Putting the Squeeze On Broadband Copper Robbers
nk497 writes "As the price of copper rises, thieves have taken to stealing broadband cables, taking out internet connections and slowing down the rollout of super-fast broadband by giving engineers more work to do. To battle the criminals, UK provider BT has 21 investigators on staff to track down thieves and has started using SmartWater bombs that spray stolen property and the criminals. The SmartWater liquid carries a DNA fingerprint that links a criminal to the scene of the crime and police units carrying ultra-violet light detectors can use the incriminating stains to make an arrest after the trap has been sprung. 'We had one case recently where someone in Dagenham was stopped and searched after acting suspiciously and the police used a UV light on them and could show that they had been tampering with the equipment,' said Auguste. The SmartWater liquid can also be pasted inside cables, making them easier to trace — and less appealing to scrap metal buyers, helping to cut demand for stolen copper."
Perhaps move to fiber should be considered
Why get in so much trouble?
Can't they just enhance a Google Maps photo?
It may be 7 digits, but at least it's a semiprime
Scrap metal recyclers don't pay much for fiber optics, just saying.
The SmartWater liquid carries DNA
So now we're calling it smart water?
Also, eeeeew! eeew! God why! eeeew!
And also, the marketing concept of "smart drink" has just gone to hell.
And finally. "Smart water? Who came with that idea?"
These crooks are just the lowest of the low - there've been churches round my way that have had lead taken from the roof, schools dismantled and road signs removed. So I would like to see this fingerprinting rolled out and used more generally. In fact - can you get it in permanent ink?
Steeling copper telephone cables for their copper content is a pretty desperate crime - even at the spot price of copper quoted (the thief will be offered far less by the scrap-merchant) - they'd need to pinch an awful lot of it. There are surely much more lucrative metals to steel than this?
Do the same for scrap metal dealers what they do here for pawnshops. Put a four week hold on all payments. Payment by cheque only, mailed to the name and address of the government ID of the person selling the scrap metal. Discourages 90% of the "disorganized" (i.e. drug addicts and homeless) opportunistic or desperation type theft. The delay also lets the power and telco companies come around and retrieve their stolen goods before they get shipped off or melted down.
This sounds like something out of a mother's-basement-dweller's worst nightmare!
Do daemons dream of electric sleep()?
So they can steal from their employers instead?
Crime does NOT pay all that well. Your car is NOT worth the money you paid for it. The moment you drive it out of the shop, it looses a lot of its value. Same with that gold ring. To a thief, it is even worth less because these things can only be sold to fences.
2nd hand copper is a legit trade. Tons of the stuff gets processed all the time, so if I show up with a ton claiming I was demoloshing a factory and dug it up, who is going to ask questions.
It may not be worth all that much, but I get market price for it, not what some fence is willing to pay.
And most criminals never become rich anyway. Yes, stealing a ton of copper is hard work, but so is regular work for that level of education/skill. These aren't smart criminals. Just greedy. That is why so many of them end up paying the ultimate price. Death as they cut a life wire.
What other metals you can easily sell large quantities of do you know are lying around unguarded? People might notice if you start dismanting power pylons and ripping out railroad tracks takes far more effort then the overhead power cables.
MMO Quests are like orgasms:
You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.
(one page print version: http://www.pcpro.co.uk/features/361783/putting-the-squeeze-on-the-broadband-copper-robbers/print)
Since we're slashvertising, I had a bit of a play with Smartwater several years ago - it's actually very good stuff. Essentially, they've figured out a way to put a long unique code into UV reflective paste (which is pretty hard to clean off stuff - although not impossible, so it's best to put it in hard-to-reach places). You slap it onto anything you want to protect; the police can find it with simple UV, and can get the unique code by asking the Smartwater boffins to analyse it. It's used on money trucks, and claims to have a 100% prosecution rate (although I wonder if there's only been one prosecution or something). The Smartwater people keep your particular code unique for as long as you pay them rental of it. I wonder what they'd do if you buy some, use it, but then stop paying for it, yet some of your stuff gets nicked. I suspect they'll still tell the police who you are, but probably only after the current owner is consulted.
There are two types of theft: stealing for necessity (food, medicine and such) and stealing for pleasure.
The guy who steals because he's starving is not even remotely the same as the guy who steals something which he doesn't need to survive.
