Normal view
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New York Times World News
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Police in Australia Were Warned of Terror Risk Before Bondi Attack, Report Says
A Jewish security group told police an attack on the community was “likely” because of heightened antisemitism, days before December’s mass shooting in Sydney.
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Malay Mail - All
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Stop nihilism from making its way to crime — Haezreena Begum Abdul Hamid
APRIL 27 — We usually explain crime in familiar ways such as poverty, opportunity, peer pressure. But there is a deeper issue we are not talking about enough: what happens when people stop believing that anything matters.This is where nihilism becomes important.Nihilism is not just a philosophical idea. It reflects a condition where meaning, value, and moral limits begin to fade. When people no longer see life as valuable or rules as binding, the internal barrier
Stop nihilism from making its way to crime — Haezreena Begum Abdul Hamid
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APRIL 27 — We usually explain crime in familiar ways such as poverty, opportunity, peer pressure. But there is a deeper issue we are not talking about enough: what happens when people stop believing that anything matters.
This is where nihilism becomes important.
Nihilism is not just a philosophical idea. It reflects a condition where meaning, value, and moral limits begin to fade. When people no longer see life as valuable or rules as binding, the internal barriers that prevent harm weaken. Crime does not just become easier to commit; it becomes easier to justify.
We are already seeing this in practice. In scams, victims are reduced to numbers. Retirees losing their life savings to phone scams, or young Malaysians recruited as “account mules”, moving illicit funds without fully understanding the consequences. The harm is real, but for the offender, it feels distant and impersonal. In violent crimes, the level of harm often goes far beyond what the situation calls for. For example, snatch thefts that escalate into serious injury or death, road rage incidents turning fatal over minor disagreements, or assaults where the violence continues even after the victim is no longer a threat.
These are not always calculated acts; they often reflect a deeper detachment from the value of human life. In some cases of extremism, violence is not only strategic but also expressive. The Christchurch mosque shootings, for example, were carried out in a highly performative way, livestreamed to maximise visibility and impact, suggesting a desire not just to achieve an ideological goal, but to assert presence and significance in a way that forces the world to pay attention.
This is not about offenders consciously embracing nihilism. It is about a gradual shift. Disconnection, frustration, and loss of purpose can slowly erode how individuals see consequences, responsibility, and even other people. By the time crime occurs, the damage has already been done.
For the Royal Malaysia Police, this raises a critical challenge. Policing cannot rely only on reacting to offences or identifying clear threats. The real issue often begins earlier with disengagement, indifference, and a growing detachment from social norms.
The digital environment makes this worse. Violence, fraud, and exploitation are constantly visible online. Over time, this normalises harm and dulls emotional response. The line between watching and doing becomes thinner.
At the same time, some individuals turn to crime not because they believe in something, but because they believe in nothing. Offending becomes a way to assert control, visibility, or even existence. This is why some crimes feel senseless: they are not driven by gain alone, but by disconnection.
The law plays its role by drawing firm boundaries. Courts make it clear that responsibility does not disappear simply because someone feels detached or lost. But law operates after harm has occurred.
If nihilism is part of the pathway to crime, then prevention must go deeper. It must address meaning, belonging, and connection, not just behaviour.
Because when nothing matters, crime is no longer a big step. It becomes a small one.
* The author is a Criminologist and Senior Lecturer at the Faculty of Law, Universiti Malaya, and may be reached at haezreena@um.edu.my
** This is the personal opinion of the writer or publication and does not necessarily represent the views of Malay Mail.
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National Post Canada
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Racial discrimination factors into reducing sentence for double shooting in Porsche
An Ontario judge whittled 13 months off a 14-year sentence for a man who shot two people due to the Muslim shooter's youth, racial discrimination he experienced growing up in Toronto, and harsh pretrial jail conditions. Read More
Racial discrimination factors into reducing sentence for double shooting in Porsche
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New York Times World News
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Teotihuacán Gunman Had Materials About U.S. Mass Shooting, Officials Say
The gunman who killed a Canadian tourist and wounded 13 other people at the Teotihuacán pyramids had materials in his backpack referencing a 1999 mass shooting in the United States, Mexican officials said.
Teotihuacán Gunman Had Materials About U.S. Mass Shooting, Officials Say
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The Guardian World news
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Acting ICE director Todd Lyons will step down at the end of May, says DHS
Lyons, who led agency since March 2025, to resign after turbulent year carrying out Trump’s immigration agendaTodd Lyons, the acting director of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), is stepping down after a turbulent year carrying out Donald Trump’s immigration agenda.Lyons, who has been leading the agency since March 2025, will resign at the end of May and move to the private sector, Markwayne Mullin, the Department of Homeland Security secretary, said in a statement on Thursday. Cont
Acting ICE director Todd Lyons will step down at the end of May, says DHS
Lyons, who led agency since March 2025, to resign after turbulent year carrying out Trump’s immigration agenda
Todd Lyons, the acting director of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), is stepping down after a turbulent year carrying out Donald Trump’s immigration agenda.
Lyons, who has been leading the agency since March 2025, will resign at the end of May and move to the private sector, Markwayne Mullin, the Department of Homeland Security secretary, said in a statement on Thursday.
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© Photograph: Michael Brochstein/ZUMA Press Wire/Shutterstock

© Photograph: Michael Brochstein/ZUMA Press Wire/Shutterstock

© Photograph: Michael Brochstein/ZUMA Press Wire/Shutterstock