^ they don't deserve a lesser punishment, the second person deserves a harsher punishment. There is a practical difference between the 2 statements.If you choose to spin it that way though, the second person "deserves" a lesser sentence, because if someone is compelled to randomly commit a crime, there is no deterrent effect from a sentence harsher than societies established minimum punishment. If someone commits the assault against a gay person though, but is otherwise rational, they would be deterred in knowing they would be punished more harshly for acting on their hate.
10/14/2009 5:54:34 PM
10/14/2009 6:25:12 PM
10/14/2009 7:00:31 PM
10/14/2009 8:06:06 PM
10/15/2009 12:34:01 AM
10/15/2009 8:59:29 AM
10/15/2009 9:13:10 AM
sounds like nothing really, but might as well post ithttp://www.charlotteobserver.com/breaking/story/1003328.html
10/15/2009 10:28:40 PM
Don't you just love how it's already labeled a hate crime just because of the victim? they don't even know *WHO* the perpetrators were, let alone their motivation.WEEEEE! Oh, and God, you're fucking crazy. I'm glad I don't live in a country founded by people that think like you.
10/15/2009 11:01:56 PM
10/16/2009 1:31:52 PM
http://www.cnn.com/video/#/video/us/2009/10/20/snow.latino.hate.crime.cnninteresting. could help those of you that don't understand the fear it instills into the community.
10/22/2009 12:58:02 AM
10/22/2009 1:59:47 AM
I'm confused. There seem to be two takes on this hate crime business.1. I don't like black people so I'm going to beat up this black man.2. I don't like black people so I'm going to beat up this black man with the intent of frightening other black people.The second case clearly involves a second crime beyond the beating--attempting to terrorize or incite fear in a community, and people should be charged with that second crime.In the first case, I thought motive was already a mitigating or aggravating factor. Kill your wife cause she cheats? Mitigating. Kill your wife for the insurance money? Aggravating. Beat up a black man cause he threatens you? Mitigating. Beat up a black man cause he's black? Aggravating. Now, is this not how it was playing out? Was there a prosecutorial deficit where haters weren't getting what they deserved? (I could definitely see this being the case.)I dunno, this type of law is normally the kind of thing I'd be all for, but it just seems like another one of those bullshit appeasements. Hey, everybody, instead of changing the institutions that perpetuate disparity, we're gonna pass a controversial policy that'll let us nail some dumb drunk vandals as hateful terrorists!!!But, honestly, I don't care all that much. I'd be pretty pissed off if my kid had to do five years of probation because he vandalized the wrong building. BUT, as long as we're busting men who drag people behind their trucks or jump them in the street and kick their teeth in, I can't say I've got a real problem with it. I'm not worried about some slippery slope where the feds are gonna haul me in for having a bad thought or saying something hateful...
10/22/2009 2:18:08 AM
10/22/2009 9:14:20 AM
There doesn't need to be a motive to scare people. The justification for hate-crime laws isn't in the motive, it's in the effects of the crime. A race-based crime has different consequences for a community than a crime that isn't race-based. We have a system of justice where the severity of the punishment is relative to the severity of the crime. It can be argued that a race-based crime has more severe consequences. Thus, the punishment should be more severe.A person who commits a crime with the specific intent of scaring people is committing terrorism.
10/22/2009 10:09:57 AM
10/22/2009 10:32:12 AM
10/22/2009 10:45:03 AM
I don't know the qualifier for race-based crimes. The point I was making was consequences are affected by the motive (when the motive is known). I don't support hate-crime laws because I don't think motive is always easy to flush out.But motives DO affect the consequences of a crime.
10/22/2009 10:55:00 AM
10/22/2009 12:27:35 PM
Pre-meditation: whether you rationally calculated the consequences of your actions and committed the crime anyay.Intent: whether you meant to commit the crime.Motive: why you commited the crime.If we punish more harshly based on motive, then that is seriously fucked up. What message are you trying to send? Punish based on pre-medition: "Don't purposefully ignore our laws and spend time planning how to purposefully ignore our laws. Laws are what keep our society in an ordered state." Punish based on intent: "Don't intentionally break laws. It's not as bad if you unintentionally break laws, but it's still a problem, so try not to do that either."Punish based on motive: "Don't think bad thoughts."There is already punishment in place for aggravated assault, attempted murder, and murder. What message are you sending to the perpetrators of these crimes by punishing them on their motive? I've yet to get an answer to this question in any of the threads regarding hate crimes.In terms of the purpose of punishment (why do we punish people for committing crimes), what is the goal of punishing people more harshly for "hate crimes"?[Edited on October 22, 2009 at 1:50 PM. Reason : .]
