Townhall.com, Where Your Opinion Counts
Talk Radio:   Bill Bennett   Mike Gallagher   Dennis Prager   Michael Medved   Hugh Hewitt   
BREAKING NEWS  LeftArrow - Townhall.com : Conservative, Political, Republican   RightArrow - Townhall.com : Conservative, Political, Republican  
Columns, funnies & more in your inbox!
  • Check the boxes and send us your email address to receveive your free newsletter
  • Your daily must-read of conservative columns, cartoons and news. Coulter, Sowell, Krauthammer and more.
  • Townhall.com’s weekly inside scoop on what’s happening behind the scenes in the world of politics. When news breaks, we report.
  • Signup to receive the latest daily Townhall cartoons
Saturday, July 21, 2007
Gregory Koukl :: Townhall.com Columnist
Why Hate Shouldn't Be a Crime
by Gregory Koukl
Vote on It:
Average Vote:
[+] Text [-]
 
 
Poll
Was the Copenhagen Global Warming Summit Walk-Out a Win for the U.S.?


Senators Ted Kenney and Gordon Smith have proposed a hate crime amendment to the defense appropriation bill the Senate is debating this week. It would add special enhancements to crimes for certain classes of victims, including homosexuals and transgenders. It’s hidden in this bill to try to ensure its passage since it might not pass on its own and the President has vowed to veto stand alone hate crime legislation. It makes it much harder for him to do so when it’s packaged with critical support for our troops.

I was first introduced to the concept of hate crimes like most Americans, from the front page of the morning paper. When I began reading the details of the story I was sickened. By the time I finished the account in the LA Times, I wanted to cry.

In Laramie, Wyoming, several years ago a homosexual student from the university there had been brutally beaten, robbed, and tied to a wooden ranch fence. He was found unconscious by a man on a bicycle who first thought he was a scarecrow.

The police arrested two men and two women in connection with the attack. The men allegedly lured their victim from the Fireside Bar, a campus hangout, by telling him they were gay. They drove in a truck to a remote spot and beat the young man mercilessly. His skull was smashed with a handgun. His hands and face were cut and his body was burned. Strung up on the fence, he was exposed overnight to 30 degree temperatures. His life was hanging by a thread. A few days later, at a hospital in Fort Collins Colorado, 22-year-old Matthew Shepard died.

Since this brutal murder in Wyoming in 1998, the effort to pass hate crime legislation—with expanded language to include "sexual preference"—has shifted into overdrive. This current bill is called “The Matthew Shepherd Law.” In spite of its proper intent to curb these attacks, such legislation is ill conceived.

I am against hate crimes, but I also am against hate crime laws for three reasons. First, they criminalize thought, not behavior. Second, they do not protect individuals, but rather select classes of people. Third, they actually encourage hostility towards one group of people, Christians.

Criminal Thought

George Orwell once said that sometimes the first duty of a responsible person is to restate the obvious. Note the obvious: Hate crime laws criminalize thought, not conduct. Assault is already punishable under existing statutes. This legislation levies an additional penalty solely for the attitude of heart: a motive called hate.

One of our most cherished freedoms is the liberty to think as we see fit, even if our thoughts are ignoble. A man's inner life has been his own. His conduct was under jurisdiction of the law, but not his convictions. Thoughts could not be made criminal.

Until recently, the law has been completely uninterested in penalizing motive. Whether one was driven to commit a crime by greed, malice, love, or hate was irrelevant. Only the conduct mattered. As far as the law was concerned, one could believe as he wished. He could like or dislike according to his whim. He could love or hate as he pleased.

Hate crime legislation changes all that. Now motive as well as conduct can be punished. This is a frightening step. "At the end of the day," wrote former ambassador Alan Keyes, "government can govern men's actions; it cannot govern their hearts. And when it attempts to govern their hearts, that is simply an excuse for the worst kind of tyranny."

Keyes’ remarks are not mere hyperbole. In April 2004, by a vote of 59 to 11, the Canadian Parliament passed bill C-250 criminalizing the expression of “hate” for homosexuality. The text reads:

Every one who, by communicating statements, other than in private conversation, willfully promotes hatred against any identifiable group is guilty of ... an indictable offence and is liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding two years.

This is just the first step. Svend Robinson, the MP who authored C-250, wants the law to go beyond punishing incitement to hatred to criminalizing the anti-homosexual speech itself. It makes one wonder how an unfettered debate on same-sex marriage will be able to proceed (“All those opposed to same-sex marriage…you’re under arrest”).

The thin religious exemption included in C-250 gives Christians little cause for comfort. World magazine reports that…

…at least one Saskatchewan court has already held that certain Bible passages expose homosexuals to hatred. Even without C-250, London, Ontario, officials recently slapped a Christian mayor with a $10,000 fine for refusing to proclaim "Gay Pride Day." A Christian businessman in Toronto was fined $5,000 for refusing to print materials for a gay-rights group.

Hate crime legislation not only criminalizes thought and, in Canada, speech. It also creates another anomaly. Isn't it odd that, in this case, assaults animated by emotion are considered more abhorrent, not less? Generally, passion is a mitigating factor. Courts show lenience for crimes committed under its influence, reserving their greatest condemnation for calculated evil, thus the difference between first and second degree murder.

Hate crime legislation turns that equation on its head. Is a hit-man more noble because he lacks emotional connection to his victim? A person who commits a crime of passion is immoral, granted. But isn't it more twisted to assault, torment, or murder without any feeling of malice? Such a person is not just immoral, he's a monster.

Further, the present trend sometimes seems to make the motive more serious than the assault itself. Representative Barbara Cubin (R-Wyoming) said, "We will not stand for the arbitrary killing of other people due to any hateful act of intolerance." Los Angeles Mayor Richard Riordan said, "Angelinos have no tolerance for crimes motivated by hatred or bias of any kind." [emphasis added in both]

Why the qualifications? Why not say, "We will not stand for the killing of other people. Period." Or "Angelinos have no tolerance for crimes done for any reason"? The crime itself is reason to lament, but in these cases it's the motive that causes the outcry.

But it's worse than that. Hate crime legislation doesn't make all hate connected with assault illegal, only certain types of hate.

A Class Action

This is the second consequence of hate crime legislation. To paraphrase a line from George Orwell’s Animal Farm, though all hate is equal, some hate is more equal than others.

