Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑November 26th, 2024, 7:45 am
We have already discussed and agreed, I think, that the label "hate crime" is an unhelpful misnomer. But that's just a bad choice of label, and does nothing to discredit the whole idea.
So what would be a good label, and why does the bad label persist ?
An accurate label might be "crimes against protected characteristics" - CAPC for short. I suggest that the reason proponents of such measures don't like that is that it puts the emphasis on the (amoral and essentially arbitrary) decision of government as to what characteristics to put on the protected list. Whereas "hate crime" achieves emotional resonance by labelling the act with the evil of hatred, whether or not it is in fact present in any particular case (see D above).
You talk of "equivocation", but your primary aim here seems to be to defend your view on your chosen topic, no matter what?
Not at all. My aim is to clarify, to analyse, to dissect. To work out what is good/bad/right/wrong about the idea, to separate the true arguments from the false.
If I independently reach a conclusion that you've already come to, that's good. We agree.
So maybe we can drop the word "hate" from this thread from now on ?
(Note in passing that your misreading of my intent here underscores the difficulty of reliably inferring motive for crimes. Relying on a reading of another's motive as a basis for whether or not a crime has been committed is a bad idea.)
As I suggested in another post, hate crime could more clearly be labelled "member-ism" or "group-ism", indicating that the crime committed is aimed at — and hits!! — a whole group of people, who are only represented by the (usually singular) victim. That's what makes it different and more serious: the crime is committed against many people, maybe even billions of them (if the crime is one that takes aim at the group we label "women", for example).
As I've said, this is a valid argument - for the seriousness of terrorism, and of the wider impact of all crime. It's not an argument that supports the distinction between protected and non-protected characteristics.
For example, someone may feel afraid to go out at night after a spate of crimes, even if every single one of those crimes was motivated by something that has nothing to do with them.
A random mugging impacts everyone. A mugging that is obviously targeted against a Clelsea supporter because they are a Chelsea supporter is a "group-ist" crime in your terminology. But thereby has less wider impact...
"Opinions are fiercest.. ..when the evidence to support or refute them is weakest" - Druin Burch