Again, I know that it doesn't. I'm saying it should. Because they have included thoughts in their outlawing of all forms of protests. They have criminalized thoughts.
No, they haven't. They have criminalized gathering in order to harass. As someone else pointed out, if they allow anyone to stand in the "no protesting" zone and "think" then they have to allow everyone to stand in the "no protesting" zone and "think". That's literally protesting. That becomes menacing, and harassing to people who are seeking medical procedures. If there were a few dozen people standing out front of a penis enlargement clinic, all with their eyes closed, praying, and I had to walk by them, I would be creeped the ◊◊◊◊ out. It would make me feel some way and that's not ok. That's the entire premise. The same with any other form of "protest". Silent protests are a ◊◊◊◊◊◊◊ thing. Remember you guys getting your undies in a bunch because of Kapernick? Yeah, same ◊◊◊◊ buddy.
You have yet to actually address that. You are doing nothing but deflecting.
No, I'm not deflecting. I'm answering it head on. You just don't like the answers and your only recourse is to tell me I'm wrong, and then imply I'm dodging. You haven't actually made any real point. You've cried about "thought policing" when everyone involved has openly said that it doesn't matter what he was thinking. We actually don't have any verifiable proof of what he was thinking, as has been pointed out to you by another poster. In fact, I'd dare to say he wasn't praying at all. He was mentally thinking, "I hope someone engages me, I get in trouble, and I can make the news". I don't think he was praying at all.
You think this is some sort of gotcha, but it isn't.
No, I think it's a comparison.
Because that would indeed also be criminalizing jumping jacks.
No, it would be criminalizing protests.
Which isn't really a problem, because we don't need categorical protections for jumping jacks. It's not a problem to criminalize jumping jacks under certain conditions.
Neither is it a problem to criminalize protesting. That's why no one is getting arrested for "thoughts". That's why you have this one, single example and you've held on to it to the point your knuckles are white. It doesn't happen, it didn't happen here, and it won't happen any time soon.
I think it's a problem to criminalize thoughts, even if you're criminalizing them under limited conditions. You don't. Just admit that.
Because I don't believe his thoughts were criminalized. In fact, I know they weren't because we don't know what he was thinking. We have no evidence as to what he was thinking. We do know that protesting in areas that are illegal, when you've told them you're going to protest, will get you in trouble....and it did. As we saw.