"France Clockwork Orange" is a valid reading for several reasons: it is a well documented book fun to read, and very far from the dominant discourse on security issues. We learn, among other things, 13,000 flights, 2,000 assaults and 200 rapes are committed in our country every 24 hours. That prison capacity of the country are lower by more than 30% to those of the UK, with a population roughly equivalent to ours. Or that the total cost of crime and crime is at present about 115 billion euros a year, which would earn him, in a normal country, particular attention from the authorities. Apart from this list of figures from departmental sources and recent works, the various chapters are supported by precise and generally lamentable examples (the case of the "gang of barbarians", the Laetitia Perrais case). These examples are not just focused on the populations of immigrant origin, as it was - too easily and quite expected - claimed by sycophants who are the opinion to discredit the book and especially its author, whose the little they care about in the end.
The thesis of Laurent Obertone is relatively simple. It calls simply for the construction of new prison and the firm application of the Penal Code (reminder: rape would be its author 15 years of imprisonment, ie 15 times 365 days of prison). Psychopaths of the ilk of Youssouf Fofana or Tony Meilhon should never get out of detention. The fight against crime and delinquency should be promoted to the rank of major national cause, unlike useless crap but financially profitable, such as the so-called fight against road crime (Mrs. Perrichon takes for his passing grade ). It also dismantles the fallacies we are watered until you drop in 40 years: the explanation of delinquency by the supposed poverty of thugs, the failure of the so-called policy of "zero tolerance" in the United States, the use of alternative sentences to detention and other progressive nonsense. The news daily also gives reason: the "young" that killed two police officers from the LAC Paris last week by deliberately hitting their car while intoxicated, driving a vehicle that n had not the right to drive had already been sentenced eight times, had passed in all and for a month in prison, and had dried both TIG and driving course in which he was convicted (source: Le Point 28/02/2013) ...
This book has already earned its author a few attempts of excommunication, inconclusive for now since it will not really, unlike Robert Ménard or Eric Zemmour, losing a place that n 'yet. The individual seems talented and I think he has not finished talking to him. This book is a good start and I wish him good luck and good luck.