Goldsmith also goes for shameless pandering
1:45 pm - January 22nd 2010
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If you thought the Tories’ ‘broken society’ meme was bit dystopic, this will really have you reaching for the bottle. According to Zac Goldsmith, Conservative candidate for Richmond Park and everyone’s favourite uber-green non-dom, we are no longer living in a civilised country. Can’t wait to see that on his election posters.
In a post which implicitly supports euthanasia, Goldsmith contrasts the seemingly lenient sentence given to a convicted paedophile with a seemingly harsh sentence for a woman who ended the life of her beloved but brain damaged son.
The problem, you see, is those pesky “sanctimonious liberal commentators” who “will argue that the mark of a civilised society is its willingness to apply justice in the face of public opinion. For them, this mother is a law-breaker, just like Sweeney, and she should be punished as such”.
Now, if I was going to write about how two court cases reveal what an uncivilised country we are, I’d probably think twice before accusing anyone else of sanctimony.
I think I’d also take the time to ponder what a liberal commentator’s reaction to these two stories would actually be.
You see, liberals are fond of liberalising things, and last time I checked, the criminal justice system hasn’t seen all that much liberalising in the past few decades.
Indeed, there are quite a few ’sanctimonious liberals’ who would go so far as to say that there shouldn’t be a custodial sentence for mercy killings, providing certain conditions are met. So under a more liberal system, the mercy killing escapes jail and the paedophile is still banged up. Am I missing something here, or is that not exactly what Zac Goldsmith is angling for?!
Seriously, I can understand why some folks have a reflexive urge to bash their opponents at any opportunity; it’s just a shame that this one couldn’t engage his brain before doing so.
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Neil Robertson is a regular contributor to Liberal Conspiracy. He was born in Barnsley in 1984, and through a mixture of good luck and circumstance he ended up passing through Cambridge, Sheffield and Coventry before finally landing in London, where he works in education. His writing often focuses on social policy or international relations, because that's what all the Cool Kids write about. He mostly blogs at: The Bleeding Heart Show.
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Story Filed Under: Blog ,Conservative Party ,Crime ,Westminster
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Reader comments
As far as this liberal commentator goes, I;d have started by reflecting on the facts.
The paedophile, Craig Sweeney, was given a tariff of 18 years for kidnapping and sexual assault, which means he could apply for parole after five years on account of his having co-operated with the police and entered a guilty plea.
Of course, to make parole after serving his minimum term, he also has to have behaved himself while inside and convince the parole board that he’s not going to be a danger on release, and with two sexual assault convictions on his rap sheet that’s going to be far from easy.
As for Frances Inglis – had I been on the jury in that case then I’ve have been inclined, on what I’ve read, to fight like buggery for a diminished responsibility verdict.
That said, I’d also point out that its precisely because of all the whining about lenient sentences in cases such as Sweeney’s that judges have been shafted with minimum sentences which prevent them exercising a bit of mercy, compassion and discretion in cases like that of Frances Inglis, and handing down a much lighter sentence.
Assuming that there’s no evidence that she’s a danger to the public at large, then this one of those rare instances where even a suspended sentence might have been justified.
@Unity – the Inglis case…phewee…no one wins in this. The connortations are mind boggling. I’m hanging about to see if Archbishop Cranmer may post on it as it’s definately one for his congregation.
Unity – diminshed responsibility for someone who made two attempts to commit the offence with considerable planning and fourteen months between them? You might think that mitigating factors should lead to a lighter sentence, but a claim that she didn’t know what she was doing is unjustified.
He “implicitly supports euthanasia”. Why does this not surprise me? It’s well known his uncle Teddy was a champion of conservation and organic farming. But I have sometimes wondered how his Dad’s good friend John Aspinall might have influenced him. Aspinall was a thoroughly nasty piece of work, an extreme right winger who talked about coups to overthrow Labour goverments in the 1970s. He was also a kind of Malthusian conservationist who considered some animals to be superior to homo homo sapiens. He talked about euthanasia,or sterlisation and it was fairly obvious it was the “lower orders” in mind when he said this (shades of Keith Joseph). He expressed the wish that “3.5 billion people should be wiped out” of the world’s population “within the next 150-200 years” mirroring the views of some extreme Greens. Looks like something of “Aspers” has worn off on Zak.
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