10/22/2009 1:48:31 PM
10/22/2009 2:30:15 PM
So following that logic, the idea is in a nutshell:Hate is bad.?That's my problem. I think you should be allowed to hate whomever the fuck you want and not be dissuaded from hating by the government or "the voting public". Maybe I should just enhance my calm.
10/22/2009 2:39:01 PM
^You can hate, hate, hate all day long. But you can't commit a crime with that hate without facing extra punishment.Just like you can belong to a gang and represent like a motherfucker, but you can't commit a crime with that gang without facing extra punishment.If you're objecting to the workings of the entire criminal justice system and law-making and whatnot, you've got a good point. But you can't cherry pick hate crimes...you've gotta come strong against the whole bullshit system.[Edited on October 22, 2009 at 2:56 PM. Reason : ?]
10/22/2009 2:55:36 PM
What you're saying is that: the goal of stricter penalties for drug violations is to eliminate drugs. the goal of stricter penalties for gang-related crimes is to eliminate gangs. the goal of stricter penalties for hate-crimes is to eliminate hate.*for the record, the drug war is bullshit too*How can you reconcile "You can hate hate hate all day long" with "our government is specifically trying to eliminate hate"?
10/22/2009 3:22:28 PM
Then, Bridget, you have not read the law:
10/22/2009 3:33:48 PM
I think that's the most frightening phrase in our entire system. Shivers go up my spine whenever I see "compelling governmental interest" as a justification for anything.
10/22/2009 3:38:37 PM
^^We're not talking about this specific law. The recent discussion has clearly been about the notion of hate crimes in general.^^^The goal isn't to eliminate those things. I doubt lawmakers are that ambitious.The goal is to express that we think those things are bad, and they are contrary to our values. It's politics...no politician can go wrong by being "tough on crime." Anyway, we can't arrest people for hating. Freedom of speech kinda gets in the way. But we can pass hate crime laws that show that we believe crimes motivated by hate are more heinous and deserving of more punishment than other crimes.It's all made-up bullshit. There's no overarching philosophy that dictates how we address the things that society deems are bad. I suspect you've already thought a lot about this so I really shouldn't direct this at you, but other people, perhaps folks in this thread, should reconsider everything if they insist on maintaining that this hate crime business is some brand new, wildly egregious law. It seems to line up with the rest of the system. The only thing new about it is that it gives a nod to minorities like blacks, Jews, and homosexuals...I wonder why people would all of a sudden have a problem with this type of legislation...hmmm...[Edited on October 22, 2009 at 4:04 PM. Reason : sss]
10/22/2009 3:44:58 PM
^^^Okay, fine, I read the bit about the law. And, yeah, I'm still all for it. Nobody is gonna go after ministers so you can tell your spines to stop shivering.But if you really want to get your shiver on, you can take a gander at the hate-based websites that implicitly encourage violence against others and turn profits off hate-based merchandise, but then they throw up their hands and say, "It's all just freedom of speech. We never meant for anything to happen!" Yeah, I support lawmakers in their attempt to bust the guys that create, breed, and profit off hate, and then deny any part in the resulting mess.Again, this is kind of how our laws work. I don't know why y'all are so scared of the slippery slope. Spine shivering? Really?Wait. I'm trying to read the "compelling government interest" portion, and there doesn't appear to be a page 1488? What am I missing?[Edited on October 22, 2009 at 4:11 PM. Reason : ?]
10/22/2009 4:02:15 PM
That's it!That's really the purpose of criminalizing anything: to show the populace what we as a society consider bad (ultimately what is contrary to our society functioning). I think it's ok to say that gangs are bad. Gangs are organizations for the sole purpose of committing crimes. Hate is in and of itself not what causes the crime. If the only reason for hate-crime laws was to eliminate the crime, then we'd also have greed-crime laws, lust-crime laws, jealousy-crime laws, i'm-too-poor-to-feed-my-family-crime laws. Hate-crime laws are adjudicating hatred.I think it's not ok to say that hate is bad. I think it's not ok to say that crimes based on hate are worse than other crimes because that's basically saying that hate is bad. This isn't a slippery slope argument. The government is already saying "hate is bad". We're already here.
