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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/4/2007 5:14:50 PM   
caitlyn


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My guess is that I know more about Roman history, than you do about sarcasm.
 
That said, I'm considerably more well-versed with Byzantine and Levantine history.

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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/4/2007 5:22:15 PM   
caitlyn


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This is an honest question DG, and not meant to call you out.
 
Do you have no thought of a society that is just transparent, and doesn't see the need to single out one group over the other ... and more to the point, doesn't see the need to put people in groups at all?
 
Would you recognize, that to have this sort of society, you will need two factors, a) removal of the need for people to place others into groups, b) removal of the need for people to place themselves in groups?

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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/4/2007 5:40:35 PM   
queencaliph


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Public Law #103-322A, a 1994 federal law, defines a hate crime as:
"a crime in which the defendant intentionally selects a victim, or in the case of a property crime, the property that is the object of the crime, because of the actual or perceived race, color, religion, national origin, ethnicity, gender, disability, or sexual orientation of any person."
 
I'm just wondering.....why did this thread turn almost completely into a "black vs white" issue?  Hate crimes can be targeted at religious bias (jewish), ethnicity/national origin (latino), gender (women), disability (mental or physical), and sexual orientation (homosexual/transgender).    Considering the different classes protected under this laws it is interesting that most people are only concernced with the part that protects against race related crimes.  I mean, most would not argue that if someone beat up a person in a wheelchair simply because he was in a wheelchair then that person DOES deserve a stiffer penalty.  (and it does happen; 55 disability related hate crimes occurred in 2005. (check fbi stats)  And no one seems to want to touch the staggering number of homosexual & trans-gender motivated murders that have occurred and still are occurring.  

My stand is that the current legislation is flawed, but some type of legislation directly addressing these heinous acts should be in place. 

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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/4/2007 5:44:22 PM   
uwinceismile


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for the record, i never mentioned any color but my own,,,aside from the cric rock jokes ;)
having said that, my best friend was in a wheel chair from age 17, till 2 yrs ago when he died....and if he were ever attacked for any reason, i would of hoped the people would of been procecuted for attcking my friend,,,not for attacking my friend in the wheel chair

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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/4/2007 5:46:37 PM   
domiguy


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quote:

ORIGINAL: zerosignal


Confirmation bias leads these white liberals to latch onto the small scraps of evidence in support of their worldview whenever they can find some, such as violent crimes against minority groups.  .


http://www.fbi.gov/ucr/ucr.htm
Hate Crime Statistics, 2005, includes the following information:
  • An analysis of the 7,160 single-bias incidents by bias motivation revealed that 54.7 percent were motivated by a racial bias, 17.1 percent were triggered by a religious bias, 14.2 percent were motivated by a sexual-orientation bias, and 13.2 percent of the incidents were motivated by an ethnicity/national origin bias. Nearly 1 percent (0.7) involved bias against a disability.
  • There were 5,190 hate crime offenses classified as crimes against persons in 2005. Intimidations accounted for 48.9 percent, simple assaults for 30.2 percent, and aggravated assaults for 20.5 percent. Six murders as well as 3 forcible rapes were reported as hate crimes.
  • Of the 3,109 hate crime offenses classified as crimes against property, 53.6 percent were directed at individuals, 9.8 percent were against businesses or financial institutions, 8.9 percent were against government, and 6.8 percent were against religious organizations. The remaining 20.9 percent were directed at other, multiple, or unknown victim types. Damage/destruction/vandalism was the most frequently reported crime against property, accounting for 81.3 percent of the total.
  • Of the 6,804 known offenders reported in 2005, 60.5 percent were white, and 19.9 percent were black. The race was unknown for 12.3 percent, and other races accounted for the remaining known offenders.

Small scraps of evidence.....But as an attorney I'm sure you see the difference between an adult who vandalizes a mosque out of hate or one who tears up the neighbors lawn joy riding in their car?

Same crime same time.  Are you sure you are an attorney?

< Message edited by domiguy -- 7/4/2007 5:47:52 PM >


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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/4/2007 5:48:44 PM   
CrimsonMoan


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easily answered queen because people love making it a black/white thing. it can happen to anyone and hell the guy up here in maine that tossed a pig's head in a mosque was lucky the DA didn't attach the hate crime statue to what he did. As for the GLBT community until it happens to someone who in the limelight it is never gonna get addressed like it should unfortunately. 

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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/4/2007 6:07:24 PM   
domiguy


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quote:

ORIGINAL: caitlyn

This is an honest question DG, and not meant to call you out.
 
