Punishment to fit crime

Things are all backward. The really noncriminal serious issues facing us all are dealt with in heated discussions with opposing sides naming and shaming the other. And yet those noncriminal issues often cost lives and damage far outweighing lesser so-called criminal activity.

As a nation we make all sorts of laws, some of them really costly and nonproductive (like Nelson Rockefeller’s “go to jail automatically for years if someone in the car you are in has a single marijuana cigarette”). And how about a woman scamming food stamps? Prison. Non-payment of parking fines? Prison or heavy fine. Theft? Prison. Violent assault? Prison or probation. Domestic violence? Only lose your million-dollar job but, if you are poor, prison. Fake financial federal records and bring about the collapse of the country’s financial stability putting 6+ million people out of work, losing homes, families and savings? Congressional committee shaming and that’s about it. Next year your bonus is back.

Let’s look at a few more. Companies that have a pay gap between men and women? Persecute the whistle-blower. Whistle-blow on the NSA? Get labelled a traitor and go on the lam. A woman’s simple traffic stop? Threatened with tazing, brutally man-handled, removing liberty for three days (effective torture) — then jailers leave a 55-gallon plastic bag in the solo-cell even after the woman declared she once tried suicide.

The Pope on climate change? Avoiding any naming or shaming, he invites mayors from around the world to listen to his moral imperative for them to do something from the grass-roots up. Reaction by our lawmakers? Declarations that he has no moral authority to solicit climate rehab, and they are damn well sure they are going to block any laws that are going to jail the polluters. Oh, and those Koch Brothers massive spills in Texas, Kentucky and West Virginia? Not one person goes to jail or is indicted — meanwhile they manage to get their Senate patsies in Tennessee to get a ban on electric public transport construction in Nashville.

Let’s add BP to that mix — fines, public shaming of the CEO. Bravo — and yet not one person went to jail. They had the money to buy their way out … but out of what? Were they really held accountable for the damage to millions of acres of land they did not own? The nation’s resources were employed in rescues, firefighting, remediation, but who paid the penalty for that? Sure, we’ll jail a pot user for smoking a joint in a public space, but that same public space can be covered in feet of tar and oil by a company and no one is personally held accountable. Me? I want more than shame for the engineer who signed off on that BP valve. I want him to serve time — if only as a lesson to other corner-cutters. 

And the Wall Street bankers who brought this country to its knees? I say bring on mandatory sentencing or, as a greater incentive, community stocks so that those they personally hurt can lob rotten fruit at them. Hard.

 

Peter Riva, a former resident of Amenia Union, now lives in New Mexico.

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