Any questions/Any answers today had one or two interesting topics today, plus the usual comments from people, both on the panel and off, who haven't a clue.
One was about reducing the voting age in GEs to 16. The argument that people aged 16 are too immature and uninformed to vote doesn't wash with me. It is highly likely that that is true, but it is equally likely that most of the people in the country aged 21 and above - all the way up to 80 are equally ill informed and not fit to vote, so why not let the 16 year olds have a go. One guy who was at the older end complained that he didn't want young people deciding about matters which affected him - but clearly did not understand the reverse argument for younger people. There were also complaints about "liberal attitudes" regarding prisons, and "illegal" immigrants.
I suspect that most of the respondents just did not have a clue about the kind of difficulties that some people face, and they think that everyone is clever enough, or at least not stupid enough, to do anything anti-social, or get into trouble. They have no idea about the fact that at the lower end of the scale there are people who really are functionally illiterate, or just do not understand "normal" social behaviour. That doesn't make them "bad" people, until they do something which society has to take action on. Some people are medically ill, but end up in prison for the wrong reasons, and that often leads to a downward spiral.
I am not an unreasonable "liberal" person, but I do think that some people should be given a chance - and much better support before they do something which attracts the attention of law enforcement, sometimes with sad results.
One was about reducing the voting age in GEs to 16. The argument that people aged 16 are too immature and uninformed to vote doesn't wash with me. It is highly likely that that is true, but it is equally likely that most of the people in the country aged 21 and above - all the way up to 80 are equally ill informed and not fit to vote, so why not let the 16 year olds have a go. One guy who was at the older end complained that he didn't want young people deciding about matters which affected him - but clearly did not understand the reverse argument for younger people. There were also complaints about "liberal attitudes" regarding prisons, and "illegal" immigrants.
I suspect that most of the respondents just did not have a clue about the kind of difficulties that some people face, and they think that everyone is clever enough, or at least not stupid enough, to do anything anti-social, or get into trouble. They have no idea about the fact that at the lower end of the scale there are people who really are functionally illiterate, or just do not understand "normal" social behaviour. That doesn't make them "bad" people, until they do something which society has to take action on. Some people are medically ill, but end up in prison for the wrong reasons, and that often leads to a downward spiral.
I am not an unreasonable "liberal" person, but I do think that some people should be given a chance - and much better support before they do something which attracts the attention of law enforcement, sometimes with sad results.
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