Uzique The Lesser wrote:
Jaekus wrote:
In my previous job it was a legal requirement that I took a national police check. They paid for it so I didn't mind, seeing as I've never been arrested for anything, let alone convicted.
yes but is it fair for people who do have previous (spent) convictions? i thought the idea of justice was that you served the punishment given to you by the court authority/state, and then you had 'balanced the books'. i think there should only be a very narrow band of crimes that should be listed as 'public interest', e.g. violence, severe mental illness/debility, and things like paedophilia or sexual offences. these are obviously crimes of a nature that an employer should know about, for their own personal safety, and to ensure that any aspect of their business that deals with the public isn't put at undue risk.
however when employers request a back-ground check and filter out people's resumés because they served time for a crime 20 years ago, or because they have a history of alcoholism that they're trying to put behind them, etc. then this ends up being another level of prying into individuals' personal life that is unjust, imo. people should be judged primarily on their competency/qualification to do the job. what happens nowadays, particularly in industries that are competitive, is that people use background checks or personal references as another filter-method of sorting out 'undesirable' candidates. that doesn't help anyone. for an ex-felon or someone with a stupid minor conviction (e.g. shoplifting, vandalism, public disorder offences, etc.) this is basically just the justice system coming around to bite them in the ass, even after they've served the punishment already. it is fundamentally unjust.
These days, with people rarely serving more than 1/3rd of their sentence, and most sentences being pitifully weak already, most people wouldn't really agree that the average crim has done his time and is due a second chance. Often they'll be laughing their bums off and ready to do it again.
That and the odd, minor, conviction is often the tip of the iceberg, and typically only comes after multiple warnings and cautions.
I don't even really agree with the concept of spent convictions. A criminal record is a criminal record, bad luck.
Why should the law-abiding have to meekly hold their tongues while a convicted criminal gets ahead of them?
Prison and a blighted future used to be the disincentives to crime, take away both and that doesn't leave a lot does it?
I'd go further personally, make life less convenient for criminals. For example, people with a history of alcohol, drugs and violence can't generally own firearms, they shouldn't be allowed to own a vehicle bigger than a scooter, maybe that would remove some of the road-rage from the roads.
Last edited by Dilbert_X (2013-06-06 04:00:56)