This is not a Cat |
Is it illegal to swing a cat? I don’t know, and I’m not
going to bother finding out. I saw a mention in the Independent, I think, about
how some lad who had been filmed by a CCTV camera swinging a cat by its tail
had ‘given himself up’. Knowing my fellow-countrymen as I do, I can believe it
was a major story for days, and not just in the tabloids.
Cruelty is repulsive to most people- and by cruelty I mean actions
that are performed primarily in order to enjoy the suffering of another-
because it is an expression of something lower than the humanity we believe we
share. Something like that, anyway. From there to loudly asserting one’s own
superiority is a short step for many people. And from there to the belief that ‘society’
(ie someone else) should punish the perpetrator of such an act is a further
short step.
Should we punish cat-swingers? Individually we can and do.
Someone who swings a cat by its tail tells you a lot about himself. You
probably wouldn’t want to employ him, to have him in your house, or anywhere
near your pets, and by extension, your children. You would speak badly off him
when his name came up, associate him with everything base, damage whatever good
name he might have previously had. In short, you would punish him. But is there
any reason why the criminal law should be involved, other than to express our
collective contempt for people who swing cats? Is it not, perhaps, a little too
easy to demand that the law punish this young cat-swinger, rather than have to
do it ourselves, as we could, and probably should?
2 comments:
I follow your thought, CIngram, and concur completely.
Was the boy's name published in the paper? That might be the only action needed here.
I don't think I saw a name. If he was a minor it's possible he could be punished by a court but his name kept secret, which is entirely the wrong way round.
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