Do you have no thought of a society that is just transparent, and doesn't see the need to single out one group over the other ... and more to the point, doesn't see the need to put people in groups at all?
 
Would you recognize, that to have this sort of society, you will need two factors, a) removal of the need for people to place others into groups, b) removal of the need for people to place themselves in groups?


Caitlyn I agree with you wholeheartedly.....There is an ideal and then there is reality.  It would be fucking wonderful if we all hate was removed and that everyone had their same shot at the piece of the pie.  Wouldn't it be something if folks thought that it was no longer necessary to feel the need to quarantine themselves off from one another....There are few to places that work like this....And it is a sad reminder as to have far we have come but how much more still needs to be achieved.

This is simply a topic on hate crimes ....Do they occur? Absolutely....I guess the question posed is should we treat a hate crime just like any other.....My answer is a resounding ..NO!

We live in a society where we are supposed to applaud our diversity and view it as an asset instead of a liability....Most folks just want an equal playing field...That's it.  We are not supposed to be tolerant to the idea that I will hate or harm or inhibit someone or destroy their belongings based on things as race, sexual preference or being handicapped etc......So now we have "hate laws."

People chime in about how the civil rights movement put an end to racism and inequality....That suddenly we all just miraculously started to get along....Then comes 9/11 and it begins all over....It is a two way street...Hate doesn't flow solely in one direction....these laws are in place as a reminder as to how we should simply conduct ourselves.

If over 7,000 crimes are reported imagine the number that are not. It is not a epidemic....they are more important problems facing this country....this is just one topic I have defended my views...I think there is nothing uglier than hate...And those who use it to lash out and cause harm to another I feel deserve a more strenuous punishment.

Is that really so difficult to understand?



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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/4/2007 6:13:12 PM   
domiguy


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quote:

ORIGINAL: queencaliph

Public Law #103-322A, a 1994 federal law, defines a hate crime as:
"a crime in which the defendant intentionally selects a victim, or in the case of a property crime, the property that is the object of the crime, because of the actual or perceived race, color, religion, national origin, ethnicity, gender, disability, or sexual orientation of any person."
 
I'm just wondering.....why did this thread turn almost completely into a "black vs white" issue?  Hate crimes can be targeted at religious bias (jewish), ethnicity/national origin (latino), gender (women), disability (mental or physical), and sexual orientation (homosexual/transgender).    Considering the different classes protected under this laws it is interesting that most people are only concernced with the part that protects against race related crimes.  I mean, most would not argue that if someone beat up a person in a wheelchair simply because he was in a wheelchair then that person DOES deserve a stiffer penalty.  (and it does happen; 55 disability related hate crimes occurred in 2005. (check fbi stats)  And no one seems to want to touch the staggering number of homosexual & trans-gender motivated murders that have occurred and still are occurring.  

My stand is that the current legislation is flawed, but some type of legislation directly addressing these heinous acts should be in place. 


It always boils down to black vs white....I think I'm a bit guilty in energizing the conversation......

Nothing is perfect....But I, like you, think that there should be zero tolerance for hate crimes....I don't understand the logic to argue to the contrary....And the laws in place prior to hate crimes were simply not adequate to address and punish the people who commit these "heinous acts."

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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/4/2007 6:15:22 PM   
SubinMaine


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i agree with CM...i posted an issue that i had personal, first hand, witness knowledge of, never once indicated the race of the other gentleman (and did, in fact call the man a gentleman) and it was automatically assumed by others that this gentleman was African American...i still haven't revealed his race, and won't, because it's not necessary to the argument.

There is just as much hate related crime against other groups that don't fall into "racial" labels...it's ALL wrong, and i don't think anyone here would contest that fact.  But labeling ALL crime where there is a difference of race, gender, religious preference or sexual orientation as a "hate" crime is presumptuous....if there's underlying proof it was hate motivated, again, i say let that be the deciding factor...but just because a hispanic citizen and an asian citizen get into a fist fight (notice, i left black/white out of it), doesn't mean the fight is racially motivated...could be one or the other was just having a bad frigign' day


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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/4/2007 6:17:08 PM   
Sinergy


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quote:

ORIGINAL: caitlyn

quote:

ORIGINAL: Sinergy
... I hope you meant it tongue in cheek.


Ya think?


(Whew)

As seldom as possible.

Sinergy

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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/4/2007 6:27:47 PM   
caitlyn


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Now THAT was a funny response!!!

