T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
396.1 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Wed Jan 22 1992 08:54 | 18 |
| Well many contemporary Christians *support* injustice either directly
(the pro-choice movement) or indirectly by stopping others from working
to stop it (those who fight stopping Saddam and others who 50 years
ago argued against stopping Hitler using the same arguements). There
seems to be an idea in some circles that actively preventing injustice
may involve force and that it is better to let injustice take place
than to risk using force to prevent it. This is hard to take sometimes.
For myself I actively protect injustice where ever and when ever I
can. I support the protection of the weak and poor by supporting their
right to resist injustice. I actively work to keep taxes down in my
town while at the same time working to make sure that everyone gets
as good an education as possible through work on school committees.
And I pray. I pray that God will help and guide the hearts and minds
of those in power.
Alfred
|
396.2 | crusaders pursue a vision of justice -- on both sides | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Wed Jan 22 1992 15:33 | 40 |
| re Note 396.1 by CVG::THOMPSON:
> Well many contemporary Christians *support* injustice either directly
> (the pro-choice movement) or indirectly by stopping others from working
> to stop it (those who fight stopping Saddam and others who 50 years
> ago argued against stopping Hitler using the same arguements). There
> seems to be an idea in some circles that actively preventing injustice
> may involve force and that it is better to let injustice take place
> than to risk using force to prevent it. This is hard to take sometimes.
Alfred,
It is clear to me that many who support the pro-choice
movement, and many who are anti-war, do so not to oppose
justice but to support it. Many in those camps just see the
situation with respect to the demands of justice differently
than you.
People who oppose war, for example, don't do it to keep the
Saddams and Hitlers of this world from justice, but to
protect nameless and faceless masses from being trampled,
unjustly, as we who are at a safe distance follow a blind
rage to administer justice to one person.
People who oppose absolute government authority over a
woman's pregnancy are not doing so to oppose justice but
rather to prevent government limiting women to the unjust
choices of mental or physical injury, social ostracism,
deeper poverty, suicide, or back-alley abortions.
You have every right to disagree with their vision of
justice, and you have every right to claim that your side, in
the balance, is the more just one. But you do demean and
belittle them to claim that they have no interest in justice
while you stand firmly on the side of all justice.
This is why issues like these are hard issues -- there are
claims of justice on BOTH sides.
Bob
|
396.3 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Peace: the Final Frontier | Wed Jan 22 1992 19:18 | 20 |
| Early on in the Bible, one learns that the cultural norm for justice is
utter annihilation. The earliest that I recall recorded is the story of how
Dinah's father, Jacob, and her brothers wipe out the entire male population
of Hamor, the father of Shechem. Shechem is Dinah's rapist (Genesis 34).
This act of vengeance is performed not without deceit, and is topped off
by a spree of looting.
Later on, the Mosaic Law makes an attempt to put a cap on retaliation for
injustices suffered ("an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth"). This
perspective on justice promoted equitable resolutions. At the same time,
it promoted a system of judgment based on a scale of balance, in other
words, "getting even".
This progression culminated in the teachings and Spirit of Jesus, the Christ,
who taught us to seek no vengeance at all, but instead to love our enemies.
This remains to be a concept too radical for many people, including many
Christians.
Peace,
Richard
|
396.4 | What is JUSTICE? | SWAM1::DOTHARD_ST | PLAYTOE | Wed Jan 22 1992 19:59 | 9 |
| RE: Justice
My father use to say "Fair exchange has never been robbery". Equate
that with the cliche "Scales of Justice", and I conceive of the whole
matter of "Justice" as one of balance and equality.
Justice...not JUST US.
Playtoe
|
396.5 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Peace: the Final Frontier | Thu Jan 23 1992 17:49 | 17 |
| Justice, in the "get even" sense of the word, is a dominant theme
of our modern cinema entertainment.
