As if laws protects you from that.
At least the normal people will refrain from doing that, for the fear of law. And if someone breaks the law, in most cases the perpetrator will be punished.
But if there is no law, who will punish the criminals?
Normal people refrain from doing that regardless.
Law isn't required to punish those who infringe upon the rights of others.
Not true.
http://www.staff.ncl.ac.uk/daniel.nettle/ernestjonesnettlebateson.pdfPerfectly normal people steal if they think they can get away with it. Its why looting and kidnapping flourishes when the system of law breaks down due to natural disaster or war.
Well... we weren't talking about theft.
...snip...
This is London on 6th August 2011 a few hours after the police let it be known that they would not be punishing property crime. People being attacked in their homes and jumping from burning buildings for their lives.
Stop being naive about our shared humanity. Evolution rewards violent aggressive species and since humans are the top predator species on the planet, violence and aggression are bred into us. Our laws are a way to manage this violence and aggression.
I do see your point. However, the riots on 8/6/11 were not caused by police stating that property crime would not be punished. The precursor to those riots occurred after an unarmed man was shot and killed by London police. After that, there was a fabricated story about police restraining a teenage girl in connection with protests regarding the shooting that ultimately incited the riots and the property crimes which your picture documented.
Furthermore, only
strategic, controlled, and acute displays of violence and aggression are rewarded consistently in our society, imo. Uncontrolled and unprovoked instances of violence and aggression attract only condemnation and unwanted attention to the party committing the acts. This is a way to ensure a coalition is formed against you, concerned only with finding the most effective means of stopping you or containing you. This is far from a reward. In fact, it will only serve to divert one's attention and resources into dealing with a new threat. No matter how powerful, a war on two or more fronts cannot be waged successfully by a party utilizing only brute-force without a guiding, strategic component. As Denzel would say, "This shit is chess, it ain't checkers!"
I think it is the fear and respect that come with witnessing successful, well-developed, strategic "shock-and-awe" displays of power that generate a reward. the obvious 2001 Afghanistan example being excepted, I'm talking about a display more along the lines of the dropping of the first fission bomb on Hiroshima in 1945 and to a lesser extent, Nagasaki. Hiroshima was such an unfathomable display of power that, initially, the Japanese thought it must've been some sort of natural disaster. This reaction took place depsite an overt warning from the U.S. that a device with unrivaled power would be used unless there was unconditional surrender. However, if this stimulus is overused, the novelty is lost and will simply be recorded, not rewarded. If Japan had been bombed 10 more times after offering unconditional surrender after bomb 2, how might our allies have responded to us and what effects would it have now? The use of 2 bombs has generated more than enough modern-day criticism, if not enough to negatively affect our image as a benevolent, executively-misguided superpower.