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Post 80

Friday, May 19, 2006 - 7:44pmSanction this postReply
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I let the audience use their imaginations. Can I help it if they misconstrue my suggestions?
Ernst Lubitsch
 
For a radio personality to not know that some listeners will misconstrue his "humor" is preposterous as it happens all the time. Whether Star's intent was humor or publicity, I disapprove. It is not unreasonable for someone to have taken him seriously.
 
The courts and the parties involved should resolve the matter and Star should make restitution for any harm caused by his action/speech.
 


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Post 81

Friday, May 19, 2006 - 10:22pmSanction this postReply
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Count me in the camp that is puzzled by the fascination with Star. Like Michael Newberry, I was immediately put off by the "Hater" moniker and found it difficult/impossible to parse out any real meaning from a few of his early posts. I certainly do not think he is a good representative or spokesman for the philosophy of Objectivism.

I agree with Robert Bidinotto's analysis in post #72, with one exception. He states:

"This guy needs to have his sorry ass thrown into the slammer, to be taught a good lesson about the meaning of both rights and responsibilities."

While I understand and generally agree with the sentiment, I really don't think any of us is in command of enough of the facts to pass final judgement on this situation. I think Bob Palin gets it right when he says:

"The courts and the parties involved should resolve the matter and Star should make restitution for any harm caused by his action/speech."

I'm not saying that incarceration might not be warranted in this case, but I do think, as a country, we have progressed to a point where we are unnecessarily locking up far too many people for offenses that could be better handled through other means.

One huge failure of our educational system is that it teaches little to nothing about issues of the rights and responsibilities that Robert is referencing. (No surprise in our current culture which abdicates responsibility for everything.) This leave it to each individual to arrive at their own understanding in this arena through personal observation and experience. Because of this, I think that many basically good people make unnecessary mistakes in their dealings with others as they struggle through a learning process for which they received little theoretical or practical training. I'm certainly not insinuating that this absolves them of responsibility for the outcome of their actions, but I do think it is imperative to take intent into account when passing judgement in situations like this. I am a firm believer that punishment involving direct restitution to a victim (when possible) is instructional and much more likely to change future behavior than punitive actions such as jailing them, which more often than not, simply produces resentment.

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Post 82

Saturday, May 20, 2006 - 3:47amSanction this postReply
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CJS demonstrated his usual profound insights when he observed:

I do think, as a country, we have progressed to a point where we are unnecessarily locking up far too many people for offenses that could be better handled through other means. ... I do think it is imperative to take intent into account when passing judgement in situations like this. I am a firm believer that punishment involving direct restitution to a victim (when possible) is instructional and much more likely to change future behavior than punitive actions such as jailing them, which more often than not, simply produces resentment.

I agree completely.  I would much prefer to see a civil suit demonstrating actual damage done rather than criminal charges with questionable motives.  Of course, the legal system needs a major tort reform to stop frivolous lawsuits aimed at deep pockets like those of Star, but that is another matter.  I would have a hard time arguing that such a suit in this situation would be frivolous even though I might argue it is not criminal.

It is a shame Bill Perry is on sabbatical from Objectivist forums and has not commented on this.  His many years of experience as a prosecuting attorney might prove illuminating.


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Post 83

Saturday, May 20, 2006 - 6:10amSanction this postReply
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Post #75:

Robert, is The Objectivist Center now The Hand-Wringing Speech-Squashing Censorship Center for Objectivism in Name Only? If so, I will cease all support of it. I need to reduce my subscriptions, anyway, so just give me the word and I will make the call to discontinue monthly contributions.


The above cheap shot is an aside, best taken "outside" (elsewhere). But it does afford me an opportunity to note a curious phenomenon, evident not only in Luke's comment above, but on other sites.

Observe that every time I post something that Certain People do not like, my personal views are immediately attributed to my employer, The Objectivist Center.