Typically, the protagonist is raked over early on in the story,
but overcomes seemingly insurmountable odds to wreak glorious retaliation
(justice) on the antagonists in the end. Some of these movies carry the
word "justice" in the title - "American Justice" - comes to mind. The original
"Death Wish" movie was of this genre (I haven't seen any of the sequels). The
"Rambo" movies were predictably like this as well. It's not an uncommon theme
in Schwartzeneggar movies. The more horrific the antagonists can be portrayed,
the greater the pleasure we feel in seeing them get their "just rewards."
I suggest that these movies fulfill the fantasy and perpetuate the
myth that this version of justice is true justice.
Peace,
Richard
|
396.6 | | SWAM1::DOTHARD_ST | PLAYTOE | Fri Jan 24 1992 17:07 | 14 |
| RE: 5
That's what I'm hearing! I entered this note because I sought insights
and/or affirmations of God's Justice. I think Ezekiel 33 has much to
do with the question of Justice.
You know, just lately it came to me the idea of how some elevate "men",
calling them "saints" even...but fail to elevate ideas, a higher
consciousness...letting a concept stand out in their mind. Jesus asks
us "Call no man good, only God is good"...yet some call me more than
good when the call them "saints"....I feel that this is part of the
same problem as above.
Playtoe
|
396.7 | Pray for LA | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Peace: the Final Frontier | Thu Apr 30 1992 20:29 | 4 |
| I do not understand the Rodney King verdict. It is most alarming to me.
I'm afraid it may be a symptom of a more pervasive disease.
Richard
|
396.8 | | SA1794::SEABURYM | Zen: It's Not What You Think | Thu Apr 30 1992 20:48 | 7 |
|
Re.7
I am afraid you are right. I think the disease involved
is called "racism".
Mike
|
396.9 | disgusting | VIDSYS::PARENT | wind: pushy air! | Thu Apr 30 1992 21:41 | 9 |
|
RE: .7 and .8
I don't know what those jurors watched but it couldn't have been that
video tape or there were 12 blind jurors. That verdict was beyond
belief. It seems there was another crime, only at the courthouse!
Allison
|
396.10 | | CARTUN::BERGGREN | uncovering that which is precious. | Thu Apr 30 1992 22:49 | 5 |
| I am also abhorred. In this case I can understand the violence a lot
more than I can the verdict. To me it defies all sensibilites.
prayerfully,
Karen
|
396.11 | | CVG::THOMPSON | DECWORLD 92 Earthquake Team | Fri May 01 1992 10:04 | 7 |
| The verdict was hard to understand but of course none of us saw or
heard all the evidence. The violence that the verdict has meant I
do not understand. That is much harder to understand. I firmly believe
that it will be a serious blow to racial relations in this country.
Far worse then the verdict is.
Alfred
|
396.12 | | CARTUN::BERGGREN | uncovering that which is precious. | Fri May 01 1992 11:07 | 18 |
| Alfred,
I do not see the violence stemming primarily from a racial issue,
though I believe that is a factor. According to the news clips
I saw, they show people of various races/nationalities being
involved in the violence. I see the core issue as a "have and
have not" and the local and national politics that have helped
bring this about.
But it also goes beyond politics, imo. There is a prevalent mind-set
in this country that places material wealth and as the crowning glory
of a good life, at the expense of those people and planetary resources
used and abused to provide it. I would also agree with Mike Seabury
that the "justice" system we have does only a marginal job at justice
at best. It's still skewed to one side of the population spectrum and
that's the "haves."
Karen
|
396.13 | | CVG::THOMPSON | DECWORLD 92 Earthquake Team | Mon May 04 1992 11:39 | 36 |
| > I do not see the violence stemming primarily from a racial issue,
> though I believe that is a factor.
Neither do I. But then I don't see the aquital stemming primarily
from a racial issue either. A big part of the problem here is the
way the media has played this thing from the beginning BTW. I believe
they played up the racial angle far more then was justified. I blame
media sensationalism for most of the violence.