Consider this. According to Webster's New World Dictionary, "Hate implies a feeling of great dislike or aversion, and, with persons as the object, connotes the bearing of malice." On this meaning, virtually any crime of passion could be construed as a hate crime because it entails malice towards persons.

However, all crimes of passion are not actionable as a hate crimes. Why not? Because they don't involve a protected class of people. This raises a question. Is hate crime legislation about hate per se or is it really about something else?

Columnist George Will observed that such laws mandate penalties for particular government-disapproved states of mind. He is only partially correct. The government is not as concerned with the hateful state of mind as it is with the particular group of people the hate is directed toward.

The result of criminalizing malice under certain circumstances is that only certain types of people get protected. Will observes, "Surely Shepard's assailants would deserve no less severity if he were not gay and their motive had been, as it may partly have been, pure sadism."

Yet this is not the case. In a state with hate crime legislation, penalties levied for an assault on me personally would be milder by statutory requirement than for the very same assault on a Matthew Shepard. Why? Because as a straight, white male I do not belong to a class protected by this law.

Hate crime legislation, then, turns out to be not really about hate, but politics. It's not hatred for the victim that is punished. That's covered under existing statutes. Rather, it's hatred for a protected class—African-Americans, Jews, homosexuals, etc.—that's punished under hate crime laws.

Such legislation makes two crimes out of one. The murder is a crime against the victim. The hate is a crime against the victim's group. Yet how does one make sense of a crime against a group that is a different crime from the one against the victim?

Groups have no rights according to the Constitution. Only individual persons have rights (or groups that become legal persons, like corporations ). Even class action lawsuits follow this pattern. Only individuals who are harmed can collect damages, even though their case is argued collectively.

Hate crime laws create a whole new category of faceless, personless victims—the injured class. They identify crimes against no one in particular, but crimes nonetheless, offenses that are punishable. They don't prohibit all hate, only politically incorrect hate.

A "Climate" of Hate

Just as these laws are used to defend certain classes of people, they can also be used to oppress a certain class of people. They can serve as a legal tool to enforce a particular moral and political point of view that goes by the misnomer of "tolerance." This is the third problem with hate crime legislation. It encourages many to actually blame Christians for incidents like the death of Matthew Shepard.

As soon as the terrible incident in Wyoming hit the national press, a torrent of criticism descended upon the Christian community.

Martin Marty, a prominent religious thinker from the University of Chicago, wrote that "anti-gay" Christians do not act in the name of Jesus. Rather, "Christian rhetoric...stirring hate" contributed to the death of Matthew Shepard. In the LA Times, Robert Scheer said, "Trafficking in the presumed judgments of the divine is a road map to the outer limits of civic intolerance."

These have joined a chorus of voices claiming that Christians, through their moralizing, are promoting a climate of hate. The phrase of choice is "less than." By claiming homosexuality is evil, Christians demote homosexuals to a "less than" status. If a homosexual is "less than," he is marked in a way that makes him an object of scorn, hatred, and physical abuse.

This is twisted logic. In Los Angeles, KABC talk show host Al Rantel—himself a homosexual—noted that this kind of thinking would make Alcoholics Anonymous responsible every time a drunk gets beat up in an alley. It simply does not follow that moral condemnation of homosexuality encourages gay bashing any more than condemning Christian “intolerance” promotes Christian bashing.

Such a tactic is equally dangerous to those who use it. According to them, taking a moral position is called hate. But objecting to hate is also a moral position. Are those who demonize Christians for their views equally guilty of hate-mongering? Clearly, this kind of attack is not really about principle, but politics once again.

Columnist John Leo noted, "The political advantage of using 'climate' arguments is that you can discredit principled opposition without bothering to engage it. All you have to do is connect the pope, your local rabbi, or any other adversary to a gruesome murder, and your work is done."

Leo concludes, "Beware of arguments based on climates or atmospheres. Most of them are simply attempts to disparage opponents and squelch legitimate debate."

Hate crime legislation is not the answer. It turns the government into thought police, and turns the law into a club to enforce political correctness. Those felled by its blow will be Christians and others like them.

Instead, existing laws should be enforced to give equal protection to all classes of people, punishing the crime and not the frame of mind.

For Believers, though, there is a frame of mind that needs attention.Made in His Image

Christians have an impulse to distance themselves from people like Matthew Shepard. Though his assault was lamentable, some have reasoned, he was, after all, a homosexual—evil and an abomination to God. Sporting signs with slogans like "Aids Cures Fags," they go public with their crusade by disrupting graveside ceremonies. This makes me want to weep.

There is no question in my mind that homosexuality is an egregious evil. Christians need to be reminded, however, that no matter how far we try to distance ourselves, we are more similar to Matthew Shepard than we are different from him.

There are at least two things each of us share with Matthew, maybe three. First, like us, Matthew Shepard is a human being made in the image of God. His value transcends whatever evil he may have been guilty of. This makes the brutal crime against him unconscionable.

Second, Matthew Shepard is fallen, as we are. We stand beside him in the dock, guilty of our own crimes against our Creator. Paul asks, "Are we better than they? Not at all, for we have already charged that both Jews and Greeks are all under sin."

Finally, for the homosexual that turns to Christ for forgiveness, we share the same Savior. Christ's blood was shed for us equally: "For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord."

For these reasons all Christians should be grieved and angered at the injustice done against homosexuals, just as they should the any victim of a crime. They should condemn without qualification the brutalizing of Matthew Shepard and others, a human being who is, in all the important ways, just like us.

Share:
Vote on It:
Average Vote:
 
About The Author

Gregory Koukl is founder and president of Stand to Reason, an organization devoted to a thoughtful and engaging defense of classical Christianity in the public square. He is also a radio talk show host and author of Relativism—Feet Firmly Planted in Mid-Air.

Be the first to read Gregory Koukl's column. Sign up today and receive Townhall.com delivered each morning to your inbox.

Waiting
This reasonable, responsible and compassionate essay quietly awaits those with agendas that will condemn his position, thereby underscoring the danger of addressing taboo subjects.
Excellent article.

Hate Crimes
Before I read this article I was reading a blog by Bill Maher. While reading Mr. Maher's opinion, which was on the founding fathers, I thought to myself "how profoundly stupid can a man as accomplished as Bill Maher be?" A, I would admit, rather unusual coupling of the words "profound" and "stupid" which are to words that typically don't inhabit the same sentence. Reading Mr.Koukl's article on hate crimes on the other hand, I found myself thinking simply "how profound."

