What's hot and on the web |
STABBING SHOULDN'T KILL TORONTO
Laura Kaminker, who is American by birth, Canadian by choice, (and has been shoeless indoors since Aug. 30, 2005, how Canadian) weighs in on the murder of Ross Hammond on her blog We Move to Canada (wmtc.ca):
It seems that every time something bad happens in Toronto -- a shooting, a pedestrian killed by a speeding car, or now, a murder by a group of people labelled "panhandlers" -- there's an outcry about how the city is "out of control" and demands that "something be done."
It's good that any death is taken seriously, and not brushed off with a "these things happen."
However ... these things do happen.
In a reasonably free society, it's not possible to eliminate every negative social behaviour. If you want Toronto to resemble Singapore or post-revolution Iran -- I've never been to either of those places, I'm basing this on writings by people who've lived there -- you can cut way down on all kinds of anti-social behaviour. But if you want to live in a city where adults are mostly left on their own and expected to follow the law, things are going to happen. The more people, the greater the odds that it will.
Based on the published descriptions of the recent stabbing death on Queen St. W., I think the attack would be better described as a mugging. Those often begin with a request for money that escalates aggressively. Is mugging out of control in Toronto? Has there been a rash of attacks lately? There was a similar incident recently in Vancouver, and one in Toronto in May. That doesn't sound out of control to me.
Similarly, "panhandling" -- a quaint word for begging -- is not out of control in Toronto. Travel to any similarly sized city, and that will be plain.
Newsflash. The problem with begging isn't that it inconveniences us more fortunate passers-by as we go to work or out to dinner.
The problem is the need to beg. Poverty. Homelessness. People who live on the street or in temporary shelters are much more likely to be the victims of violence than the perpetrators.
Describing this incident as a stabbing by a "panhandler" further marginalizes people who are already despised, or at best strenuously ignored.
I'm sorry for the man who was killed, and the people who mourn him. And I'm sorry for the people who survived the attack, as I'm sure it was extremely traumatic, something that will haunt them for a long time.
But it's still safe to go outside.
No comments:
Post a Comment