There was a time when the latter were regarded without any mercy and rightly as the scum that they are. You could use force, even deadly force when necessary, in defense of property that no one needs to meet basic human needs.
Guess what? People pulled this shit a lot less often back then.
The irony of the accusation that letting people use serious force to defend their property is a form of barbarism is that the unlawful taking of property, especially when it damages entire parts of the community, is a real form of barbarism. Basic crime is a rejection of civil society.
So they can steal from their employers instead?
I think what the parent's point is that many of these folks are doing this to make a living. When one has their backs against the wall, they do desperate things.
It would be a great sociological study - finding out the motives for these crimes: poverty, drug habits, wanting some extra cash for luxury gods. etc....
RIP America
July 4, 1776 - September 11, 2001
If I had mod points, I'd mod you up. One of the things I've noticed is that you can often walk out of a store through a beeping loss control device, by behaving as if it isn't going off. Also certain shops with those detectors have ones that malfunction and the staff tends to ignore it. It's probably because store staff don't have arresting power in misdemeanor theft around here.
It applies to most things, if you don't want somebody executing a felony arrest warrant on you, the easiest way to avoid that is by not driving like an idiot. It's not fool proof, but it's the most common way for those arrest warrants to lead to an arrest.
Back when I was working as a mechanic, we had a guy that came around and bought up all our scrap. He was doing pretty well for himself...likely earning as much if not more than we were working in the shop. He ended up disappearing for a couple of months...when he returned, he said that he had been almost caught ripping copper out of a construction site (something he did regularly, apparently...which explains his lavish lifestyle given his collecting scrap life.)
He said he could make more money in a single copper run than he could in nearly three weeks worth of scrap collecting. I don't think opportunities or a lower income gap are the problems...I think it's an activity that pays really well compared to the effort required, at least if our old scrap guy is any indication.
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Meanwhile, in the USA, Smartwater is something very different indeed!
Maybe if we had a lower income-gap, better paying jobs, and opportunity for people this wouldn't be such a problem?
Alternatively we could legalize recycling of the broadband cables. A slogan: "Let's put it to a better use!"
Remember prohibition never worked in any war on anything. I am not an expert, but does anyone know any medicinal use of the broadband copper?
Of course that all depends on how broad is contraband of the broadband copper.
In theory there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice there is. - Yogi Berra
As he was building up a wireless network in Indonesia. He told be, if they put copper up, someone would steal it.
On the other hand, he worked for RCA in New Jersey. The location put up a chained linked fence. And that got stolen.
Who the hell steals a fence? Ok, his name is Tony . . . .
Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
Maybe if we had a lower income-gap, better paying jobs, and opportunity for people this wouldn't be such a problem?
Ah the Nativity of youth. I have two words for you. Jeffrey Archer.
So, I mess with your package, and I get sprayed with a florescent liquid containing DNA.
I hope they don't try to patent this, as I think there may be prior art.
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Why the hell not, employers steal from the employees all the time. If the labor market hadn't become so distorted by corporate trickery it would be a completely different matter. Good luck getting anybody to care if your employer is stealing out of your paycheck or making you work off the clock.
I have genuine sympathy for employers that make a good faith attempt at following the laws and engaging in fair play, but there's a huge amount of pressure created by Wall Street to cut corners and do things which are harmful to the employees, whether or not there's a business justifications for doing it.
You don't inspire employee loyalty or productivity by making it tough for employees to survive on their salary alone.
If UV lights prove of crime, my right hand is set for a life sentence
Given slashdot as the audience to this comment, so is yours..
This was a big problem in East Africa when I lived in the region. This is also the reason why wireless really took off, with things like WiMax and 3G becoming ubiquitous in all the major cities. The advent of the fiber optic cables connecting to the rest of the world further supported the existing wireless network. It's a perfect example of leapfrogging technologies. Besides, only about 15% of people ever had access to old copper phone lines anyway. ;)
I think what the parent's point is that many of these folks are doing this to make a living. When one has their backs against the wall, they do desperate things.
This is the typical bleeding heart argument. And poor drug dealers, they're just trying to make a living too.
You realize that a morally sound person will refuse to engage in this type of activity on principle, no matter how hard up they are? These people are the scum of the earth, their parents should never have had children because certainly they had no idea how to raise them. These opportunists are out to make a quick buck because they think the world owes them something, and they have no interest (or are probably amused by) the damage they cause to society. I'm just sad that because of bleeding heart like you we're not allowed to shoot them.
Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
". . .Nativity . . ."
I don't think that word means what you think it means. I believe the word you are looking for is "naivety".
What, you were never in the school Christmas play?
Living With a Nerd
So they can steal from their employers instead?
We call that economic transaction "wages", not stealing. The criminalization of poverty and the assumption that the poor are all thieves is just astounding.
I am not a crackpot.
The war on theft is one of those basic prohibitions that's been around since the dawn of civilization. When I leave for work in the AM, this prohibition helps to make sure my shit is still in my house when I get home. It's one of the lubricants for a smooth running society, and legalizing theft (as you seem to be advocating) is a monumentally Bad Idea.
I don't believe that the parent said anything about not *blaming* the perpetrators for the crime. But punishment, in and of itself, is rarely a solution to anything- witness the perpetual failure that is the war on drugs.
It's perfectly reasonable to suggest that we investigate and attempt to fix the causes of crimes, *in addition* the punishing those caught perpetrating them.
The world is not black and white. Your "you must be a bleeding heart who's causing all our problems by not letting us shoot petty criminals" attitude is not a solution, it's part of the problem.
The ringing of the division bell has begun... -PF
For a while now, thieves in the UK have been testing whether an access pit contains copper or fibre by chucking a bit of petrol and a match in. If it burns green, they've hit the jackpot, they put it out and pinch the copper cabling. Otherwise they just sod off and leave it burning. Nice.
a few fish hooks hidden between the lettuce and the cheese.
There's no "+1 Twisted and sick, don't fuck with this guy" mod, so I figured I'd reply instead.
Well done sir.
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Collect the cool, refreshing smart water and splash it on your mark's car. Pop the lock and splash it on his seat and steering wheels around 4am; roll the window down a bit before you do so. Make sure your chosen mark has the same kind of car as you. Also, wear a rain coat and rain hat and vinyl pants and gloves and boots, and dispose of all this after (before getting in YOUR car...). Put the cables in an isolation chamber (a cooler).
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Wait, industry reports from radio to railroad have been been saying that copper theft is down because copper is also down.
Whom am I supposed to believe?
Kriston
Yes, and if women gave it up more easily, maybe we wouldn't have rape.
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how do the coppers cope with copper capers?
45 5F E1 04 22 CA 29 C4 93 3F 95 05 2B 79 2A B2
Ok, this worrys me a bit if used in another application.
What if this were used to mark protesters at a rally?
Out of modpoints but really liked a post? 1BDkF6TtmmeZ3yqXbz9yhdYVqRYnwFoXDj
You obviously haven't met my cousin Jack. You could give him a multi-million dollar job as a CEO and he would get fired the first day for stealing office supplies and selling them in the alley beside the building.
Most of the thieves I've known in my life weren't stealing because they lacked opportunity. They steal because they're life-long fuck-ups who have blown every opportunity that has ever been given to them.
SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
There are actually quite a few morally questionable actions that are ignored everyday, performed by employees of corporations. Just because you have a legal job, doesn't mean you aren't screwing somebody over directly or part of a corporation that does it.
Not that this excuses thieves in general. Bad behavior is bad behavior.
That is why so many of them end up paying the ultimate price. Death as they cut a life wire.
I remember one day I was driving in to work listening to the radio and when they did the news stories I realized that I heard a familiar (and fairly unique) last name mentioned by the news lady. The next time the stories rolled around, it turned out that the story was that a would-be copper thief was electrocuted and died in the act, and he shared a last name with a very good friend of mine. Ironic, I thought.
:-P
A few days later, I'm visiting with my friend when he tells me that someone in his family died the week before trying to steal copper. One of the details that was left out of the news report though was that he wasn't working alone and was in fact left behind as dead by his surviving accomplices. Not that anyone in his family didn't think that he wasn't incredibly dumb for getting himself killed, but it was a shame nonetheless.
I never met the guy myself, and considering how tight-knit that family (or at least my friend's branch of it) is, I found myself surprised. However, given some of his obvious life choices (and friends... the men on that page look creepy as all hell) I'm not really surprised either
Boot Windows, Linux, and ESX over the network for free.
The SmartWater liquid carries a DNA fingerprint that links a criminal to the scene of the crime and police units carrying ultra-violet light detectors can use the incriminating stains to make an arrest after the trap has been sprung.
