Would you make the same argument for random attacks as well?
Perhaps in a limited sense in that violence can be construed as an attack on everyone. But the harm is pretty widely distributed in that case.
Would you make the same argument for random attacks as well?
Many, but they have no more a right to extra protection than anyone else.
Would it be any less or more of a crime if the person who killed them were black?
Would other people who feel attacked feel less attacked if the person who killed them were black?
All violent crimes are hateful.
His dad didn't want his only son being around nothing but females -
So he brought in the son of the house maid to live and be a male companion to his boy. This child was photographed with the family just like an adopted son....
What do you really know about slave owners?
Did you really think they were all bad and not like all other employers both good and evil existing through time?
Well, you're whining, so I guess it affected you.
What do you think should happen? Execute him and then send him to a course on political correctness?
Perhaps in a limited sense in that violence can be construed as an attack on everyone. But the harm is pretty widely distributed in that case.
Well, I meant random violence, not any and all violence.
But how distributed does something have to be to make you say there doesn't need to be any heightened penalty?
Because an act of random violence could make an entire community feel threatened, even if it's a lower level of fear than the black community might feel if someone murders out of racism. The intensity is higher in one case, but the reach is farther in the other.
The truth is that not long ago many Americans thought that enslavement was a morally and legally acceptable behavior. Now days most Americans will reject human enslavement both morally and legally, and yet will inexplicably support the physical and economic exploitation of other human beings for the sake of profit. Which is the ideological essence of human enslavement.
All murderers should be executed. One can only imagine why you want to worry about "ideologies."Do you *only* blame the individual when there's an ideology he's feeding on? Would you say the same for the Boston Bombers? Would you have said the same in the 1960s?
First show us someone who has said otherwise.Um the shooter was the racist here. Are you unwilling to discuss that fact?
Murderers should always get the death penalty. Nobody should ever be charged over "racism."In this case, the penalty for his actions without the hate crimes enhancement is already about as high as it could be. It isn't always.
I generally expect that the threat to the entire community should be covered in the penalty for the base crime. Singling out a subgroup within the community is a further crime beyond that.
All murderers should be executed. End of argument.
I'm not talking about what the actual law says. I'm talking about your justification for having those laws. If I understand your justification then it seems like it should apply in some cases where it isn't a specific subgroup that's targeted. Perhaps the crime being random isn't the only criteria though.There's no such threshold or requirement like that for hate crime. What matters in hate crime is the motivation of the perpetrator.
Would you punish random violence in the same way that you'd punish violence targeted against a specific person?I generally expect that the threat to the entire community should be covered in the penalty for the base crime. Singling out a subgroup within the community is a further crime beyond that.
...and the victors of the Civil War made literal amends towards ending the institution.
If you really want to go there dig into the Confederate Constitution, which protects slavery far more than its counterpart ever did. If you know history as well as you claim, this shouldn't be news.
The rebel flag is uniquely despicable in that its very existence was born of a demand to perpetuate slavery. While slavery was incidental in the formation of the United States it was the very lifeblood of the Confederacy.
This love affair with the lost cause needs to end.
The truth is that this has nothing at all to do with this thread. :execute:The truth is that now many Americans think it is okay to kill your baby
I do think there is an extraordinary threat to society when the victims were chosen by happenstance. People who kill indiscriminately prove by their actions that they remain a mortal threat, to everyone. Whereas this is not necessarily the case with people who kill for money, or revenge, or in a some chemical stupor.I generally expect that the threat to the entire community should be covered in the penalty for the base crime. Singling out a subgroup within the community is a further crime beyond that.
I'm not talking about what the actual law says. I'm talking about your justification for having those laws.
If I understand your justification then it seems like it should apply in some cases where it isn't a specific subgroup that's targeted. Perhaps the crime being random isn't the only criteria though.
Would you punish random violence in the same way that you'd punish violence targeted against a specific person?
Turning this tragedy into an excuse to dump on a party you disagree with's both predictable and lame.