The author's attitude towards crime is that
A. punishment must be severe in order to prevent crime:
B. the offenders must be Warned first of all.
C. those playing with drugs must be told that they might be caught by the police.
D. an excuse should not be found for the youngsters' bad behavior.
According to the passage, the following facts are true EXCEPT
A. that the American public are now mainly concerned with their own risk.
B. that Americans realize that AIDS has a powerful impact on their society.
C. that homosexuals run a higher risk of catching AIDS.
D. that drug addicts are more likely to contract AIDS.
As parents, you are not alone in your efforts to form. character. Organizations such as the Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts teach accountability and strengthen it with pressure of equals. Churches are also strong helpers.
I remember clearly an event from my childhood. In our church's Sunday school playroom was a set of little lead cowboys and Indians. One day, I took one of them home, and that night my brother saw me playing with it. "I know where you got that," he said. "You stole it from the church."
Stole it! From the church! Those words hit me like a thunderbolt. The anger of God, my mother's anger, the scorn of the world rose up like a terrifying wave in my mind. I ran a mile and a half to return the figure and all the way back home, where my mother put me to bed with a couple of beats for "cattin around" (到处乱跑着寻乐). I never told her why I had left the house; I was too ashamed. Shame led straight to accountability, and I never again took anything that wasn't mine.
What about teachers? To them I'd say: your classroom is a small society. Don't excuse bad behavior. Get students to impose standards upon one another, and work to persuade the school administration to become firmer about discipline.
I've heard of high schools where the first time a student is caught with drugs, he's warned; the second time, he may be kept from school temporarily; the third, possibly driven away. To the principals of such schools I would say, "Why not suspend students the first time?" And I would quote a religious leader's words: "Punish severely the first offender, for in him lies the greatest hope of reform."
Finally, a wise teacher might tell a high-school class: "If you choose to play with drags, the police may never catch you. But your body is responsible to the laws of chemistry and biology."
What about law enforcement? If I could say just one thing to the designers of that system, it would be: restore fair, swift, sure punishment 'as one of the key supporters of accountability. There is nothing unreasonable about just punishment, but you'd never know it from watching our law carried out today. Criminals don't fear the law, because in most Cases its punishment is so slow and weakened that any preventing effect is lost.
Which of the following is NOT hue according to the author?
A. Parents are very important in helping form. the children's character.
B. One can have more than one way to shape character.
C. Punishment should be carded out quickly.
D. The author ran a mile and a half to avoid the shower of scoldings.