That's why my kids drink SmartWater at breakfast. Just in case..
He was the manger.
deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
Most of the thieves I've known in my life weren't stealing because they lacked opportunity.
Two words for you: selection bias.
Wants to be free~
The Kruger Dunning explains most post on
How about we take this debate a little further?
If we jacked up wages significantly (say 80%), what whould happen?
- Would mothers quit work and stay home to actually *raise* their children?
- Would we keep on with two-income families and splurge on more crap, bigger houses, and better daycare so our brats would learn more sophisticated anti-social behavior?
- Would we just accept insane cell phone bills for uncapped data and unlimited texting, so our kids would be able to text and tweet instead of holding actual conversations?
- Would we descend into the enonomic abyss even faster, as the rest of the world careens past us?
The reality is that even the most desperately poor American is better off than 90% of the rest of the world, maybe 95%.
Stealing coppper isn't even the most desperate act. In Egypt, they bury long fiber runs in the desert as much as 30 ft. to discourage the locals from digging up the conduit for scrap. Here in Phoenix the crooks steal air conditioning units right off the side of a house of day care building for scrap. I left 10 ft. of angle iron outside by my driveway for half a Saturday afternoon. Gone. Foreclosed and partly built neighborhoods in many states were and are victims of scavengers ripping wiring and plumbing out of the walls, cutting rebar out of foundations, you name it.
But poor in America is more a matter of pride. Welfare is still available. And it pays better than living in the streets of Mogadishu.
deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
Just put a nice 30kV bias on the wire and let the problem take care of itself. Any time I hear about attempted power line theft, the people who were involved are charcoal.
A couple of year back, this guy drove into the fire department parking lot, brazenly loaded up a reel of copper (wire, I think -- possibly for maintaining the town's antique "Red Fire Box" alarm system?) and drove off with it (not before being noticed either): Lexington man is 'person of interest' in area copper thefts.
Yeah! Scum like Han Solo and Malcolm Reynolds!
Hmmm... I don't know any real world examples but I think sometimes when living in oppressive conditions a morally sound person will feel that doing what they can to harm that entity is right on principle.
I'm not SAYING it's right, but morals are quite grey and subjective.
Cwm, fjord-bank glyphs vext quiz
They were after the grounding strap, which hopefully wasn't carrying much in the way of current. He'd already knocked the protective shield loose with a crowbar. The racket drew my attention. When I confronted him he told me exactly what he was doing and carried right on until I dragged out my cell phone and called it in.
It's not bleeding heart. It's recognizing a fact.
It is well recognized that when against a wall, people do what they feel they need to survive. Dismissing that for no reason other then it isn't part of your ideology shows you aren't really a moral person,. Just a parrot that can only think long enough to repeat what it's master ahs said.
You, my friend, are the problem.
Why are people like you so bent on making this country a 3rd world hell hole?
The Kruger Dunning explains most post on
In the US at least, we can do away with the penny.
This is a means of detecting criminals, but is it really using DNA to do that? Seems really unlikely...
So you can look at your justice system as having three goals, in order:
1) Deterrence. The first and foremost goal is to have consequences so that people simply don't do shit they aren't supposed to. You try to deter as many people as possible by saying "If you do this, we punish you," and hopefully people say "Well I don't wanna be punished, I'm not going to do that." When that doesn't work you move on to:
2) Rehabilitation. You make good on the threat, you punish them. You try and make it so that, having experienced the punishment, they aren't interested in it happening again. Also, and this is something our prisons are NOT good at, you try to help give them options when they get out. Basically it is a case of "Ok you fucked up and now you pay the consequences. We don't ever want to see you back, and we hope that you don't want to come back." However if that doesn't work you go of:
3) Removal. If someone just keeps causing problems, you don't have a lot of other choices. I mean I suppose you could let them just keep committing crimes but that really isn't an option, and kinda makes a mockery of the idea of a justice system. So you just lock them up. When they are in prison, they can't be out committing crimes. May well mean they spend most of their life there, that just may be what is needed.
Well #3 is the point you get to with some people. It isn't a matter of hard sentences for the sake of being a hardass, it is because you've had enough of the shit. They won't learn their lesson, it is time to just keep them out of trouble. You can't do anything else because they are too stupid, or they have an addiction and aren't willing to fight it (you can't force cure an addict, they have to choose to fight it and only then can you help them).
