To punish
Answer: "Read the riot act" is not punishment per se, but explaining (often loudly!) what the infraction is and what the consequences will be if the problem doesn't stop. It's the step before punishment.
The idiom "read the riot act" means to issue a stern warning or reprimand to someone, usually in a forceful or direct manner. It comes from a historical practice where a formal proclamation known as the Riot Act was read aloud to disperse unruly crowds or protests.
There was a literal Riot Act in England up until fairly recently. This phrase has come to mean anything you say to reprimand rowdy people and try to get them to quiet down.
I don't remember the details, but in 18th or 19th century England if a crowd was considered unruly by the authorities someone would actually read the crowd the anti-riot law. Sounds sort of like reading Miranda rights to a group.
cooperative
The phrase "read the riot act" originates from the Riot Act of 1714 in England, which was enacted to empower authorities to disperse groups of twelve or more people deemed to be causing a disturbance. When the act was read aloud, it gave rioters a legal warning to disperse or face consequences. The act was officially repealed in 1973, but the phrase has since evolved into a general expression for reprimanding or warning someone about their behavior.
if you read the book, i bet you wold find it.
Get real: face reality, think and act in a serious fashion
Keep an idea in ones head to act on it later.
The cast of The Riot Act - 2012 includes: Rachele Rapisardi
who issued the declartory act
because it caught shays
behave badly...