archanfel
Active Member
Kelly McParland at National Post wrote an interesting piece on the on-going David Chen assault trial.
http://fullcomment.nationalpost.com...id-chen-learns-the-canadian-word-for-justice/
Sympathy for the guy aside (I think he did the right thing), I am kind of surprised by the attack on law from a right wing paper.
I am rooting for this guy too and I hope his name is cleared (which pretty much happened based on the testimonies). However, I would be far more afraid if the law is not blind and carries prejudice like Mr. McParland does. If any "honest" people can use any method he think is justified to "protect" himself, the society would be a lot scarier than a few thieves running around. The law is the law. If you don't agree with law, you can change it. And maybe that's warranted here (although again, the fact seems to suggest the law worked just fine). However, putting righteousness above the law is a very slippery slope that I am not sure Mr. McParland wants to go down on.
I do think Canadian laws are too nice. Criminals are not punished nearly severe enough and even when they are prisoned, they do not learn the skills that would allow them to reintegrate with the society. However, a law is a law. Canada is a democratic country and we have a process to pass laws. We also have a court system that use precedents to explain laws. Does Mr. McParland really wants a society where "honest people might think they had a right to protect themselves from people like Bennett"?
I hope David Chen clears his name and I hope he will still hold a positive view of the Canadian justice system.
http://fullcomment.nationalpost.com...id-chen-learns-the-canadian-word-for-justice/
Sympathy for the guy aside (I think he did the right thing), I am kind of surprised by the attack on law from a right wing paper.
Gee, Ontario justice system, we sure are impressed that you decided to enlist this guy to go after an honest shopkeeper who tried to stop the guy from stealing from him. Boy do we support the idea that David Chen should be made an example of, because otherwise honest people might think they had a right to protect themselves from people like Bennett. And we can’t have that.
I am rooting for this guy too and I hope his name is cleared (which pretty much happened based on the testimonies). However, I would be far more afraid if the law is not blind and carries prejudice like Mr. McParland does. If any "honest" people can use any method he think is justified to "protect" himself, the society would be a lot scarier than a few thieves running around. The law is the law. If you don't agree with law, you can change it. And maybe that's warranted here (although again, the fact seems to suggest the law worked just fine). However, putting righteousness above the law is a very slippery slope that I am not sure Mr. McParland wants to go down on.
I do think Canadian laws are too nice. Criminals are not punished nearly severe enough and even when they are prisoned, they do not learn the skills that would allow them to reintegrate with the society. However, a law is a law. Canada is a democratic country and we have a process to pass laws. We also have a court system that use precedents to explain laws. Does Mr. McParland really wants a society where "honest people might think they had a right to protect themselves from people like Bennett"?
I hope David Chen clears his name and I hope he will still hold a positive view of the Canadian justice system.