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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/4/2007 6:37:31 PM   
domiguy


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quote:

ORIGINAL: SubinMaine

i agree with CM...i posted an issue that i had personal, first hand, witness knowledge of, never once indicated the race of the other gentleman (and did, in fact call the man a gentleman) and it was automatically assumed by others that this gentleman was African American...i still haven't revealed his race, and won't, because it's not necessary to the argument.

There is just as much hate related crime against other groups that don't fall into "racial" labels...it's ALL wrong, and i don't think anyone here would contest that fact.  But labeling ALL crime where there is a difference of race, gender, religious preference or sexual orientation as a "hate" crime is presumptuous....if there's underlying proof it was hate motivated, again, i say let that be the deciding factor...but just because a hispanic citizen and an asian citizen get into a fist fight (notice, i left black/white out of it), doesn't mean the fight is racially motivated...could be one or the other was just having a bad frigign' day



Wow....Are you capable of understanding what a hate crime is?  it is not always a hate crime if the people involved have no animosity towards each other based solely upon race.....There  was a case that I googled where I believe a white couple was murdered and raped after being car jacked by three black guys and one woman....It was initially looked at as a hate crime....But since the people in question had white friends and even dated inter racially there was no apparent motivation for the crime other than the murdered couple were simply at the wrong place at the wrong time. It was found not to be a crime where hate was the motivation for the action.

That is the difference....

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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/4/2007 6:42:34 PM   
uwinceismile


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exactly! there is no difference,,the charges should be the same

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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/4/2007 6:47:43 PM   
SubinMaine


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quote:

ORIGINAL: domiguy

quote:

ORIGINAL: SubinMaine

i agree with CM...i posted an issue that i had personal, first hand, witness knowledge of, never once indicated the race of the other gentleman (and did, in fact call the man a gentleman) and it was automatically assumed by others that this gentleman was African American...i still haven't revealed his race, and won't, because it's not necessary to the argument.

There is just as much hate related crime against other groups that don't fall into "racial" labels...it's ALL wrong, and i don't think anyone here would contest that fact.  But labeling ALL crime where there is a difference of race, gender, religious preference or sexual orientation as a "hate" crime is presumptuous....if there's underlying proof it was hate motivated, again, i say let that be the deciding factor...but just because a hispanic citizen and an asian citizen get into a fist fight (notice, i left black/white out of it), doesn't mean the fight is racially motivated...could be one or the other was just having a bad frigign' day



Wow....Are you capable of understanding what a hate crime is?  it is not always a hate crime if the people involved have no animosity towards each other based solely upon race.....There  was a case that I googled where I believe a white couple was murdered and raped after being car jacked by three black guys and one woman....It was initially looked at as a hate crime....But since the people in question had white friends and even dated inter racially there was no apparent motivation for the crime other than the murdered couple were simply at the wrong place at the wrong time. It was found not to be a crime where hate was the motivation for the action.

That is the difference....


You know, you really are a pompous ass.  If you fail to see how i see it, that's all fine and well, but do not decree my feelings on a subject as "irrelevant" because they do not fall in line with yours.  The original post was: is it important to add 10 yrs to someones sentence because they say something during the act of a crime? or because the crime was perpertrated against another race?...i posted my own personal experience and was called a "liar" because the all mighty domiguy couldn't verify it by googling it up.  my post was directly related to the orignal question.

There was a point in my last post.  If you cannot see it, the flaw is yours, not mine.

< Message edited by SubinMaine -- 7/4/2007 6:49:06 PM >


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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/4/2007 6:53:02 PM   
domiguy


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quote:

ORIGINAL: uwinceismile

for the record, i never mentioned any color but my own,,,aside from the cric rock jokes ;)
having said that, my best friend was in a wheel chair from age 17, till 2 yrs ago when he died....and if he were ever attacked for any reason, i would of hoped the people would of been procecuted for attcking my friend,,,not for attacking my friend in the wheel chair


So why was your friend an asshole?  What if they simply attacked your friend for no other reason than he was handicapped?...You would feel no additional outrage at learning the reason your friend was attacked? You would say to the prosecutor..."No difference between a bar room disagreement and what happened to my friend ...Please don't treat this as a hate crime...My friend who is hospitalized would have wanted it this way."

I would be fucking pissed off....I would want every possible crime thrown at these dirt bags that would allow them to think long and hard, passing the years in prison, about what in the fuck is wrong with their brains to even to begin to think along those lines that would cause them to attack my handicapped friend.