I do agree whole heartedly that the haves v. havenots is a big problem
in the US. I see it as the single biggest barrier to solving the
problems of racial strife and crime in America. The media running a
close second BTW.
I do not however believe that the justice system is heavily skewed
towards the wealthy. Skewed yes. Heavily no. I say this because I
believe that the system is skewed the most against the middle class.
There is always money to fight for the rich. They have their own.
There is always money to fight for the poor. It's taken from the
middle class. It is the middle class that must use it's own resources
(like the rich) but has to little of its own resources (like to poor)
to defend itself against a so called justace system that is all too
often interested in punishing "someone" then looking for truth or
determining right and wrong.
It's a concequence of wanting to "solve" the "easy" problem of crime
rather then the more difficult problem of poverty. I believe that this
all started getting worse when the churches started losing the resources
and will to work the poverty issues. If the churches were strong and
alive with people giving time and money the problem of poverty would
not be as bad. Government almost by its very nature can only make the
problem of poverty worse. Unless it is willing to go to forced socialism
which I believe is detramental to society and has the potential for
worse long term effects then the short term gains are worth.
Alfred
|
396.14 | Innocent unless a DA does better | USCTR1::RTRUEBLOOD | Rollyn Trueblood DTN 297-6553 | Mon May 04 1992 14:40 | 108 |
| This article was taken from the Reason Notes File.
Perhaps it will fill in a little of the Rest of the Story
the press seems to have overlooked.
This note was extracted without permission, so the original
author's name was excised. The Node::Username extracted this
note from an Easynet source.
Best wishes,
================================================================================
Note 87.13 Police Brutality 13 of 14
BEING::EDP "Always mount a scratch monkey." 108 lines 1-MAY-1992 08:49
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
This article gives a good argument for the "not guilty" verdict.
-- edp
I watched most of the trial on Court TV and learned alot about the case
that didn't come out in any of the news reports tonight. It was not as
"open and shut" as it appears if you only look at the clip most of the
news programs show. I think the media is responsible for some serious
misunderstandings underlying the violence we're seeing.
The tape runs 81 seconds but the first part, where King attacks the police,
has rarely been shown. Even tonight, one news program reported the tape
runs 60 seconds and gave the impression King was a motorist dragged out
of his car and beaten for no good reason.
In fact, King was stopped for driving at speeds in excess of 115 MPH and
"weaving." I think most people know he led police on a chase and was
later tested at over twice the legal limit for alcohol.
Initially, King and his two passengers assumed the "felony arrest position",
face down on the ground, arms out. Police regard drivers who evade them
as "suspected felons" and take extra precautions. Testimony showed there
were very few cases of evaders who did not have outstanding felony warrants.
Without warning, King springs to his feet and attacks officer Powell. This
happens in 6 frames on the tape and is called a "super human feat" by the
defense. It causes the officers to believe King was under the influence
of PCP. Powell responds by striking King with his baton, possibly in the
face, possibly on the shoulder.
This is important because the procesecution needs a baton blow to the head
at this point to sustain its "Assault with a Deadly Weapon" charge. All
other blows on the tape can be seen and all are to the buttocks, legs and
kidney areas - possibly assault but not deadly. Apparently the jury
accepted the defense that this blow was purely self defense.
Koon then fires a taser but it has no effect on King other than to make
his "cheeks vibrate" and cause him to "roar like a bear." The second
taser shot has no effect either and Powell strikes King again with his
baton. King goes down but then rises up and reaches for his wasteband.
This brings on the first flurry of blows and King goes back down. The
tape shows the officers stop hitting King when he lies still and start
hitting him again whenever he rises to his hands and knees. At one point
he rolls over on his back as is still but the officers keep hitting him,
claiming his hand is near his waistband again. That is not apparent on
the video.
