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black321

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Location: An earth without maps
Gender: Male


Posted: Sep 14, 2023 - 8:02am

 Red_Dragon wrote:


I think this same issue can be thrown into a democratwingnutz thread
Some common sense here is clearly need. No need to "ban books" but then certain types of books should not be in grammar schools. 
Red_Dragon

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Posted: Sep 14, 2023 - 7:47am

rgio

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Posted: Sep 7, 2023 - 1:17pm

File this under 
Anyone wanna guess whose name was on the list of those asking for pardons before Trump left the WH?  

Republican lawmakers asked the White House for pardons before and after Jan. 6


oldviolin

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Posted: Sep 5, 2023 - 4:45pm

 Steely_D wrote:
Seems light to us that want justice - but imagine how much our culture changed in the past 20 years, and he’ll have to deal with all that if he serves all that time. That is, if people don’t vote Trump into office again…

If Democrats produce a viable candidate, he can't. Win.  Yet, all attempts to discredit his existence and punish him for his Trumpness are just building support among the many soured by the status quo. He knows this.  Stone cold, but there it is. Get us a candidate, Republicans and Democrats! This is all my opinion. I would prefer healing, myself. Instead we seem to have a collaborative effort among those in power and those presenting a skewed view of society and the cultural moods for the day to purposely run the country off a cliff. On one hand it stands to reason given the true nature of the god of this world of spiritual maya and crushing mammon. But enough preaching! Keep rigging sail for the new world.! It'll be along bye and bye and we can all float! Or something.
Steely_D

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Posted: Sep 5, 2023 - 4:24pm

 rgio wrote:

Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio sentenced to 22 years in prison for January 6

The prosecution asked for 33, so he ended up with 2/3rds of it.  



Seems light to us that want justice - but imagine how much our culture changed in the past 20 years, and he’ll have to deal with all that if he serves all that time. That is, if people don’t vote Trump into office again…
rgio

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Location: West Jersey
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Posted: Sep 5, 2023 - 3:39pm

Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio sentenced to 22 years in prison for January 6

The prosecution asked for 33, so he ended up with 2/3rds of it.  

kcar

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Posted: Sep 5, 2023 - 9:58am

 Lazy8 wrote:

As long as it's done by humans it will be subjective. I'd like to see a judge's justification for the severity of punishment. That also creates grounds for appeal.

If we're ok with allowing judges to impose harsher or more lenient sentences based on constitutionally-protected (or even irrelevant) behavior then we need to be ok with judges doing so on things like race, class, ethnicity, immigration status, height, hotness, or participation in the court's annual office chili cook-off. We aren't.


If you re-read the NPR piece and IIRC the CBS News piece I linked to, you'll see that the articles did mention why Pezzola got a lighter sentence than the one sought by prosecutors. 

1. He was a "foot-soldier", not a planner like Nordean. 

2. He was not found guilty of seditious conspiracy; Nordean was. 

3. The NPR piece mentioned that the judge wanted to reduce the disparity in sentences. The prosecutors IIRC wanted Pezzola to get 18 years, roughly the same as those convicted of seditious conspiracy and/or involved with planning the attack on the Capitol. 

4. The judge also stated, however, that he wanted to give Pezzola a stiff sentence to serve as a deterrent to other people contemplating similar behavior. 

5. AFAICT, Pezzola's yell didn't factor into the sentence. Whether it would have if he'd yelled it out before sentencing, I don't know. 
rgio

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Posted: Sep 5, 2023 - 9:51am

 black321 wrote:
We have individual judges who make all sorts of subjective decisions with cases.  It would seem to deal with your complaint, you would need to eliminate such discretion?

That's what "judging" is.  There is no way to "automate" everything, and decisions made by judges throughout an entire case (evidence, testimony, witnesses) ultimately has influence on the outcomes.

