Soldato
- Joined
- 3 Aug 2005
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If you hurled abuse at a funeral or outside the grieving parents house you could be expected to be carted off by the police for public disorder offences, this is no different.
Even if you cooperate you are liable to be physically harmed. You know on all the reality television shows when arrestees complain about handcuffs being too tight? That hurts, and often causes lasting injury. Many compliant suspects are still tackled to the ground, have a knee shoved in their back, their face pressed into the ground, etc. as a precautionary measure.
Secondly, in relation to non-compliant suspects, the intention is irrelevant. It does not matter whether violence is conducted in order to protect police officers or members of the public. It is still violence.
In that respect both of your examples are irrelevant. Constable Vallario would not propose any fantastical courses of action that differ significantly from established methods.
But on that point, let's not dress violence up as 'restraining force'. When you are arrested, you are being threatened with violence. You will be hit, you will be tackled to the ground, have a knee in your back, be mauled by a police dog, electrocuted with a Taser gun, or even shot with a police firearm.
An astute observation. That would be because the burden of proof lies with those — such as yourself, it seems — that think it ought to be an offence.
Al Vallario said:We are working from the premise that freedom of speech and expression is a universal human right. Human rights are supposed to be inviolable — negating cases in which they conflict — but alas, many states feel they are above such things and decide to place restrictions on them.
Al Vallario said:This particular statute is one such restriction. It means, ultimately, that I cannot freely express myself in communications. I cannot so much as state a falsehood with the intention of causing a recipient of my message distress or anxiety.
Al Vallario said:Consider, for example, the hilarious ruse of a girl telling her partner she is pregnant when she is not. This statute brands her a criminal, and makes her liable to a custodial sentence.
Al Vallario said:Consider also a person who sends an email to their coworker intentionally misstating a project deadline so as to cause them anxiety and make them work harder. A criminal offence?
Al Vallario said:The onus is on you, not myself, to justify this statute as a necessary restriction on a supposedly inviolable human right. I cannot possibly deconstruct the justification for its existence and return to the premise that the right to free speech and expression is indeed inviolable without first knowing what justification has been provided.
Al Vallario said:Legislation is not the answer to every minor grievance. Should we also be legislating against overgrown hedges? Oh wait, too late.
Al Vallario said:My views on the matter are not fully established; essentially because there is no perfect answer to the matter.
Al Vallario said:Generally I see the appeal of the avoidance principle in relation to things like these. That is to say, suffering distress or anxiety as a result of the actions of a person like Duffy is not nice, but if you can avoid his communications — his free speech and expression — simply by clicking a button to delete his messages, block further messages from him, etc. then I don't see the need to pursue further action.
Al Vallario said:To answer your previous question, I don't have any particularly strong objections to existing defamation legislation, nor do I think that is particularly relevant to this case. Defamation often results in far more serious harm to a victim — irreparable damage to their character or reputation, the loss of their livelihood, indirect destruction to property, etc. — than simply feeling anxious or distressed.
How are you taken into police custody? Under duress, with the threat of violence. It may be explicit — e.g. "You will be tasered!", "We will let the dog on you!", "You will be shot if you do not put the gun down!" — or implicit, but the threat is always there.
How are you taken into police custody? Under duress, with the threat of violence. It may be explicit — e.g. "You will be tasered!", "We will let the dog on you!", "You will be shot if you do not put the gun down!" — or implicit, but the threat is always there.
Without the threat of violence the police wouldn't be able to arrest many people.
I am fortunate to have not had any dealings with the police in my life.
It seems to me that Al Vallario is probably a bit of a dodgy character, which is why he hates the police. Shocker.
They certainly aren't violent to you unless you're resisting arrest or giving them a good reason to be more heavy handed.