I'm not sure how we want to define "crazy," or if that's limited to mental illness, but if you're targeting peaceful people because of something they have no control over, that's psychopathic behavior in my view. I don't care what your "values" are - if you're having violent outbursts towards people that have done or said nothing to threaten you, you've got serious problems and I don't want you on the streets for a while. You can believe whatever you want, but if you infringe upon the rights of others for no good reason, you're the most dangerous kind of criminal.I don't think it's an untenable legal philosophy, either. You could easily write the law in such a way where no specific "protected class" is mentioned, but crimes where victims are targeted because of some immutable characteristic are treated in precisely the same way as a crime where there is no explained or observed motive.I suppose the political class, as a whole, would have to accept that sexuality is also an immutable characteristic. Currently, I'm certain that there are many politicians and judges who still view being gay as "lifestyle choice." I'm trying to think of a better word than immutable, since I do believe that sexuality can shift throughout a person's lifetime, though not immediately and through conscious decision making.
2/9/2011 5:31:30 PM
2/9/2011 5:46:24 PM
2/9/2011 6:56:18 PM
2/9/2011 7:13:27 PM
why is discrimination an action while threatening or terrorizing is not? could you explain that dichotomy? wouldn't removing him be the action? which, as he pointed out, is okay in some situations and not in others. you seem to be responding with exactly what he is challenging as evidence that his challenge does not make sense.
2/9/2011 7:35:11 PM
2/9/2011 7:49:58 PM
2/9/2011 8:07:17 PM
2/9/2011 9:54:59 PM
2/9/2011 10:43:13 PM
From what I've read of this thread just now, I'm flabbergasted. It's like the whole world has been turned on its head. I never thought I'd see d357r0y3r argue in favor of any law in any capacity. I certainly never thought I'd see McDanger speak out against hate crime laws in the least. Next thing you know, you'll be telling me that aaronburro will say something that makes sense OH MY GOD HE KIND OF ALREADY DID!
2/10/2011 12:56:25 AM
I am so fucking confused, where do I speak out against hate crimes laws??[Edited on February 10, 2011 at 2:20 AM. Reason : .]
2/10/2011 2:20:00 AM
There's so many posts, I think he got mixed up.
2/10/2011 4:40:17 AM
It was revealed to him by a fiery shrubbery atop Mount Sinai.
2/10/2011 9:08:52 AM
Where is this idea coming from that "protected classes" are written into hate crime laws? I've seen it from disco stu and destroyer now, and I'm seriously clueless as to what they're talking about. Something like 20% of hate crimes victimize white people.
2/10/2011 10:54:24 AM
Protected classes = race, gender, sexuality, religion (for some stupid reason), age, uhhhh not sure if there are others, maybe state of pregnancy.You're just too busy trying to be anti-racist to realize we weren't talking about a specific race, we were talking about a category of characteristics.and, because I'm not lazy:Race - Federal: Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Civil Rights Act of 1866Color - Federal: Civil Rights Act of 1964Religion - Federal: Civil Rights Act of 1964National origin - Federal: Civil Rights Act of 1964Age (40 and over) - Federal: Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967Sex - Federal: Equal Pay Act of 1963 & Civil Rights Act of 1964Familial status (Housing, cannot discriminate for having children, exception for senior housing)Sexual orientation (in some jurisdictions and not in others)Gender identity (in some jurisdictions and not in others)Disability status - Federal: Vocational Rehabilitation and Other Rehabilitation Services of 1973 & Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990Veteran status - Federal Vietnam Era Veterans Readjustment Assistance Act of 1974Genetic information - Federal: Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act[Edited on February 10, 2011 at 11:06 AM. Reason : .]
2/10/2011 11:01:47 AM
So you're saying "people who have a race" are a "protected class"?
2/10/2011 11:13:18 AM
No, in terms of of anti-discrimination laws, "protected classes" are the characteristics by which people are not allowed to be discriminated against.A person's race, for example. Which may be white or black or whatever."class" in this case is not a person or group of persons. It's a characteristic.[Edited on February 10, 2011 at 11:16 AM. Reason : .]
