Jay wrote:
For the record, we do have hate crime laws over here, but they're applied after a crime has been committed and they simply add further punishment on top. If you graffiti swastika's on a synagogue, you'll get charged with a hate crime on top of vandalism. Attack a black man because he's black, and you'll get charged with a hate crime on top of the assault. I think it's absurd (if the initial punishment for the crime isn't considered tough enough, change that aspect).
That said, speech is protected. The KKK can hold their clan meetings and spew hatred all they want. The WBC can picket funerals. But it also means we're completely free to criticize our government, or our police, or whatever else we want. I wouldn't trade it, ugliness and all.
You can criticize the government here. You can picket and protest soldiers' funerals here too if you want (it has happened)
*. You can protest against anything you want, so long as you have the right arrangements and paper-work done first so it doesn't create a mess. You can express yourself all you want - go nuts. Our press are not obeisant to the establishment (on the contrary, most of our tabloid-rags are in servitude to the Murdoch empire's agenda, which is often political...) The only difference essentially between your right to free speech and ours is that ours isn't written down on a piece of parchment for us to all get a hard-on over.
You are completely misunderstanding this case, and it's frustrating. You say racism is added as a 'hate-crime' on top of an existing case. Well, in the case of this Twitter abuse...
that is exactly what has happened. The guy committed a racially-aggravated assault (which is the standard legal definition of what he did, exactly just that). His offence constituted firstly (i) an assault, i.e. a threat or intimidation made with intent and secondarily (ii) it was an assault and an attack of a racist nature.
Hel-lo? Are you understanding this?
*Interesting case-study: An Islamic group decided to stage a protest at the small village where dead UK soldiers are repatriated off the air-base. They protested against the war in Iraq and used the soldiers' death and funeral cortege as a platform to make a political point. In response, many incensed (mostly white) British people decided to protest against the protest, etc.etc. A large part of this counter-protest and reaction was, of course, nationalist and fired up by the English Defense League and other well-known fascist, far-right, ostensibly racist groups. Were they arrested for doing this? No. Were the Muslims arrested for their initial protest? No. There you have it, a small case-study that captures how our law is fine: racist groups can protest and make noise and hold up xenophobic placards all they want... so long as they don't break a law. This guy broke a law when he committed assault.
Last edited by Uzique (2012-04-04 16:09:17)