I'm sorry about the loss of your friend...I'm not trying to sound callous to the fact that he passed away.

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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/4/2007 6:57:41 PM   
domiguy


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quote:

ORIGINAL: SubinMaine

quote:

ORIGINAL: domiguy

quote:

ORIGINAL: SubinMaine

i agree with CM...i posted an issue that i had personal, first hand, witness knowledge of, never once indicated the race of the other gentleman (and did, in fact call the man a gentleman) and it was automatically assumed by others that this gentleman was African American...i still haven't revealed his race, and won't, because it's not necessary to the argument.

There is just as much hate related crime against other groups that don't fall into "racial" labels...it's ALL wrong, and i don't think anyone here would contest that fact.  But labeling ALL crime where there is a difference of race, gender, religious preference or sexual orientation as a "hate" crime is presumptuous....if there's underlying proof it was hate motivated, again, i say let that be the deciding factor...but just because a hispanic citizen and an asian citizen get into a fist fight (notice, i left black/white out of it), doesn't mean the fight is racially motivated...could be one or the other was just having a bad frigign' day



Wow....Are you capable of understanding what a hate crime is?  it is not always a hate crime if the people involved have no animosity towards each other based solely upon race.....There  was a case that I googled where I believe a white couple was murdered and raped after being car jacked by three black guys and one woman....It was initially looked at as a hate crime....But since the people in question had white friends and even dated inter racially there was no apparent motivation for the crime other than the murdered couple were simply at the wrong place at the wrong time. It was found not to be a crime where hate was the motivation for the action.

That is the difference....


You know, you really are a pompous ass.  If you fail to see how i see it, that's all fine and well, but do not decree my feelings on a subject as "irrelevant" because they do not fall in line with yours.  The original post was: is it important to add 10 yrs to someones sentence because they say something during the act of a crime? or because the crime was perpertrated against another race?...i posted my own personal experience and was called a "liar" because the all mighty domiguy couldn't verify it by googling it up.  my post was directly related to the orignal question.

There was a point in my last post.  If you cannot see it, the flaw is yours, not mine.


There is no additional crime for someone who does not meet the standard of what a "hate crime" actually is...So there is no additional time involved. 

Sorry you wer incapable of understanding that.

And yes, judging from your posts ....My guess is that you did not give a factual account of what actually transpired in the case of your friend.

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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/4/2007 6:59:27 PM   
uwinceismile


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dg,
i must admit, u are a difficult person to like. ur poststarted off with the question..why was my friend an asshole?
and u end it with...sorry bout the loss of ur friend. dont mean to sound callous.
actually, i am starting to believe that you enjoy sounding callous, and rude,,but figure if u throw a quick...lol.. at the end,,or say sorry,,its all good?
and i posted what i meant,,if he ever got attacked,,id want his attackers procecuted...end of sentence,,doesnt matter what he wanted..this is my thoughts,,not me trying to :sell: my thoughts by saying he shared them.
signed,
whitey

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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/4/2007 7:16:13 PM   
SubinMaine


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quote:

ORIGINAL: domiguy
There is no additional crime for someone who does not meet the standard of what a "hate crime" actually is...So there is no additional time involved. 

Sorry you wer incapable of understanding that.

And yes, judging from your posts ....My guess is that you did not give a factual account of what actually transpired in the case of your friend.


In your opinion, and it is only your opinion.  In my experience, yes, there was addional time involved for a "crime" that was labeled "racially motivated" when it was unquestionable self defense.

Contrary to your little assessment of me, i do, completely understand.  i choose not to agree with you based on my experiences.  You can either accept that, or not.

my account was 100% factual, again, the only thing i did not reveal was the race of the other gentleman and the slur my friend voiced.  Your guess is just that, a guess...an idea not formed on facts and since you were not there to witness it i'm automatically distorting the truth.  Because what happened in this one case falls outside your train of thought on the matter, you feel justified in, yet again, trying to assisinate my character by labeling me a liar.

There was a point in time where i could see some of the points you argued, no matter whether i agreed with it or not but your treatment of others who do not "agree" with you is a clear indicator that in your tiny bubble world, the almighty domiguy will be right or he will belittle and ridicule until others just give up.

Commendable.


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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/4/2007 7:43:24 PM   
domiguy


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quote:

ORIGINAL: SubinMaine

quote:

ORIGINAL: domiguy
There is no additional crime for someone who does not meet the standard of what a "hate crime" actually is...So there is no additional time involved. 

Sorry you were incapable of understanding that.