However, also observe that every time I post something that virtually everyone likes and approves, Certain People never credit The Objectivist Center.

Isn't this a curious phenomenon? Gee, folks, I wonder what it could mean?

Luke, let me repeat something we've said about one million times, but Certain People refuse to "get." The Objectivist Center is no monolith, and staff members aren't required to march in lockstep. There is plenty of staff debate and disagreement about the application of principles that we all share. That's because unlike some groups, we take the term "rational individualism" seriously. Thus, I didn't conduct a poll of the staff, or humbly seek permission to speak out, before weighing in here...or before publishing my blog. Two books and many published articles on crime and the criminal justice system amply qualify me to speak out on this issue, and on my own behalf (as if the First Amendment weren't qualification enough).

So how about directing your comments exclusively to the argument at hand, or -- if you must -- against me personally, and not resort to "guilt by association"? If indeed I bear any "guilt" for standing up on behalf of the rights of a frightened child and its parents to be free from public threats and intimidation.

If that be "censorship," Luke, make the most of it.


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Post 84

Saturday, May 20, 2006 - 6:57amSanction this postReply
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Robert wrote:

So how about directing your comments exclusively to the argument at hand, or -- if you must -- against me personally, and not resort to "guilt by association"?

I have already done that, Robert.  You have adequately answered my question about TOC.  While TOC as an organization does not advocate censorship or ethnic prejudice, you might well be doing so based on the exchanges I have seen here.  Your views do render your editing of The New Individualist suspect, though.  Would you publish an article in TNI defending Star's right to free speech in this case as argued by some here?

Obviously this amounts to what you call "debate and disagreement about the application of principles that we all share."  Suffice it to say that I disfavor criminal charges in this case in favor of a lawsuit based on demonstrable damages.  I seriously doubt that the nemesis DJ could make a case for believable impending harm.  But I could be wrong.

(Edited by Luke Setzer on 5/20, 7:02am)


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Post 85

Saturday, May 20, 2006 - 8:26amSanction this postReply
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So wait a minute, I have nothing to do with TOC, I have never made any comments about ethnicity, and what we disagree on Luke is that you feel civil action is warranted where I feel crminal action is warranted? And yet you felt the need to berate me? Thanks for the apology. Whether the actions warranted criminal or civil action wasn't even the debate. Pretty slick there how changed the argument. I also like the guilt by association you are attributing to Robert and TOC, how does that fit into the ideals of objectivism? I suppose since you are part of RoR, I can attribute RoR to some kind of collectivist ideal since guilt by association should be the expected norm now? Would I be justified in calling RoR a bunch of collectivist/anarcho-capitalist activists? I think not. So you can show some civility to Robert and I and not do the same.

I can't speak on behalf of Robert but the ethnic angle he's playing on that previous post 72 I attribute to trying to make an analogy. An analogy is by no means proof of the arguments validity, it only helps as a way to help explain a position better and Robert was making a colorful description of his analogy. He's Italian, I don't think he really thinks Italians should be labeled as mafioso thugs, only that ethnicity can play a factor if the individual's behavior is reprentative of a mafioso thug, i.e. "it would be a shame if something happened to your house". I think you are unfarily taking Roberts words out of context and meaning.

But the argument was whether the speech was coercive, and it started to sound like Luke and Michael Moeller were beginning to think there was no such thing as coercive speech.

But I digress. I disagree with the notion it should only be a civil matter as his comments lead the child and parents to be in a state of fear and intimidation. This was not a breach of contract, most civil suits without a prior criminal suit entails breach of contract, or libel or slander or some kind of property damage that wasn't a result of violent action. Since fear and intimidation were involved, this ought to meet the standard of criminal prosecution as you have no right to use fear and intimidation to coerce someone from dropping a civil suit no more than doing so on the air. Suppose it was handled as a civil suit, and Star continued his sick veiled threats because the parents initiated a civil suit? Where do you draw the line? When can the state step in to protect the child and parents from these threats?

