- Wed Jan 29, 2025 6:23 pm
#83347
Apply some critical thought: what does this demand (that the convicted be in the dock to hear sentencing) actually mean?
That the perpetrator should be confronted with the effects and consequences of their transgressions. Surely the sentence confronts them with the consequences, and I'm not sure you can force someone to listen to victim statements.
That the perpetrator should be semi-publicly humiliated as a consequence of their transgression (quite probably the reason the offender refuses to attend, of course). Is the humiliation of the offender an appropriate course? In some cases there there might be a negative effect on rehabilitation, but where that does not apply is it just an opportunity for people to express their anger? Is this a substitute for public flogging or hanging?
Or it shows that the forces of society have established control over the outsider, the rogue element, so reinforces the normative or conformative aspects of social pressure, and that this control could affect anyone.
What does the team think?
[6 typos corrected, one sentence recast to more clearly express an idea]
The moneychangers have fled from their high seats in the temple of our civilization. We now restore that temple to the ancient truths. The measure of the restoration lies in the extent to which we apply values more noble than mere monetary profit.