Best story of the week: To deter the rough element from knocking down people at light-rail stations and taking their iPods, the authorities are considering ... playing Beethoven on the loudspeakers!
Apparently, members of the hooligan community react to Beethoven as if someone blew a freight-truck air horn 6 inches from their heads:
"No! The smoothly rolling melodies, with their sense of inevitable destiny, the muscular orchestration, the paradigm-breaking introduction of a chorus in the final movement -- from what alien world do these some arise? I must flee!"
We assume it's because criminals are so stoopid they cannot linger in an environment that isn't pumping loud, sullen, bass-heavy thunder-junk. But perhaps it's more subtle than that.
Perhaps studies will show Beethoven is so compelling that criminals become confused:
"I was all set to knock the guy out, when suddenly the slow movement from the Seventh comes on. Ruined my timing. It's like that time I was beating up a guy and Debussy came on. You just can't fight to Debussy. You feel like a faun in a forest, caught in a ray of sunlight. I tell you, if they start playing Stravinsky, it's over; the jarring harmonies and unconventional time signatures will make everyone on the platform on their guard."
But, hey: If it works, it works.
This could mean, of course, that people with a home-alarm system can cancel it and keep the classical music station on all day.