If everyone who is trusted with a public forum would offer their opinions in such a logical, well thought,and other than intellectually, unconfrontational way than the world would be better for it.

Mr. Koukl has a new fan.

I agree with Dan
What an excellent essay on the dangers of "hate" legislation?

I hope to see Mr. Koukl making the rounds on TV/Radio to provide his clear, level-headed, and passionate understanding of this issue.

Oops!
Not sure why I put the question mark at the end. I guess it's because I started the sentence with "what".

Hate Teddy
I hate Teddy Kennedy because he is a lying, murderous, drunken imbecile. I should be given a medal for those thoughts.

This article makes too much sense
which is precisely why it will be vehemently condemned by the handful of "progressives" that frequent TH and whose posts are the verbal equivalents of Molatov Cocktails.

Another writer that has discussed this topic at length is Selwyn Duke, who explains that hate crime laws will be the slipperly slope that removes our freedom of speech in this country. Hate will simply become divergence from whatever the cultural elites want. I strongly encourage you to read some of his essays on the topic. The are absolutely spot-on and can be found at http://www.selwynduke.com

Incorrect Foundation
"Whether one was driven to commit a crime by greed, malice, love, or hate was irrelevant. Only the conduct mattered."

Yikes, that is embarassingly wrong. The basic foundation of this article is an incorrect statement of the law. Almost every crime has an act ("actus reas") and a mental state ("mens rea"). Laws that increase punishment based on mental state have always been part of the common law we inherited from England; they are nothing new. Think of running over someone with your car: if you premediated that act and carried out that plan, that's Murder 1. If you did it carelessly and unintentionally, it's manslaugher, a very different (and lesser) crime.

Additionally, mental state should be distinguished from motive (strategic goal), something Mr. Koukl conflates.

One who not understand these basic criminal law concepts should not write about criminal law, less he grossly misinform the rest of us.

Nice touch, Jawls
In showing your superior knowledge about the law, you say nothing about the conclusions of Mr. Koukl.

Rather, you choose to undermine the sound thinking and valid points in his very excellent and well-written article by claiming he is "grossly misinforming the rest of us."

Now why would you do that?

It is an extreme irony that a law is being crafted to give special protection to one class of persons at the expense of the freedoms of another.

The Orwell quote says it better: all people are equal, but some are more equal than others.

The real crafting going on here is a remaking of American culture through a systematic process that increasingly marginalizes Christians.


I dunno Jawls...
...I think Koukl made perfect sense in stating his case as to why hate crime legislation is indeed a slippery slope of sorts.

Regardless, I've heard time and again some fellow Christians telling me that the time is coming in the United States when we will have to do like they do in China: worship in secret. You'd think that that's bunk in a country with a national constitution like the USA. Then you see things like this (for another example, Judy Chu, a CA state legislator, wants to redefine "tolerance" so that children in public schools may be taught that people of these so-called alternative lifestyles aren't just to be passively accepted and put up with (current def. of tolerance), but are to be embraced as equally valid as your own lifestyle (the inverted, pol. correct def. of tolerance).

Christians and traditionalists in the United States had better start praying, fasting and making lots of noise in the public arena. Currently, we still outnumber the far-left loons. We can send a knock-out punch in our nation's culture war if we got half as serious as the so-called progressives have been.

My emails with Focus on the Family
The irony here is that laws like these are being passed because many big government social "conservative" CINOs have been actively empowering our government to act as thought, behavior, and moral police. Here are my communications with the good folks at Focus on the Family:

Dear Amy and Focus on the Family,

Thank you very much for your thoughtful reply to my inquiry on your stand concerning Internet poker. I read it with much interest and felt compelled to reply. I honestly don’t feel your advocacy of a total ban on Internet poker is in the best interests of your organization, and I’d like to share my thoughts with you on this.

Your organization thrives under freedom. The power you wish to give the federal government over our lives is the power the government will one day use against all Christians, including Focus. As I mentioned in my initial letter, you’ve essentially told the federal government that Americans cannot be trusted to make their own decisions, so I hope you won’t be surprised when preachers are prohibited from speaking against homosexuality and other issues (at risk of losing at least their tax exempt status). As you know, many feel discrimination is a moral issue as well. Many also feel the same way about gun possession, and I’m certainly not willing to initiate any process by which I end up surrendering my Second Amendment rights simply to keep people from choosing to play poker. Many of my fellow conservative Republicans feel this way, and we’ll vote for our freedoms. How will Focus fare under the Democratic majority you’re helping to create?

You mentioned that all laws are based on morality. I respectfully beg to differ. Theft may be immoral, but laws against it are based on property rights. Laws against murder are based on the right of the victim to life. Many pro-life people, me included, are pro-life not because of morality, but because we believe the unborn child has a right to life just as a “born” individual does. Even if you do believe freedom should be curtailed in the name of morality, you have not made the case that poker is immoral. Gambling is not prohibited anywhere in the Bible. In fact, your tortured “proof” that poker is a sin really only proves that your organization simply doesn’t like poker. Perhaps it doesn’t “seem” Christian to some. Sorry, but most of us believe God gave us His marching orders in the Bible and that we shouldn’t be in the business of inventing new sins. Does Focus feel the work God actually asked of us is done, such that you all feel compelled to figure out what’s next? If not, how much time and money is Focus taking from God’s work to work on curtailing freedom in America, and how much is too much? After all, you know my fellow poker players will be fighting hard for our freedom. Your ill conceived fight for big government will consume a lot of cash and political capital. Is it worth it?

Your citing of the experiences of Atlantic City, NJ was telling. First of all, it seems disingenuous that you chose the example with the most manipulable statistics to cite as average. The use of per capita stats appears disingenuous, as Atlantic City has many more tourists now than it had pre-gambling. As such, the city’s average daily population (which includes these many money-spending tourists) of Atlantic City is now much higher than the city’s resident population (which is used for per capita statistics). Were you trying to imply that crime rate increases were caused by former law-abiding citizens who were drawn to crime by gambling addictions? I hope not, as the reality is that crime went up simply as a result of increased economic activity, growth, and increased tourism; in fact, many believe any economic stimulus would have caused a similar outcome. And, the reality is that Atlantic City is far better off today than it was the day before gambling was legalized. Finally, this whole argument is better suited for “bricks and mortar” casinos and related zoning issues. As Internet poker does not cause any of the issues you attempted to show with the example of Atlantic City, it seems odd to cite this case as justification for an Internet poker ban.