But I could be wrong. You are certainly entitled to your opinion Luke but the way you went about attacking Robert and myself was quite insulting and unnecessary.

(Edited by John Armaos on 5/20, 8:29am)


Post 86

Saturday, May 20, 2006 - 9:32amSanction this postReply
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This thread has reached the point of irreconcilable differences and only the judgment of the court ultimately matters anyway.

Are those broadcasts recorded somewhere we can listen to them?  Perhaps if I actually heard it I might find it more convincing -- or not.  Does Star have any criminal record that would make his threats believable?  Does his history of outrageous broadcast stunts make the broadcast in question unbelievable?

I have already spoken my mind about the issue.  Nothing anyone has said here thus far has changed it.


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Post 87

Saturday, May 20, 2006 - 11:00amSanction this postReply
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Michael:I will always look for clues as to the motivations of the people finding the theme of their character then makes sense of their actions and thoughts.

Michael, I wonder why you lose so much time finding the theme of people's character,don't you know that for the majority of people you do not exist? Your paintings do. LOL
This is the  price to pay for being an artist!


Post 88

Saturday, May 20, 2006 - 11:14amSanction this postReply
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Thanks to various people for their comments. I'm undecided on whether his words should constitute a legally actionable threat, and it's been interesting to see the arguments here.

Many specific aspects people are arguing seem to not be mutually exclusive with arguments for the other side. For example, it's very questionable that his on-air comments were intended as serious rather than stunt - yet also likely a problem could be posed by a few crazy listeners who take them as serious. It also seems both that his radio rival may reasonably consider this a concern - and also have ulterior motive to blow the situation out of proportion.

Like most people here, I've only seen the isolated offensive comments written down, with no surrounding phrases, inflection, connotation, etc. Kurt, you seemed very confident context made it clear Star's comments were not serious; where did you encounter it? Has anyone else seen or heard the surrounding audio broadcast or a transcript to give more context? Thanks.


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Post 89

Saturday, May 20, 2006 - 11:18amSanction this postReply
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John,

You say that nobody was questioning whether anybody was disputing distinctions between idle threats and real threats?  Perhaps you missed Robert's post (#17):
After all, who can tell which coercive statements are "idle threats" or serious ones?
Who can tell?  Robert, via his last post, obviously can tell.  That was a neat little trick, too, by going from this statement to then backing away in his last post and applying the "reasonable person" standard to see if a threat is "idle" or serious".  Will Robert admit this is wrong and instead say he meant to apply the reasonable person standard? I doubt it.  I am sure I will be accused of taking this "out of context" instead evaluating Robert's words as meaning what they mean.

Maybe he can in BIG, BOLD letters tell us once again that a "real" threat of violence is not protected by the 1st Amendment.  Well, duh?  I stated that exact thing in my last post and have stated all along that "real threats are a problem" and that the Supreme Court "treats them as criminal".  Then you guys make the Great Leapt saying X is a real threat and therefore is not protected.  Yes, IF it is a real threat!!  The question is:  what standards do you use to determine if statement X as a real threat?  What makes it illegal and how do you know it?  Is the surrounding context sufficient to make it fall under protected speech?  This is conveniently skipped over and all threats are treated as if they are created equal and backed up with concretes that prove their own point.  Stunning legal analysis.

But I am in a generous mood today, John, and I'll take Robert at his subsequent word that he wants to use the "reasonable person" standard for evaluating a threat.  But that's it?  A reasonable person standard?  No mens rea attached to this?  That is going to make a HUGE DIFFERENCE in how the action is evaluated and the OUTCOME of the case.  John, you make an attempt at this:
 Harrassment alone is an initiation of force as it was foreseeable the child could be harassed or otherwise harmed directly as a cause of Torain's on-air statements.
Reasonable forseeability of the harm? Reasonably forseeability of the harm is a standard applied where the mens rea is negligence, such as involuntary manslaughter.  Is that what we are dealing with?  Crimes of rape and murder (and the attempt of them) have a mens rea of purpose, of conscious intention.  If you answer only one question, John, answer this one:  in evaluating a threat of rape, why the hell would you apply a test of negligence for a crime that requires purpose?  Its like saying all you have to do to prove you know calculus is to pass a test for algebra.  If you are using a "reasonable person" standard, wouldn't the proper method of evaluation be whether a reasonable person would interpret the defendant's statement as a serious intention to inflict bodily harm?

