Fried Egg wrote: ↑December 13th, 2024, 4:26 am
I can agree with that. One of my original arguments is the non-universality of hate crime law. I think all law should be universally applied and that, if one group enjoys legal protection, all groups should.
I wonder if you expect too much from "law" — as distinct from justice — but I agree completely with your expressed sentiment. Laws apply equally to all of us.
Fried Egg wrote: ↑December 13th, 2024, 4:26 am
However, I still have problems with it. I don't think any group should be protected from critical (or even hateful) speech.
Critical speech is one thing. "Hateful" speech, which is hurtful and harmful, is quite another. All of us should be subject to the former, and protected from the latter. Hate speech is *intended* to cause hurt. That is its one and only purpose.
[Even when the hurt is not physical — "sticks and stones..." is a cruel proverb that carries a blatant lie.] That is why it should be prevented or punished. Criticism,
justified criticism, is an altogether more beneficial practice.
Fried Egg wrote: ↑December 13th, 2024, 4:26 am
Nor do I think that it should be possible to commit crimes against group identities. One can only commit crimes against individuals (or groups of individuals) but not group identities. And on that point I'm sure you'll disagree...
...until recently, I might have done. But I've been thinking...
But first, and I'll try to keep this bit brief, all human groups are necessarily "groups of individuals". There are no other possibilities. And those groups, once identified and labelled, have a 'group identity', by virtue of having been described (identified!) as a group.
If you stab me because I am male, you attack me as an individual. And I don't mean that literally, although it is literally true too. I mean that, by identifying me, and attacking me, as a member of the group labelled "male", you deny and erase my individuality. You are
moving toward denying my very humanity, as you reduce me just to 'a male', any old male. I'm an example of a male, a synecdoche for all males; I'm just the unlucky one who ended up on the wrong end of your knife. You didn't attack *me*, you attacked a male, and in doing so, you knowingly and intentionally attacked all males. I'm just the male who got stabbed. I'm not "Pattern-Chaser", a person, I'm just a 'male'.
A hate crime is a crime against the individual, literally
and as described above.