Also, not all Internet gambling has been banned. Many Republicans schemed behind the scenes to allow Internet wagering on horseracing to continue. Why no Alert Warnings about this? Is Chad Hills okay with horse betting? Or, could it be that you all oppose all gambling…just some more than others? I imagine it’s hard to oppose your friends in Congress. It does seem hypocritical, though. After all, Internet horse betting is no less susceptible to the issues you cited than Internet poker. You can be sure the proponents of Internet poker will ask you why you support Internet horseracing wagering (at least implicitly by not opposing it with the same vigor as you do poker). What will you say? Will you stand for your friends, or will you stand for your principles?

Finally, I think your organization fails to understand the realities of poker. Poker is a game of skill that we play because we enjoy the challenges of the game. I think you feel everyone who plays is some kind of addicted gambler. I assure you nothing could be further from the truth. A recent Harvard study concluded that only 0.4% of gamblers develop addictions. Why deprive the other 99.6% of their liberties when you could be at the forefront of helping those who actually need it? After all, they’ll find a bet somewhere. HR 2046, the Internet Gambling Regulation and Enforcement Act, funds treatment for compulsive gamblers while regulating the industry for fairness, age verification, and other issues. Wouldn’t your organization be better suited to providing this treatment and to airing public service announcements warning of your concerns, so that Americans could make their own choices? I think you would.

Thank you for your time and attention.

Kind regards,

xxxxxxxxx



----- Original Message ----
From: Focus on the Family
Sent: Wednesday, July 11, 2007 8:35:11 AM

Recently you requested personal assistance from our on-line support center. Below is a summary of your request and our response.

Thank you for allowing us to be of service to you.


Subject
Gambling

Discussion Thread
Response (Amy Campbell) 07/11/2007 09:35 AM
Thank you, xxxxx, for contacting Focus on the Family.

We appreciate the time you took to offer your personal insights on the controversial issue of gambling. In response, what some people don't realize is that the pragmatic downside to gambling, including poker, is serious. The hard facts indicate that legalized gambling is responsible for a host of social ills (a suggestion that can be validated by looking at virtually any area where gambling has been introduced on a widespread basis). Take Atlantic City, for example, where from 1976 to 1992 the community’s police budget tripled to $24 million while the local population decreased by 20 percent. And despite spending $59 million yearly to monitor casinos, during the first three years of casino operation Atlantic City jumped from 50th to 1st on the nation’s per capita crime chart! Even more disturbing is the astronomical price tag associated with the costs of “cleaning up the mess” left in gambling’s wake. John Kindt, Ph.D., professor of commerce and legal policy at the University of Illinois, asserts that for every one dollar of revenue generated by gambling, taxpayers must dish out at least three dollars in increased criminal justice costs, social-welfare expenses, high regulatory costs, and increased infrastructure expenditures.

In addition, gambling can quite literally have a devastating effect on individuals. Millions of Americans now have a compulsive gambling problem, which not only causes great personal financial hardship for the gambler, but also disrupts and, in some cases, destroys families. Countless studies show a direct link between legalized gambling and gambling addictions, as well as drug and alcohol abuse and suicide.

On another note, if it be contended that Dr. Dobson wants to “legislate morality,” or that we are attempting to force individuals to conform to our idea of what constitutes godly behavior, we respond that nothing could be further from the truth. But Dr. Dobson believes that a nation which recognizes no transcendent standard of accountability is headed for moral bankruptcy and social chaos. All laws place restraints upon human behavior by declaring one act socially acceptable and another unacceptable. To that extent laws are statements about morality. We can’t avoid “legislating morality,” then. The question is, whose morality will be legislated? To what standard do we appeal in seeking a rationale for our laws? As Chuck Colson writes in his book, _Kingdoms in Conflict_, “Without transcendent norms, laws are either established by the social elites or are merely bargains struck by competing forces in society ... laws rooted in moral absolutes do not vacillate with public taste or the whim of fashion.”

Again, thanks for writing. We hope this response has clarified our perspective. God bless you.

xxxxxxxxxxxx
Focus on the Family

Customer 07/04/2007 08:05 PM

I’m writing to let you know many Americans find your organization’s outspoken (and often inaccurate to the point of being deceitful) advocacy of banning Internet poker offensive, particularly FoF’s assertion that the American people need the federal government to act as their nanny. Americans are capable of making their own decisions. We don’t need a bigger federal government to do that for us. Actually, we need a smaller one. After all, the power you give government today is the power they’ll use against us tomorrow.

For example, do you feel safe in saying the IRS could never revoke a church's tax exempt status for refusing to hire a innapropriate pastor? Do you feel safe in saying the IRS could never revoke a church's tax exempt status for preaching that homosexuality is a sin? If you answered "yes, that cannot happen", are you certain that couldn't come to pass within ten years? And, why shouldn't it? YOU decided government should involve itself in issues of morality, and many Americans do think discrimination against gays is immoral. That's the power you're advocating giving government today!!! After all, YOU said the American people are incapable of making their own decisions. YOU said government should have a role. And, YOU condemned yourself to this outcome by chasing limited-government conservatives like me from the Republican Party, assuring the party of minority status.

I urge you to let this one go. Support limited government. Support regulation over prohibition. Fiscal conservatism plus government out of your life = true conservatism. Government control of one’s life = statism.

Sincerely,

xxxxxxxxxx
Auto-Response 07/04/2007 08:05 PM
Focus on the Family

Jawls misdirection
Jawls shows his misunderstanding or perhaps his bias with the red herring he throws up. Every crime has a mental state associated with it, but it is the action not the thought that creates the crime. Since mens rea is already in the law, we certainly don't need an added superfluous mental test.

Most Christians don't hate homosexuals, for instance. They do hate people who corrupt and rape their children. Liberals always want us to tolerate the intolerable.