I found the case I mentioned earlier on the threat against LBJ (Watts v. US), here is what the defendant said:
"If they ever make me carry a rifle the first man I want to get in my sights is L.B.J."
This is more explicit than the examples Robert gave, but why did the Court strike it down?  Where the statute requires purpose ("knowing and willing intention to inflict death or bodily harm on the President") they applied the standard where a reasonable person would construe this as an intent to inflict bodily harm.  Here, even though it was directed at the specific person in the President, in light of the fact it was a political rally and the people laughed at the comment, the Court did not consider it "serious intention".  They dismissed it as "political hyperbole", i.e. as following under protected speech.

IF the standard had been would a reasonable person forsee this to be interpreted by the perceiver as intention to inflict harm, then the outcome would probably completely different.  In fact, this threat did take cause the state to take protective measures to secure the life of the President, yet they struck it down

And do either you or Robert take into account different types of threats of violence, like in Brandenburg where the death threats were directed generally?  Or in your standards of evaluation, do you take into account mitigating circumstances like the case above that involves "political hyperbole"? What about the proper mens rea?

No, you guys take none of this into account.  Instead, you look at Mr. Torain's case and supply a couple of hypothetical concretes, and draft a law around it stating all threats of violence are not protected speech.  Unbelievable.  It would be rather pointless to argue if there is a better standard than the "reasonable person" because that doesn't seemed to be grasped too well to begin with.

I don't what a "tyraid" is, John, but a tirade it is not.  It is annoyance--annoyance at the fact that there is no regard for basic legal principles, no regard for a wider category of threats, no regard for circumstances that would put it under protected speech, and on and on.  I would expect it from Bill, who wants to obliterate the line between speech and action.  I think Little Johnny on the playground can tell the difference between saying "I want to kick Little Susie in the stomach" and actually going over and kicking Little Susie in the stomach.  A statement maybe back up by physical force, a statement may exhibit an intent to committ physical coercion, but physical coercion itself it is not.

I did expect greater scrutiny from Robert.  He edited and wrote articles for a book on criminal justice, which was quite good.  He should be able to bring a greater level of legal scrutiny and make those kind of distinctions as above.  Ironically, it was I who defended his ideas punishment on the Crime and Punishment thread against Bill's sophistry.  Oh well.

Michael


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Post 90

Saturday, May 20, 2006 - 11:33amSanction this postReply
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Jeff writes:
While I understand and generally agree with the sentiment, I really don't think any of us is in command of enough of the facts to pass final judgement on this situation.
Yes, Jeff, this is the correct attitude.  I said something similar earlier when I wrote:
Can a case be made, based on these facts, that Mr. Torain was a real threat?  Sure, Bill, that's not what I am arguing.  Based on the facts specified, however, I don't think they have a great case.  If the police acted on what was perceived to be a real threat, I have no problem with that.  Mr. Torain can have his day in court to settle this on the facts.
Of course the fact that Mr. Torain offered $500 for the girl's address weighs heavily against a claim of non-intent.  But does keeping the "context" of the circumstances mean judging the man on this fact in isolation?  What would would one think if a judge or jury hung somebody by their toenails by just one fact supporting a defendant's intent?  Good luck with that judge or jury.