Lazy8

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Location: The Gallatin Valley of Montana
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Posted: Sep 5, 2023 - 8:34am

 black321 wrote:
So even if the ranges were narrowed, there is still subjective rulings based on whether someone says they are no longer involved in politics, drugs, domestic abuse... Regardless, bringing the matter more into the light does put pressure on judges to act appropriately.

As long as it's done by humans it will be subjective. I'd like to see a judge's justification for the severity of punishment. That also creates grounds for appeal.

If we're ok with allowing judges to impose harsher or more lenient sentences based on constitutionally-protected (or even irrelevant) behavior then we need to be ok with judges doing so on things like race, class, ethnicity, immigration status, height, hotness, or participation in the court's annual office chili cook-off. We aren't.
black321

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Posted: Sep 5, 2023 - 8:23am

 Lazy8 wrote:

We've tried that. On the federal level we had complicated formulae for calculating punishments that tied judges' hands, and the Supremes ruled that unconstitutional for good reason.

We have absurdly wide ranges of punishment on the books, mostly absurdly high. This gives a judge a lot of power to abuse. Sentencing reform should start with that.



So even if the ranges were narrowed, there is still subjective rulings based on whether someone says they are no longer involved in politics, drugs, domestic abuse... Regardless, bringing the matter more into the light does put pressure on judges to act appropriately. 
Lazy8

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Location: The Gallatin Valley of Montana
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Posted: Sep 5, 2023 - 8:17am

 black321 wrote:
We have individual judges who make all sorts of subjective decisions with cases.  It would seem to deal with your complaint, you would need to eliminate such discretion?

We've tried that. On the federal level we had complicated formulae for calculating punishments that tied judges' hands, and the Supremes ruled that unconstitutional for good reason.

We have absurdly wide ranges of punishment on the books, mostly absurdly high. This gives a judge a lot of power to abuse. Sentencing reform should start with that.

Lazy8

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Location: The Gallatin Valley of Montana
Gender: Male


Posted: Sep 5, 2023 - 8:12am

 Steely_D wrote:
A parallel question: should punishment be different for "hate" crimes? This, to me, is the exact same question you're asking but set up in an emotional powder keg. But the same question: If a person murders another because of their beliefs, is it a "worse" crime deserving a commensurate punishment? 

That is, is there ThoughtCrime?

Is there? Yes, there are statutes on various books enhancing punishment for hate crimes. Ought there be? Oh hell no.

I don't think it's worse to murder someone because you hate them than to murder them for the change in their pockets, and I see no deterrent value in enhanced penalties, at least for serious crimes. If you're willing to risk felony charges to express your hatred then adding more to your sentence isn't going to make you think twice.

It's also ripe for abuse. Great way to ratchet up the pressure to get a plea deal, and it means some crime victims get their perps punished harder than others for the exact same act. It can turn a barroom brawl into a federal case, and it can hinge on what would otherwise be constitutionally-protected speech.

We can never know what's in another person's heart. We shouldn't ask juries to pretend to have moral x-ray vision.
black321

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Posted: Sep 5, 2023 - 8:11am

 Lazy8 wrote:

To answer your question: political participation should have absolutely no bearing on sentencing for a crime. If a defendant gets lighter sentencing for forswearing political participation then it did.

This is not complicated, there is no nuance here. Absent a sentencing document justifying the penalty decision we have no way of knowing if it did or didn't, but it absolutely shouldn't.


We have individual judges who make all sorts of subjective decisions with cases.  It would seem to deal with your complaint, you would need to eliminate such discretion?
Lazy8

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Posted: Sep 5, 2023 - 8:02am

 haresfur wrote:
Well, I asked you a simple question and got an obtuse answer. And my answer to your question may depend on your answer to mine. Nuances.

To answer your question: political participation should have absolutely no bearing on sentencing for a crime. If a defendant gets lighter sentencing for forswearing political participation then it did.

