Should Hate Crime Laws Exist?...
YES
By Kaitlin Rothridge
Hate crimes are unique among offenses specifically because of their motivation, a motivation that is essentially intolerance taken to its greatest extreme. These laws address that intolerance, which runs contrary to those principles on which our country was founded.
Most crimes – take assault as an example - are rooted in motives that transcend lines between religion, race, or sexual preference. A mugger would attack anyone who might be carrying items of value; a gang member walking through what he perceives as his territory might confront or attack people from other neighborhoods who don’t belong there.
Hate crimes are entirely different. Unlike the crimes that transcend the lines between race or lifestyle differences, hate crimes are actually motivated by those differences. Our nation was founded on the idea that we are all created equal; hate crimes are assaults on this idea as much as they are assaults on their victims. It is for that reason that hate crimes need to be defined in our laws, and for that reason that they should carry harsher sentences when committed than crimes with more universal motivations.
It is not my intention to minimize the pain felt by victims of crimes not motivated by hate; they aren’t "second-class victims." I advocate harsher penalties mandated for hate crimes for two reasons: first, since most of these crimes are premeditated, having harsher penalties will act as a deterrent for those planning the crimes, and second, if it wasn’t for the perpetrators' hatred, these crimes wouldn’t happen at all.
NO
By Celene Miller
Hate crime laws are unconstitutional, and need to be modified or repealed.
There is an equal protection clause in our Constitution that states that our nation’s laws must be applied equally and fairly to all citizens. Our discrimination laws are fine examples, as they define only generic conditions on which people cannot discriminate, such as age, gender, race, or religion. The specifics of those conditions do not matter; people from any religion, for instance, have legal recourse against people who discriminate against them due to their religious practices.
Hate crime legislation differs from discrimination laws in a very significant way:
instead of stating generic conditions for hate crime victims, these laws name specific groups who are protected by those laws. For example, consider an attack motivated by an assailant’s attitude toward homosexuality. Rather than defining that crime in a way similar to discrimination laws, such as “motivated exclusively by a victim’s sexual preference,” these laws identify homosexuals as a protected group. Due to the wording of these laws, a hate crime cannot be committed against a heterosexual, even if a heterosexual person is attacked on the basis of sexual preference. While recognizing that nearly all hate attacks motivated by sexual preference are committed against homosexuals, in the event that a heterosexual is attacked in that manner, he or she won’t be protected by these laws.
Specifically naming a protected group invariably identifies an unprotected one, which violates the equal protection clause.
So why would our lawmakers, with well-drafted discrimination laws before them as examples, decide to name specific groups? I can think of a one-word answer: votes.
By Kaitlin Rothridge
Hate crimes are unique among offenses specifically because of their motivation, a motivation that is essentially intolerance taken to its greatest extreme. These laws address that intolerance, which runs contrary to those principles on which our country was founded.
Most crimes – take assault as an example - are rooted in motives that transcend lines between religion, race, or sexual preference. A mugger would attack anyone who might be carrying items of value; a gang member walking through what he perceives as his territory might confront or attack people from other neighborhoods who don’t belong there.
Hate crimes are entirely different. Unlike the crimes that transcend the lines between race or lifestyle differences, hate crimes are actually motivated by those differences. Our nation was founded on the idea that we are all created equal; hate crimes are assaults on this idea as much as they are assaults on their victims. It is for that reason that hate crimes need to be defined in our laws, and for that reason that they should carry harsher sentences when committed than crimes with more universal motivations.
It is not my intention to minimize the pain felt by victims of crimes not motivated by hate; they aren’t "second-class victims." I advocate harsher penalties mandated for hate crimes for two reasons: first, since most of these crimes are premeditated, having harsher penalties will act as a deterrent for those planning the crimes, and second, if it wasn’t for the perpetrators' hatred, these crimes wouldn’t happen at all.
NO
By Celene Miller
Hate crime laws are unconstitutional, and need to be modified or repealed.