There are no other facts to consider here in regards to Mr. Torain's intent?  Like the fact he exhibits rage and is a radio host who makes inflammatory threats?  Did he make these threats before?  Do he seek to carry them out?  Judging the rant as a whole could a reasonable conclude that it didn't exhibit "serious intention"?  Somebody on the thread who listened to the broadcast thought so.  What kind of criminal announces his intent to millions of people before he goes and carries it out?  I don't know too many of those.  Isn't it prudent that before sentencing him to the "slammer" you consider facts that support his lack of intent?

Michael


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Post 91

Saturday, May 20, 2006 - 12:01pmSanction this postReply
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Hey Ciro,

Thank you for such a delicious compliment about my paintings and the reminder about the importance of my time.

Michael


Post 92

Saturday, May 20, 2006 - 12:36pmSanction this postReply
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Michael Moeller stated:

Then you guys make the Great Leapt saying X is a real threat and therefore is not protected. Yes, IF it is a real threat!! The question is: what standards do you use to determine if statement X as a real threat? What makes it illegal and how do you know it? Is the surrounding context sufficient to make it fall under protected speech? This is conveniently skipped over and all threats are treated as if they are created equal and backed up with concretes that prove their own point. Stunning legal analysis.


I don't believe I ever said all threats are equal. Only that by definition, a threat is a coercive statement, and all coercive statements ought to be criminal.

Definition of threat:# An expression of an intention to inflict pain, injury, evil, or punishment.
# An indication of impending danger or harm.

Torain was either joking or threatening. I'm interpreting his words as a threat.

Harrassment alone is an initiation of force as it was foreseeable the child could be harassed or otherwise harmed directly as a cause of Torain's on-air statements.

Reasonable forseeability of the harm? Reasonably forseeability of the harm is a standard applied where the mens rea is negligence, such as involuntary manslaughter. Is that what we are dealing with? Crimes of rape and murder (and the attempt of them) have a mens rea of purpose, of conscious intention. If you answer only one question, John, answer this one: in evaluating a threat of rape, why the hell would you apply a test of negligence for a crime that requires purpose? Its like saying all you have to do to prove you know calculus is to pass a test for algebra. If you are using a "reasonable person" standard, wouldn't the proper method of evaluation be whether a reasonable person would interpret the defendant's statement as a serious intention to inflict bodily harm?


I'm not a lawyer and don't profess to be one. But what is legal does not necessarily mean what something ought to be. In this case Torain's actions lead to fear and intimidation, professing the ignorance of what the consequences of his actions would lead to does not excuse the behavior. I can't crawl into his mind and figure what he intended to do, it shouldn't matter what his intent was. I'm sure Stalin intended to help people, and he thought his intentions were noble, but it doesn't matter. We hold people accountable to their actions, not to their thoughts. Speech is action. He should've known his speech would lead to harm which it did, the parents and child were in a state of fear and intimidation, a state of fear and intimidation as a result of someone's speech is harm. And speech, contrary to your efforts to present a dichotomy, is an action. There is also a thing called criminal negligence where the action was criminal by virtue of its willful carelessness. But I can't read minds, so I'm only going to go by his actions.

This is more explicit than the examples Robert gave, but why did the Court strike it down?


I don't really care. Appeal to authority arguments do nothing to validate your reasoning.

I would expect it from Bill, who wants to obliterate the line between speech and action.


There is no line! Speech is action. I don't care how the legal principles are applied it doesn't change the objective reality of what Speech is. Speech is the end result of an action, you must move your mouth to speak, you must move your hand to write. You must move a brush to paint.

I think Little Johnny on the playground can tell the difference between saying "I want to kick Little Susie in the stomach" and actually going over and kicking Little Susie in the stomach. A statement maybe back up by physical force, a statement may exhibit an intent to committ physical coercion, but physical coercion itself it is not.


