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Moderated Using wrong pronouns= violence??

Give us an example of a context in which mere words should lead to a charge of assault & battery.

Upchurch, on the other hand, seems to be sincere in his belief that verbal abuse can be classified as criminal violence in at least one context.

I, too, would like to see an example of the context(s) Upchurch has in mind.

Incitement is a context where mere words could lead to a charge of assault and battery.

That is merely moving the goal posts.


For people who are so insistent that words can only have one meaning, you should really pay more attention to them.
 
Incitement is a context where mere words could lead to a charge of assault and battery.

That is merely moving the goal posts.


For people who are so insistent that words can only have one meaning, you should really pay more attention to them.

Incitement would lead to a charge of incitement not assault and battery. For the person doing the inciting that is. If the incitement causes someone to commit A&B then yes they'd be charged with that.
 
I think I've argued this before, but I'd actually like to see provocation upped to formal assault. If you use fighting words to pick a fight, you should fully be viewed as the instigator. Right now, most States treat provocation only as a mitigating factor.

Call a black guy the n-word? You were trying to provoke an attack, and should be treated as the initiator of the predictable subsequent violence. A lot of cowards like to hide behind freeze peach to spout vile hate without consequence. We could do without some of those fig leaves.
 
Not necessarily valid for all countries:

https://www.legalmatch.com/law-library/article/what-is-assault.html

"Is It Necessary to Strike Someone In Order to Be Found Guilty of Assault?
A person does not necessarily need to strike someone in order to be found guilty of assault. In fact, the legal definition and elements of proof for assault do not ever mention any kind of physical contact—only the reasonable belief that harmful or offensive contact will be inflicted on the victim.

However, there are some acts that may offer stronger proof that an assault occurred. For example, getting in someone’s fact can be considered assault if the assaulter is being aggressive and doing things like screaming, spitting, or threatening to hit the other person with an object that they are holding (e.g., bat, beer bottle, fist, etc.).

On the other hand, getting in a friend’s face and pretending to slap them while both parties are laughing about it, will not constitute an assault."
 
Assault can be merely verbal. Assault & battery, must include violence being done upon a person.

Agreed. It doesn't change the fact that you Moved the Goalposts mid-argument. You started with challenging to give an example of words being assault only, then quietly added & battery in there.
 
Incitement is a context where mere words could lead to a charge of assault and battery.
Incitement to violence is not violence. It's a separate crime.

That is merely moving the goal posts.


For people who are so insistent that words can only have one meaning, you should really pay more attention to them.
That is me trying to promote a more generally-accessible term, "criminal violence", since terms like "assault" and "battery" vary in meaning from jurisdiction to jurisdiction. But we all understand that what we're talking about is criminal violence, and whether or not being rude should qualify as criminal violence.

At least, that's what I understood us to be talking about. In that context, it seems to me that you don't think being rude ever qualifies as criminal violence, but you do think it can qualify as incitement to violence.

I'd like to keep that distinction, between violence and incitement, clear if possible.
 
Not necessarily valid for all countries:

https://www.legalmatch.com/law-library/article/what-is-assault.html

"Is It Necessary to Strike Someone In Order to Be Found Guilty of Assault?
A person does not necessarily need to strike someone in order to be found guilty of assault. In fact, the legal definition and elements of proof for assault do not ever mention any kind of physical contact—only the reasonable belief that harmful or offensive contact will be inflicted on the victim.

However, there are some acts that may offer stronger proof that an assault occurred. For example, getting in someone’s fact can be considered assault if the assaulter is being aggressive and doing things like screaming, spitting, or threatening to hit the other person with an object that they are holding (e.g., bat, beer bottle, fist, etc.).

On the other hand, getting in a friend’s face and pretending to slap them while both parties are laughing about it, will not constitute an assault."

If you are responding to me I said "battery" must be physical, not "assault".
 
Incitement would lead to a charge of incitement not assault and battery. For the person doing the inciting that is. If the incitement causes someone to commit A&B then yes they'd be charged with that.

Yeah. That's what I said.

Mere words leading to a charge of assault & battery.
 
Not necessarily valid for all countries:

https://www.legalmatch.com/law-library/article/what-is-assault.html

"Is It Necessary to Strike Someone In Order to Be Found Guilty of Assault?
A person does not necessarily need to strike someone in order to be found guilty of assault. In fact, the legal definition and elements of proof for assault do not ever mention any kind of physical contact—only the reasonable belief that harmful or offensive contact will be inflicted on the victim.

However, there are some acts that may offer stronger proof that an assault occurred. For example, getting in someone’s fact can be considered assault if the assaulter is being aggressive and doing things like screaming, spitting, or threatening to hit the other person with an object that they are holding (e.g., bat, beer bottle, fist, etc.).

On the other hand, getting in a friend’s face and pretending to slap them while both parties are laughing about it, will not constitute an assault."

I mentioned earlier that I was charged with assault on non-phyaical grounds. The judge went to great lengths to spell out the New Jersey USA concept and definitions of assault, which the charge was consistent with. The charge only failed on proofs.
 
Agreed. It doesn't change the fact that you Moved the Goalposts mid-argument. You started with challenging to give an example of words being assault only, then quietly added & battery in there.

When I say "assault", I mean a physical attack upon a person. But the law says that is "assault & battery", so I adjusted my language to fit the law.
 
When I say "assault", I mean a physical attack upon a person. But the law says that is "assault & battery", so I adjusted my language to fit the law.

Oh, what's this? Are you suggesting that the context of what is said makes a difference in the meaning of the words used, perhaps?
 
Why is calling someone a "he" instead of a "she" an act of violence, but calling someone a "jerk" is not?

I can't see anywhere in the article you refer to that they express an opinion on the insult "jerk". How do you know they do not also classify that the same way?
 
If you are responding to me I said "battery" must be physical, not "assault".

Actually to Thermal.. But yea battery is usually physical.

Legal arguments are really hollow without specifying the country and the laws you go by.

Assault in most laws is not Assault&battery - that is just one subset of assault, might have aggravated assaults and such. For all I know, some country might have Verbal Assault listed as well. But for USA - Assault&battery is definately NOT the only variation of assault there is.
 
That doesn't answer my question.

Does the context in which words are used matter or not?

Do you believe there is any context in which the use of the wrong pronoun should be considered assault & battery?

And if so, please describe said context.

Thanks.
 

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