Difference between revisions of "Hate crime"

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The label "hate crime" is increasingly widely applied.  
 
The label "hate crime" is increasingly widely applied.  
  
The US since about 2015 has seen a huge rise in "hate crimes: but, since the [[FBI]] does not keep separate track of them as of 2017, quantification is difficult. Whether this corresponds with a rise in such activity is uncertain - it might result from relabelling.  Louisiana law illustrates this trend; since 2016 [[resisting arrest]] has been classified as a hate crime, punishable by a fine of up to $5,000 or a 5 year [[prison]] sentence. The law was part of a surge of similar legislation introduced around the US.<ref>https://reason.com/2017/01/23/louisiana-police-chief-resisting-arrest</ref><ref>https://www.richmond.com/opinion/editorial/a-barton-hinkle-column-wearing-a-mask-in-public-shouldn/article_54af93c5-8909-5ffc-b082-9aad625333ec.html</ref>
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===US===
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The US since about 2015 has seen a huge rise in "hate crimes: but, since the [[FBI]] does not keep separate track of them as of 2017, quantification is difficult. Whether this corresponds with a rise in such activity is uncertain - it might result from relabelling.  [[Louisiana]] law illustrates this trend; since 2016 [[resisting arrest]] has been classified as a hate crime, punishable by a fine of up to $5,000 or a 5 year [[prison]] sentence. The law was part of a surge of similar legislation introduced around the US.<ref>https://reason.com/2017/01/23/louisiana-police-chief-resisting-arrest</ref><ref>https://www.richmond.com/opinion/editorial/a-barton-hinkle-column-wearing-a-mask-in-public-shouldn/article_54af93c5-8909-5ffc-b082-9aad625333ec.html</ref>
  
In UK, convictions reportedly doubled from 2012 to 2017, according to [[Home Office]] figures for England and Wales.<ref>https://www.theguardian.com/society/2018/oct/16/hate-crime-brexit-terrorist-attacks-england-wales</ref> The ''[[Daily Mail]]'' reported in 2018 that 2507 alleged "hate incidents" were logged in 2015-2016, as revealed by a FOIA request. It gave several examples, including a dog fouling and a disputed line call in a tennis match.<ref name=dm2018/>
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===UK===
 +
In UK, convictions reportedly doubled from 2012 to 2017, according to [[Home Office]] figures for England and Wales.<ref>https://www.theguardian.com/society/2018/oct/16/hate-crime-brexit-terrorist-attacks-england-wales</ref> The ''[[Daily Mail]]'' reported in 2018 that a FOIA request had revealed that 2507 alleged "hate incidents" were logged in 2015-2016. It gave several examples, including a dog fouling and a disputed line call in a tennis match.<ref name=dm2018/>
  
 
"Met police chiefs were criticised for bragging about the resources during a surge in London murders." One tweet, later deleted, boasted that "We have 900+ specialist officers dedicated to investigating all [[hate crime]]."<ref name=dm2018>https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6401779/The-DOG-accused-hate-crime-fouling-outside-home-just-one-2-500-cases-probed.html</ref>
 
"Met police chiefs were criticised for bragging about the resources during a surge in London murders." One tweet, later deleted, boasted that "We have 900+ specialist officers dedicated to investigating all [[hate crime]]."<ref name=dm2018>https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6401779/The-DOG-accused-hate-crime-fouling-outside-home-just-one-2-500-cases-probed.html</ref>

Revision as of 15:32, 28 January 2020

Concept.png "Hate crime" 
(discrimination,  enemy image,  plastic phrase)Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
Truth is hate for those that hate the truth.jpg
Interest of• Antifa
• Southern Poverty Law Center
• Humza Yousaf
The phrase "hate crime" is a plastic phrase associated with the "hate speech" effort to stifle free speech on the internet.

"Hate crime" is one of a set of plastic phrases used to try to facilitate the introduction of laws that stifle free speech and end anonymity on the internet.

Official narrative

The idea of "hate crime" and "hate speech" goes back to the 1960s.[1] A "hate crime", according to Wikipedia as of April 2019 is "(also known as a bias-motivated crime or bias crime[1]) is a prejudice-motivated crime which occurs when a perpetrator targets a victim because of his or her membership (or perceived membership) in a certain social group or race." It notes that "term "hate crime" came into common usage in the United States during the 1980s." Such crimes are particularly heinous and deserve special laws.[2]

Google Trends reveals a spike in search interest in the term "hate crime" in January 2017 - of unknown origins.

Growth

The label "hate crime" is increasingly widely applied.

US

The US since about 2015 has seen a huge rise in "hate crimes: but, since the FBI does not keep separate track of them as of 2017, quantification is difficult. Whether this corresponds with a rise in such activity is uncertain - it might result from relabelling. Louisiana law illustrates this trend; since 2016 resisting arrest has been classified as a hate crime, punishable by a fine of up to $5,000 or a 5 year prison sentence. The law was part of a surge of similar legislation introduced around the US.[3][4]

UK

In UK, convictions reportedly doubled from 2012 to 2017, according to Home Office figures for England and Wales.[5] The Daily Mail reported in 2018 that a FOIA request had revealed that 2507 alleged "hate incidents" were logged in 2015-2016. It gave several examples, including a dog fouling and a disputed line call in a tennis match.[6]

"Met police chiefs were criticised for bragging about the resources during a surge in London murders." One tweet, later deleted, boasted that "We have 900+ specialist officers dedicated to investigating all hate crime."[6]

"Fake hate crimes"

A "fake hate crime" is a false flag hate crime and may make up a large proportion of hate crimes.[7] They often include alleged incidents of racism such as name calling or graffiti[8] although they fake stabbings are not unknown.[9] A website, http://fakehatecrimes.org attempts to keep track of fake hate crimes in the USA. Inspiration for this trend may be a growing awareness of the Mossad's long history of false flag attacks against Jewish targets, to try to raise sympathy for the cause of "antisemitism".[citation needed]

"Online hate crimes"

Full article: “Online hate crime”

In 2019, the UK police trialled a unit to investigate trolls, styling them as "online hate crime". The unit convicted 7 people in its pilot year.[10]

Associated concepts

Gay black jewish klansmen.jpg

"Hate group"

Full article: “Hate group”

A "hate group" is a group which promotes a "hateful" ideology such as racism or sexism. These groups are a special focus of the Southern Poverty Law Center, which staff members alleged in March 2019 itself suffered from a "systemic culture of racism and sexism within its workplace."[11]

Hate speech

Full article: “Hate speech”

"Hate speech" is part of the ongoing effort to restrict free speech. In 2019, the Austrian government was considering a (widely criticised)[12] policy of outlawing internet anonymity on grounds of "hate speech".[13]


 

An example

Page nameDescription
"Online hate crime"

 

Related Quotation

PageQuoteAuthor
"Hate speech"“The further a society drifts from truth the more it will hate those who speak it.”George Orwell

 

Related Documents

TitleTypePublication dateAuthor(s)Description
Document:Putting the Word "Hate" into Proper Contextwebpage16 May 2017Russ Winter
Document:Someone said they wanted to see me trapped in a burning car and watch flames melt my fleshArticle22 October 2021Nadine DorriesAfter the murder of MP David Amess, a crackdown on "internet trolls" is being demanded by most politicians. The UK's new Culture Minister Nadine Dorries is pursuing new overreaching legislation regulating Big Tech. The "Online Safety Bill" will abolish online anonymity and empower internet censorship. There are fears that it will be the end for freedom of expression in the UK.

 

An official example

Name
2016 Orlando nightclub shooting
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References