Fixed it.Afaik, other than "dangerous offender" which rarely gets invoked, the career criminal has little to lose. Their sentences won't be substantially different than a first time offender. They already had a criminal record so a longer one changes nothing regarding travel or employment. Zero meaningful consequences to continuing to hurt people. While three strikes has its issues, especially for violent offences, it's hard to argue that they should be given more chances. Offer MAID or a lifetime behind bars SUBBED OUT TO CHINA as the offender is not capable of being in society.
Most of us get angry once in a while. Most of us want things. An extremely small number commit murder to achieve their goals.
The US system is about punishing people, driving the bad further in. The Canadian system is about correcting behavior. Neither system works well with psychopaths, not that all psychopaths are criminals.I've said it before and I'll say it again: Our system works far better than the more punitive one in the US.
But where we do fall down, is in the case of repeat offenders. Career criminals aren't dealt with severely enough. The "no fixed address" statement is a big red flag and if you have a clear indication that an accused is unlikely to appear, you shouldn't release them. Doubly so in the case of an obvious career criminal.
What punishment will change a person already with a record and no assets to take away? Jail is a reunion, class of '24.