This is not complicated, there is no nuance here. Absent a sentencing document justifying the penalty decision we have no way of knowing if it did or didn't, but it absolutely shouldn't.
haresfur

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Posted: Sep 5, 2023 - 12:33am

 Lazy8 wrote:

I'm asking a question. A very simple question. It seems to me to be in very plain language. Most of the respondents are trying very hard to answer some different question, and are failing/refusing to answer the one asked.

That question has an obvious answer—well, obvious to me anyway—but that doesn't make it rhetorical. I'm trying to provoke some introspection, some reflection on what the goal of a legal system should be. Is it there to enforce a political orthodoxy and punish those with different views, or is it there to protect the rights of everyone?

I seem to have mostly failed, and I find this disheartening.

Well, I asked you a simple question and got an obtuse answer. And my answer to your question may depend on your answer to mine. Nuances.

Steely_D

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Posted: Sep 4, 2023 - 2:04pm

 Lazy8 wrote:

I'm asking a question. A very simple question. It seems to me to be in very plain language. Most of the respondents are trying very hard to answer some different question, and are failing/refusing to answer the one asked.

That question has an obvious answer—well, obvious to me anyway—but that doesn't make it rhetorical. I'm trying to provoke some introspection, some reflection on what the goal of a legal system should be. Is it there to enforce a political orthodoxy and punish those with different views, or is it there to protect the rights of everyone?

I seem to have mostly failed, and I find this disheartening.


A parallel question: should punishment be different for "hate" crimes? This, to me, is the exact same question you're asking but set up in an emotional powder keg. But the same question: If a person murders another because of their beliefs, is it a "worse" crime deserving a commensurate punishment? 

That is, is there ThoughtCrime?
steeler

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Location: Perched on the precipice of the cauldron of truth


Posted: Sep 4, 2023 - 1:16pm

 Lazy8 wrote:

I'm asking a question. A very simple question. It seems to me to be in very plain language. Most of the respondents are trying very hard to answer some different question, and are failing/refusing to answer the one asked.

That question has an obvious answer—well, obvious to me anyway—but that doesn't make it rhetorical. I'm trying to provoke some introspection, some reflection on what the goal of a legal system should be. Is it there to enforce a political orthodoxy and punish those with different views, or is it there to protect the rights of everyone?

I seem to have mostly failed, and I find this disheartening.

Is our legal system there to enforce a political orthodoxy and punish those with different views? No. Is it there to protect the rights of everyone? Yes. Should the defendant’s politics enter into the way we’re treated in court? No.

Sentencing by a judge involves a number of factors and an element of subjectivity. One of those factors is whether a defendant is remorseful. Evaluating the sincerity of expressions of remorse includes considering and interpreting pre-sentencing statements made by a defendant in context. If, for example, Pezzola had raised his fist and yelled “Trump won” as part of his pre-sentencing statement, there is a good chance that would have been considered by the judge to be an expression of defiance that would have cast doubt on his expressions of regret and possibly resulted in the imposition of an increased sentence. If so, that would not, in my view, be an instance of the judge punishing Pezzola for having differing political views.

islander

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Posted: Sep 4, 2023 - 1:09pm

 Lazy8 wrote:

I'm asking a question. A very simple question. It seems to me to be in very plain language. Most of the respondents are trying very hard to answer some different question, and are failing/refusing to answer the one asked.

That question has an obvious answer—well, obvious to me anyway—but that doesn't make it rhetorical. I'm trying to provoke some introspection, some reflection on what the goal of a legal system should be. Is it there to enforce a political orthodoxy and punish those with different views, or is it there to protect the rights of everyone?

I seem to have mostly failed, and I find this disheartening.


No. His politics shouldn't matter. But his politics here put him in conflict with the law. If your politics inspires you to commit a crime, should you not be tried because your inspiration was political?  

