Posted on 06/12/2002 11:57:24 PM PDT by Cultural Jihad
Edited on 04/12/2004 5:38:44 PM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
VICTORVILLE, Calif. (AP) - A man described by a judge as "an evil monster" was sentenced to 25 years in prison for using a baseball bat, metal pipe and golf club to attack a 12-year-old Halloween trick-or-treater on his doorstep.
(Excerpt) Read more at sacbee.com ...
Fine by me. There are no responsible peaceful meth users. The drug makes that impossible.
Do you want to leave the people who threaten others alone?
I read the article.
I understand it quite well.
The individual was responsible for the crime.
Not the inanimate object.
Punish the inidividual.
Don't give in to the temptation to blame the inanimate object, and empower a tyranny in an attempt to control it.
Think.
I'm bald. :^(
Of course murder violates someone's rights to a greater extent than drug use does. It is a valid point and worth discussing. But again, that is irrelevant to the point I was trying to make.
Sarah....? Sarah Brady...??
Izzzat you?
Too late. I would have agreed with you back about 10, maybe 20 years ago. But now they are holding people indefinitely without even charging them with a crime, seizing property without needing to prove any crime, and are immune from punishment if they gun down the wrong people.
Just like the former Soviet Union.
Individual drug use (in and of itself) does not and CANNOT violate anyone's rights.
That was the point.
Just a bushman, to whom any sizable city was known simply as 'The Big Smoke'. ;^)
Uhhh, all of them? If drugs were legal, then they would be much easier to obtain. In particular, no one would risk arrest and/or death from attempting to obtain them.
Give me one good reason why beating someone's head in while stoned on Methamphetamine is more heinous a crime than beating their head in while "in a pissy mood".
You'll have to point out to me where I claimed this. This person should be sternly punished regardless of whether they were on speed or not.
Yes, but it had nothing to do my original point. But, to discuss your thoughts...
Individual drug use does not take place in a vacuum. A junkie never just affects himself. Sorry, in a perfect world that may be the case. But the reality is drug use affects entire communities whether they use or not.
Actually, I think the argument is should the state have the right to prevent risk. If someone is not of their right mind using drugs and is at risk for such violent behavior, does the state have the right to prohibit the substance that causes the behavior?
Drug users cannot say that they have the right to the drugs, but no responsibility for the behavior resulting from them. The old, "I was on drugs and didn't know what I was doing.", is no defense from prosecution.
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