Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑December 15th, 2024, 11:06 am
Good_Egg wrote: ↑December 13th, 2024, 7:54 am
If part of the motive for Alfie mugging Bruno is that Alfie counts Bruno as rich and Alfie is prejudiced against rich people thinking them to be - as a class - idle, selfish and undeserving - then that is a group-prejudice motive. Why does that warrant a more severe punishment ?
I don't think a search for exactly what might qualify as a hate crime, and what might not, is helpful.
The notion of well-defined terms is so
antiquated ? And gets in the way of expressing your feelings ?
And yet, I cannot help but wonder if your choice, in your example, of the group "rich people" is somehow intended to demean the whole idea of anti-group crimes?
If what you say about groups is equally applicable to groups for which you do and do not have political sympathy, then maybe it's worth listening to. If what you say doesn't stand up when that element of sympathy is removed, how much weight can we give it ?
The point is that, in this case, any man would do, because the real target of the attack was men, all of them. I just got unlucky that I was the example the criminal chose to demonstrate their hate.
The point is that - at one end of the spectrum of group size - there are crimes which are not related to any characteristic of the victim. Crimes where any
human would do. (Or any human with a wallet...)
You appear to think that those crimes somehow necessarily don't involve "hate" ? That whatever a "hate-crime" is, it isn't that ?
Seems like you think you can infer a level of hate from the size of the group which the perpetrator thinks they are targeting ? That's nonsense.
Hate is a bad thing. But conflating level of hate with the size of the group being targeted (in the mind of the attacker) is just an error, based on misunderstanding of those who do not share your political sympathies.
After all, there is no hate in burglary. There is envy, I suppose, but not real hate.
Except if someone only burgles Muslims, for example, in which case you're happy to infer hate...
You cannot tell the difference between someone who hates everybody and someone who is an equal-opportunity criminal who'll attack anyone without any hate involved.
=========
I'm thinking that maybe the truth behind this relates to the notion of provocation. If a crime was actually provoked in some way, then that is a mitigating factor - something that makes it a less-serious offence.
If there was objectively no provocation, but in the mind of the criminal there was provocation, then that still seems like a less-criminal mentality than someone who freely admits there was no provocation.
"Opinions are fiercest.. ..when the evidence to support or refute them is weakest" - Druin Burch