Possible Solution
Enforce all of our laws. The primary purpose is to bring the ramifications of each law into the home of the average citizen. An informed populace is a necessary step to provide the balance of power a democracy ought to have. If the nation agrees with the purpose and the effect (in all likelihood only the effect will ultimately matter), then there is no need for civil unrest regarding that issue. Conversely, if there is public dissent, then it is up to the people to pressure the government into a change of policy. A democracy depends upon the consent of a nation, and the government ought to deserve the consent with open policy rather than assume the consent from a relatively silent ambivalent nation.
Practicality
When applying the above solution to our simple examples, opponents will indubitably argue impracticability. Conceding that perfect enforcement is impracticable - although with the advances of privacy infringing technology (e.g. cameras, satellites, biological scanning, etc.) it is an ever approaching reality - there is no argument that enforcement cannot be increased. We need not even go into covert methods of enforcement. Simply put, every time a law is broken in front of an officer of the law, it ought to be enforced. Violations, especially the low-penalty ones used above occur all of the time. Only through actual enforcement will the full power of the government's restrictions and ability to restrict register with the ordinary citizen.
placing traffic cameras on lights, and later in public areas like the cameras in Britain.
The gov can enforce the law as strictly as it wants and just having the law there is a statement of power and control. does a complaint against the law make the gov enforce it more stringently? |