AOG - // andy-hughes
I have not mentioned thieves, I am referring to rape criminals, and in cases of rape it is very hard to prove, thus preventing many victims of such an horrendous crime from coming forward to get the offender to pay for his crime, and many women have to live with their abuse for the rest of their lives. //
As I pointed out, that speaks to the emotional response to the crime of rape, as against something like theft.
But for justice to work, the system has to be fair across the board - it cannot operate in a system that has a sliding scale of moral outrage that defines the chances of a suspect being named or not - the law does not, and cannot function like that.
// In rape cases, I agree that accused criminals that have past rape convictions should be named and shamed, as they are now. //
Then we must agree to differ.
Everyone is entitled to redemption - the concept that a rapist must forever be effectively condemned over and over again for his crime never allows for the notion of punishment and atonement to occur.
If you start that as a system of law, then every single rapist will know he has nothing at all to lose by carrying out as many rapes as he can, since he can only ever be endlessly persecuted once.
And that I am sure you will agree, is no basis for a legal system to operate effectively.