2/10/2011 11:15:40 AM
So you do have a problem with anti-discrimination laws, then?edit: there is no definition of "class" that means that, unless you're using some kind of short hand for "classification" in such case i've never heard people do that before[Edited on February 10, 2011 at 11:19 AM. Reason : .]
2/10/2011 11:17:56 AM
No, and I've been thinking about it a lot since you posted earlier.I'm fine with anti-discrimination laws even though they are similar to hate crime laws. I don't see a massive amount of discrimination in murders that needs to be addressed, nor do I feel that murder victims deserve equal treatment from their murderers.Dude, just read this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protected_class[Edited on February 10, 2011 at 11:25 AM. Reason : .]
2/10/2011 11:24:39 AM
Well I'll be damned: re protected class.Anti-discrimination laws aren't just similar to hate crime laws, I'd say they're more extreme. Take an action, like kicking someone out of your business, which is completely legal, and it becomes illegal when based on a "protected class". Hate Crime laws just increase a penalty when a protected class is there in the intent. If anything, anti-discrimination laws are the ESTABLISHMENT of protected classes, and hate crime laws just extend the application of the concept to already-illegal activities.For example:*A teenager spraypaints "El Barto" on a billboard*Another person spraypaints "Niggers get out" on another billboard.Should both of these be prosecuted as simple vandalism? Are they really equal crimes in terms of the damage caused?[Edited on February 10, 2011 at 11:28 AM. Reason : .]
2/10/2011 11:27:30 AM
It's the fact that they're murder and assault are already illegal which makes them unnecessary and illustrates that their sole purpose is to punish the hatred.Yes, I think "Niggers get out" should be punished the same as "El Barto." Can you demonstrate that no one would be offended by "El Barto?" It isn't demonstrable the impact that either of those statements have beyond the repairs needed to fix the damage. You just have a gut feeling that "Niggers get out" will do something to the black community and someone needs to be punished more harshly than that.And finally, the insistence that the racist statement be punished more does nothing besides further solidify race borders which are arbitrary to begin with. What if the net effect of seeing racist vandalism was that the community rose above it, joined together with people of different races and took donations to fix the sign and not dwell on it? Would additional punishment still be justified in that the social damage was actually negative?[Edited on February 10, 2011 at 11:43 AM. Reason : .][Edited on February 10, 2011 at 11:44 AM. Reason : .]
2/10/2011 11:42:36 AM
So you ARE concerned about racial tensions rising.So how does "Niggers get out" affect racial boundaries? How does "El Barto" ?It does more than just "offend" the black community. for one it actively alienates them if not outright terrorizes them. It also emboldens other white supremacists, especially when it's treated as nothing more than mere vandalism by local government, punishable by a small fine just like the 14 year old who wrote "El Barto".And to restate my question:"Are they really equal crimes in terms of the damage caused?"Do you really, REALLY think that "El Barto" and "Niggers get out" have the same social consequences? Don't propose hypothetical situations where a class of people who are offended by El Barto might exist, or a community comes together to fix a private company's advertisement then all have brownies and lemonaid together, tell me based on the real fucking world whether those two crimes cause the same damage.[Edited on February 10, 2011 at 11:54 AM. Reason : .]
2/10/2011 11:50:59 AM
The crime in that scenario is vandalism, either way. Free speech, though, means you could walk into a public place and say "niggers get out," regardless of who gets offended, so the "message" or "social harm" caused by the vandalism is irrelevant. Now, if you want to get rid of free speech, and I suspect that you do, then okay, we can also go that route.We should have anti-discrimination laws targeted at consumers as well. If we can prove that someone refrained from visiting a store because the majority of the customers were a certain race, or the employees were a certain race, clearly that consumer is discriminating against that private business. Is that better or worse than a business discriminating against potential customers?The reality is that, in this day and age, discrimination laws aren't needed. Anyone dumb enough to oust someone from their private business because of their race or anything like that will suffer a massive blow to their reputation when the media gets wind, and they're going to lose out on a paying customer. If someone wants to open up a store called "No Black Allowed" that only sells racist paraphernalia, it's a free country, they should be allowed to. They should then suffer the natural consequences that arise from that kind of racist enterprise.I mean, holy shit. Look at what happened when a Chic-fil-a owner provided sandwiches to some "pro-marriage"/socially conservative group. You had groups formed on Facebook within 24 hours demanding boycotts of all Chic-fil-a restaurants because it was an "anti-gay" business.
