someaccounts mention that the company kill more than a million people while responding the revolt. if u were company official, would u agree we ith this strategy to suppress the revolt. why or why not?
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Answer:
A National Strategy
AMERICA CAN CONTROL CRIME. This report has tried to
say how. It has shown that crime flourishes where the
conditions of life are the worst, and that therefore the
foundation of a national strategy against crime is an
unremitting national effort for social justice. Reducing
poverty, discrimination, ignorance, disease and urban
blight, and the anger, cynicism or despair those conditions
can inspire, is one great step toward reducing crime. It
is not the task, indeed it is not within the competence, of
a Commission on Law Enforcement and Administration
of Justice to make detailed proposals about housing or
education or civil rights, unemployment, or welfare or
health. However, it is the Commission's clear and urgent
duty to stress that forceful action in these fields is essential to crime prevention, and to adjure the officials of
every agency of criminal justice-policemen, prosecutors,
judges, correctional authorities-to associate themselves
with and labor for the success of programs that will
improve the quality of American life.
This 'report has shown that most criminal careers
begin in youth, and that therefore programs that will reduce juvenile delinquency and keep delinquents and
youthful offenders from settling into lives of crime are indispensable parts of a national strategy. It has shown
that the formal criminal process, arrest to trial to punishment, seldom protects the community from offenders of
certain kinds and that therefore, the criminal justice system and the community must jointly seek alternative ways
of treating them. It has shown that treatment in the
community might also return to constructive life many
offenders who quite appropriately have been subjected to
formal process.
This report has pointed out that legislatures and, by
extension, the public, despite their well-founded alarm
about crime, have not provided the wherewithal for the
criminal justice system to -do what it could and should
do. It has identified the system's major needs as better
qualified, better trained manpower; more modern equipment and management; closer cooperation among its
functional parts and among its many and. varied jurisdictions; and, of course, the money without which far-reaching and enduring improvements are impossible.
Finally, this report has emphasized again and again
that improved law enforcement and criminal administration is more than a matter of giving additional
resources to police departments, courts, and correctional
systems. Resources are not ends. They are means, the
means through which the agencies of criminal justice can
seek solutions to the problems of preventing and controlling crime. Many of those solutions have not yet
been found. We need to know much more about crime.
A national strategy against crime must be in large part a
strategy by search.