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Criminalizing Your Thoughts
October 10, 2007
By John W. Whitehead
“If my
thought-dreams could be seen, they’d probably put
my head in a guillotine.”—Bob Dylan
Americans have
always had difficulty reconciling the fact that the
First Amendment protects those who may be perceived
as offensive, profane and bigoted. That’s the
double-edged sword that is free speech.
Unfortunately, more
and more Americans in their efforts to censor,
silence or sanitize what they find offensive have
resorted to banning certain words and criminalizing
the thoughts behind certain actions. However,
attempts to curtail the actions and speech of a few
individuals are now threatening the constitutional
rights of all Americans.
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Such is the danger
posed by the Matthew Shepard Act, which was named
after a gay college student who was savagely beaten
to death in Wyoming in 1998. This Act would expand
the 1969 federal hate crime law to include crimes motivated
by a person’s actual or perceived sexual
orientation, gender identity or disability.
The Shepard Act
would give federal officials greater authority to
engage in hate crime investigations at the local and
state level. It would also remove the current
prerequisite that the victim be engaging in a
federally protected activity like voting or going to
school. In other words, it opens the door for
federal law enforcement officials to crack down on
undesirable behavior wherever it occurs, as well as
undesirable thoughts.
Frankly, this
legislation is unnecessary. There are already a host
of stiff penalties on the books for those who commit
acts of unspeakable horror, whether the crimes are
based on an individual’s race, religion, national
origin or sexual orientation. Indeed, most states
already have hate crime laws. As Senator Orrin Hatch
(R-Utah) has noted, “Those who perpetrated the
Shepard murder in Wyoming are already sentenced to
death or in prison for their lives under state law.
There is no evidence that state governments are
incapable of prosecuting these crimes or that they
are failing to do so.”
Thus, there being
no real need for such legislation, one has to wonder
why Congress would spend so much political capital
on it when there are other, more critical battles to
be fought? The answer is obvious. Having failed to
make good on their campaign promises, especially in
regard to the Iraq war, Democrats are trying to
mollify certain private interest groups with this
legislation.
It is also another
example of how our elected officials are bartering
away our freedoms by playing political games. By
tacking the Shepard Act onto a defense authorization
bill aimed at providing a pay raise and increase in
health care spending for U.S. military personnel,
Democrats are most likely trying to score points
against their Republican opponents who voted against
the legislation.
Yet such political
pandering and manipulation does a disservice to all
and creates a bureaucratic nightmare that poses real
threats to our constitutional rights. For instance,
the Shepard Act singles homosexuals out for expanded
protection from hate crimes yet fails to address the
thousands of crimes that occur each year against
people who, while not gay, just don’t “fit
in.” As one commentator pointed out, “Why not
accord the same enhanced protection to kids who
stutter, teenagers with bad acne, or adults who are
overweight, homeless, or have unusually large
ears?”
Furthermore, by
providing millions of dollars in funding to help
state and local agencies pay for investigating and
prosecuting hate crimes, this legislation incites
prosecutors to further intimidate defendants by
piling on the charges. Moreover, hatred toward the
victim often isn’t necessary in order to be
charged with the crime. Under New York’s hate
crime statute, no actual hatred for the victim is
necessary for a conviction. As one reporter pointed
out, “The law requires only that they have singled
out a person for a violent act because of some
belief or stereotype about that person’s
ethnicity, gender, religion, age, disability or
sexual orientation.”
Finally, and most
concerning of all, the Matthew Shepard Act has the
potential to further suppress free speech,
especially among religious individuals who disagree
with homosexuality. Whether or not the law includes
a provision exempting free speech, there have
already been instances at home and abroad where
peaceful religious expression has resulted in hate
crime prosecutions. For example, Christians have
been prosecuted under a state hate crime law for
“singing hymns” and peacefully “carrying
signs” while attending a homosexual fair in
Pennsylvania. Because the signs challenged the
morality of homosexuality, these Christians were
charged with three felonies and five misdemeanors
and faced 47 years in prison for attempting to
preach at a homosexual street fair. Indeed, a state
judge determined that the prosecutions could go
forward. His rationale was that the Christians’
speech constituted so-called “fighting words.”
The decision was eventually overturned.
Well-meaning though
they may seem, hate crime laws that punish not just
the act but the motive open the
door for a whole new realm of prosecutions, namely thought
crimes.
But when all is said and done, a violent crime is
still a violent crime, no matter what the
motivation, and criminalizing someone’s thoughts
or speech will never change that.
Unfortunately, this
issue is not going away any time soon. Although
President Bush has pledged to veto the legislation,
the likelihood of an expanded federal hate crime law
is a very real eventuality. It is one more sign that
politically correct America is moving closer and
closer to extinguishing freedom.
WC: 893
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