Eventually, King raises his hands over his head, the beatings stop and he
is handcuffed. Powell struck a total of 45 blows although 10 to 15 of
them miss. Winds strikes King 11 times. Bressineo (sp) never hits King
but does kick him, claiming he was trying to push his (King's) shoulders
down. It's hard to tell even when the tape is played in slow motion but
the jury obviously believed it. Koon doesn't strike King at all but
was the commanding officer.
Other interesting things not reported:
Most of the "police" seen "standing around" on the tape were, in fact,
School District Police not trained to deal with violent suspects. LAPD
policy is that they would not engage such a suspect.
Some of the LAPD police on the scene but not participating were assigned
to guard the two passengers in Kings car.
Doctors at the hospital found King "combative" and required that be be
strapped down. When he was later transfered to the drug treatment center,
(they thought he was on PCP but tests later were negative), doctors would
not let ambulance attendents transport him because he was "violent." Police
took him in a sier.
Race really didn't enter into the trial much. In the first place, none of
the charges had a racial component. Assault with a deadly weapon does not
consider motive (ie, racisim) so not much time was spent on that.
The two racial remarks were "...(our last call) was like something out of
'Gorillas in the Mist" and "I wonder who be the parties." It's doubtful
the gorillas remark could stand up as a racial slur even as a hate crime
and the "parties" remark brought out quite an interesting point.
In order to accept that as a racial slur, one would have to believe blacks
had difficulty conjugating the verb "to be" which is a racist belief. The
prosecuter (a black man) made that point and just left it to the jury saying
something like "if you believe the language 'who be the parties' identifies
a certain race then this remark is racist."
The single outstanding charge is "Use of Excessive Force Under Color of
Authority" against Powell. He will surely be re-tried. All four officers
will be tried again on Federal charges and also face a civil suit by
King. (A man who obviously saw millions of dollars evaporate and looked
like it when he was interviewed.) For what its worth, 3 of the 4 have
lost their homes and are financially devastated. Koon has a book deal.
.
--
|
396.15 | | DEMING::VALENZA | Karaoke naked. | Mon May 04 1992 15:03 | 26 |
| That article brings up once again the issue of his speeding. What
someone does before being assaulted is not a justification for being
assaulted. This is again a case of victim-blaming, not unlike the
defense lawyer in a rape case who brings up the the provocative dress
or other behavior of the rape victim. I was glad to see that, in
Indianapolis (where I used to live), the jury in the Mike Tyson case
didn't buy that sort of victim-blaming argument, or (in the offensive
words of the Rodney King juror) that the victim "was in control of the
situation".
We've seen this time and time again in cases of police brutality. We
saw it in Miami in 1979, in Chicago in 1968, and now LA in 1992.
Unscrupulous police officers usually can get away with assaulting
people, often with the full support of a lot of people. It is rare
that a police brutality case is successfully prosecuted.
It is interesting to note that we also have a videotape from the riot,
of black men assaulting and nearly killing a white man. Those men who
assaulted the truck driver, if they are identified, should be tried to
the fullest extent of the law. If they are tried, then the videotape
will be compelling evidence in the courtroom against them. And if that
happens, does anyone want to take bets on whether or not *they* would
get a non guilty verdict? Does anyone have some swamp land in Florida
they would like to buy?
-- Mike
|
396.16 | how easy is it to qualify for a beating? | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Mon May 04 1992 15:14 | 17 |
| re Note 396.14 by USCTR1::RTRUEBLOOD:
> Initially, King and his two passengers assumed the "felony arrest position",
> face down on the ground, arms out. Police regard drivers who evade them
> as "suspected felons" and take extra precautions.
Can somebody tell me more about this "felony arrest
position"? If I were arrested and didn't perform this, would
I be beaten up by an officer? Should this be something that
is taught to every school child, so that they can correctly
perform it if and when they are arrested?
If I failed to correctly hear and obey the commands of an
officer (presumably in the heat of passion -- mine AND
theirs), would I be fair play for a beating?