Opposition to Homosexuality can be love
GOD-GIVEN RIGHTS ARE SUPERIOR TO HUMAN RIGHTS
Please try to visualize my smile and feel the warmth of God’s love in my heart as I type this letter of concern, and consider it as “love language.” By the way, just like many others, I have been offended by “hate language” from preachers who ministered condemnation with bigotry, anger, and hatred. But about 32 years ago (July-Oct 1975) “I believed the report” (the gospel of Jesus Christ preached in love) and “the arm of the Lord” (Isaiah 53:1) lifted me out of a darkened world of selfish lusts and pride and filled my heart with His divine love, joy and holiness.
Now, by the grace of God (His life-changing influence), I am the faithful husband of one wife (31 years), and father of five normal children (3 boys and 2 girls). Not because of my goodness, but because of God’s mercy and the spiritual elevation where He has lifted me (through trusting in His word), I can look back at the valley of corruption where I lived for 35 years, and see other unfortunate people who think they are having fun, but are unaware of their predicament; and I desire to help them become delivered like I was.
If the Bible is true (and I know it is), God has ZERO TOLERANCE for homosexuality in His spiritual Kingdom, both now and in eternity, and so should we in America. God’s hatred for homosexuality is directly proportional to His love for delivering people from it. Please consider the following pieces of objective evidence:
(1) God created each human with one of two distinct genders - “male or female” (Gen2:24-25, Matt19:4-6, Eph5:31), with many attractive physical and functional gender distinctions, so that 1 masculine man and 1 feminine woman can "marry" or “fit together” as a couple, and reproduce another generation of normal masculine boys and feminine girls. People who think they were created or born gay, are victims of extreme degeneration. Therefore, the term “same-sex marriage” is an oxymoron, unrealistic, contrived by dishonest people who ignore reality.
For example, in the electronics industry, it is impossible for 2 male plugs or 2 female connectors to be "mated," or to be used together to accomplish the purpose intended by their designer. They are just an open circuit. Only 1 male plus 1 female can be physically and functionally related as “a couple;” and together they can complete the circuit.
Likewise, there is no such thing as "gay marriage" or "same-sex marriage.” Why? Because it is impossible for 2 men or 2 women to "marry" and fulfill the purpose of marriage ordained by their Designer. Also, a truly “civil union” is marriage between a “civilized” (moral) man and woman.
(2) Negative Scriptures stating who God WILL NOT accept into His Kingdom (Lev.18:22-24, Rom 1:18-31; 2:1-3, 1Cor.6:9-10, Gal.5:19-21, and 1John 2:15-17). There may be some religious homosexuals, but there is no such thing as a Christian homosexual; they are just pretenders; but they could easily become Christians (see 3-7).
(3) Positive Scriptures stating who God WILL accept into His kingdom (Rom 1:15-16, 14:17, 1Cor 6:11, Gal 5:22 and Eph 1:4).
(4) Positive Scriptures describing the complete new birth procedure Jesus gave to His New Testament church - how to be delivered from the world and into God’s Kingdom (John 3:3-5, Acts 2:38-42 and 19:1-7).
(5) God’s willingness to reach out with His strong arm of love (John 3:16), and joyfully enter into hearts and cleanse them from abnormal desires, so they are free to live the way He created us. If they think they were “born gay” and can’t change, they can be born again normal.
(6) The joy in heaven when sinners repent and turn away from their sins (Luke 15:7).
(7) The wonderful feelings of relief and joy in our hearts when we receive deliverance from sin and guilt, exactly the same way sinners did while the New Testament was being written (1 Peter1:8). The only legitimate “human right” we have, is to live right in God’s sight.
(8) I understand this by personal experience (Acts 1:8).
Not only are homosexuals and lesbians abusing their God-given physical and biological resources (and each other and our heritage), but these men and women are living way below their potential. They are just wasting their lives on a few moments of selfish pleasure. What benefits are there in walking a path known to be a dead-end both physically and spiritually?

Get Human Rights Campaign out of USA
The so-called “Human Rights Campaign” is trying to devastate our American culture like uncontrolled “invasive species” (eg; Kudzu in our forests).using the same tactics they used during the Weimar Republic of Germany.

According to a well referenced book, "Pink Swastika" by Scott Lively, Hitler and the Nazis were a domineering minority (political party) of brutally abusive homoerotic "Butches" and pederasts, who believed in Darwin’s "survival of the fittest" and wanted to become the master “Aryan” race idolized in Greek paganism. They hated Jews and effeminate homosexuals, so they killed millions of them during the Holocaust.

After WWII, HRC came to America and started all over again. Legalized pornography and violence in media and entertainment has distracted married men and women, causing some to become more abusive and unfaithful. As a result, they raised children with the same distractions, who are less competent to become the next generation of responsible moral parents.

I have a 3,700 word version of this I could send you, which looks at these issues from an "invasive species" point of view, and a zipped PDF version of the 370 page book "Pink Swastika" (~10 meg, without photos) which Scott Lively sent to me last year. It contains many quotes from objective historians looking into the Weimar Republic during the first half of the 20th century (facts which are no longer taught in public schools or in colleges), and quotes from the pagan and occult groups whose strategies brought about the rise of the 3rd Reich. Excellent reading.

Some Liberals who support American acceptance of homosexuality, and recent events in our White House, resemble the Nazi character described in “Pink Swastika.”

According to American Life League, abortion has prevented the birth of about 15% American babies. Also, there was some cross-pollination between Margaret Sanger (founder of PP) and the Nazis.

According to Urban Legends posted by Traditional Values Coalition, about 2-3% of Americans are homosexual. This means over the past three generations, HRC has killed or corrupted about 18% American youth – future workers and leaders, and dads, moms.

I would love to see the “Human Rights Campaign” suffer a major set-back, so history won’t repeat itself here in America. GET HRC OUT OF AMERICA!!

Secular law enforcement and counseling are inferior solutions, like trimming weeds. I believe prayer and Bible studies should be allowed back into public schools, without Government involvement (only 1st Amendment protections), and conducted by volunteer groups of students, parents, teachers and “qualified” preachers. This would show everyone the way into a higher quality and more abundant life that God has provided.

“The gospel of Jesus Christ” is “the power of God unto salvation to every one that believeth. For therein is the righteousness of God revealed.” This wonderful promise in Rom 1:16-17 precedes God’s severe warning in Rom 1:18-32; and the good news in 1 Cor 6:11 follows the bad news in 6:9.


Defense of Anal sex
At least Tubby Teddy understands that anal sex, eating feces off of butts and snuffing the life out of gerbils in one’s butt is the most powerful weapon of national defense. The question for Teddy is how do we get all our enemies to start doing this.

my 2 cents - question
"it's hidden in the bill to ensure its passage since it might not stand on its own and the president has promised to veto stand alone hate crime legislation. It makes it much harder to do so when it's packaged with critical support for our troops."

In the face of such incredible hypocrisy by the Senators Kennedy and Smith - What more need be said?

Perhaps one word will suffice - Chappaquidick

Jawls writes: 21, 2007 3:56 AM

Incorrect Foundation
"Whether one was driven to commit a crime by greed, malice, love, or hate was irrelevant. Only the conduct mattered."

