Steve
Penultimate Amazing
Trials and courts? Who needs them. Just let the police on the spot be judge and jury! Kinda like ICE.Oh good, let's just abandon the process then.
May contain traces of irony.
Trials and courts? Who needs them. Just let the police on the spot be judge and jury! Kinda like ICE.Oh good, let's just abandon the process then.
May contain traces of irony.
No, it doesn't work like that.When someone is all in on the idea that a person is arrested due to a "thought crime" I think they're always going to be resistant to any viewpoint they disagree with as well.
In my office upstairs I have a souvenir from my time working as a volunteer guide at a women's health clinic in USAia, escorting women past the horde of god botherering scum screaming abuse at them.That's really bloody rich coming from you!
Yes. Begin by not arresting people for things that are not crimes.Oh good, let's just abandon the process then.
May contain traces of irony.
You're not wrong, technically.Sigh. No it's not, it's prosecution of a stated intention, i.e. an attempt.
Sorry, sometimes my idea of humour is rather singularNo, they are not. The embassy itself is restricted, not the surrounding area.

It works exactly like that.No, it doesn't work like that.
His act of protest, however, should have been legal based on the content of the act itself.No, the act of demonstrating or protesting is illegal in that location. He stated publicly his intention to demonstrate in that location. That is evidence. He then proceeded to enter that location in accordance with his stated intentions. That is evidence. We have only his word about what he was thinking during that demonstration. Praying - who knows? There is no evidence. Can you provide evidence that he was actually praying silently? What there is evidence for are his actions., and that is why he was arrested.
Silent prayer on a public sidewalk is not harassment. Unless you want to live by the rules of an authoritarian regime.No. It's allowing women to exercise their freedom without harassment. But then you don't care about women, do you?
It wasn't necessary. It was a choice.Why was it necessary for him to pray outside an abortion clinic?
Apart, of course, from that it’s "a publicly owned and maintained sidewalk"?
The crime was defined by law before the event. The dude knew that. He chose to commit the crime anyway, and was properly arrested by those who knew the law.. He was convicted based on an interpretation of the law by a court. And was exonerated based on a different interpretation of the law by a higher court. A decision which invalidates the original law and makes it unlikely that similar arrests will occur in the future. The courts determined that a law passed by legislators was invalid. Which is how things work in most western countries. Absent the courts and this process there would be no method to review the laws passed by legislators and many more unjust arrests would result.Yes. Begin by not arresting people for things that are not crimes.
No, it wasn't. Burning the Qu'ran was not a crime.The crime was defined by law before the event.
And as it turns out, it wasn't a crime. Dude knew that.The dude knew that. He chose to commit the crime anyway
Well, they clearly didn't know the law, did they?...and was properly arrested by those who knew the law.
The next step in the process of punishment.He was convicted based on an interpretation of the law by a court.
And rightly soAnd was exonerated based on a different interpretation of the law by a higher court.
A decision which invalidates the original law and makes it unlikely that similar arrests will occur in the future.


I have ZERO confidence in this part of the process. From my observations of what is happening right now in the UK, this sort of thing won't happen again until it inevitably does happen again.The courts determined that a law passed by legislators was invalid. Which is how things work in most western countries. Absent the courts and this process there would be no method to review the laws passed by legislators and many more unjust arrests would result.
You're not wrong, technically.
But it gets a bit fuzzy when the stated intention is "I'm going to silently pray for the soul of my offspring that was killed here decades ago, and I view my silent prayer as a silent protest"
Even if you don't agree with the person's belief that it was murder, you should at least be able to recognize that a silent activity that isn't blocking anyone's ability to enter the premises is pretty damned benign.
He attested that he had been engaging in silent prayer as a vigil for his unborn son following an abortion procedure 22 years ago.
The order, which was due to be in place for three years, is intended to prevent “protesting… with respect to issues relating to abortion services”...“includes but is not limited to graphic, verbal or written means, prayer or counselling”. Another restricted activity is listed as “holding vigils’ [sic] where members audibly pray if they perceive a service-users [sic] is passing by”.
...Mr Smith-Connor affirms that he is aware of the so-called “safe zone” around the clinic while speaking to a community safety accredited officer who informed him that he was believed to be in breach of the order.
Remaining in the safe zone after being asked to leave...could result in a fine or prosecution.
The restrictions apply from 7am to 7pm on weekdays.
So describe a different, more fair, process that does not involve the police enforcing the law as written. Should legislators be stopped from passing laws? Should courts be stopped from interpreting the written laws based on evidence presented at trial? Should trials be abolished? Should the arresting police be the sole arbiters of guilt? Should laws be abolished in favour of anarchy?No, it wasn't. Burning the Qu'ran was not a crime.
And as it turns out, it wasn't a crime. Dude knew that.
Well, they clearly didn't know the law, did they?
The first step in the process of punishment.
The next step in the process of punishment.
And rightly so
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(There aren't enough laughing dogs to truly do this statement justice)
I have ZERO confidence in this part of the process. From my observations of what is happening right now in the UK, this sort of thing won't happen again until it inevitably does happen again.
Deleted. My comment appears to have been incorrect. Thanks to plague311 for providing the correct info.His act of protest, however, should have been legal based on the content of the act itself.
This isn't rocket science.
Silent prayer even one foot from a abortion clinic should not be illegal. It's absurd to think otherwise.
What part is special pleading? That doing something silently inside your head while not obstructing other people shouldn't be a crime, and that it doesn't matter how evil the thoughts inside their brain are?Ah yes, special pleading.
I assumed it, I could certainly be wrong.ETA: Where did you get the hilited from? I can't find anything saying that the fetus was killed there....only that the kid died from abortion.
What part is special pleading?
But it gets a bit fuzzy when the stated intention is "I'm going to silently pray for the soul of my offspring that was killed here decades ago, and I view my silent prayer as a silent protest"
That doing something silently inside your head while not obstructing other people shouldn't be a crime, and that it doesn't matter how evil the thoughts inside their brain are?
I assumed it, I could certainly be wrong.
It is also allowing residents near the place, workers at other businesses the ability to go about their daily life without harassment and intimidation. People in the UK have other rights than just the right of freedom of expression, as usual in a society different rights have to be balanced out with other rights.No. It's allowing women to exercise their freedom without harassment. But then you don't care about women, do you?
Your legal system works exactly the same way, cases have to go forward so that precedents get set, it happens with pretty much all legislation in countries based on the British system, such as the USA and New Zealand.The fact he was ULTIMATELY exonerated does not compensate or rectify the fact that he was put through a process that he should never have been put through in the first place.
And that is the plan. Even when authorities KNOW the accused will ultimately be exonerated, they still put them through the process to dissuade others and chill free speech. These things happen too often for it to be mere coincidence.
The process IS the punishment!