Someone like Bobbitt, or a criminal constitutional lawyer, can begin to flesh out just some of the difficulties with the idea itself, the juxtaposition of a lynching, which you think of as a spontaneous act, but which can also be premeditated.
Can more than one person conspire to lynch, but then do nothing physical? Talking about lynching obviously counts.
This opens up a whole new universe of criminalizations.
it seems to me that the Amherst Common Language Guide needs to be amended, or apended, to include a Proposed Uniform Criminal Law chapter, perhaps assisted by the American Law Institute, ALI, and the ABA, dealing with all the new crimes that rigorous enforcement of the Guide implicitly calls into being, and morally and legally should require as a matter of law.
it is always very dangerous when you have a large number of bozos enacting criminal codes. Trust me. They say things like that is not intended, or that will not be how it will be enforced, things like that.
Trust me, it would be more easy to turn it on a small group of negro youth in a ghetto than on the white, asian, latino, or negro, cop in a patrol car.
it seems to me that the Amherst Common Language Guide needs to be amended, or apended, to include a Proposed Uniform Criminal Law chapter, perhaps assisted by the American Law Institute, ALI, and the ABA, dealing with all the new crimes that rigorous enforcement of the Guide implicitly calls into being, and morally and legally should require as a matter of law.
it is always very dangerous when you have a large number of bozos enacting criminal codes. Trust me. They say things like that is not intended, or that will not be how it will be enforced, things like that.
Trust me, it would be more easy to turn it on a small group of negro youth in a ghetto than on the white, asian, latino, or negro, cop in a patrol car.
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