There are moments when a society reveals just how far it has fallen. This is one of them. According to figures from Kent Police, a one-year-old baby girl was recorded as a crime suspect after allegedly causing a minor injury to another child. The same figures included 6 two-year-olds, 11 three-year-olds, and 20 four-year-olds. In what was once the nation that gave the world Magna Carta and the foundations of common law, police are now compiling crime statistics on babies.
Kent Police defended the practice by explaining that they want to understand what causes children to become involved in crime. We are not talking about teenagers. We are not talking about young adults. We are talking about toddlers and infants who, much like the Kent Police, have not yet developed the cognitive skills for advanced thought.
Welcome to the new reality where every incident from birth to death must be logged, categorized, measured, and entered into a database. Governments continue to build systems that collect more information while common sense quietly disappears. Instead of concentrating on violent crime, organized gangs, terrorism, or the growing social tensions facing Britain, officials are recording playground disputes involving children who are not even old enough to attend school.
So even babies are not immune to the two-tiered justice system. The authorities seem perfectly capable of recording a one-year-old baby as a crime suspect, yet when serious crimes involving violent offenders make national headlines, the public is often told there is insufficient evidence, investigations take years, or victims are ignored until it is too late. People look at cases like Henry Nowak who was arrested for racism after a migrant stabbed him to death. Dangerous individuals are permitted to terrorize the public, and the police are warned to turn a blind eye. Police resources are being used to classify toddlers as suspects when there are hundreds, if not thousands, of open rape cases against one particular subset of the population.

That is why confidence in government is collapsing. The average citizen cannot understand how a government can find the time to build police records on babies while repeatedly failing to address the crimes that genuinely threaten public safety. It is impossible to take the British legal system seriously, let alone maintain the belief that the law is there for the benefit of society.
Britain has become obsessed with monitoring, tracking, and documenting everything. Everyone, including your baby, mother, and grandmother, is considered a criminal. They will create whatever evidence they believe they need. Thousands are arrested over online communications, surveillance powers continue to expand, and government agencies increasingly treat ordinary citizens as subjects to be managed rather than people to be served. Recording toddlers as crime suspects may seem ridiculous, but it is simply another symptom of a system that has lost all sense of proportion.
The problem is the mindset that believes a one-year-old belongs in a police database. Every empire eventually reaches a stage where bureaucracy expands beyond reason. When police are officially recording babies as criminal suspects, perhaps it is time to ask whether the system itself has become the absurdity.
