When I sit in the coffee shops, go to a pub, or go out with my buddies to a game, and stuff like that, the common consensus is that we need to be tougher on crime; we need to punish people and lock them up. But you're right that I don't confess. If I'm with my close friends they already know. If I'm with some acquaintances, of course I'm not going to say anything.
Having lived on both sides of the fence, so to speak, I think there is merit in what you're saying. We need to be tougher on crime and maybe have stiffer sentences. All of those things apply. But at the end of the day, someone gave me an opportunity; that's all they did. I had a choice to turn around and take that opportunity and run with it, or squander it, as I did with several thousand other opportunities. I made the right choice that time and took the opportunity, and it has served me very well.
Unfortunately, having insight from being on both sides of the fence, if this legislation passes perhaps I wouldn't be able to present an opportunity to someone else in the future. It really comes right down to the fact that there is a need for stronger and stiffer sentences, but if you put up too many barriers and restrictions you will ultimately take people who already have a very jaded and cynical attitude, and reaffirm what they think they already know: that the world is against them. They won't be able to recognize opportunities when they're presented to them. That's really what it comes down to, sir.