2/10/2011 12:01:33 PM
2/10/2011 12:10:16 PM
2/10/2011 12:11:48 PM
2/10/2011 12:23:27 PM
2/10/2011 12:35:51 PM
2/10/2011 1:44:10 PM
2/10/2011 1:57:17 PM
2/10/2011 2:38:49 PM
2/10/2011 2:50:34 PM
haha"words aren't threatening, it's the meaning of the word's that's threatening!"only on the Internet would an argument like this find a home.And you would mostly certainly feel threatened if you were in an area that was, say, 70% non-white and saw a bill board that said "get out whitey." You're delusional if you don't think you would be.
2/10/2011 3:10:19 PM
Forget all this "what's a hate crime" nonsense.I bet the owners were behind it. Someone should see if/to what extent the owners were underwater on their loan.It's easy, really. Establish a string of anti-gay crimes over several months and torch the house while you're "out of town". Good alibi, and who's gonna publicly express doubt that some gays were victims of a hate crime?
2/10/2011 3:10:56 PM
I give up. I am now for any law banning bigoted thought. In fact, any thought that the government arbitrarily deems wrong should be outlawed.
2/10/2011 3:13:13 PM
2/10/2011 3:14:52 PM
The "holy shit" was to signify that people, these days, will not just sit by and say nothing if they recognize something to be even remotely discriminatory. I'm saying that we don't need discrimination laws, because individuals are motivated enough to organize - without government - and oppose businesses who promote some agenda they disagree with.
2/10/2011 3:29:55 PM
Fair enough.
2/10/2011 3:38:25 PM
2/11/2011 1:57:44 AM
It's clear that str8foolish thinks racist thought is innately threatening and should be eradicated through law. It's clear that moron thinks that a picture of a burning cross is equivalent to a burning cross placed threateningly on someone's private property because everywhere in America is innately intimidating to black people in perpetuity. And it's clear that it's not possible to have a rational discussion regarding this. People are so against racism that they are incapable of analyzing it objectively and exploring ways to actually get rid of it instead of preserving the status quo through divisive legislature and punishment. And it's clear that you're going to respond that I don't know what the word rational means in the classical sense of the word or some other elitist bullshit that always springs from your keyboard.
2/11/2011 9:05:14 AM
It's certainly possible to have a rational discussion about this. It's just not possible with somebody who is uninterested in reality and would rather play word games without a clear idea of what rational discourse looks like, what purpose it serves, and what its conventions are (and why).
2/11/2011 10:58:14 AM
Let me guess, disco stu, it doesn't bother you at all when you're called a "cracker." You just shake it off because sticks and stones, right?
2/11/2011 12:16:49 PM
Well, yeah, but according to moron that's because I'm safe in my fortress of whititude and don't know what it's like to be outnumbered in the United States of White People.
2/11/2011 12:58:34 PM
And honestly, does me being bothered even matter? Wouldn't a better question be do I feel threatened when I'm called a "cracker?"Do you really want laws to protect people from being bothered?
2/11/2011 2:51:01 PM
that's not what they are about, stop being obtuse.
2/11/2011 3:48:42 PM
2/11/2011 4:22:44 PM
You know that calling someone a cracker is not a hate crime and is not what any hate crime legislation is about. You are being purposely difficult and seem to be taking aaronburro's traditional method of argument. I mean, its that or you are actually just an idiot.
2/11/2011 4:52:10 PM
If calling someone a cracker isn't a hate crime, is calling someone a nigger a hate crime?
2/11/2011 4:59:50 PM
No, not if that is the entirety of it[Edited on February 11, 2011 at 5:52 PM. Reason : .]
2/11/2011 5:48:43 PM
^^ you are forgetting that only whites can be racists. duuuh
2/11/2011 5:59:02 PM
2/17/2011 1:32:08 AM