eight bits
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Sep 5, 2012
- Messages
- 1,580
Craig B
Well, of course, I cannot speak for Octavo.
Thank you for the link to the story about the Glasgow attacks. I agree that reprisals against, or "education" of, people who have not committed violent acts would be ill-advised. Actually, leaving people alone who leave me alone has some attraction as a component of a "strategy" to deal with the threats Dr Harris has identified.
There is no possibility of government religious education, pro or con, here in the United States. Occasionally there have been efforts to enlist schools in efforts to "fight crime" of the secular sort by giving special attention to pupils identified as "potential criminals." These efforts are very difficult to design and implement, since our federal Fifth Amendment provides
No person shall ... be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law ...
(and the Fourteenth Amendment extends that to all levels of American government, while the various state constitutions may contain more restrictive language still). Thus, any sort of mandatory participation in "treatment" based on a perceived "propensity" to commit a crime which you haven't actually committed "yet" (shades of Minority Report) will not fly.
Once a threat has been identified, the question is raised, What is the best way to handle it? There are things I would not do, and would not advocate be done by others, to "protect" me. For example, many of us here, especially those of the libertarian bent, oppose the "Patriot Act" and its various renewals and expansions.
Well, of course, I cannot speak for Octavo.
Thank you for the link to the story about the Glasgow attacks. I agree that reprisals against, or "education" of, people who have not committed violent acts would be ill-advised. Actually, leaving people alone who leave me alone has some attraction as a component of a "strategy" to deal with the threats Dr Harris has identified.
There is no possibility of government religious education, pro or con, here in the United States. Occasionally there have been efforts to enlist schools in efforts to "fight crime" of the secular sort by giving special attention to pupils identified as "potential criminals." These efforts are very difficult to design and implement, since our federal Fifth Amendment provides
No person shall ... be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law ...
(and the Fourteenth Amendment extends that to all levels of American government, while the various state constitutions may contain more restrictive language still). Thus, any sort of mandatory participation in "treatment" based on a perceived "propensity" to commit a crime which you haven't actually committed "yet" (shades of Minority Report) will not fly.
Once a threat has been identified, the question is raised, What is the best way to handle it? There are things I would not do, and would not advocate be done by others, to "protect" me. For example, many of us here, especially those of the libertarian bent, oppose the "Patriot Act" and its various renewals and expansions.