Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑November 28th, 2024, 12:05 pmNo problem in saying that case law about group-prejudice (as a motivation for crime) is predominantly couched in terms of anti-Islamic prejudice rather than anti-Buddhist prejudice, because those are the cases that the legal system has to deal with.Good_Egg wrote: ↑November 28th, 2024, 4:55 am I find that I'm a little surprised that UK law has a definition of "Islamophobia".Could this be as simple as saying that we have a law against Islamophobia, because we have noted numerous cases of it, in practice, while we have not been so troubled with anti-Protestant or anti-Buddhist crimes?
Does it also define "phobias" about Protestantism or Zen Buddhism ?
How can that possibly be consistent with the notion of equality under the law ?
But if any equivalent act is defined as a crime when directed against the Islamic religion but not when directed against the Buddhist religion, then equality under the law has been lost.
There is a managerialist argument that says "We have a law-and-order problem driven by high levels of anti-Islamic motivation, but minimal equivalent anti-Buddhist motivation.
We should deal with this by criminalizing more behaviours, or increasing the severity of sentence, in the one case but not the other."
Such an argument is unjust.
There is a human temptation to escalate responses. To start off reasonable and tolerant and measured, but as one's words are not heeded, to grow louder and more extreme, threatening ever-greater punishment until one's message is heard and responded to.
Which is fine at the individual level. Persistent offenders may need escalating punishment until a level that achieves deterrence is reached (subject to considerations of overall proportionality).
But is unjust if applied to groups. Punishing Alfie more severely because Bruno and Charlie and Don have previously committed similar crimes is unjust to Alfie. Each of us is the protagonist of our own story. Each person's first offence is a first offence and should be judged as such.
As with so much else, treating people as instances of a group instead of as individuals in their own right is at the root of much wrongness.