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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/4/2007 7:49:13 PM   
uwinceismile


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<<<standing ovation for zerosignal,,,,,

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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/4/2007 8:13:19 PM   
zerosignal


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Oh, and looking over the remainder of the thread, I see you made a second post containing additional arguments against my original proposition.  Sadly I don't think the extra time you spent cleverly googling FBI statistics gives your argument any additional traction.

First, I should point out that you are getting information from a law enforcement agency, an entity whose continued relevance and therefore funding depends on the public and the government believing it's necessary to keep it around with a big budget.  The natural consequence is a motivation to present the most dire portrait of crime possible.  So I wonder how much exaggeration goes into those numbers.

Second, there are subtle nuances to the language of that report that you probably overlooked in your rush to outdo the quality of your previous stroke of brilliance.  Specifically, the word "reported" should stand out like a sore thumb.  A "reported" crime could well be no crime at all.  A "reported" crime requires no evidence, corroboration, or other support beyond the report itself.  Under such a definition, I could up those numbers 600% if I wanted to by reporting a long series of attacks on my home by people calling me honkey and cracka.  I'm sure you can see the problem with using such "reported" crimes as conclusive evidence of anything.

And, moving to the crux of the argument, you quibble with my characterization of "hate crimes" evidence as "scraps."  Assuming arguendo that none of the criticisms of the integrity of the data apply, we're still left with the following:

3,109 "hate crimes" against property in 2005.  10.2 million crimes against property total in the same year.

5,190 "hate crimes" against persons in 2005.  Approximately 1.4 million crimes against persons total in the same year.

7,160 "single-bias incidents" seem dwarfed (scraps, if you will) by comparison to the pattern of crime at large.  And that's using your own evidence.  I imagine the comparison would be even more stark if I used data not obtained from an entity whose funding depends on people seeing it as necessary to save them from crime.

In answer to your first question, no I don't see a difference between someone attacking a mosque and someone destroying a lawn, except that one act produces more serious property damage and risk to human life.  Both are criminal acts already covered by state and federal statutes.  Mosques and lawns are already protected without the indulgence in social engineering that makes a white person attacking a black person worse than an equally severe attack by a white person on a white person.  American law punishes only bad acts ("Actus Reus" as it's called in American law).  Without an act, there is no crime (except for crimes of omission like nonpayment of taxes, but I'll assume your superior legal acumen already makes you aware of that).  What "hate crime" statutes appear to do is to punish an attitude by proxy, through increasing the penalty for an act.  Seen from this perspective, I have to admit, I was wrong about one thing.  It's perfectly reasonable to look at hate crime laws as thought policing.   Congratulations, DG.  The quality of your advocacy presented the most compelling argument against your position of all.

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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/4/2007 8:21:26 PM   
NeedToUseYou


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So, what I have we learned today.

If you are going to attack a person of another race, gender, religion, sexual orientation, ethnicity, or disability. Make sure you donate to a fund in support of that particular group in advance,LOL. That should prove your inncence of the thought crime. Better yet before you attack your favourite target of hate, make sure you fuck one to, apparently people that are sexually involved with there hated goup of choice, can't be racist. And if you really want to be safe pick up a token friend of your hated group. That shouldn't be to hard.

Then go to town. You might still get caught, but at least you won't be accused of a thought crime.

I'm really fucked though, because I hate people. LOL. Shit, no crime for me, I'd hate to serve that extra time



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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/4/2007 8:35:10 PM   
MstrssPassion


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recent case:  person A attacks person B, violent & near fatal assault. It is revealed that A admitted that A beat B until their hand hurt & once their hand was hurt they proceeded to smash B's head against a structure, repeatedly.

Everyone has made comment that punishment should be determined based simply on the crime... right? This was the crime, a brutal assault was carried out against person B & person B never once made any aggressive moves on person A. A's actions were all admittedly carried out because of contempt that A had about certain specifics of B. I'm  leaving out all the details such as gender, race, orientation, etc etc etc because everyone says crime is crime & all of these factors shouldn't determine ruling. Murder is murder & punishment should be across the board, assault is assault & so on... Right?

So, what would you say when a judge speaks out saying he can understand why A was so angry & believes that the general population would understand as well? HELLO!!!This judge is basically leavening the charges based on what? The fracking details that I purposely left out. Race, orientation, religion, gender & all of that IS being used as factors in the decision process & too often decisions are being made where a victim's difference is considered to play a contributory factor in the rulings. This is bias & bigotry. These unrevealed details were excuse enough to UNDERSTAND why someone would beat another human beings head in?

