Expanding Hate Crime Legislation…Or Not

The House of Representatives voted on Thursday to extend hate-crime protection to people who are victimized because of their sexuality. But the most immediate effect may be to set up another veto showdown between Democrats and President Bush.
By 237 to 180, the House voted to cover crimes spurred by a victim’s “gender, sexual orientation, gender identity” or disability under the hate-crime designation, which currently applies to people who are attacked because of their race, religion, color or national origin.

To be honest with you, I didn’t think I needed to read any further than that, but I knew that it wasn’t going to be that easy, there had to be a catch. I was right.

Companion legislation is moving through the Senate. But even assuming that a bill emerges from the full Congress, it will face a veto by President Bush on the grounds that it is “unnecessary and constitutionally questionable,” the White House said. The vote to approve the bill did not come close to the two-thirds needed to override a veto.

Wait a second…since when is the government protecting it’s citizens “unnecessary and constitutionally questionable?” Is it really that it’s constitutionally questionable, or is it more the fact that President Bush’s religious morals are leading the way on this issue?

Debate over the legislation has been spirited, and while some of it has addressed whether the bill is necessary, the arguments in the House chamber and beyond have been colored by issues of conscience and personal morality.

Why we need hate crime legislation

The current hate crime bill doesn’t protect transsexual or transgender persons and it only covers people while they are participating in a federal act, such as voting. The bill recently passed by the house “would make it easier for federal authorities to take part in hate-crime investigations if local investigators are unable or unwilling to pursue them.”

How is not expanding hate crime legislation wrong? Shouldn’t we do everything in our power to protect people? Even people who identify as trans? How could it hurt?

Representative Mike Pence, Republican of Indiana, called the bill “unnecessary and bad public policy.” While he finds racism and sexism “abhorrent,” Mr. Pence said, the bill’s language is so broad that it could encroach on free speech.

Representative John A. Boehner, Republican of Ohio and the minority leader, said the bill made no sense: “We’re going to put into place a federal law that says that not only will we punish you for the crime that you actually commit, the physical crime that you commit, but we’re also going to charge you with a crime if we think that you were thinking bad things about this person before you committed the crime.”

People are perfectly free to say whatever the hell they want. There’s an amendment in the Constitution that protects that right. All this bill is trying to do is protect people from violent acts, and if needed, to classify violent acts against trans people as a hate-crimes.

Source – NY Times Article

What Others Are Saying

  1. lisa May 4, 2007 at 11:41 am #

    I don’t know what to say.

    But yes, people should be protected from being attacked for being who they are, but the legislation won’t prevent them, only get them a tougher sentence. And people who are commiting hate crimes don’t think about the punishment as they do it, so I don’t know if it would really deter someone.

  2. Josh May 4, 2007 at 1:06 pm #

    Well…you’re right. It wouldn’t prevent anything. But, it would protect who they are. The whole point of this bill is to protect people for who they are. Yes, the punishments would be more severe for the crimes, but only if it actually is a hate crime. Right now, crimes against trans people aren’t kept track of, because we aren’t included in any hate crime bills. If we were, they FBI would have to keep track of hate crimes committed against us.

    All violence is pointless and ridiculous, but when a person decides that this person deserves to get the shit beaten out of them, or deserves to die for the simple fact that they are gay, a woman, disabled, transgender, black or even white, that type of crime tears at the moral fabric of our society and endangers the welfare of everyone.

    President Clinton once said that “All Americans deserve protection from hate.” We’re being denied that. Yes, we can’t stop someone from hating someone, or any of their feelings, or thoughts, ideas, and words. But we can do something about violence. Even if it’s just by making the punishment more severe.

    When the Hate Crimes Act of 2000 was passed in New York State, the legislature said this about hate crimes:

    “Hate crimes do more than threaten the safety and welfare of all citizens. They inflict on victims incalculable physical and emotional damage and tear at the very fabric of free society. Crimes motivated by invidious hatred toward particular groups not only harm individual victims but send a powerful message of intolerance and discrimination to all members of the group to which the victim belongs. Hate crimes can and do intimidate and disrupt entire communities and vitiate the civility that is essential to healthy democratic processes. In a democratic society, citizens cannot be required to approve of the beliefs and practices of others, but must never commit criminal acts on account of them. Current law does not adequately recognize the harm to public order and individual safety that hate crimes cause. Therefore, our laws must be strengthened to provide clear recognition of the gravity of hate crimes and the compelling importance of preventing their recurrence. Accordingly, the legislature finds and declares that hate crimes should be prosecuted and punished with appropriate severity.”

    They say it better than I could ever say it. I should have put all this in my post…ha.

  3. captain-awesome Apr 30, 2010 at 1:51 pm #

    Wow, what a long boring blog, no offense but it took like an hour too scroll through it. Anyway i don’t know what ur taliing about but all i read was people can say what they want or something? Sure i agree but not for all of it. Anyway, I’m at school and should be looking up stuff for a project but this is pretty cool. beeter then what I have to do. A library project. ugh. I’d rather watch paint dry. really g2g. peace out person i will probably never talk to again.
    btw thats not my email.
    just a random one.

  4. captain-awesome Apr 30, 2010 at 1:52 pm #

    btw
    sorry for all the spelling errors

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