There is an equal protection clause in our Constitution that states that our nation’s laws must be applied equally and fairly to all citizens. Our discrimination laws are fine examples, as they define only generic conditions on which people cannot discriminate, such as age, gender, race, or religion. The specifics of those conditions do not matter; people from any religion, for instance, have legal recourse against people who discriminate against them due to their religious practices.
Hate crime legislation differs from discrimination laws in a very significant way:
instead of stating generic conditions for hate crime victims, these laws name specific groups who are protected by those laws. For example, consider an attack motivated by an assailant’s attitude toward homosexuality. Rather than defining that crime in a way similar to discrimination laws, such as “motivated exclusively by a victim’s sexual preference,” these laws identify homosexuals as a protected group. Due to the wording of these laws, a hate crime cannot be committed against a heterosexual, even if a heterosexual person is attacked on the basis of sexual preference. While recognizing that nearly all hate attacks motivated by sexual preference are committed against homosexuals, in the event that a heterosexual is attacked in that manner, he or she won’t be protected by these laws.
Specifically naming a protected group invariably identifies an unprotected one, which violates the equal protection clause.
So why would our lawmakers, with well-drafted discrimination laws before them as examples, decide to name specific groups? I can think of a one-word answer: votes.
COMMENTS
What is a hate crime? Is it an act committed on the basis of hatred against a particular group? Is it an attempt to intimidate a group? Both? Neither? Something else?
Person A assaults person B. Is that a hate crime? Person A hates person B. Is it now a hate crime? Person A hates person B because of his race. Is it now a hate crime? Hate crime laws say no. We need to know what race in order to decide the severity of the crime. This is life in the Jim Crow south.
To access ones thoughts in a crime may be a mitigating factor or go to motive, but to give more time for such things is inherently discriminatory.
Now add to that the different races, religions and sexual identities that are protected and those that are not. That is the definition of discrimination.
Those men in Texas who killed James Bird were executed. The one that didn't participate got 20 years. Yet there was cries that Texas' hate laws which do not state particular groups is somehow terrible. The men responsible paid with their lives. The crime was the murder. Period.
If A beats up B because B would not stop hitting on A's wife and A's white and B's black is that a hate crime?
If A slashed B's tires because he hates blacks should he get more time than an assault because B is a jerk?
These become judgement calls at best. The hate crime is in the eye of the prosecutor. That's not law.
Person A assaults person B. Is that a hate crime? Person A hates person B. Is it now a hate crime? Person A hates person B because of his race. Is it now a hate crime? Hate crime laws say no. We need to know what race in order to decide the severity of the crime. This is life in the Jim Crow south.
To access ones thoughts in a crime may be a mitigating factor or go to motive, but to give more time for such things is inherently discriminatory.
Now add to that the different races, religions and sexual identities that are protected and those that are not. That is the definition of discrimination.
Those men in Texas who killed James Bird were executed. The one that didn't participate got 20 years. Yet there was cries that Texas' hate laws which do not state particular groups is somehow terrible. The men responsible paid with their lives. The crime was the murder. Period.
If A beats up B because B would not stop hitting on A's wife and A's white and B's black is that a hate crime?
If A slashed B's tires because he hates blacks should he get more time than an assault because B is a jerk?
These become judgement calls at best. The hate crime is in the eye of the prosecutor. That's not law.
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Nice information, many thanks to the author. It is incomprehensible to me now, but in general, the usefulness and significance is overwhelming. Thanks again and good luck!
Nice information, many thanks to the author. It is incomprehensible to me now, but in general, the usefulness and significance is overwhelming. Thanks again and good luck!
I think it depends on the situations too. If everything are going well, there's no reason for us to hate it.
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Crime of any kind is bad. People must have zero tolerance facing them. But maybe you are right and hate crime laws are unconstitutional.
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Others seem to hate will never be profitable. Even if hatred has culminated not uncommon for people to do things like kill or destroy the criminal efforts of others. I think this is something not good. Tools.com - Shop for great deals on power tools, hand tools, air compressors, generators , tool storage and ladders.
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