Someone said Lady Liberty is blind, well she is the only one blind in these court rooms.

The judges aren't blind
The juries aren't blind
We are not blind

No matter how impartial a judge or jury must be... sometimes those biased feelings will slip in & decide what should be EQUAL JUSTICE. People are only human.

think about it.....

< Message edited by MstrssPassion -- 7/4/2007 8:37:51 PM >


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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/4/2007 8:41:58 PM   
uwinceismile


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we have judges doing this all the time,,although it usually sways the other way.....giving a man in new england i believe it was,,no jail time, after being found guilty of raping a lil boy starting at an early age (3 maybe) and for years to follow.
there is a term for this that escapes me at the moment  ......
someone will tell us, many here smarter then i am...
if it weent for a cable news anchor making a huge fuss, the story would of ended there, the judge resentenced the convivted pedophile  to something like 3 yrs. (still way to lienant)

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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/4/2007 8:49:37 PM   
popeye1250


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Last time I checked it's not against the law to "offend" someone.

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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/4/2007 9:27:48 PM   
domiguy


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quote:

ORIGINAL: zerosignal
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.



The problem with your argument as to...
quote:

zerosignal
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."

Is that the law is equally  dispensed to all....It favors no group or color....A Chinese handicapped woman is just as capable of being charged with a hate crime as a well as an able bodied Lithuanian.

Hate laws are run by each state as they see fit, they are not a federal law.

So actually, although it was in gest....My arguing in front of a court some quip from a comedy might be just as solid as an argument as the one you have posed.


In comparison to the general amount of crime hate crimes make up a small amount...Perhaps this is why they need to be treated differently....As far as the FBI stats go we can debate all day whether they hold any relevance.....I see a difference in someone defiling a mosque in comparison to tearing up a lawn....You don't.  You feel that without specific "Hate Laws" that the punishment for the crime is in place to deal with such individuals....I don't.

You think that hate laws were established because of white guilt and sheltered white liberals...I don't see it. I simply see it as being an extra bonus of time for acting like an asshole.

quote:

zerosignal
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.


I see white liberals are unable to grasp the complex realities of your statement....What does this statement have to do with hate crimes?

It is fine to not like the idea that people should be punished because they act on their hateful feelings towards a person or group that has caused them no harm....It is a legitimate argument.....blame all of the problems when it comes down to race as far as affirmative action or anti-hate laws on liberals shows a lack of clear thinking and judgement......Which by judging from this post would it be wrong to assume you would consider yourself a conservative?  Since you didn't state it, but it does have relevance about how you could reach these conclusions.

Now your last statement
quote:

zerosignal
Seen from this perspective, I have to admit, I was wrong about one thing.  It's perfectly reasonable to look at hate crime laws as thought policing.   Congratulations, DG.  The quality of your advocacy presented the most compelling argument against your position of all


This would insinuate that people are compelled not to commit a crime by the possible extended sentence. I'm not sure if this is true....Either way if the additional time is a deterrent for someone not to act on their hateful thoughts then I'm cool with it.

I dislike government encroaching into our lives...I have rather startled myself by taking up this position...I don't like the idea of the gov't encroaching into free speech...Which has been attempted to be included in some of the language that has been proposed in the anti-hate laws.

Hopefully there may come a time when these laws will not be be necessary....But they are here....And I think they serve a purpose...Which is the point of this forum....We do not have to agree.


.


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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/5/2007 2:38:47 AM   
SubinMaine


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quote:

ORIGINAL: domiguy

I have watched you proceed with arguments on other threads...It gets tiresome.


As does your constant need to be "right."

quote:

ORIGINAL: domiguy
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.


Try following the line of conversation.  i said my original post was in direct response to the original question and that is when you started spouting your opinion that i'm a "liar"....and that my last post (at that time) had a point if you wanted to try and see that point.

quote:

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


Glad you're proud of that.

quote:

ORIGINAL: domiguy
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....


Have you straight out called me a liar? No, you haven't but your passive-aggressive way of stating that you "don't believe i'm being truthful about the facts" basically says "she's a liar."

Whether you want to see that everything i said was an opinion or not is completely up to you, but let me say EVERYTHING was an opinion.  Everyone has a right to one. Again, you don't have to agree with it but it's detrimental to a "good argument" to consistently tell someone that they are "incapable of following the line of conversation and backing up facts" when what they are stating is personal opinion based on personal experiences. 