Yikes, that is embarassingly wrong. The basic foundation of this article is an incorrect statement of the law. Almost every crime has an act ("actus reas") and a mental state ("mens rea"). Laws that increase punishment based on mental state have always been part of the common law we inherited from England; they are nothing new. Think of running over someone with your car: if you premediated that act and carried out that plan, that's Murder 1. If you did it carelessly and unintentionally, it's manslaugher, a very different (and lesser) crime.

Additionally, mental state should be distinguished from motive (strategic goal), something Mr. Koukl conflates.

One who not understand these basic criminal law concepts should not write about criminal law, less he grossly misinform the rest of us.


DESKJOCKEY RESPONDS

NOLO law dictionary

"The mental component of criminal liability. To be guilty of most crimes, a defendant must have committed the criminal act (the actus reus) in a certain mental state (the mens rea). The mens rea of robbery, for example, is the intent to permanently deprive the owner of his property."

It appear that “mens rea” does not involve the moral state but rather the intent being limited to the outcome of the act. For example you can shoot at somebody wanting to kill them and miss and get one penalty and hit and get another. The mental desire to kill the guy being the same in both outcomes. Koukl wisely makes that distintion, claiming we now have a new crime out of the same act, it being the moral component.

Therefore the killing of Matt is not mens rea of hating folks who want anal sex, but rather mens rea of wanting to deprive him his life. And the punishment dependant on whether Matt lived or died.



Chuck 21, 2007 5:49 AM
Thank you for your compelling submissions. I will keep them for my permanent files. You prove what the unwashed call trite, that God only hates the sin, because of his great love for the sinner and his welfare.

TheEngineer July, 21, 2007 5:22 AM

My emails with Focus on the Family
The irony here is that laws like these are being passed because many big government social "conservative" CINOs have been actively empowering our government to act as thought, behavior, and moral police. Here are my communications with the good folks at Focus on the Family:

DESKJOCKEY RESPONDS

You point out what has become the counter attack by like weapon of the dominionist activities of the CNP of which Dobson is part of. The various crowds of anal sex folks, Larry Flint, yada, yads, have decided to use the Federal Courts and legislature to encourage the Feds to get into the business of legislating behavior, once the exclusive right of the states.

The CNP has decided to use the same tactic of giver-ment abuse as its response. This goes back to Bastiat writing in the late 1840s about how when one side gets control of giver-ment, it doesn’t undo the wrongs of the other side, but merely picks new winners and losers. Because the CNP is growing with enormous power, we now see Billarly, Obama, Edwards etc. giving their religious bona fides, this is becoming no small matter. I think it is not unreasonable to expect in 15 to 20 years that the Federal endorsed National Religion of Secular Humanism could be replaced by Evangelicalism.

What the left has accomplished it to establish a national religion, what the CNP is going to do now is merely change which one it is going to be. My mamma would have advised the left long ago to be careful what you pray for because you might get it. They prayed for the Feds to control behavior and promote a national religion. Now they will get it, but it won't be the one they wanted.

Libs Drumming up the Drones.
__As the definition of hate is quoted here,Mr. Koukl writes that," On this meaning, virtually any crime of passion could be construed as a hate crime because it entails malice towards persons." With this legislation a hate crime ability to be defined would be the passions of the governing power.He writes,correctly, that the intent of Hate crimes legislation turns out to be protecting hatred displayed towards groups. Those groups, defined with greater precision,are factions of a society this legislation is written to protect. This is another attempt,by the libs in control of the democrat party,to force their will upon the American society. They imagine that,by regulating thought,and limiting its expression,you will,in turn,equalize passions.In time, this will act to create a society equalized in political passions,equalized in possessions.In doing so,securing the power,and dominance,of the liberal party without meaningful competition.


intent
We have debated this law many times on TH and I have not heard one logical argument yet to support any hate crime law. Jawls likes to make the same old tired argument about the use of "intent" in the varying laws regarding unlawful death. This is a "red hearing" in that originally the law considered everything but accidental death as murder and executed the guilty as such. The varying degrees were put into place to give DAs and judges an option for leniency when the intent was to NOT kill someone. Hate crime laws are put in place to INCREASE the punishment of the guilty based on somehow divining the inner thinking of the defendant. All hate crime laws are blatantly unconstitutional. The old liberal court has ruled previously that hate crimes involving speech were in fact unconstitutional but those involving actual violence was ok (note that as far as the old liberal SC went the bill of rights only included speech and privacy).

In any case, the other missing part of Jawls’s argument is the fact that who said the current interpretation of intent in wrongful death cases is correct? If a guy is holding up a liquor store and shoots up in the air to get everyone’s attention and the ricochet hits a bystander and kills him, why shouldn’t he be prosecuted for murder and executed?

Love is the fulfilling of the lew!
An excellent message and comments throughout.

A very difficult subject presented with out guile or malice. Timely and convincing where we all can and need to do better.

If the law is not written upon the heart who will obey? "The constitution was written for a moral people, and it will serve no other."
Jefferson I believe said that.

"The entertainment that society allows today will become the standards for tomorrow." Ezra Taft Benson, - former Us Sec. of agriculture.

We have the power and freedom to choose, a moral or ethical act, when we choose any other it is immoral. Twenty-two year-old Matthew Shepard died from an immoral act of persons who were not pure in heart or moral, much less Christian at heart. Christianity did not kill Matthew Shepard, nor the teachings of Christianity, but personal or cultural prejudice and bigotry. It was and misguided intelligence and ignorance! This is the same bigotry that minority groups show when they claim the right as a minority to bet up on the rights of others who are not of their minority status. What good has this way done?

Laws does not legislate conscience. Morel and immoral values, of a good or evil conscience are shaped by every thought we entertain, every desire we cultivate, every emotion that we feel that grows that is the harbinger of every act or behaviour. As a man thinketh in his heart so is he." Proverbs

Quoting from "Power and Freedom to Choose"

"What cultivates or shapes the object of our love? It is like a mighty oak that springs from a tiny acorn. It is very small, barely noticed, if not perceived at all. It is so tiny, yet it sends its influence through our whole being. It is like the dawning of the day, as the soft unbroken shadows flee the awakening rays of the morning sun, revealing all things hidden by the dark of night. Yet through our neglect, like a double edged sword, by refusing to see things as they are, then the light of truth is darkened to our mind, like the dimming of the sun, as dusky shadows hide the day, ushering forth the dark of night, revealing only the glory of the lesser light."

