When Bunny heard the sentence, she wondered, if what he did was so bad as to earn 14 years. I explained to her that yes, I thought the punishment did fit the crimes. Here was a man, who had promised to change the culture of corruption in Illinois when he ran for governor. (He sure kept that promise. However, we thought he would change the culture for the better, not the worse.) Instead, He sullied the already tarnished reputation of Illinois politics.
He betrayed the trust of the people he was supposed to govern, and engaged in criminal acts without any sign of remorse, until today's grab to earn a reduced sentence. I thought the firm sentence was a very good strong message that business as usual, look the other way, what's in it for me politics will no be tolerated.
I was not only an observer of the justice system today, I was also a participant. One of my daughters, I wont mention names, but the one with the birthday yesterday, did something she knew was wrong today. She then lied about it several times before admitting her guilt. It was very Blago-like. Except we didn't have to go to trial.
Like Bunny with Blago, I also had to question whether the consequence (which I chose and administered) fit the crime. The consequence for the misdeed was actually quite light. The consequence for the cover-up was very strict. Like the Blagojevich sentence it effected more than her it effected the whole family. The Awana Grand Prix was tonight. She had been planning on going and was working hard to prepare for it.
Puppymobile Grounded |
I was tempted to make her nonattendance the only consequence. The cars had been entered last night, so it was logistically possible for her car to race and be judged without her there. I decided against that because:
A) That would not be fair to a kid who had not misbehaved to lose out to someone who did.
B) It would treat her misbehavior like it was an illness or a scheduling conflict.
C) Regardless of whether she won or not. allowing the car to race would be less of a deterrent for her not lying the next time.
My opinion on Blago's and my daughters sentencing are very similar: The punishment fits the crime and acts as a deterrent for future misdeeds. Whether it be politics or parenting justice can be served by following that pattern.
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In totally unrelated blogging business, I am going to feature 1 HSBA winner in each of my next 20 posts. Today's featured blog is the winner of Best Home School Dad Blog, Families Again. This fantastic blog is very deserving. Here is a sample of his fine work
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Next Time: Race Night Roundup