That's ridiculous, first of all nice attempt at patronizing the argument. But what do you think a teacher ought to do when Little Johnny says that? You don't think the Teacher should punish Little Johnny for saying that? By allowing the action to go unpunished you allow for a state of fear and intimidation to be the norm. And that's exactly the kind of discourse we often see in this country. I don't know what school this would be but if Little Johnny's butt didn't get detention I'd pull my child out of that school. Thuggery of any kind should not be rewarded.

Like the fact he exhibits rage and is a radio host who makes inflammatory threats? Did he make these threats before? Do he seek to carry them out? Judging the rant as a whole could a reasonable conclude that it didn't exhibit "serious intention"?


It would have to be completely obvious he was joking. Otherwise you're asking people to read minds. The burden is on the individual to make sure people understand he's joking 100%. But there's a line that you can cross where no amount of convincing can take away doubt of the true intent of his actions. Some jokes can just simply not be interpreted any other way other than a threat. Does he not speak candidly ever on the show? Is the show 100% jokes and no commentary? Saying it is a joke would imply we understand the motives, sorry but I don't fully understand the motive to that statement of offering 500 dollars to find out what school the child goes to. I can't see how anyone can interpret that as humor.
(Edited by John Armaos
on 5/20, 3:11pm)

(Edited by John Armaos
on 5/20, 3:13pm)


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Post 93

Saturday, May 20, 2006 - 12:38pmSanction this postReply
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So true - it is thru our works that we are known, if at all.......

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Post 94

Saturday, May 20, 2006 - 4:51pmSanction this postReply
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In Post 47, Michael Moeller states, "Remember, people are criminally liable for their actions, not their words." And in Post 92, he refers to me as someone "who wants to obliterate the line between speech and action."

So Michael, are you saying that the airline passenger who makes a false bomb threat by telling the flight attendant that his luggage contains a time bomb set to go off in five minutes, when in fact it doesn't, is not criminally liable for his words, because people are criminally liable only for their actions, and his words do not constitute an action?

Would you say the same thing about liable and slander - that these are also not crimes, because they are mere words and not actions? How about a heckler who interrupts a speaker, and thereby prevents people from hearing him? Does the heckler have a right to do that, because he is employing mere words and not actions?

If, as Rand says, "The concept of a 'right' pertains only to action -- specifically, to freedom of action" (VOS, p. 94) -- and there is a right to freedom of speech, then the right to freedom of speech must be a right to freedom of action, in which case, speech is an action.

So, I take it that you disagree with Rand's definition of a right, and would say that the concept of a right does not pertain only to action, but includes speech as well. I wonder, then, how you would define the concept of an action. Care to enlighten us?

- Bill

Post 95

Saturday, May 20, 2006 - 7:33pmSanction this postReply
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Aaron, I did listen to his show a reasonable amount of time.  However, I am not 100% sure.  I think I will leave it to the system to handle this (as if I have a choice anyway).  I find that despite some notable flaws, the legal system is pretty good at handling stuff like this.  Ultimately, I can't say I know enough to be certain either way.

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Post 96

Saturday, May 20, 2006 - 9:06pmSanction this postReply
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I liked him because I thought he had an individual take on Oism and was using in-your-face material to get people to reconsider why hate is bad and to hopefully react positively. I thought: "Well, maybe this is something I just won't understand completely." In a sense, I was thinking "reverse psychology". But I only listened to one show (which wasn't that bad--- apparently, he's worse), I read his words here, and I don't listen to the radio.

He crossed the line with the verbal threats--- whether he actually meant them or not. If Oism supports individualism, it also supports self-responsibility. When I read this thread, I thought, "What is it with people who go overboard and act as if they have no idea the difference between professional/public and personal and then get upset when not everyone applauds them?!" [Reason? Where?]

I don't care what subculture it is (because this isn't about culture or race), but entrenching the mind in hate words or just hate (no matter how awesome the stated goal is), does have a destructive effect on thought and destructive effects on others if you're not responsible for yourself. In the end, the "awesome" goal becomes a joke when the person thinks it makes them better, and they refuse to see, with insight, how words can have a negative impact, and how that impact could turn against them. [What self-interest?]