Now I'm not saying our system as-is is perfect, but that is where part of it comes from. Perhaps what we need is something not as harsh as prison, a work camp like system where you go if you are a massive repeat offender, but not for serious things. You continually steal, nothing helps, fine now your sentences start to be long stretches in a structured environment where you are kept out of trouble. Not because we hate you, just because we need you to stop causing problems for other people.
Um, so do you mean we shouldn't prohibit any theft at all, or is there something special about copper theft?
To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
That is a truly hilarious fail at English.
To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
I entirely agree with your analysis. And I would like to see much, much more done on rehabilitation. And for petty crime, I think that removal doesn't work in that the level of cruelty (long sentences) needed to make it work is, to my mind, disproportionate for the offences. But that is a matter of opinion, not fact.
Consciousness is an illusion caused by an excess of self consciousness.
Given the Isaac Newton article posted a couple days ago and my current reading material of the Baroque Cycle, i'm suddenly thinking that these guys are the modern day equivalents of people who clipped and scraped coins in order to melt the residue into bullion. Everyone else is busy trying to make an honest living while they are ripping out the foundation of the economic infrastructure. It's an activity that seems aggravating but somewhat trivial in small doses but can (and has in the past) destroy entire economies when allowed to get out of hand.
This Space Intentionally Left Blank
The logical separator between defensible theft and indefensible theft is the immediacy of the need and the minimal effort and theft needed to satisfy that need. Both of those are met when a homeless man steals a little food here and there. The amount of time and energy it would take said homeless man to steal the TV, transport it to a seller and convert it into currency ipso facto proves that it was not necessary.
You are conflating security (eating for a month) with immediate need (starving now). No one is morally entitled to security, only their basic immediate needs.
Excellent idea! Let's shoot everyone who is not morally sound. Personally, I think wanting to shoot anyone who isn't "morally sound" is absolutely repugnant, so let's start with you.
You are spot on about prisons being poor at rehabilitation...
The current system actually works very poorly in this:
You go to prison for a relatively minor crime, and are thrown in with a bunch of people who are usually far more experienced criminals than you... You get mistreated (beaten up, raped etc) by the other prisoners and some of them teach you additional criminal skills.
Once you come out, you've typically lost whatever you had before you went in, you are now more bitter, you are stigmatised by having a criminal record which makes it difficult for you to get legitimate work and to top it off you've learnt how to commit new or more effective crimes and have new criminal contacts.
So for many, the only course of action open to them is to commit more crime, and this time they may get away with it for longer due to increased experience.
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I for one steal copper wire so that I can fund my expeditions to cold climates which I then club baby seals. These baby seals are harvested for their essential oils so that I can fuel my bio-mass luxury yacht.
One man's necessities are another man's luxury goods.
"What is there a tank on the boat? WHY IS THERE A TANK ON THE BOAT?!?" L4D2
Yep, which is why the whole assertion by the parent that income gaps are the cause is complete and utter bullshit.
Actually depending on the circumstances when they're stealing from you, you can shoot them.
With copper capers. A classic: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cVkZZsS-66c
Much better title ;-)
Hey don't blame me, IANAB
If these people weren't so stupid they wouldn't be stealing copper. They'd earn more if they just took a job at McDonalds. Unfortunately, more often than not these people don't want someone telling them what to do, so they're incapable of holding down a proper job.
My interpretation:
::noise outside:: (burglar attacking grounding strap with crowbar)
(homeowner exits house and arrives on scene)
Homeowner: Well, Sir - what are you doing?
Copper Thief: I'm making off with your copper grounding strap, old chap. (continues attempt)
Homeowner: Well sir, you shall have to cease and desist henceforth or I shall have to alert the authorities...
Apparently, I've made you and the burglar out to be British (stereotypically colloquial, naturally). But I have to say, I'm impressed the guy kept at the attempt with you just standing there.
"What is there a tank on the boat? WHY IS THERE A TANK ON THE BOAT?!?" L4D2
Actually, the big problem I've been seeing is the theft of copper pipes from foreclosed and abandoned homes. I know someone who's a real estate agent and the impression I've gotten, in the city where I live, is that any home on the market, not being lived in, gets it's copper stolen within a few months. In some cases they'll even rip up walls to get at the pipe.
