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Sam Wilks
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Fences, Cameras, Canines and Common Sense
So, the next time an external training organisation, a board member or public administrator suggests a workshop on “inclusive safety environments,” ask them if the fence is intact, the cameras are monitored, and whether anyone on the team can respond to a threat faster than an online complaint.
Because while they’re focused on feelings, some of us are focused on facts.
And the fact is, fences, cameras, canines, and common sense work.

Sam Wilks
May 203 min read


From Vagrancy to Violence, Why Cleaning the Streets Reduces More Than Litter
It’s no accident that the most successful suburban renewal projects around the world start not with speeches, but with sanitation. Not with community roundtables, but with cleanups, evictions, enforcement, and order. There is no safe path to rehabilitation that runs through public lawlessness. There is no justice in allowing chaos to fester for the sake of optics.

Sam Wilks
May 193 min read


Security Isn’t Social Work
Criminals, addicts, and repeat offenders don’t pause mid-assault to assess your trauma-informed posture. They respond to certainty of consequence, not empathy. They back down when they see resistance, not understanding. And they escalate when they sense hesitation, especially hesitation wrapped in bureaucratic self-doubt.

Sam Wilks
May 185 min read


Zero Tolerance, Not Zero Action
Zero tolerance is not about authoritarianism. It’s about clarity. It communicates to every potential offender, this space is protected, not neglected. It empowers the security guard to act. It tells the public, “We won’t wait until someone bleeds before we intervene.”

Sam Wilks
May 174 min read


Deadbolts Over Diversity Seminars
This is not a call to cruelty. It’s a call to clarity. If you want less theft, secure the perimeter. If you want fewer intrusions, increase resistance. If you want to protect your people, invest in tools, not theories. It is better to have a well-locked building than a well-worded policy.
Because when the burglar tests the door, he’s not asking what you believe. He’s asking what you built to stop him.

Sam Wilks
May 163 min read


Criminals Choose Easy Victims, Stop Being One
And for those who think this mindset is too harsh, too judgemental, or too “unfair,” ask yourself this, do you want to win the moral argument with a knife-wielding addict? Or do you want to make it home to your family?
Because criminals don’t argue with your philosophy. They don’t respect your values. They don’t care what’s on your social media profile. They care about whether you’ll fight back. Or better yet, whether you’re just not worth the trouble.
So, stop being th

Sam Wilks
May 153 min read


Why Soft Targets Stay Soft, Unarmed Sites Are Invitations, Not Operations
Virtue doesn’t save lives. Preparation does. Offenders do not fear intentions. They fear consequences. And when a site broadcasts that it will not respond with force under any circumstance, it ceases to be a deterrent. It becomes an invitation.

Sam Wilks
May 145 min read


The Fence Stops the Thief, Designing Physical Environments That Deter Criminals
If you want to reduce crime, don’t start with a theory. Start with the blueprint. Security begins where vulnerability ends, at the edge. And in every environment, the edge is defined by a decision, do we welcome protection, or do we pretend everyone is already safe?

Sam Wilks
May 134 min read


The Broken Windows Still Aren’t Fixed
Because if you don't fix the broken windows, soon enough, you’ll be dodging bricks, and the NT has learnt, the hard way, the criminals are carrying knives.

Sam Wilks
May 124 min read


The Myth of the Watchtower
The Northern Territory’s justice reformers, the virtue signallers, activists, bureaucrats, and well-meaning progressives, have seized upon Panopticism like it’s a magic trick. They love its surface appeal, no batons, no boots, no cells. Just cameras, ankle bracelets, data dashboards, and moral superiority.

Sam Wilks
May 116 min read


Profiling Isn’t Prejudice, It’s Pattern Recognition That Saves Lives
Let’s stop pretending that pattern recognition is inherently unjust. What’s unjust is letting ideology override safety.

Sam Wilks
May 114 min read


No Bail, More Jail, The Data Behind Holding Repeat Offenders Before Trial
From a security standpoint, the pattern is predictable, fewer conditions, more crime, less supervision, more escalation.

Sam Wilks
May 104 min read


Crime Drops When Consequences Rise
The rapist that gets immediately released on bail, quite predictably offends again.

Sam Wilks
May 103 min read


Economic Policies for a Resilient NT
There is nothing moral about destroying incentives to work, invest, or create value.

Sam Wilks
Apr 273 min read


Can Canberra Help Restore Safety in NT Communities?
The idea that Federal legislation can override local judicial leniency is not without precedent. The Northern Territory is not a state. It is a legislative child of Canberra, and Canberra has acted before, during the Intervention, with alcohol bans, and through court-mandated reforms to sentencing.

Sam Wilks
Apr 266 min read


Modern Solutions Rooted in Timeless Ideas
Reform doesn’t require reinvention. It requires the courage to apply timeless truths in modern ways.

Sam Wilks
Apr 263 min read


Will Federal Policies Tackle Rising NT Crime Rates or Just Fund More Excuses?
Crime in the NT is not a mystery, it is the consequence of policies that reward excuses, punish self-defence, and defer to unelected legal elites.

Sam Wilks
Apr 256 min read


tHE gUILTY jUDGE
A man of seventy-one stood tall, A simple life, a steady call. A hand to hold, a path he made, A quiet home, a love well-laid. Fifty-one...

Sam Wilks
Apr 251 min read


Community First
National governments should provide guardrails, not handcuffs.

Sam Wilks
Apr 253 min read


A Blueprint for Change
This is not a call for perfection. It is a call for courage, the courage to speak plainly, act decisively, and govern with the people, not above them. If the Territory is to rise, it will be led not by those who pander, but by those who perform.

Sam Wilks
Apr 243 min read
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