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Frederick's avatar

If a minor behavior meets a slap down and continues to meet a slap down, that behavior fails the utilitarian usefulness test. it disappears. On the other hand, the opposite is true. If a minor behavior meets any approval, it is repeated. The more repeats, the more visible and emulation of that behavior will happen. If a major act that is not currently supported happens, resistance is immediate and widespread. It may survive, but only with piles of corpses. I have known too many bad prosecutors, and I know that it starts with the overlooking, or deliberate insertion of the one, the first one, to desensitize everyone involved so that the next one is not a big deal. We have long built an attitude of excuses are exceptions that are now widely accepted as mainstream. From Bar Associations, interested parties such as LEO's, to politicians, media and worst of all the citizenry. I will always remember that the true point of that pithy phrase: Power corrupts... was really about the citizen, the majority, being corrupted, not the few.

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Michael Smith's avatar

My long held opinion of this not-so U. S. is that it is the best damned country ever! My emphasis is on the damned. I wish I could write. I wish people could read! This would be my book title. Our police and welfare state was flawed from its beginning by too weak a centralizing religious cult, a unifying faith. Thanks to the Protestant Revolt---and more than one book has lately examined this. One aspect of this lack is a too shallow understanding of Natural Law, and I confess I don't get it either. I am neither a philosopher nor a theologian. Nor am I a historian but I get this, the long understood Catholic teaching of the proper role of civil governments was that the Church held the trump card on our eternal destination depending on how we ruled ourselves and over others. Our Founding Fathers ranged from Deist to Calvinism (I think our original sin---is a kind of neo-puritanism rooted in Calvinism that still haunts us today.) Rush Limbaugh used to talk of how there are people who cannot stand the realization that somewhere there are people enjoying life. That neo-calvinist-puritanical impulse is what has fueled our police state mentality. At the opposite end is the ultra-liberal impulse of "Anything goes!" Between these any real justice is crushed. The only way we could have had a justice state would have been that every poor man would have representation in court from as good a legal team as that representing the government. In addition, a jury of his peers would have to be men of similar circumstance in terms of rich v. poor, age bracket, political and theological persuasion. All this would seem to be impossible in the "real would." Let's face it; no real justice is likely on earth. Natural never forgives---only God can. And then no forgiveness is possible from Above unless we repent!

We can add what Toqueville warned of-- to personal focus among a populace trying to gain personal wealth to the detriment of public duty. Many founders warned of the need for vigilance to protect Liberty. Leaving it up to the early ruling class led to our early foundering as a republic.

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