Trakar
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Oct 20, 2007
- Messages
- 12,637
Mywas a nod to the fact that universal agreement will never happen, though as has been pointed out by others, we do have a fairly good definition of 'reasonable' being used in the courts, established by a fairly large amount of case law over the years.
I thought I was acknowledging that I was agreeing and expanding upon the perceived intent of your emoticon, apologies if that did not translate well.
As to the legal definitions they are many and varied, as well as generally constantly undergoing revision and reinterpretation, not that this is necessarily a bad thing, but rather that such are generally vague and moving targets.
If i had to paraphrase your statement, it would be thus : 'I don't see anywhere that I "blamed the victim,", what I did imply was that if potential victims respond to a threat with force, they're doing something wrong'. By suggesting that using force in response to a perceived threat is unjustifiable escalation, you are blaming the victim in exactly that way I tried to describe. If you genuinely perceive that someone is threatening your life or your physical health, then using force to prevent them is an entirely reasonable and justifiable escalation. We then have a legal system where if necessary a jury can decide if your perception of danger was reasonable. This is the system working as it should.
My first response would be to say that as you apparently misinterpreted what I was trying to say, it is not surprising that you have constructed improper deductions from that misinterpretation. The primary difference being that when there is a reasonable clear display of an actual physical threat (eg. the individual brandishing a firearm and actually threatening personal harm and injury) we both view as "acceptable self-defense" as a reasonable response. It is when the threat is much more subjective and potentially abstract that we seem to disagree. IOW, just because I don't trust, or feel suspicious about the behavior of another individual, even if they are shouting at me and talking about what they do to people like me, I don't feel that this alone should give me the right to pull out a gun and shoot them, or even continue to walk up on them confident that I could pull a gun if their words turn to actions. IMO, the proper action is to de-escalate the situation and avoid that individual. The only time you pull a weapon is immediately prior to using that weapon, and you only do that when you have no other option in the preservation of your own life or the life of someone else who has no other option.
To take your viewpoint to a logical extreme, i could be cornered by two guys with knives who threaten to kill me unless i give them my money and if I pull out a gun to defend myself then I am at fault for escalating the situation. Now, I know that much advice along the lines of 'just give them the money' is given, and if handing over the cash was some magical shield which would ensure i would not then be harmed anyway then it would be really good advice, but we all know that's not the case.
Though my explanations, have now, and in the previous posts clarified my position,...in actuality, when simple robbery is the primary motivation the only time you and others (innocent and guilty) around you are most likely to get hurt, is when you resist and try to protect the $27 dollars in your wallet with your life. I would be very likely to never pull my gun in such a situation, at least not until after I had handed over my money and it looked like robbery alone was not their game.
Who would be entirely justified, whether the weapon they were being threatened with was a gun, a knife, a lead pipe or a pair of fists. Don't think fists can be deadly? Take that up with Andrew Young. Also note that this didn't require an extended beatdown, but only one single punch
Who should be going to jail. However, if they do not go to jail this is not a failing of gun laws, but rather of the application of self defense laws. After all, if we take the gun out of the equation and the assault you describe was of the form 'get off my lawn [with a shove] - hey you can't shove me [with a harder shove back] - hey you're assaulting me [with a fatal punch to the head]' Then the situation is the same. Unprovoked assault leading to a death - someone should go to jail. You'd struggle to find anyone here who would disagree, i feel.
I'm not sure what you are arguing in this example, should the attacker who felt threatened by the racial slur and insulting language of the dead man been found innocent by way of self-defense? or should the dead guy have pulled out a gun and started shooting at the three people who argued on a crowded street with him because he felt threatened after he initiated the exchange by trying to tell them what they should and should not be doing?
Striking the dead man was a bad choice, complicated by the fact that he actually died from what looks like a wild "girlish" swing. Manslaughter with jail time actually seems rather harsh for this incident, but it is hard to say without knowing all of the details, and I wouldn't be inclined to second guess the judge in this case. Most manslaughter cases are issues of negligence, without compounding factors they typically result in probation and possibly counseling, in this case something like anger management and impulse control would seem fitting.