Our politicians, meanwhile, queue to one-up each other in their condemnation of the rioters and willingly scramble to throw away some more of our hard-won freedoms in yet another knee-jerk reaction.
Which freedoms do you consider being unjustly taken away? Freedom from consequence is not freedom.
I agree that there may have been organised criminals making off with the largest proceeds. I have also seen evidence that the looters came from many walks of life, not just the unprivelaged.
However, amongst the first duties of government in my eyes is the assurance of the upholding of the law. That someone was poor or came from a 'broken family' must not change the tenacity with which it is upheld.
You cited a prolific tax evader - I am sure you are aware that the battle against tax evasion is one of many the UK government faces. Not to comment on its efforts, but I don't see how citing this one successful tax evader has weight to belittle the criminal behaviour seen in this event.
In general, I would like to understand why poverty can be used as an excuse for such behaviour. Why doesn't this behaviour regularly happen in other countries faced with huge inequalities, or why it hadn't happened at other times of crisis, such as during the great economic depression?
In my view this is mainly a problem to do with values at the personal and societal level, not poverty. I would agree that the problem is layered and poverty is a factor. The looters were stealing luxury goods, not articles of sustenance.
As part of a multi-input solution, I would have liked to see those convicted drafted into reconstruction groups, who would repair the damage done, a type of community service. In doing so, they would learn skills that they could use to obtain an honest income after being discharged. In doing so, they would become accustomed to a scheduled life. In doing so, they'd be able to pick themselves up on their own merits after they get kicked out of subsidized accomodation that their community had previously funded.
A community has to learn to take care of its own. I would welcome less government involvement in trying to solve these overly complicated problems rather than spending money on solutions that have had no worthwhile effects. The movements for enhancing cross-community cooperation would be part of the way forward.