Fact is, the Hate Laws exist for a reason.  Fact is, they are supposed to work a certain way.  Fact is they are WRITTEN a certain way.  Fact is they are not always USED in the way they were intended.  my example that i put out there was one instance that made, what was supposed to be a "good" idea (hate crime laws to try and stem hate related violence), look like a joke.

i never once defended my friend for his actions.  He was wrong, he lost his temper and for the outcome of that fight, he deserved that malicious mayhem charge.  It was not however "racially motivated"...words.  Simple words spoken in the heat of the exchange got him extra time because the state interpreted those words as a "hate crime".  The only way to give you facts is to list names.  i REFUSE to do that to him, it is NOT my place. 

Instead of just saying "wow, well that's a sucky situation" you try to google something that took place 15 years ago and didn't even make the local news and because you can't google the incident you immediately assumed i was lying or, leaving important facts out of the story.  Not true, i don't lie, i have no use for lies and it's insulting to be thought of in that light simply because someone doesn't want to see an accounting of a situation that flies in the face of what HE believes.

i feel sorry for you that you can't see how you can make someone feel belittled and ridiculed.  i feel sorry for you that you have to use that angle when trying to argue a point.  All it does is cause harsh feelings.  i'd much rather argue something with someone who's going to make me THINK and give an example that's actually relevant than with someone who points a finger and makes accusations.  It's happened on this board, one poster in particular had me rethink my ENTIRE view on a matter by simply giving me a hypothetical situation that was relevant to the discussion.

i'll refrain from arguing any of your responses as well.


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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/5/2007 8:44:24 AM   
Alumbrado


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quote:

Sadly I don't think the extra time you spent cleverly googling FBI statistics gives your argument any additional traction.

First, I should point out that you are getting information from a law enforcement agency, an entity whose continued relevance and therefore funding depends on the public and the government believing it's necessary to keep it around with a big budget.  The natural consequence is a motivation to present the most dire portrait of crime possible.  So I wonder how much exaggeration goes into those numbers


I'll bet if you checked, you would find out that the municipalities who turn those numbers over to the UCR have been caught underreporting them on more than one occasion... for reasons that probably make more sense to mayors and policy wonks than to cops.

quote:

Second, there are subtle nuances to the language of that report that you probably overlooked in your rush to outdo the quality of your previous stroke of brilliance.  Specifically, the word "reported" should stand out like a sore thumb.  A "reported" crime could well be no crime at all.  A "reported" crime requires no evidence, corroboration, or other support beyond the report itself.  Under such a definition, I could up those numbers 600% if I wanted to by reporting a long series of attacks on my home by people calling me honkey and cracka.  I'm sure you can see the problem with using such "reported" crimes as conclusive evidence of anything.


There is indeed a problem with the accuracy of crime reporting, hence the commonly used term 'the dark figure of crime' (dark as in hidden from clear view), but I would dare say that the vast majority of crime analysts seem to think that again, underreporting is the UCR's problem.

Would you care to shed a little more light on the methodology you've employed to arrive at fundamental conclusions so drastically oppositional to those of your colleagues?


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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/5/2007 9:06:35 AM   
kittinSol


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What I want to know is where the new wave of insecure racist white trash that posts on collarme.com has come from. I suggest they all go back to their trailer parks  .

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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/5/2007 9:10:13 AM   
SeeksOnlyOne


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quote:

ORIGINAL: kittinSol

What I want to know is where the new wave of insecure racist white trash that posts on collarme.com has come from. I suggest they all go back to their trailer parks  .


wow........thats just so......uh......i cant even think of a word that captures my feelings on it......maybe later.....

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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/5/2007 9:11:54 AM   
Alumbrado


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Mmmmm.. they won't let my kind in trailer parks...probably explains your lack of familiarity with us.

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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/5/2007 9:16:36 AM   
kittinSol


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quote:

ORIGINAL: SeeksOnlyOne

quote:

ORIGINAL: kittinSol

What I want to know is where the new wave of insecure racist white trash that posts on collarme.com has come from. I suggest they all go back to their trailer parks  .


wow........thats just so......uh......i cant even think of a word that captures my feelings on it......maybe later.....


HAHAHA were you feeling aimed at or something?