"As long as the, recreations we choose to entertain, are considered only a distraction from the boring, dull, tedious life we live, we are fooling ourselves. The recreations that we choose to entertain, that are out of harmony with everything in life, make freedom a mockery, by giving license to thoughts, feelings, and actions that promote and foster weakness, thus promoting irresponsible behavior and every undesirable consequence in our lives. Better recreation and entertainments, inspire and help us all to cultivate and nurture better feelings, thoughts and behavior; leading to a better world for us all."

"The recreations that we choose to entertain are the hammer and chisel that shape, and carve the marble after the image of our own thoughts, feelings and desires. When the marble crumbles and brakes, it is not the fault of the marble, but our ignorance in recognizing the marbles characteristic and accidental flaws."

"If we are going to master the life that we live, we must first master ourselves. We must learn to know and under stand the characteristic and accidental flaws in our own nature. Until then our dreams will continue to crumble before our eyes, because our thoughts, feelings and behavior are out of harmony with the nature of our own being. Ignorance leaves us with no excuse."

"Let us shape our lives with the help of the master's hand! Know this, that, "Reap we will just what we sow, there is no law in our nature that is greater." As we yield our heart and our mind to the Master, with faith in Him, the Son of the living God, our Savior, we become more like Him. To emulate Him in our heart, mind and soul, to desire to be as He is, live as He lived, to overcome as He overcame all corrupt things. Let us learn from wholesome recreation and entertainment! Let us cherish and meditate on goodly deeds that lead to self-mastery. If we do this we too shall overcome, as we must over come all corrupt things!"

It is true that thoughts influence, but it is good conscience that determines the choice that drives the passion and love for truth, for God and our fellow man>

"Be not deceived: evil communications corrupt good manners."
1 Corinthians 15:33

The best law cannot be enforced, where society entertains corrupt communications, nor should we tolerate the laws that give licence and prevent teaching and training our children to love the truth, and keep God's laws to pray in school and in public places where it is mutual.

Where we allow evil-minded persons to promote sex as entertainment, and sensor prayer as an abuse to a minority, is another oxymoron.

"Love is the Fulfilling of the law."

One more thing on this bill
Why in the h*ll is it OK to add this obscenity to a bill on funding the military? This is a practice that should be halted.

FOOD FOR THOUGHT ON HATE CRIMES
Hate, like many other things in life, is in the eyes of the beholder. What is merely bad manners, bad taste, disagreement, or unflattering to some people would be criminalized under "hate crimes" laws.

If Matthew Shepard had lived in an earlier era, his killers would have been prosecuted for murder and would have been given the death penalty.

If, on the other hand, Matthew Shepard had murdered his tormentors, would he have been determined to have committed "murder in self defense" or "justifiable homicide"?

Being homosexual is not comparable to being Asian, Black, or Latino. Most social conservatives understand this.

No social conservative can condone the Matthew Shepard murder. However, the First Amendment right to freedom of expression must be preserved because one thing inevitably leads to another. If one type of expression is prohibited today, other forms of expression will inevitably be prohibited in the future. Calling someone "goofball", "idiot" or "stupid" could become hate speech.

Call a spade a spade.


TheEngineer
Great letter.

I'm All For It!
If the "hate" crime legislation goes through, then the federal government is saying that my thoughts are not private. And if my thoughts are not private, then there can not be a Constitutional "Right to Privacy" because what can be more private than my thoughts? Therefore, if you're following my logic, there is no "right" to abortion because there is no "right" to privacy. Therefore, Abortion would be a "Hate Crime" (it already is, just not in the legal sense).

Hee hee hee...you Libs have dug yourself a hole...

Kennedy,Smith hate.
__Sen.'s Kennedy,and Smith,seem to dislike presenting this has a legislation that could stand on its own merits.So,there must be some underlying hate,in their mind,to those that oppose this measure.The real American majority, to be precise,of those that oppose.They also must not care to much about the people this defense appropriation bill is meant to assist. They insert an amendment that,on its own, requires a veto.I would call these actions disguised hate crimes,for personal,ideological reasons.

THOUGHT POLICE

In a comment to a column yesterday, I admitted fantasizing about proper punishment for some criminals. I wondered whether, inasmuch as I do have a conscience, my fantasies would be construed as being as hateful as the crimes of the barbarians being punished.

However, rationalizing, I satisfied myself that I was free to so fantasize because the thought police had not caught up with me -- yet.

Having grown up long before 1984, I read George Orwell's "1984" with a certain fascination and incredulity. The incredulity has diminished.

Message from the Tar and Feather Society
Dear Senators Kennedy and Smith,and others

We the people of the United States of America do hereby claim our rights as free citizens to Tar and Feather those representatives of the people who choose to ignore the will of the people that they supposedly represent and pursue a policy that enslaves Citizens who strive to build a nation that adheres to the Rule of Law as set forth in the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States. We shall oppose these criminal acts of Legislation Without Representation with every fiber of our being. Your actions are reprehensible and devoid of character.

Concerning the laws and ordinances was this item, a thief or felon that hath stolen, being lawfully convicted, shall have his head shorne, and boyling pitch poured upon his head, and feathers or downe strawed upon the same whereby he may be knowen and so at the first landing place they shall come to, there be cast up.

"All men are created equal."
NOT - some people are created differently and are thus in need of protection.
NOT - some people are created MORE equal.

REALLY GREAT ARTICLE!

Must agree with those who want amendments to bills to be RELATED to said bills.

Bush will probably sign this abhorrent changling of a bill because it is not 'stand alone' legislature.

IF WE DO NOTHING - it passes.

IF WE ACT SOON - it is defeated.

POWER OF THE PEOPLE!

Special Laws for protected Groups

.....Unstated but implicit in hate crime legislation is that only white males will be tried for "Hate Crimes" ...

.....no minority ...black ...woman or homosexual will ever be convicted of a Hate Crime ...

.....this violates the equal protection clause but when did the Constitution ever stop the hero of Chapaquiddick? .....COLOSSUS

Great article!
This is probably the best article I have read about why hate crimes legislation is such a dangerous game to play. When the laws can be written to make a separate crime of what you think, then we are in serious trouble---especially because in the eyes of liberals any crime against a protected class is a hate crime. Unless, of course, the crime happens among members of the same class. I have a strong feeling that when a Black man kills another---and calls him a n*gger in the process---that won't make the hate crime hit parade!

