No Incentive

Why you should think carefully about your actions…

Many naive utopians, not necessarily ill-intentioned, are restless to attain their fantasy. Thus, they bulldoser through radical measures, lost in their own dreams, without thought for the real-world consequences.

How easy it is to fell a forest, it can be done in an afternoon – not so easy to grow it back. Stupid actions will have consequences that even the clever cannot fully predict; so many examples.

The abolition of proper education in this country is one. Restore selective education you say, easy you say? The problem: no incentive. So many long for it, it would benefit us all – but where’s the incentive? The parents who want it are too busy working; the children powerless and know no different. What about those whom can change it? The politicians have no political incentive to do so, quite the opposite. Perhaps from within the schools – or from independent schools & universities; again: quite the opposite. Many private schools stand to lose easy-fees, earned by simply teaching basic maths & english in schools not plagued by disorder as bad as the state-schools are. Incompetence spreads further than even the most clever can predict; even the universities now have a perverse incentive to prevent proper education. Our universities are setup as businesses, millions is made ripping-off students through fees and accommodation. The centralisation and investment it brings is a monumental incentive against enforcing proper admission standards.

So, the abolition of proper education has resulted in perverse interests blockading its restoration. This is the difference between abolitionism and the considered repealing of an ill. Abolitionism is utopian.

The Police Need an Incentive To Behave Urgently

And so to the point. Know any history, and you’ll know that in societies that fall apart the coup comes from the military. Sir Peel’s civilised police, (police in British English distinct from American English – don’t confuse the term), were massacred decades ago (Read the abolition of liberty by Peter Hitchens to find out how). We now have a militia, run by the Home Office – but is it?

The likes of the ‘riot police’, ‘TSGs (Tactical Support Group), ‘armed police’, have been expanded rapidly over the past few years. Since Kim Jongson has had his ego inflated to ‘Prime Minister’, they have grown more than ever before. The result, (nobody could have possibly predicted): they are out of control.

You need only see the scenes in Manchester, London, Bristol (coming to a city near you) to realise: if urgent action is not taken to hold wrongdoers in the police accountable – we are heading for an irrevocable catastrophe. It is an interesting coincidence that the army is set to be squeezed by another ten-thousand, in a time where many ex-army recruits are joining the likes of the TSG and armed policing squadrons. Speaking to such people involved in such organisations has only confirmed that these ex-recruits are typically the types of undesirables that militias such as the TSG appeal-to.

You may not believe me: but how about the mayor of London? He has openly admitted that he has lost control of the police. Even the politically-correct police chiefs have raised the alarm over the proportion of new & young recruits. The police have become a militia, and these young men know it – they are there to expend their adrenaline.

Back to unintended consequences: where is the break lever? Abolishing the local police forces removed all the protections of the old system. Because not only did the police become a militia, but they ceased to enforce the law. Thus, the courts are full. Don’t heed my words, heed the words of the thugs in the police: ‘take us to court mate’. It will be months, years, before the case is dealt with, (while the state falls apart and struggles to maintain control of this militia); and if the judge is on the side of the law, (in an increasingly lawless-land) – there will be no punishment to those who have done wrong.

The victim of the wrongdoing will receive at-best monetary compensation. But this monetary compensation doesn’t come from the thugs who comitted the wrongdoing – or the morons who try to cover it up and do further wrong: it comes from you & I. Thus: ‘take us to court mate’: it’s your money you’re spending.

If people do not have incentive to behave then they won’t. Unless officers who flout the law are suitably punished, then more and more wrongdoers will join the police-turned-militia to bully with immunity from repurcussion.

I’m sure others can propose better measures than I, I encourage them do so. I suggest the following as a start:

Anybody convicted of a criminal offence ought to be barred from the police force (including those currently employed)

Any officer convicted of a criminal offence ought to lose their pension

Police forces must be forbidden from settling out of court on cases against them (preventing police staff facing justice)

Proper legal-aid must be restored in relation to action against the police

Bail procedures need reform; and bail-restrictions need proper attention by the courts. The current bail rules are being abused to the extent bail measures are contravening fundamental human rights – and the victims are powerless. Further, we must enable those on legal-aid to challenge bail.