tl;dr Simon has come up with a plan to save money. Sure, it's monstrous.It contains conflicts of interest. There is a high probability of harming powerless people. It breaks human rights laws. But, it saves money and that will make powerful people happy.
The comment to the piece explains the problem quite well.
The article wants to expand the ability to kidnap somebody. The people authorizing the kidnapping to be bureaucrats, instead of a judge. Bureaucrats with a possible financial, personal, reputational or ideological interest in the outcome. This is not mentioned, and the editor has had to insert this important fact into the piece. Maybe Simon just forgot to mention it, or views it as trivial.
This should happen, because depriving people of their liberty is considered too expensive. The answer is not to provide more resources. The answer is to remove safeguards, minimal and ineffective as they are.
These people do not deserve basic human rights. They don't deserve to be humans any more, because that costs
money. They are not like us. The only concern about them is monetary.
Not surprisingly a lot of people get very upset by all this, when, as is the case in the vast majority of cases, the end result is nothing, a legal confirmation that they are indeed doing the right thing for their relative, and not exploiting or abusing them.
People get very upset about a lot of things, it doesn't mean we have to do what they want because they are upset. Maybe they are wrong?
We are also taught that being held against your will is the same as somebody making sure you do not fall out of bed when in a hospice. A sleight of hand accomplished by the insertion of a personal family anecdote. The anecdote did not have to be personal, so why is it there? For sympathy, and to distract from the argument?
Maybe he can go on to advocate that people charged by the police should also be judged and sentenced by them. It would save money. They are not very popular with the general public. Being charged is not the same as being guilty, but the whole process is expensive, and why would the police be wrong?
Perhaps one day we might be able to have a single act that covers both mental illness and mental capacity – in other words a “fusion” act. That has definite advantages, and Lady Hale, the President of the Supreme Court made it clear last week this is what she favours, although there also some drawbacks as well.
Gosh, I'm glad you mentioned there might be some drawbacks. I'm sure Lady Hale, being a mere
President of the
Supreme Court would have just sped ahead without considering this important fact. Women can be just so emotional and impulsive can't they Simon?
Carceral neo-liberalism through and through.