Scott wrote: ↑March 28th, 2023, 10:40 pm
LuckyR wrote: ↑March 28th, 2023, 8:15 pm
As to whether violent offenders are common or a "teeny tiny" percentage, most sources put them as [...] or 40% of all US prisoners
40% is a minority, so at least we agree that the majority of prisoners are only charged with non-violent crimes.
[...]
Nonetheless, can you provide the links to your specific source(s) for that statistic, meaning the 40% of all US prisoners being violent?
I ask because I am interested in the definition and criteria used for "violent criminal".
For example, an otherwise very peaceful gay person in Uganda who resists arrest and execution would then probably be considered a "violent criminal".
A woman who defended herself by physically resisting legal marital rape would herself be a "violent criminal".
If Martin Luther King had resisted arrest 1 of the 29 times he was arrested, he would have been deemed a "violent criminal".
LuckyR wrote: ↑March 29th, 2023, 2:38 am
There are many sources of data on prisoners (the primary subject matter of a thread on prisons, I might add). Take for example ProCon.org
I typed that URL into my browser and didn't see any stats.
But it's moot. I was just curious what your source was.
LuckyR wrote: ↑March 29th, 2023, 2:38 am
Didn't see resisting arrest, sorry. MLK need not apply.
You will likely find those under "aggravated and simple assault".
John Oliver did
a great, informative, and hilarious piece on school police in which he reports about how school officers arrested more than 54,000 students in s single school year. He reports about children being charged with assault for things such as throwing a paper airplane or Skittles. He reports about a five-year-old with ADHD who had a tantrum and was charged with battery on a police officer.
Those are many of the "violent criminals" you'll find in your statistics, and also help explain why arrests for violent crime go up so drastically when there's things like the war on drugs such as marijuana. It's hard to estimate just how much "violent crime" would instantly disappear if
consensual crimes like marijuana possession or being gay were legalized.
Of the three categories in the Original Post (OP), many so-called "violent criminals" really fall into category 1 of the 3. But, regardless, many truly violent criminals fall into the 2nd category, not the 3rd, especially if the police started the conflict. I am extremely confident that the number that fall into the third category of the three is indeed teeny tiny. Heck,
the police in the USA arrest over half of a million people for marijuana each year. Rapists and serial killers just cannot put up numbers like that.
But it's moot. It doesn't really matter if there is 100 of them, 1,000, or 10,000 in terms of what I am willing to do or do to them.
It's analogous to talking about whether their more pigs or cows in relation my vegetarianism. I'm not going to eat them either way.
Likewise, I oppose all non-consensual non-defensive violence (e.g. murder, rape, slavery, etc.). It's not something I do, and it's not something I support. You'll never see me
hanging peaceful gay people or putting pacifists in prison. Indeed, you will never see my put anyone in prison. You could see me helping drag someone to the mental ward of a hospital, but only in very exceptional cases regarding very exceptional people.
Thank you,
Scott
My entire political philosophy summed up in one tweet.
"The mind is a wonderful servant but a terrible master."
I believe spiritual freedom (a.k.a. self-discipline) manifests as bravery, confidence, grace, honesty, love, and inner peace.