It’s worth pointing out that if this offence had taken place thirty years ago (through different means, obviously) then he’d have been looking at about ten years, so out in about six. This guy is going to serve at least twenty.
Society was less violent and unkind back then. It was also more forgiving.
Sentences have been increasing steadily in that time and yet the problems that society faces in terms of serious crime have been increasing throughout that period too. And the calls for tougher and tougher sentences continue. And the cycle continues.
People need to step back and consider what the problem actually is, because it might not be where they think it presently lies.
The desire for retribution is a natural one, but it plainly doesn’t provide all the answers.
And I fear too many people believe it does.
If we persist with having wars on nouns, as opposed to wars on proper nouns, I fear we’re locked into this doom loop forever.
The very framing of a war, be it on drugs, on crime, on terror, or any of the myriad of ‘wars on’, far from being the ‘solution’ are, indeed, often the problem. In my view the problem with wars on nouns is that most people see it as a war of ‘others’, that is people who aren’t them. Once that has happened the game is up before you’ve actually started and, unlike the Proper Nouns, nouns cannot surrender…..
If we were a sane country we’d actually have a consensus on certain aspects of society that government(s) would just agree on, whatever their colour.
NHS to be funded at GDP or inflation, train as many nurses and doctors who successfully apply for places every year, defence spending to be x% of GDP etc…
Instead, every few years, or even months recently, everything gets thrown up in the air and nobody has any idea what the next plan will be.
If we want jail time to be the answer, build lots of prisons and fund the criminal justice system properly. If we want prevention to play a part, then fund children and youth activities and invest hugely in education, but do these things consistently, as a matter of course, not on a piecemeal basis for 3 years.
When making policy, be guided by the evidence and don’t be afraid of where it takes you, might actually make for good government…