|  10-30-2009, 10:44 AM | #124 | 
	| Worn Romantic 
				 
				Join Date: Feb 2006 Location: Long Beach California 
					Posts: 8,435
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					Originally Posted by Ghoulish Delight  Perhaps not, but we as a society are already perfectly okay with creating different levels of punishment based solely on motive.  By your earlier logic, if I shoot someone in the head, my punishment should be no different if I did it because he's some stranger that spilled my beer at a bar and I happened to have my gun on me than if I spent months plotting to kill someone because they hit on my wife once.  The actual act is the same, different punishments would amount to punishing thought, no?
 Like I said, I don't necessarily think that hate crime legislation is an effective thing to do, but "we can't punish motive because that's being thought-police" isn't a argument against it that holds much water because, well, we already do that with no objection.
 
 Which is why rape carries a stiffer penalty than simple assault.  Crimes against children can carry larger penalties than crimes against adults.  Domestic violence stronger penalties than punching a guy at a bar.  We already have many dividing lines where, as a society, we feel it necessary to make a point of discouraging specific behavior.
 |  Thank you GD.  You made the exact same points I wanted to make last night, but couldn't (sick computer).
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