"Crime and bad lives are the measure of a State's failure, all crime in the end is the crime of the community"
About this Quote
The subtext is a redistribution of guilt. When he insists that "all crime in the end is the crime of the community", he's not denying agency so much as refusing the comforting fantasy that bad outcomes are neatly quarantined inside bad people. Communities design the conditions that make certain choices feel normal, necessary, or inevitable: housing, work, schooling, policing, public health. If those systems are brutal, absent, or rigged, "criminality" becomes one of the predictable outputs.
The rhetorical move is also strategic: it yokes empathy to accountability. Wells doesn't ask you to romanticize the offender; he asks you to see the offender as evidence. In a Britain jolted by industrial inequality and anxious about social unrest, this is a political argument disguised as moral arithmetic: a modern state can't claim legitimacy while outsourcing its failures onto the desperate and calling it justice.
Quote Details
| Topic | Justice |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: A Modern Utopia (H.G. Wells, 1905)
Evidence: Crime and bad lives are the measure of a State's failure, all crime in the end is the crime of the community. Even for murder Utopia will not, I think, kill. (Chapter the Fifth , “Failure in a Modern Utopia” (exact page varies by edition)). This sentence appears verbatim in H. G. Wells’s own text in *A Modern Utopia* (1905), in Chapter the Fifth (“Failure in a Modern Utopia”). Project Gutenberg’s HTML edition contains it at line ~858 of the file view, but Gutenberg does not preserve the printed page number. Contemporary bibliographic records note that *A Modern Utopia* was first printed serially in *The Fortnightly Review* (Oct 1904–Apr 1905) before book publication in 1905, meaning the ‘first appearance’ may be in that serial run; however, I did not retrieve the original *Fortnightly Review* installment pages to identify the earliest specific issue/page where this line first appeared. Other candidates (1) Justice as a Basic Human Need (Antony James William Taylor, 2006) compilation95.0% ... Crime and bad lives are the measure of a State's failure , all crime in the end is the crime of the community - A... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Wells, H.G. (2026, February 12). Crime and bad lives are the measure of a State's failure, all crime in the end is the crime of the community. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/crime-and-bad-lives-are-the-measure-of-a-states-23642/
Chicago Style
Wells, H.G. "Crime and bad lives are the measure of a State's failure, all crime in the end is the crime of the community." FixQuotes. February 12, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/crime-and-bad-lives-are-the-measure-of-a-states-23642/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Crime and bad lives are the measure of a State's failure, all crime in the end is the crime of the community." FixQuotes, 12 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/crime-and-bad-lives-are-the-measure-of-a-states-23642/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.