It is this type of stealth legislation that makes the need for a line item veto so important. If there was a chance that the President could strike this down out of hand, it would force the Congress to bring this stuff up for open debates and votes---not trying to slide it in with "must sign" legislation.

baseballdoc
Where have you been? I've missed you over at the Spade---you gonna come visit me anytime soon? I'd love to get your take on some of the stuff that I've been writing.

homosexuality is not evil...
...it is a biological abnormality, like thousands of others that occur in nature. These poor people, unable to fulfill the one thing that defines humanity - procreation, are to be pitied and left to lead as normal a life as possible. Like people with downs syndrome or a cleft lip, their chromosomes are damaged and they will never live a normal life. We should also not kid ourselves into thinking their lives are normal, or teach are children that. They are not normal. These are people that biology has cheated. Help them and leave them to their ways, but do not redine societal norms to the degree that abnormality is accepted as normal. No acts of violence should be tolorated against them or any person, and we have appropriate laws on the books for that.

Its the Old Catch-22 for Pols...
...especially for the Republicans. There are so many semi-illiterate voters lurking amongst the populace now (For you Dims, all words starting with ill, does not mean the issue is immigration). No the problem for Republicans is that if they were to vote against any Bill that is proposed as a Hate Crimes Bill, that the majority of potential voters will misinterpret that vote as a vote for Crime, because how is it possible that a responsible citizen or better, an elected official, could not Hate Crimes.

there is hate speech that incites violen
I totally agree with the author. But these thoughts We do have the clear and present danger test which limits certain kinds of speech that incite to violence. Clearly, that it totally irrelevant re HS or TG people here in the US.
But my thoughts go to what goes in England and other countries where jihad is preached and the consequences of such are horrofic as we saw over the last two years in England. And that raises the question what one should do, if anything, but such speech that leads to such. It is one thing if the incitement leads to a killing here and there, but given modern technology one or a few people can inflict damages on 1000's and much more. We have not had anything happen here, but once it does, there will be discussion what to about such speech and teachings.

Hate speech does affect our police. Read Heather MacDonald's article in the City journal

http://www.city-journal.org/html/eon2007-07-19hm.html

She points out that both the reporting and editorial pages of the NT TIMES continually accuse the police of racism and thereby incite hatred of such and shooting of such by blacks. Not only the times, but the politicians.

There is nothing much we can do about this. But it occurred to me that our homosexual community faces practicaly zero threat from US citizens, save maybe those of extreme moslem persuasion, whereas our police at least in big cities face the constant holacust of hate speech from the mainline press and politians that incite hatred and lead to murder of police. I also add the hip hip lyrics which Don call cops pigs. Don Imus did not incite hatred of anyone, but the mainline press and the hip hop music do incite hatred of police and their death by the black underclass.

Read her piece. It will be an eye opener for you.

Wrong way laws
With prisons overcrowded and violent felons backing up the court system, increasing punishments is clearly a bad idea.

What we should do instead is REDUCE punishments for murders of and assaults on straight white males.

We should additionally reduce punishments for black-on-black, Hispanic-on-Hispanic, transgendered-on-transgendered, and gay-on-gay crimes, although not as much as we reduce them for crimes against straight white men. Victims in these case may still suffer horribly, but at least they aren't killed or assaulted by straight white men, or persons of other races or sexual orientations, and therefore cannot be said to have been the victims of HATE.

What to do about, say, black-on-transgendered white crime is more problematic, since there are two victim categories here, neither of which is eligible to be charged with HATE.

But it would certainly send a message that we won't tolerate hate crimes, if we decide the lives and suffering of straight white men are simply worth less than anyone else's.

You're so funny Knight!
Knight,

There was a a time when the American Psychiatric Association defined homosexuality as a mental illness. Probably about forty years ago there was a movement to define homosexuality as an alternative "lifestyle choice." After the rise of HIV/AIDS, the push was to define it less as a chosen behavior and more as a genetic condition with which a person is born. When there was talk of trying to isolate a "gay gene," there was some backpedalling by the gay community on that definition.

So what is the real nature of homosexuality and should society make special legal accommodations for something that is not perceived as normal by the majority? Mohaski has a point, even if he very clumsy at expressing it.

He is certainly right that unprovoked violence against any citizen of our society should not be tolerated. There are already laws that prohibit threats and speech that clearly incites physical violence.

BTW, society has never tried very hard to design suitable notebooks, firearms, baseball mitts, computer mice, etc. for my left-handedness. When I was a child, it was just "tough sh t, kid!" I was really screwed, being both left-handed and near-sighted.

With all the hate that you routinely express toward the poor theists in posts, you should be the last guy to argue for such legislation.

I thought you were a libertarian, Knight
knight_of_baawa,

I thought by some of your comments that you were a libertarian.

As a libertarian myself, I abhor any legislation that could be used by the state to coerce the citizenry. It's a slippery slope and a way of dividing the population into squabbling groups that can be individually subjugated by the tyrants. Wake up knight, you old stick.

Mohaski is right except for one thing
Not everyone who engages in homosexual behavior was born that way. When talking about why some people don't marry, Jesus said that some are born that way, some are made that way by men, and some don't marry for the sake of God. I think in the first two cases, he was talking about homosexuals. Some people do it just because they know others think it is wrong. Some people do it because they just get bored from too much regular sex. It's more complicated than just being born tht way.

To the other Ken
In the passage you referenced, Jesus said some people are born eunichs (I may not have spelled it right). A eunich, by definition, is non-sexual.

Other than that, I think you made some good points.

No Robert
Voicing your thoughts is protected by the Constitution as FREEDOM OF SPEECH! While hate may be a motive for a criminal act, it is the act that is punishable not the thought. The motive of hate can be used for a more severe punishment. If this is allowed to continue then you have the government deciding what thoughts are acceptable. Isn't that the concern voiced by liberals about the separation of church and state? Laws can only regulate actions.

a million definitions
For so many words, there are a million definitions. I am sick, or sick and tired, sick of doing this, or so sick I will die in a few minutes.

Same way with hate, I hate to do this or that, I hate to get up in the morning, or I hate someone who drives his car into the water, and lets his girl friend drown.

Who is going to determine when the word sick passes from a comment to a death sentence. And who determines when hate passes from “comment” to “crime”

And just remember, Homos have a birth defect. The only three things on this earth that can’t reproduce are a rock, a hand full of dirt, and a committed Homo.