Recently, he went to look over a home a client was about to put an offer on. He discovers a few inches of water in the basement and with more gushing into the basement from a broken pipe. It turns out someone had broken in and taken all the piping they could. Needless to say the client no longer wanted the house.
This has been having quite an impact on real estate prices and there's not a whole lot that can be done to fight it. The pathetic part here is that the thieves aren't earning a whole lot of money for all the trouble they go through to get at the copper. But then, they have to be rather stupid to resort to this sort of thing. They could earn more working a minimum wage job. They're incapable of holding down a job because they can't stand being told what to do. And in the scheme of things stealing copper seems like a relatively benign crime.
It is too easy. In Arizona most people have their electric panel outside the house. That means by opening the panel you gain access to pounds of copper - you just have to pull real hard.
Similarly, neighborhoods have park land with lights. The wiring connecting these to power to extremely vulnerable and has been stolen in a number of locations. Of course, nobody is talking about this because they don't want to encourage people.
The problem is going to get worse. When you have bands of people that have little to lose, why not try to steal some wires. The scrap metal dealers are sufficiently isolated from the criminal acts that they really don't care where the wire came from, especially if it isn't obviously a spool of cable that might have been stolen. So you can fill up a pickup truck with wire scraps and make $100 or more.
Any construction site is fair game. Any park with lights is a target. Homes that aren't in some gated subdivision are pretty easy as well. Parks near my house have been victimized, one has been hit twice. And this is going to generally be considered to be a victimless crime - nobody got hurt and whatever was destroyed was probably insured.
Even if they put up enough dummy cameras and a few live ones to make people think twice about this, there are plenty of sources. How much copper do you think is in the average car?
That god my connection is still in inta
You missed retribution...
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Jesus had a job. His dad hired him.
deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
I bought a pack of batteries from, Asda with total value of 1.99 that was tagged (I guess becuase they are easily stolen), but since I used the 'express' checkout the overkill security tag sticker wasn't deactivated.
Since I was going to be going into other shops with alarms I really needed to get it disabled so I looked around for the member of staff that was supposed to be stopping me... and after 5 minutes and setting the thing off for the 6th time I went all the way back to the checkout (which was quite far as it was a big store!) and got a checkout operator to de-tag it... and she didn't even look at my receipt.
I wish I had thought about it a bit more... I could have easily taken a big TV and no one would have noticed...
[The Universe] has gone offline.
The war on drugs is a failure because the majority of the country does drugs, its trivial to not get caught, and best of all, a good portion of the people doing the 'enforcement' are drug users themselves.
Proper punishment does stop crime. You're idea of slapping them on the wrist and sending them to counsuling doesn't, as is well documented and easy to see if you look at pretty much any school in America due to the current state of 'omg, don't punish them, feed them adderal instead!'
The world isn't black and white, this is true, but your still a pussy and I'd be willing to bet you exert 0 control over the people around you. I'd put $100 on saying that you get used as a door mat on a daily basis, even if you don't' realize it.
I came from the shitty 'back to the wall about to starve death' situation, I got out without breaking the law. The friends I had which instead turned into thieves and murders (yes, murderers) are in fact still in the same situation they were in to start with.
The situation doesn't make the person, the person makes the situation. Stop being such a pansy and giving people bullshit excuses for not acting the same way civilized people do.
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no retribution is not part of the criminal legal system, you use the civil justice for that
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Bloody nepotism!
And several much more qualified candidates were probably ignored.
the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
The war on drugs is a failure because the majority of the country does drugs, its trivial to not get caught, and best of all, a good portion of the people doing the 'enforcement' are drug users themselves.
Well, five minutes of googling got me to Center for Substance Abuse Research from the University of Maryland. They compiled these stats for the state of Maryland (unfortunately I couldn't find nationwide stats, but feel free to reply with numbers and citations if you find that they look significantly different). In 2005, 17.1% of all adult arrests were drug related. Out of those, 76.9% were possession-related, and only the remaining 23.1% were sales-related.
From the above stats, it doesn't look like the cops, in Maryland at least, are taking it easy on the drug-using population. I'm also willing to bet that once these people leave jail, they're not going to start living clean lives, again, feel free to look up info on how many of these people are repeat offenders. If you try to argue that their time in jail just wasn't punishment enough, I invite you to google up living conditions in one of those places. If you argue that they're not spending enough time in jail, I suggest you look up the relative sentence time and compare them to theft, or violent crimes.
