There has been an argument regarding an issue of whether laws really change people’s behavior or not. Some people maintain that laws cannot control people’s behavior because they think it does not matter if people do not know. From my perspective, however, organized laws have controlled people to follow the laws. There are two reasons to support the idea; not to pay fine and not to go to a jail.
First of all, paying fine frighten people to crime sins. A lot of people have worried about costing money for fine. For example, my mother always checks a camera which spies people who commit car speed. This made my mom not to make speed enough to commit traffic rules. Another circumstance is that she does not park at illegal parking lines because it takes a lot of cost of fine! Statistically, since a government give fine to people who commit sins, the rate of crime has decreased. Because of those reason, fine of law have changed people to keep the laws.
Second, people are afraid to go jail make them keep the law. Usually, people who experience going a jail know that it is terrible to live there, so they turn their mind and decide never committing sins. Public statistic shows that people who already went to a jail dramatically lose their mind to do wrong things. If we do not go a jail, even when we do bad things, we will do not care about how it is bad and keep do the things. Therefore, going a jail could help us to erase our mind to commit sins.
In conclusion, many governments enact laws to make health society, and those efforts have given better quality of lives for people. The more the governments make rules for preventing crime rate, the more the rate will be declined for they recognize that to commit crimes will bring responsibility that they did not want to go through.