Bob
|
396.17 | | CARTUN::BERGGREN | Nature's calling | Mon May 04 1992 15:29 | 17 |
| Alfred .13,
Thanks for offering your views on this. I agree that the justice
system all too often seems more interested in punishing someone than
in determining the truth. I don't know enough about it to know if
the middle class bears most of the consequences of this, but I
wouldn't doubt it. Although the poor may be assigned state or federal
subsidized defense, if you're poor and non-white, I think the deck gets
increasingly stacked against you and the chances for a fair trial
become more remote, for the reasons you cited already.
I also agree with your implication that poverty breeds crime, both
material, and particularly, spiritual poverty, imho.
Thanks,
Karen
|
396.18 | | VIDSYS::PARENT | wind: pushy air! | Mon May 04 1992 15:34 | 16 |
|
From what I know there are at least 2 positions an officer would like
to see during a felony arrest. The key point is no resistance, total
submission. The positions are face down legs spread, hands behind the
head, or leaning into a wall or other stationary object arms and legs
spread. In either case If arrested or asked to halt one would do well
to assume the most position that most clearly indicates your not
hostile to the officer. Resistance on the part of the suspect is
authorization for the officer to use force as needed to maintain
control. Even if it is an error on the part of the officer every
effort to cooperate must be made. None of this will protect against
someone intent on abuse, fortunately those are few at the level of
violence, though harrassment is more common and sometime subtle.
Allison
|
396.19 | | DEMING::VALENZA | Karaoke naked. | Mon May 04 1992 15:43 | 12 |
| I have not practiced civil disobedience, but I do know that those who
do will not obey police orders; for example, one tactic involves lying
limp, requiring that they then be physically carried off in order to be
arrested. Since they don't obey police orders, perhaps they should be
beaten too.
(The movie "Gandhi" actually portrays that as having happened; protesters
walked up to the authorities and were systematically and brutally
beaten. It was a very poignant scene; I don't know if that happened in
real life India or not.)
-- Mike
|
396.20 | | CVG::THOMPSON | DECWORLD 92 Earthquake Team | Mon May 04 1992 15:57 | 9 |
| Someone asked about the area where the Watts riots happened. I drove
through there about 22 years ago. Coming from New York I was floored.
Compared to areas in NYC it was down right great looking. Single
family houses with real yards. I thought I was in the country. My
hosts pointed out that those houses were a lot worse then the ones
in other nearby neighborhoods. So I guess contrast is a bigger factor
then absolute values. I have no idea what the area is like now though.
Alfred
|
396.21 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Peace: the Final Frontier | Mon May 04 1992 17:39 | 21 |
| Mike .19,
I have been involved in nonviolent civil disobediance. And yes, the officials
can be quite rough. However, I am white, well-scrubbed and in a wheelchair.
I have no doubt that these factors influenced the way I personally was treated.
And actually, I suspect I was a most unwelcome learning experience for my
captors. I was assigned a guard separate from the others. I was loaded into
a separate van than the others. I was ridiculed and bad-mouthed, but that's
about all.
Before participating in the action, we were all reminded that the arresting
officials were not our enemies, but our brothers and sisters. And we all
agreed in advance that we would present no threat to them or in any way
provoke them to respond in fear.
This is not to say that there existed no possibility that anyone would
have been beaten or injured. Nonviolence, like love, doesn't always
produce the desired results.
Peace,
Richard
|
396.22 | Who Finds Truth... | USCTR2::RTRUEBLOOD | Rollyn Trueblood DTN 297-6553 | Mon May 04 1992 20:07 | 19 |
| Perhaps we need to review our judicial system a little.
a. The prosecutor has to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that an
event occurred.
b. The defense has only to create a reasonable doubt, he does not
have to prove innocence. (Napoleonic Law turns the tables here
but Napoleonic Code is applicable only in Louisiana.)
c. The judge rules on points of law, keeps decorum, keeps things
moving, and imposes justice/mercy.
d. It is up to the Jury to determine Truth. (In ancient times
jurors could investigate all evidence independantly, ask questions,
seek undiscovered evidence etc.)
