An interesting oppinion piece from The Wall Street Journal
BY Theodore Dalrymple
The youth of Britain have long placed a de facto curfew on the old,  who in most places would no more think of venturing forth after dark  than would peasants in Bram Stoker's Transylvania. Indeed, well before  the riots last week, respectable persons would not venture into the  centers of most British cities or towns on Friday and Saturday nights,  for fear—and in the certainty—of encountering drunken and aggressive  youngsters. In Britain nowadays, the difference between ordinary social  life and riot is only a matter of degree, not of type. 
A short time ago, I gave a talk in a  school in an exquisite market town, deep in the countryside. Came Friday  night, however, and the inhabitants locked themselves into their houses  against the invasion of the barbarians. In my own little market town of  Bridgnorth, in Shropshire, where not long ago a man was nearly beaten  to death 20 yards from my house, drunken young people often rampage down  one of its lovely little streets, causing much damage and preventing  sleep. No one, of course, dares ask them to stop. The Shropshire council  has dealt with the problem by granting a license for a pub in the town  to open until 4 a.m., as if what the town needed was the opportunity for  yet more and later drunkenness.
If the authorities show neither the  will nor the capacity to deal with such an easily solved problem—and  willfully do all they can to worsen it—is it any wonder that they  exhibit, in the face of more difficult problems, all the courage and  determination of frightened rabbits?
The rioters in the news last week had a  thwarted sense of entitlement that has been assiduously cultivated by  an alliance of intellectuals, governments and bureaucrats. "We're fed up  with being broke," one rioter was reported as having said, as if having  enough money to satisfy one's desires were a human right rather than  something to be earned.
"There are people here with nothing,"  this rioter continued: nothing, that is, except an education that has  cost $80,000, a roof over their head, clothes on their back and shoes on  their feet, food in their stomachs, a cellphone, a flat-screen TV, a  refrigerator, an electric stove, heating and lighting, hot and cold  running water, a guaranteed income, free medical care, and all of the  same for any of the children that they might care to propagate.
But while the rioters have been maintained in a condition of  near-permanent unemployment by government subvention augmented by  criminal activity, Britain was importing labor to man its service  industries. You can travel up and down the country and you can be sure  that all the decent hotels and restaurants will be manned overwhelmingly  by young foreigners; not a young Briton in sight (thank God). 
The reason for this is clear: The  young unemployed Britons not only have the wrong attitude to work, for  example regarding fixed hours as a form of oppression, but they are also  dramatically badly educated. Within six months of arrival in the  country, the average young Pole speaks better, more cultivated English  than they do. 
The icing on the cake, as it were, is  that social charges on labor and the minimum wage are so high that no  employer can possibly extract from the young unemployed Briton anything  like the value of what it costs to employ him. And thus we have the  paradox of high youth unemployment at the very same time that we suck in  young workers from abroad. 
The culture in which the young  unemployed have immersed themselves is not one that is likely to promote  virtues such as self-discipline, honesty and diligence. Four lines from  the most famous lyric of the late and unlamentable Amy Winehouse should  establish the point:
                 I didn't get a lot in class              
                 But I know it don't come in a shot glass             
                 They tried to make me go to rehab              
                 But I said 'no, no, no'             
This message is not quite the same as, for example, "Go to the ant, thou sluggard, consider her ways and be wise." 
Furthermore, all the young rioters  will have had long experience of the prodigious efforts of the British  criminal justice system to confer impunity upon law breakers. First the  police are far too busy with their paperwork to catch the criminals; but  if by some chance—hardly more than one in 20—they do catch them, the  courts oblige by inflicting ludicrously lenient sentences. 
A single example will suffice, but one  among many. A woman got into an argument with someone in a supermarket.  She called her boyfriend, a violent habitual criminal, "to come and  sort him out." The boyfriend was already on bail on another charge and  wore an electronic tag because of another conviction. (Incidentally,  research shows that a third of all crimes in Scotland are committed by  people on bail, and there is no reason England should be any different.)
 The boyfriend arrived in the  supermarket and struck a man a heavy blow to the head. He fell to the  ground and died of his head injury. When told that he had got the  "wrong" man, the assailant said he would have attacked the "right" one  had he not been restrained. He was sentenced to serve not more than 30  months in prison. Since punishments must be in proportion to the  seriousness of the crime, a sentence like this exerts tremendous  downward pressure on sentences for lesser, but still serious, crimes. 
So several things need to be done,  among them the reform and even dismantlement of the educational and  social-security systems, the liberalization of the labor laws, and the  much firmer repression of crime. 
David Cameron is not the man for the job. 
 
 
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