HATE CRIMES IN AMERICA!
Thursday, May 5th, 2016
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
HATE
CRIMES IN AMERICA!
There are new laws that are roaring through the legislatures
throughout the country. Any physical
attack on a law enforcement officer, firefighter or emergency services
personnel will now be considered a hate crime.
So what’s a hate crime you ask? If someone is
premeditatedly shot and killed, that’s generally murder. When you’re
dead, you are dead, and there is a strong penalty for that; generally life or
the death penalty. But hate crime supporters want more than
justice. They want vengeance.
Under many current state laws, one can be charged with a hate
crime if the crime was motivated by hatred involving race, religion, national
origin, color or sexual preference. Penalties for crimes against these
groups already exist, but under the law such crimes are enhanced by what’s in
the perpetrator’s mind. In the Four Lads song, Standing on The Corner,
Watching All The Girls Go By, there is the lyric, “Brother, you can’t go to
jail for what you’re thinking.” Well, in the case of hate laws, apparently you
can.
Having deeply troubling concerns over a thought police is
nothing new. George Orwell’s novel 1984 paints a disturbing and
chilling scenario where one can be accused of a crime, arrested and prosecuted
merely for thoughts in your mind. “The thought police would get him
just the same. He had committed… the essential crime that contained all others
in itself. Thoughtcrime they called it… Sooner or later they were bound to get
you.”
Have you ever gotten so mad and pent up that you went into a
rage and said things you really didn’t mean? “That sorry, no count
blank, blankity blank! I’ll get even with him!” Have you ever used a
racial slur? Oh, no, you say. But then, upon reflection, maybe you did
once or twice. Does that make you a racist?
If there is supposed to be equal justice under the law,
shouldn’t the punishment be based on the crime, and not on who the victim
is? If a deranged killer opens fire in a shopping mall, is this less of a
crime than a maniac opening fire in a club filled with African-Americans or
gays?
What the lawmakers are telling us is that when a life is taken,
the state will now make a determination that the lives of one particular group
have greater value than the lives of another group. Lawmakers are saying that
the life of a brutally murdered small child is not worth as much as the life of
a first responder. Isn’t it a fundamental principle of a democracy that the
punishment fits the crime, not the victim?
Ayn Rand wrote about the divisiveness that takes place when
preferences are given under the law. “There is no sure way to infect
mankind with hatred – brute, blind, virulent hatred – than by splitting it into
ethnic groups or tribes.”
Freedom in America means the freedom to have bad thoughts.
I may not like what you are thinking, but ideas alone should not be a
crime. A criminal should be punished for bad acts, not bad
thoughts. James Madison said it well: “We have extinguished
forever the ambitious hope of making the laws for the human mind.”
When it comes to crime, there should be a protected class that
gets full safeguards from the criminal justice system. That protected
class should be all Americans. And all Americans should be treated
equally.
*******
“Because
federal hate-crime laws criminalize thoughts, they are incompatible with a free
society.”
Ron Paul
Peace and Justice
Jim Brown
Jim
Brown’s syndicated column appears each week in numerous newspapers throughout
the nation and on websites worldwide. You can read all his past columns
and see continuing updates at http://www.jimbrownusa.com. You can also hear Jim’s
nationally syndicated radio show each Sunday morning from 9:00 am till 11:00 am
Central Time on the Genesis Radio Network, with a live stream at http://www.jimbrownusa.com.
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