The world isn't black and white, this is true, but your still a pussy and I'd be willing to bet you exert 0 control over the people around you. I'd put $100 on saying that you get used as a door mat on a daily basis, even if you don't' realize it.
I strive to exert zero control over the people around me. I don't believe I have any right to exert any more than that. In a consistent manner, I'm very resistant to attempts by others to control my life, so I'm fairly certain that, at the very least, I wouldn't get used as a door mat by you.
I came from the shitty 'back to the wall about to starve death' situation, I got out without breaking the law. The friends I had which instead turned into thieves and murders (yes, murderers) are in fact still in the same situation they were in to start with.
Fantastic. I think we can all agree you are a better man than your friends are. Nevertheless, those people with weaker moral character exist, and you haven't shown me any evidence that they would have turned out any different if they had been punished more severely. So you have enough character to not turn to crime when your back is to the wall. The problem is that there are many people who are not as strong-willed. If we can prevent the crime by making sure their back isn't to the wall, and removing the temptation, it's a win for everyone.
See Subject.
My God, it's Full of Source!
OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
instead of pursuing the stolen copper cables, companies would be better off taking the insurance money and replacing the copper runs with fiber.
Remember kids, if you're not paying for the service, YOU ARE THE PRODUCT THAT IS BEING SOLD.
Drug dealers are hard working low pay folks, and they provide a valuable service. Considering what they provide is wanted by many and a victimless crime I fail to see what you have against them.
So close yet so far off the mark. Nations with legalized prostitution have lower rape rates, among the first world.
Most thieves steal precisely *because* an opportunity present itself to them.
Did you actually read my post, or did you just skim it and then decide to make ad-hominem attacks because you can't come up with anything else?
Nowhere did I comment on the level of punishment. Nowhere did I say anything about "just sending them to counseling" regarding anything; my comments about the war on drugs is merely that it, as a strategy primarily relying on punishment, has failed. This is pretty much indisputable.
In fact, I agree wholeheartedly with your statement regarding the state of discipline for children and its replacement by medication.
Learn to read. Also, grow up; throwing insults around as in your post is a really just a way to be viewed as a child and ignored.
The ringing of the division bell has begun... -PF
You have your goals pretty much completely backwards. The first and foremost objective of the justice system should be to separate those breaking laws from everyone else, to minimise the harm they can do. The second objective should be to provide a way for injured parties to seek redress and reparations for any losses suffered. The third objective should be to rehabilitate offenders, so you no longer have to expend resources keeping them isolated.
Only as a last resort should the threat of harsh punishment be used to coerce lawful behaviour ("deterrence"). IMHO if you need to do this at all, your society is already failing in that area. Deterrence should *never* be a major objective of a legal system.
Actually, many have applied. All so far found wanting.
And this is not a job you want. Trust me, you need certain special abilities. And certain character traits.
Fortunately, there is only one opening, and it's been filled. We can go back to our own jobs, those who have them.
deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
If a criminal justice system truly did not acknowledge the right of the victim to retribution, what purpose would it serve? How can the law exist - a system where a third party is responsible for redressing private wrongs - if it ignores this most fundamental human instinct?
The Rule of Law is not a given; other systems are possible, those of clan and blood feud. If the law abdicates its ability to give justice to those who are wronged, how can it expect to survive?
We, in our enlightened times, rightly consider many other aspects when sentencing a criminal. But ultimately for every crime there is a victim, and they have given up their right of private revenge to this thing called Law. It is both right and sensible that judges consider this when passing sentence.
This sig all sigs devours
Restaurants are always hiring, they pay better, and are less likely to get you killed then stealing copper.
If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
Just put up a sign: "Look up, the cables overhead are bigger and contain more copper."
The rest of the problem solves itself when thieves drop from the power poles.
I think the recycling business is where the problem should be addressed.
For instance, the police in Santa Clara set up a recycling business, and they found that out of 278 people who came
in, only TWO people actually brought in legitimate recycled stuff.
http://articles.sfgate.com/2008-01-24/bay-area/17148400_1_copper-thieves-santa-clara-county-burglary-tools
I don't think that word means what you think it means.
Inconceivable!
They're both considered valid, alternate spellings. I checked. I decided to go with the more Anglicized spelling instead of the French form.