Our Threatened Freedom

Can Crime Stopping Be Dangerous?

3 min · 22. apr. 2026
episode Can Crime Stopping Be Dangerous? cover

Beskrivelse

This passage warns against the dangers of predictive crime prevention. Richard Conniff’s article in Science Digest highlights research aimed at identifying potential future criminals before they commit any crime, with proposals even suggesting preemptive jailing or execution. Critics, including ACLU lawyer David Landau, point out both constitutional and scientific flaws future criminality cannot be reliably predicted. The author adds a religious and moral objection: justice is only valid when applied to actual acts, not hypothetical ones, and people can change over time, as exemplified by reformed youth who later became productive citizens. Predictive measures risk punishing the innocent, potentially targeting those critical of authority, making such “crime-stopping” both dangerous and unjust. #PredictiveJustice #CivilLiberties #BiblicalJustice #CrimePrevention #MoralResponsibility #SocialScienceLimitations

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Alle episoder

82 episoder

episode Are the Courts an Enemy to Justice? cover

Are the Courts an Enemy to Justice?

This passage argues that the courts, rather than serving justice, have increasingly become instruments of relativism and majority rule, often harming victims more than criminals. It highlights Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.’s philosophy that the law is a game to be played according to its rules rather than a pursuit of justice, suggesting that justice is no longer viewed as absolute but as subject to human whims. The author warns that when courts treat law as a game, human lives and freedoms are at stake, and both moral and civil order suffer. The broader critique is that divorcing law from objective standards of good and evil leads to a destructive legal system that undermines true justice. #JusticeVsLaw #CourtCritique #HolmesianLaw #Relativism #FreedomAtRisk

3. juni 20263 min
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Done Any Nagging Lately?

This passage explores the origin and meaning of the word nag, tracing it from its Scandinavian roots meaning “to gnaw, bite, or burrow” to its modern sense of persistent, irritating talk or complaint. The imagery comes from rats gnawing in thatched-roof houses during the Middle Ages, producing an unending, unwelcome noise hence the connection to human nagging. Solomon recognized the difficulty of living with constant complaint, yet the text argues that not all nagging is negative. Constructive nagging, like Samuel Adams’ persistent advocacy for freedom, can lead to important political or social change. The takeaway is that citizens should engage in persistent, courteous political advocacy with state and federal representatives to safeguard and advance freedom reminding us that freedom requires active, continual effort. #Nagging #PoliticalPersistence #Freedom #CivicEngagement #Etymology

20. maj 20263 min
episode Is Mexicos Problem Americas Problem Too? cover

Is Mexicos Problem Americas Problem Too?

This passage argues that Mexico’s debt crisis in 1982 is not just Mexico’s problem but a global and particularly American one. The United States and other nations, through international loans and private banking, have tied themselves to the fate of unstable economies. Mexico’s $80 billion debt, coupled with economic collapse and inflation, threatens U.S. banks, credit availability, and the broader economy. The author frames “debt living” as a form of national self-destruction, likening it to burning one’s house to stay warm today, only to face ruin tomorrow. Debt, he concludes, is a form of slavery and a direct threat to freedom, requiring a return to sound, long-term economic principles to safeguard national stability. #DebtCrisis #EconomicResponsibility #InternationalFinance #NationalFreedom #MexicoDebt

13. maj 20263 min