10/22/2009 4:10:37 PM
^I'm confused by the distinction between "we" and the "populace."The populace determines what is considered bad.And the people think hate is bad.So your problem appears to be with the people (the majority).
10/22/2009 4:14:46 PM
Seriously, LoneSnark, where are you getting your info?We've got one link that says the bill broadens the language to include gays.And then your assertion that it does something else entirely, except I can't find what you're saying in your link.Your link has no page 1488.The first link in this thread says this:
10/22/2009 4:37:49 PM
In our new modern judicial system (post passing of the hate crime bill)Criminal A who randomly slaughters 3 victims and rapes their dead bodies is just a petty run of the mill murderer and not as BAD as Criminal B who is some ignorant white-trash redneck who gets into an argument with black guy at a party, calls him a NIGGER, and stabs to death while yelling "die coon die". Since Criminal B yelled racial slurs the DA can append the murder as a Hate Crime since the victim was black and now Criminal B has the extra level of punishment over criminal A.
10/22/2009 6:02:04 PM
10/22/2009 6:58:48 PM
10/22/2009 8:24:57 PM
^A-OK? Of course not.Just like Im not A-OK with all the other heinous thing the majority of people have supported in the past.In those instances, the minority protests and pushes as hard as they can possibly push to change the minds of the majority (or at least the politicians).So good luck to you all in your fight for hate.
10/22/2009 9:52:56 PM
10/22/2009 10:06:36 PM
I think it would be really cool if we could find some examples of this law gone awry.It seems like it would be really hard to actually apply the hate crime law cause you've gotta prove it.If it turns out that it's only been successfully applied to a few obvious and outrageous cases, would you guys still feel threatened by it?
10/22/2009 10:25:45 PM
Isn't that the same argument pro-PATRIOT act people make?Just saying; those are some mighty strange bedfellows you're inviting in.
10/22/2009 10:30:20 PM
^Nah, I'm not that passionate about this.It's just we got a lot of nasty history with hate, and it kinda weirds me out to see folks come out against this law. Like, you gotta admit that, while a lot of people on here are relatively sophisticated, most of the contention over this law elsewhere is coming from people who've got some unchecked racism/homophobia/bigotry in their gut. It's the perfect policy for conservatives to trot out and get their race bait on.Here's a good story that happened in Raleigh...Dude lost it on a black bus driver outside his kid's school:http://abclocal.go.com/wtvd/story?section=news/local&id=5893325He was not convicted of a hate crime:http://www.wral.com/news/local/story/2310821/He got fired, then he sued and got paid, and then he may have gotten his job back:http://www.wral.com/news/news_briefs/story/3180481/Meh, kind of interesting.
10/22/2009 10:43:54 PM
10/22/2009 10:47:36 PM
^I don't think you guys are, but yeah, I'm suspicious of people who don't have any interest in law or politics who all of the sudden pop out against hate crime laws. Given our history, yeah, just a little fucking suspicious over here.And, holy shit, homeless people!http://www.nationalhomeless.org/factsheets/hatecrimes.htmlI forgot about homeless people!Sorry, guys, the more I read about hate crime legislation, the more I'm loving every bit of it.[Edited on October 22, 2009 at 10:51 PM. Reason : LOVIN' IT!]
10/22/2009 10:49:45 PM
10/22/2009 10:54:50 PM
10/22/2009 11:14:42 PM
^I was just giving y'all a lesson in the way the law worked and letting you know this hate crime thing isn't some new way doing things. I'm not saying it's right that it works that way.
10/22/2009 11:15:47 PM
you were "giving us a lesson?" you were practically saying it was a good thing that it worked that way. what a cop-out
10/22/2009 11:17:54 PM
10/22/2009 11:31:23 PM
10/23/2009 12:12:01 AM
10/23/2009 12:22:25 AM
10/27/2009 6:10:56 PM
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