the system created the circumstances to make the crime a serious temptation (to any given person in those circumstances). Failing to recognize this goes back to the old adage: we create the theif and then punish him for being so.
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