Turbo said:
I went on to explain it in the remainder of my post that you quoted, but I'll take another crack at it.
A black man rapes and murders a white woman and is sentenced to 25 years because it is deemed a "hate crime."
Another black man rapes and murders a black woman and is sentenced to only 10 years in prison because it is not deemed a "hate crime".
The black victim is therefore considered less valuable than the white victim.
In a just society, every convicted murderer and rapist is put to death, regardless of the motive.
The verdict will have had nothing to do with anyone's "value" except in your own mind. The court will have said nothing about anyone being more valuable than anyone else.
First, a black man raping a white woman would not in itself be a hate crime. For it to become a hate crime, it would have to be proven that he raped her because she represented, to him, a group of people that he irrationally hates, and it would also have to be proven the the rape was (in his mind) an act against
all such hated people. The reason the crime is then considered even more heneous than it already is, is because it was (in the criminal's mind) perpetrated against
all women (or all white women, or all Canadian women, or all brown eyed women, or all of whomever it is that he so hates). A "hate rape" would be a different crime than a rape because it's a crime done with a different intent, just like a violent sexual rape would be a different crime than a consentual statuatory rape, even though they are all the crime of rape.
Not all rape crimes are the same. Not all murders are the same. Not all robberies are the same. Not all kidnapings are the same. Part of the responsibility of a just justice system is to recognize that not all crimes, nor all victims, nor all criminals are the same, and to do the difficult work of condsidering mitigating conditions and circumstances. Over-simplistic "one-size-fits-all" platitudes about the law may play well to fools who don't want to be bothered to consider the complexity of the real world, but justice requires that honest men and women take that responsibility and do the work it asks of us.