MCViewPoint

Opinion from a Libertarian ViewPoint

Posts Tagged ‘hate crimes’

Should We Recognize ‘Hate Crimes’?

Posted by M. C. on June 9, 2021

Before going about their business, mafia hit men sometimes say something along the lines of, “It isn’t personal; it’s just business.” In other words, they harbor no personal animosity toward their victim.

But there is all the world of difference between the two examples. Distinguishing between someone who intends to save his fellow’s life and someone who wishes to harm his fellow is perfectly sensible. It’s not at all clear, though, that it makes sense to treat two murderers who committed the same exact heinous crime differently merely because one acted in cold blood while the other succumbed to bad thoughts.

By Walter Block

On the seventh night of Chanukah last year, Grafton E. Thomas went on a stabbing spree at the home of Rabbi Chaim Rottenberg in Monsey, NY. He wounded five people, one of whom later died from his injuries.

The case seems pretty straightforward. If Mr. Thomas committed the crime, he should be found guilty of assault, battery, and perhaps even murder. If he didn’t, he shouldn’t.

But the government complicated the moral waters by also charging Thomas with a hate crime. Hate, of course, is an emotion. It takes place solely in the mind of the perpetrator. One can commit a crime with or without being hateful about it.

Before going about their business, mafia hit men sometimes say something along the lines of, “It isn’t personal; it’s just business.” In other words, they harbor no personal animosity toward their victim.

But should mafia hit men be treated as lesser offenders than criminals who commit the exact same crime while acknowledging their hatred of the victim? Why should an extra penalty be imposed for entertaining “bad thoughts” while in the commission of a crime? From the point of view of the victim in this example, the end result is the same. In both cases, he’s dead.

I don’t mean to imply that motives are completely irrelevant. If you break someone’s ribs while pushing him away from a speeding truck, you are innocent of any crime. On the other hand, if you commit the exact same act in order to hurt the person, you’re a criminal.

But there is all the world of difference between the two examples. Distinguishing between someone who intends to save his fellow’s life and someone who wishes to harm his fellow is perfectly sensible. It’s not at all clear, though, that it makes sense to treat two murderers who committed the same exact heinous crime differently merely because one acted in cold blood while the other succumbed to bad thoughts.

Indeed, some might even argue that the person who murders coolly and rationally should receive a harsher punishment. After all, the assassin who plies his trade solely due to pecuniary considerations could easily have chosen to refrain. In contrast, the “hateful” murderer was in the grip of his passion, and thus less able to desist.

In short, I believe it wise to strike hate crimes from the criminal code. That means that Grafton E. Thomas should only be charged for what he did, not for what he thought. A person should only be punished for his deeds, not for his motivation.

Be seeing you

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The art of only being outraged at things that don’t matter

Posted by M. C. on February 26, 2019

That’s kind of like how in America, hate crimes against gay black men are so rare, they have to be staged.

That’s what actor Jussie Smollett did.

The whole situation really clues you into how deep inside a leftist bubble these people really are…

So if you don’t know how these progressives operate, you might be surprised that they even found a way to criticize Trump’s plan to end the criminalization of homosexuality worldwide.

Yes, ending the criminalization of homosexuality is–you guessed it–RACIST!

This is an example of intersectionality: it’s considered worse for white men to tell Middle-Easterners what to do–stop murdering gays–than it is for Middle-Easterns to do something horrible–murder gays.

The art of only being outraged at things that don’t matter

By Joe Jarvis

I knew it was coming. Charcoal face masks are racist…

A few weeks ago, I was reading an opinion piece written by a black man about a photo hanging in a restaurant in Arizona.

It was an old photograph of coal miners enjoying some drinks after work. The coal miners were covered from head to toe in black coal dust.

The author of the article admits that he knew these were coal miners, and their “black-face” was unintentional. He knew that the photograph of coal miners had absolutely nothing to do with racism.

And yet he still wanted the restaurant to take the picture down because it made him think of black-face. Apparently, coal mining history has to be revised or it is offensive.

I kind of chuckled to myself, next thing you know charcoal facemasks will be racist… Read the rest of this entry »

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PC Marches On – Taki’s Magazine

Posted by M. C. on September 11, 2018

Political correctness is now far more protected by cops than innocent people going on about their business. (Shoplifting, incidentally, is now hardly prosecuted, and has become an open invitation to break the law.)

RIP Londonstan

http://takimag.com/article/pc-marches-on/#axzz5QiTqv7RJ

by Taki

Some of you oldies will never believe this, but London is no longer the place of The Blue Lamp and other black-and-white golden oldies that were made in the Shepperton and Elstree studios by the great Rank and Korda organizations…

But times change, so you can imagine my surprise when I read about something that took place in London during the last week of August, and is the reason I brought up The Blue Lamp and the fuzz of yesteryear. Two bobbies, a male and a female, were trying to arrest a suspect, a powerful black man whose name turned out to be Nanikutomisa Mpelenda, 25, in East London, while a large crowd watched. As the cops struggled, the largely white crowd cheered the suspect on with cries of “Go on, son,” encouraging him to escape. The man possessed a firearm, whereas the cops did not. He was a drug dealer. Read the rest of this entry »

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