If the prosecutor fails to convince the jury, the defendant goes free.
Thats all there is to it.
|
396.23 | | SA1794::SEABURYM | Zen: It's Not What You Think | Mon May 04 1992 20:24 | 7 |
|
Re.22
Just a nit, but the Napoleononic code hasn't been applicable
in Louisiana since Napoleon ran the place.
Mike
|
396.24 | | JURAN::VALENZA | Karaoke naked. | Mon May 04 1992 21:39 | 23 |
| I wouldn't go so far as to say that juries determine Truth; practically
speaking, all they determine is what will happen to the defendant,
based on a host of factors that may or may not correspond to some sort
of Truth. We all know that court verdicts are not always correct;
innocent people have been convicted, and guilty people have been set
free. That does not mean that our legal system is bad, or should be
replaced with a different one, at least not necessarily; it simply
means that it is composed of human beings, and as such is fallible.
I think Rollyn made a key point about the prosecutor having to convince
the jury; an incompetent attorney on either side can make a big
difference in the outcome. It has been alluded that the prosecutors in
the Rodney King case did a poor job by relying exclusively on the video
alone and not really trying to refute the case that the defense was
making for itself. Since police almost always get off scot free in
brutality cases, this laxness may have been a crucial mistake on their
part.
In any case, even though our legal system may be founded on excellent
principles, that doesn't mean that every individual verdict that it
renders serves justice.
-- Mike
|
396.25 | Something is terribly wrong | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Peace: the Final Frontier | Mon May 04 1992 23:08 | 26 |
| Note 396.17
> I also agree with your implication that poverty breeds crime, both
> material, and particularly, spiritual poverty, imho.
Agreed. Spiritual poverty spans the economic spectrum. And it has
come to me that it is really quite funny that so many think in terms of
lifting the poor out of the bondage of poverty, but never (except in
the radical teachings of Jesus) in terms of lifting the wealthy out of
the bondage of wealth. Such thinking defies the American paradigm that
great wealth is the result of industriousness and deserving effort, and
is a sign of Divine favor.
As far as the legal system goes, the rich seldom go to jail. Leona Helmsley,
Patty Hearst, and even Jim Bakker are notable exceptions.
I've heard that up to 25% of all homeless people hold down full-time jobs.
And something I heard repeatedly since the explosion of rage in Los Angeles
is that there are more American Black males in jail than there are in school,
and that the average life expectancy of the American Black male of lower than
males in Bangladesh.
If these things are true, something is terribly wrong.
Peace,
Richard
|
396.26 | | SA1794::SEABURYM | Zen: It's Not What You Think | Mon May 04 1992 23:37 | 16 |
|
Re.25
Yes Richard there are some sickening stats indeed.
The leading cause of death among Black males between 18 - 35
is homicide.
I have also heard the other stats you mentioned quoted
several times before.
I have heard it said that we are at risk of "losing" an
entire generation of young Black men to crime, violence and
poverty.
Mike
|
396.27 | RE: .25 - I don't think Bakker, et al., are the exceptions | CHGV04::ORZECH | Alvin Orzechowski @ACI | Tue May 05 1992 11:09 | 15 |
| RE: .25
> As far as the legal system goes, the rich seldom go to jail. Leona Helmsley,
> Patty Hearst, and even Jim Bakker are notable exceptions.
It's instructive to reflect on what the three individuals above share;
their crimes were well publicized. IMO, the above could be more
accurately reworded to, "As far as the legal system goes, the rich do
not go to jail unless their crimes are well publicized." But this is
very cynical, and I would be very happy indeed to find out that I am
wrong about this.
Think "Peace",
Alvin
|