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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/5/2007 9:36:36 AM   
SeeksOnlyOne


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quote:

ORIGINAL: kittinSol

quote:

ORIGINAL: SeeksOnlyOne

quote:

ORIGINAL: kittinSol

What I want to know is where the new wave of insecure racist white trash that posts on collarme.com has come from. I suggest they all go back to their trailer parks  .


wow........thats just so......uh......i cant even think of a word that captures my feelings on it......maybe later.....


HAHAHA were you feeling aimed at or something?


not one bit feeling aimed at......amazed is a better word....

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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/5/2007 9:56:40 AM   
kittinSol


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quote:

ORIGINAL: SeeksOnlyOne

not one bit feeling aimed at......amazed is a better word....



The feeling is mutual: I have been speechless at some of the things that were posted on this thread too.

What's wrong with a little classism, aye? If racism's not a crime in the eyes of many, I don't see how they could allow themselves to be offended by my virulent dislike of pale-skinned garbage.

Et toc.

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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/5/2007 10:22:30 AM   
caitlyn


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It's so easy to call someone a racist, and you get amazing bang for the buck. Even the accusation alone, carries so much weight.
 
I dated a really nice hispanic guy once. I must have liked him, because I agreed to go out with him. To be honest, that he was hispanic, or not, or whatever, never really crossed my mind. He was just someone that I wanted to go out with, that actually asked me.
 
The entire time we dated, he made it a habit to point out, again and again, that he was a hispanic man and I was a white woman. I can't ever recall bringing it up myself, but to him, it was a rather constant topic. When we went out with his friends, he knew my Spanish was only pretty good, and he would make it a point to talk so fast, that he knew I couldn't really keep up. He would talk to me, so fast I couldn't follow him, and then get mad when I couldn't. We dated for two months, and race was a consistant part of the relationship ... never by me, mind you ... I couldn't have cared less if he was green and from Mars ... he was just a guy I wanted to date.
 
When we broke up, he called me a racist and insisted that I was ditching him because he was hispanic. He told his friends that I was a racist. He told some of my friends that I was a racist. When the next guy I dated happened to be white, he did everything but take out an ad in LaRaza, "exposing" me.
 
Racists... they certainly exists, and certainly are a bad thing. It's also often over used, and usually a cheap shot.

< Message edited by caitlyn -- 7/5/2007 10:42:00 AM >


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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/5/2007 11:37:55 AM   
philosophy


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[FR]
Some questions.......
...what is a crime? Can we define it as an act that actively works against a harmonious society? Or maybe as an act that takes away the rights of another to live their life?
Can we assume that hate, when not acted upon, is not a crime? Can we assume that when it is acted upon it is a crime? If we do assume the latter then it is an additional crime to the act itself. If not then there are no hate crimes.
Was the WW2 holocaust a different sort of crime to simple mass murder? If so then hate crimes are different to more generalised acts, and therefore ought to be punished differently.

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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/5/2007 11:39:24 AM   
kittinSol


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This thread is actually full of racist thoughts; it drips with it. To deny it is to bury your head in the sand.

As for me, I have absolutely no qualms whatsoever about calling a spade a spade. It seems you do.

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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/5/2007 11:42:12 AM   
CrimsonMoan


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you know we have been going on about those that get that hate crime statue slapped on them. We really haven't acknowledge the victims. Google the name David Ritcheson. This 17 yr old of a very brutal and heinous hate crime nearly a year ago recently jumped to his death from a cruise ship. He seemed liek a upbeat kid and was getting his life together after being beaten unconscious, sodomized with a PVC pipe until his orgam ruptered, kicked doused with bleach and a swastika carved into his chest. He refused therapy and to even talk about what happen.

His case is what really brought home the Hate Crime bill in Congress when he testified this past April. The attack went on for about 4 hours and no one else at the patry this happend at came to his aid. He was left outside for almost 10 hours, bleeding and dying.

And what did he do to bring this upon himself? He tried to kiss another partygoers 12 yr old sister. There were drugs and alchohol and this party and it has never been said if he knew her age, but guess what? Skinhead don't really need an excuse do they?


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RE: HATE CRIMES = thought policing? - 7/5/2007 11:54:28 AM   
SubinMaine


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CM, what happened to this boy was horrible, let's just get that out of the way first...and normally we see eye-to-eye on a lot of things but there's a problem with this....and just hear me out:

Skinheads do NOT associate with anyone other than their own. 

If anything, i don't think this boy was attacked for trying to kiss anyone...i think it was a true setup because i can't imagine a skinhead inviting a hispanic to their party?  Maybe i'm missing something but...


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