And again, he got leniency. His sentence is below guidelines and recommendations. Apparently 'because politics', and we don't want to appear to be persecuting people who are political. His outburst had no impact on the outcome. So I would say his politics didn't make much difference. 

kcar

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Posted: Sep 4, 2023 - 12:27pm

 Lazy8 wrote:

I'm asking a question. A very simple question. It seems to me to be in very plain language. Most of the respondents are trying very hard to answer some different question, and are failing/refusing to answer the one asked.

That question has an obvious answer—well, obvious to me anyway—but that doesn't make it rhetorical. I'm trying to provoke some introspection, some reflection on what the goal of a legal system should be. Is it there to enforce a political orthodoxy and punish those with different views, or is it there to protect the rights of everyone?

I seem to have mostly failed, and I find this disheartening.


"I'm trying to provoke some introspection, some reflection on what the goal of a legal system should be. Is it there to enforce a political orthodoxy and punish those with different views, or is it there to protect the rights of everyone?"


The US legal system—and all legitimate legal systems—has the authority and responsibility to protect the rights of everyone. It should not punish those with "different views."

But I'm not sure how you think those principles that you and I (apparently) agree on should apply to the prosecution of Pezzola and other Proud Boys taking part in the January 6 2021 storming of the Capitol. Pezzola and Nordean (the guy sentenced at the same time as Pezzola) had and have the right to believe that Trump won and that the 2020 election was false. They DID NOT and DO NOT have the right to commit violence, trespass, obstruct a government proceeding, etc. regardless of whether their belief about the 2020 election was the basis for their criminal actions.

If you're asking your question because you think the US courts are suppressing or punishing rightful and legal acts as expression of political beliefs, I don't see it. US courts have long protected the rights of people expressing "different" or even repugnant political and social beliefs. For instance: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...  See also https://www.aclu.org/issues/fr...

Your question does bring up interesting issues about the limits of legally accepted civil disobedience, though. Nordean got a longer sentence because he was actively involved in the organization of the Proud Boys actions at the Jan. 6 rally. I believe he was convicted of seditious conspiracy.

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/p...

Washington — The one-time president of the far-right Proud Boys group Enrique Tarrio and three subordinates were convicted of numerous felonies including seditious conspiracy for their roles in the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol attack.

A federal jury in Washington, D.C. found Tarrio, Ethan Nordean, Zachary Rehl and Joseph Biggs guilty of conspiring to prevent the peaceful transfer of power from Donald Trump to Joe Biden and using force and prior planning to hinder the 2020 presidential election certification.

The jury initially did not find a verdict for the fifth defendant, Dominic Pezzola, on the most serious charge, seditious conspiracy, and they were sent back to deliberate by Judge Timothy Kelly. After several hours, they found him not guilty of seditious conspiracy, but remained hung on whether he was part of the conspiracy to obstruct. They sent a note to the judge that after lengthy discussions, all jurors firmly agree that further discussions" will not yield agreement and they were dismissed.

All five were found guilty of several other felonies, including obstructing an official proceeding; obstructing Congress; conspiracy to prevent an officer from discharging duties; obstruction of law
enforcement during civil disorder and aiding and abetting and destruction of government property. But the jury was hung on a total of 10 counts, and a mistrial was declared on those charges.





oldviolin

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Posted: Sep 4, 2023 - 11:52am

 Lazy8 wrote:
 haresfur wrote:
Are you saying they shouldn't have given him leniency for claiming to be contrite and saying he had given up politics in support of that?

I'm asking a question. A very simple question. It seems to me to be in very plain language. Most of the respondents are trying very hard to answer some different question, and are failing/refusing to answer the one asked. That question has an obvious answer—well, obvious to me anyway—but that doesn't make it rhetorical. I'm trying to provoke some introspection, some reflection on what the goal of a legal system should be. Is it there to enforce a political orthodoxy and punish those with different views, or is it there to protect the rights of everyone? I seem to have mostly failed, and I find this disheartening.
 
A-ha! An Objectivist! I knew it!
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