And yes, judging from your posts ....My guess is that you did not give a factual account of what actually transpired in the case of your friend.


In your opinion, and it is only your opinion.  In my experience, yes, there was addional time involved for a "crime" that was labeled "racially motivated" when it was unquestionable self defense.

Contrary to your little assessment of me, i do, completely understand.  i choose not to agree with you based on my experiences.  You can either accept that, or not.

my account was 100% factual, again, the only thing i did not reveal was the race of the other gentleman and the slur my friend voiced.  Your guess is just that, a guess...an idea not formed on facts and since you were not there to witness it i'm automatically distorting the truth.  Because what happened in this one case falls outside your train of thought on the matter, you feel justified in, yet again, trying to assisinate my character by labeling me a liar.

There was a point in time where i could see some of the points you argued, no matter whether i agreed with it or not but your treatment of others who do not "agree" with you is a clear indicator that in your tiny bubble world, the almighty domiguy will be right or he will belittle and ridicule until others just give up.

Commendable.


.

I have watched you proceed with arguments on other threads...It gets tiresome. If you feel belittled I'm sorry for you....I love a good argument someone who comes to the table and can back what they are saying with some sort of factual evidence...And has the capability of following a conversation as well as a line of thought....

Now whether hate crimes should be on the books I have argued my position....No one said that all crimes against people of different ethnicity should be considered a hate crime and if you were addressing the op's original question on the 129th post of this thread than I stand corrected and I owe you an apology.

And yes, I am a pompous ass...If that makes you feel any better.

And I like my tiny bubble....It is not  my intention to belittle or ridicule you...I have questioned your ability to figure things out....I have repeated my stance on other threads in the hopes that you could follow along....I have not called you names...I love a good debate....I will refrain from taking you up on one in the future....This actually is all my fault for continuing.

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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/4/2007 7:43:38 PM   
zerosignal


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quote:

Since you are an attorney...Is this the argument that you would make in a courtroom defending a white person accused of a hate crime?...That the only reason we could possibly be here is because of "white guilt" and "sheltered white liberals.?"

To quote Belushi "Seven years of college down the drain!"...Are you saying that there are never any crimes that are based sole on race and sexual preference or so few that only white liberals could dare notice? Maybe you should google the numbers, Mr attorney, or have one of your clerks do it for you.

One of the aspects of America is that we are supposed to be tolerant...you know huddled masses and all...So when a crime is committed that is based solely on race...sexual preference..etc....it becomes all the more heinous...And should be dealt with accordingly.

A hate crime is a hate crime...blacks have been charged with hate crimes against whites....the difference is that you will never hear about it in the media because it doesn't wag the dog.

When a crime is committed for no apparent motive other than race...We live in a country that simply will not tolerate such actions and we make it clear by installing the language of hate crimes.

Nothing is perfect....I'm sure there are cases where a person was tried for a hate crime that "hate" was not a motivation for the incident.

Out of curiosity, my uber conservative attorney friend, what exactly are the more "complex realities" of a hate crime.

You can bill me by the hour.
quote:

ORIGINAL: domiguy

quote:

ORIGINAL: zerosignal

In my view, the central cause of racial double-standards enshrined in the law is, ironically, the misguided benevolence of sheltered white liberals.  Having lived and worked in some fairly "diverse" environments in my day, my experience has been that most minorities disapprove of the legal double-standards designed to benefit them such as "hate crime" laws or affirmative action.  The biggest proponents of both of those policies are privileged white liberals who have never had a meaningful interaction with a member of a minority social group in their lives. 

I'm going to take a small bit of rhetorical license at this point and make some generalized assumptions of my own with respect to these white liberals.  From my experiences with them, they seem plagued with "white guilt" over their social station and economic advantages, and commit themselves to crusading for equality to assauge those feelings.  But, like many members of every social group, these white liberals put unwavering faith in simple concepts to avoid having to struggle with more complex realities.  To wit, problems of socioeconomic disparity and historical (not present) institutionalized racism become a nebulous, indistinct conspiracy that lurks around every corner and must be stamped out at all costs.

Confirmation bias leads these white liberals to latch onto the small scraps of evidence in support of their worldview whenever they can find some, such as violent crimes against minority groups.  To liberals struggling with white guilt, these crimes stop being isolated incidents of violence or disorder, and become the very symbol of inequality in this country.  Naturally, such travesties need to be stamped out right away and thus we are left with laws that treat a crime of assault very differently, depending on what social groups the perpetrator and the victim belong to.

