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John Young: When I say 'hate crime,' you say . . .



Thursday, May 14, 2009

This is not just a threat to the American way of life. It threatens the “very survival of freedom.”

So says former grand wizard of the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan David Duke.

Tell us, Brother Duke. What is it? Unauthorized eavesdropping? The abolition of habeas corpus? Martial law under the Patriot Act?

Actually, no. The threat to our very freedom is something called the Matthew Shepard Hate Crimes Act.

The bill broadens the definition of a federal hate crime to one targeting homosexuals or transgendered people. It is named after the college student beaten and left to die, bound to a Wyoming fence post, by two men who posed as gays.

An act aimed at offenses like this, say Duke and other fringe characters like Operation Rescue’s Flip Benham, threatens our freedom and the First Amendment. They have mounted a march on Washington and a “gathering of Christian leaders” (ahem) to stop it. Godspeed, voyagers. Let us know if any of your First Amendment rights are stripped in the process by homeland security.

The bill in question, S.909, certainly wouldn’t do that, unless you decided to take a mighty rod to some people with gender-identity issues to instill the fear of a wrathful God in them.

Bible made illegal?

Oh, but the bill is much worse, says Benham. It “expressly forbids any language that might be perceived as ‘hate’ by the homosexual community. This makes illegal every word in the Bible.”

Well, I flipped though S.909. Here’s what I found: “Nothing in this act shall . . . prohibit any constitutionally protected speech, expressive conduct or activities (regardless of whether compelled by, or central to, a system of religious belief) . . .”

This bill is not about faith or free expression. It’s about violence, violence aimed at a group of people to imprint mortal fear in them, much as the cross burnings and lynchings of Brother Duke’s forebears did with Americans of color.

You may object to hate crimes as a legal concept, being a crime compounded by the mind-set of an offender. But if you say it’s a case of the state enforcing an unconstitutional “thought crime,” know that the penalties for any number of criminal offenses are made more severe based on the intent of the offender. Indeed, that’s the difference between manslaughter and murder.

Really, what’s at play here is absolute, unmitigated hate masquerading as Christian love.

It’s the kind of hatred that would cause Republican Congresswoman Virginia Foxx to stand on the House floor and call the hate crime against Matthew Shepard a “hoax.” You see, she says, it was just a robbery.

It’s the kind of venom that would get a hate merchant like Duke engaged in the issue, to say that including “sexual orientation” in a hate-crimes bill would make it a hate crime to slap a pedophile.

I’d like to see a prosecutor try that legal tack. No, Brother Duke, I’m thinking this “threat to our very liberty” is all in your calcifying skull.

Oh, and by the way: Pedophiles come of all sexual persuasions, including yours.

Your anti-S.909 literature, Brother Benham, quotes Jesus (“Have I now become the enemy of the truth?”) and says, “Is truth hate?”

Does God hate homosexuals? Or were homosexuals (like you and me, as Genesis says) formed in God’s image?

My opinion: The last person for whom you people speak is Jesus Christ. The “truth” you express is hate. Constitutionally protected, I might add, but hate nonetheless. It must be. You are so stirred by it to look right past the intent of something aimed at acts of violence to find a “threat to our very freedom” in it.

Freedom to do what, Brother Duke?

John Young’s column appears Thursday and Sunday. E-mail: jyoung@wacotrib.com.

Comments

By KDF

May 14, 2009 10:00 AM | Link to this

I am no friend of Mr. Duke. Even when he tried to show a softer side the hate burned right through his rhetoric. And Mr. Young, you are correct. God made everyone in His image, and before sin entered the world there was Adam and Eve, not Adam and Steve. God pronounced his creation as perfect, and it was, until Adam and Eve partook of the fruit and sin became fact. There is no one we should hate. Our Lord does not permit this. But there is sin -- it is absolute. If we rewrite God's word, then the created make themselves the Creator. Every violent crime is a hate crime. You hate yourself, you hate your victim, you hate your parents, you hate anything that draws you to violent crime. As our God's word says, "...for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God." And yes, I do love homosexuals. Why shouldn't I?

By mec

May 14, 2009 9:45 AM | Link to this

Closely read, the Bible, in one passage or another strongly recommends killing just about everything that moves. There's a dialog in the movie, "Angry Old Men." The steriotypic southern planter was interruped in his attempt to be mean to a black youth by a group of elderly black men bristling with shotguns. " Bowah, It says in the Bible, 'Servants obey thy master.'"
"Yassuh It do. That just goes to show that sometime you got to stay away from that Bible."

The main argument against hate legislation is that it is redundant. The crimes in question are already crimes whether they be breaches of the peace or capitol felonies. The hate crime designation only serves as 'feel good' legislation to express public outrage.

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