Thursday, April 21, 2011

the whole rutgers thing

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dharun ravi--wow, this guy just looks like a douchebag, doesn't he?  even in two dimensions, he fairly oozes that smug, shiny, well-fed arrogance peculiar to his kind.  this is the sorta kid for whom college and life beyond were supposed to be as effortlessly golden as the childhood he'd left behind.

guess not so much anymore, huh?

because, see, this is also the sorta kid who, since time immemorial, has taken it as his god-given right to make a living hell outta the not-so-golden lives of kids like


tyler clementi. even my two-sizes-too-small heart aches every time i look at this picture and imagine his tortured last hours, and think of the promise lost.

but that doesn't stop me from asking whether his tormentor should really be facing a 10-year prison sentence for what seems on its face no more than a malicious, stupid prank--and yeah, i mean no matter how horribly wrong it went.

before i go any further, lemme just say that (a) i'm not a lawyer, legal expert or constitutional scholar; and (b) i don't have all the facts of the case as presented to the grand jury that returned the indictment--when i do, my opinion may change.

but from what i can tell, mr. ravi's being charged with a "hate" crime (whatever that even means), because his victim (a) was gay; and (b) killed himself, presumably as a result of mr. ravi's actions [i'm inferring this last part, because even though the prosecutor denies it, i think it's safe to assume that we wouldn't be talking about a 10-year prison sentence had mr. clementi not jumped off the bridge].

so i have a couple questions:

  • are mr. ravi's actions criminal only because his victim was gay?  in other words, if some future douchebag does this to his nerdy straight roommate--say, a fundamentalist christian kid who hangs himself because, to him, the thought of his fornication being exposed to the world is worse than death--will he be charged with a hate crime, too?  and if so, into what protected class does said straight roommate fall?  and if not, then why is what happened to the gay kid worse than what happened to the straight kid, and where is equal justice under the law?
  • or are mr. ravi's actions criminal only because his victim killed himself?  in other words, if he'd picked a thicker-skinned gay kid to psychically bash, would we even be talking about this?
  • what if the doubtless charming mr. ravi,  his presumed dream-team of attorneys and an endless string of character witnesses manage to snow a jury into believing mr. ravi doesn't have a homophobic bone in his body, and that he was just goofing on a roommate--is what he did still a crime?

you see where i'm going with this?  with the introduction of the "hate crime" concept, all of a sudden it's not about what the perpetrator actually did anymore; we have to bring the thought police in, because it becomes all about what was in his heart, what his intentions were, and whether or not he did it to a member of a special, protected class of people--the actual crime kinda gets lost in the confusion.

and that's where my problem with hate crime legislation and protected classes lies.  yeah, when it comes to crime, we're all equal under the law--except, of course, for those of us who are more equal (or more hateful) than others.

*     *     *     *     *

having said all that, would i want a guy who gay-bashed me or anybody i care about charged with a hate crime?  you bet your sweet ass i would--and not only him, but his mama, daddy, pre-natal nurse, obstetrician and/or anybody else who was responsible for bringing his hateful ass into the world.


which is why you're not supposed to let vengeful victims or their advocates write the laws--but that, in essence, is exactly what's happened with hate crime legislation.

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

and speaking of things i was right about

 .
since our deal with the middle east has always involved protecting oppressive dictatorships in exchange for cheap dollar-denominated oil, and since we now seem to be throwing said oppressive dictators under the bus one after another, i'm wondering how long before the saudis wake up and start shopping around for better protectors [like the chinese and/or russians, for example--both of whom abstained from the libya vote]. . .

 turns out it didn't take 'em long at all.




as for the second part of the above quote,

. . . and we find ourselves up shit creek, crude-wise.

lemme put it this way:  when the saudis talk about "expanded business opportunities" with the russians and chinese, they ain't talking about sending 'em sand.

look, the prospect of $9 gas doesn't bother me much personally--hell, i bought my prius a year ago, and anything that gets the riff-raff off the streets and frees up traffic can't be all bad--but what's coming is gonna hurt america, and it's gonna hurt us bad.

[h/t to john for sending me the above clip]