Of course, this fits perfectly with the worldview of liberals grappling with white guilt; they are already predisposed to seeing minorities as victims and whites as oppressors.  Such a simplification of social problems leads to the easy solution of giving the "victim" social group extra protections under the law.  And so, to at least answer the question posed in the title, I see hate crimes not as thought policing, but as institutionalizing a distorted view of society.



Since you are an attorney...Is this the argument that you would make in a courtroom defending a white person accused of a hate crime?...That the only reason we could possibly be here is because of "white guilt" and "sheltered white liberals.?" 

To quote Belushi "Seven years of college down the drain!"...Are you saying that there are never any crimes that are based sole on race and sexual preference or so few that only white liberals could dare notice?  Maybe you should google the numbers, Mr attorney, or have one of your clerks do it for you.

One of the aspects of America is that we are supposed to be tolerant...you know huddled masses and all...So when a crime is committed that is based solely on race...sexual preference..etc....it becomes all the more heinous...And should be dealt with accordingly.

A hate crime is a hate crime...blacks have been charged with hate crimes against whites....the difference is that you will never hear about it in the media because it doesn't wag the dog.

When a crime is committed for no apparent motive other than race...We live in a country that simply will not tolerate such actions and we make it clear by installing the language of hate crimes.

Nothing is perfect....I'm sure there are cases where a person was tried for a hate crime that "hate" was not a motivation for the incident.  

Out of curiosity, my uber conservative attorney friend, what exactly are the more "complex realities" of a hate crime.

You can bill me by the hour.



Swing and a miss, my friend.  First of all, you humorously equivocate on the forum we're in right now.  No, this is not a courtroom.  No, these would not be the arguments I would make in that setting.  Were I making a purely legal argument against "hate crime" legislation, I would reference the long-established Equal Protection Jurisprudence in American law which unequivocally states, "The guarantee of equal protection cannot mean one thing when applied to one individual and something else when applied to a person of another color. If both are not accorded the same protection, then it is not equal."  That's Bakke v. Regents of the Univ. of California, by the way.  I'd then follow up with a reference to City of Richmond v. J.A. Construction Co., which identified racial discrimination designed to benefit minorities as a suspect classification subject to strict scrutiny.  Since you insinuate that you're in the know, I guess I don't have to define strict scrutiny for you; I'm sure you can devise some clever red herring response, anyway.  After that, I'd cite Wygant v. Jackson Bd. of Ed. which required a particularized evidentiary showing to justify any racial differentials in affirmative action, and link it to "hate crimes" legislation by analogy, and then distinguish Grutter v. Bollinger by referencing the government's burden to justify racial differentials in each individual case and not pursuant to any blanket policy.  And once I was done with that, I'd quote C.J. Roberts' recent opinion at the end of the most recent SCOTUS term, "The way to stop discrimination on the basis of race is to stop discriminating on the basis of race."   I dare say that would probably be a bit more persuasive than some Belushi quote used in a sad attempt to come off as clever.

However, since we aren't in a courtroom, I was offering my personal experiences with the proponents of hate crimes legislation.  You seem to demand more than that to meet your expectations of intellectual rigor, and I don't have a pop culture quote to respond to yours with, so let me try the following instead. 

You say that America is supposed to be tolerant; you provide rock solid support for this proposition by vaguely referencing a poem by Emma Lazarus.  The problem with that premise, and what follows it, is that there is a hierarchy of principles in American culture, and the Constitution sits at the very top of it (that's why they call it the Supreme Law of the Land; I know Article VI, Clause 2 is no Emma Lazarus poem, but let's at least compromise and call them roughly equally controlling doctrines of legal policy).  Equality before the law is enshrined in the Constitution.  An ideal regarding private human behavior, no matter how noble, desirable, or intuitive, is not.  When a private individual selects a victim for a crime on the basis of race, that is immoral.  When a governmental body institutionalizes special protections in the law for one social group versus another, that is unconstitutional.  The latter outcome is worse than the former.

Put another way, a series of individual discrete wrongs is not as bad as an official system of wrongs bearing the imprimatur of the state.  If an attack on a black person by a white person, or an asian person by a black person, or a Jewish person by a Native American is truly so repellent, increase the penalties for one person attacking another person.  Provide protection from violence to everyone, regardless of social group membership.  To approach the problem any other way carries with it the undeniable implication that some social groups are "special" and deserve extra privileges.  The American Constitution was written to avoid those things.

And that lesson, genius, is free of charge.

(in reply to domiguy)
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