For me, it would be good if he apologized, but way better if the focus from "Hate" was changed to, say, "Love". Fluffy, but look where Hate went.

**I don't know anything about free speech/threats/legality to warrant any attempt in that aspect of this thread, but it is interesting to learn about legality here.

Post 97

Sunday, May 21, 2006 - 1:00amSanction this postReply
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Michael Moeller wrote,
I found the case I mentioned earlier on the threat against LBJ (Watts v. US), here is what the defendant said:
"If they ever make me carry a rifle the first man I want to get in my sights is L.B.J."
This is more explicit than the examples Robert gave, but why did the Court strike it down? Where the statute requires purpose ("knowing and willing intention to inflict death or bodily harm on the President") they applied the standard where a reasonable person would construe this as an intent to inflict bodily harm. Here, even though it was directed at the specific person in the President, in light of the fact it was a political rally and the people laughed at the comment, the Court did not consider it "serious intention". They dismissed it as "political hyperbole", i.e. as following under protected speech.

IF the standard had been would a reasonable person forsee this to be interpreted by the perceiver as intention to inflict harm, then the outcome would probably completely different. In fact, this threat did take cause the state to take protective measures to secure the life of the President, yet they struck it down.
It strikes me that there are two different issues here. One is whether or not the man's statement was in fact a serious threat, and the other is whether or not he should be held criminally liable for the inconvenience that he caused the president and his security staff, even if he was not seriously intending to harm the president. My understanding (and please correct me if I'm wrong) is that the ruling of the Court was that his statement did not reflect a serious intent to harm the president. This would not, however, absolve him of liability for a statement that could easily have been, and in fact was, construed that way, since it caused the state to take protective measures to secure the life of the president, which was a reasonable action under the circumstances. Therefore, the man should at least have been held liable for causing this kind of fear and inconvenience, in the same way that the perpetrator of a false bomb threat should be held liable for the fear and inconvenience that his threat occasioned, even though he had no intention of setting off a bomb or of physically harming anyone.

- Bill

Post 98

Sunday, May 21, 2006 - 5:29amSanction this postReply
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Bill rightly noted:

Therefore, the man should at least have been held liable for causing this kind of fear and inconvenience, in the same way that the perpetrator of a false bomb threat should be held liable for the fear and inconvenience that his threat occasioned, even though he had no intention of setting off a bomb or of physically harming anyone.

Relentless harassment from Viking Collection Services to collect a liability judgment would perfectly fit the transgression.


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Post 99

Sunday, May 21, 2006 - 2:37pmSanction this postReply
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John,

That's precisely what I mean--you just dispensed with mens rea.  Obviously, one cannot peer directly inside another's head, but that doesn't mean you cannot establish the requisite level of intent from the statements and actions of the criminal.  Take your Stalin example, how could anybody doubt his willfully and knowingly intention to kill when he ordered people to be executed and into concentration camps?  You don't need to look inside his head to establish this. If he stated "I didn't intend to kill them", it wouldn't matter, the fact show his intention to kill them (and did).  What if I got caught outside a bank with a mask, a gun, a floorplan of the bank, and a safe-cracking device--can you use this to establish my intent the rob the bank? 

Mens rea provides the very basis for the grading of crimes.  That's the prosecutor's job, to use the facts and statements to prove the level of culpability required for the specific crime.  Compare a 1st degree murder with somebody who recklessly drives their car and kills another.  They are graded differently because one is based on a deliberate, premeditated killing and another is based on reckless conduct.  Do you judge them the same based on the actions alone because one person killed another?  No, you have to use their statements and actions to meet mens rea required for each of these crimes.

John, it is not an argument from authority, I am laying out the principles the legal system uses and why they are valid.  I'm going to conclude here John because I feel like I am speaking to the wind.

Michael



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