This should be obvious, but apparently it’s not obvious to everyone.
Thames Valley Police: Tea and Consent. (YouTube, 2:49 min)
(BTW, the MetaFilter thread on the Brock Turner case is still going strong.)
This should be obvious, but apparently it’s not obvious to everyone.
Thames Valley Police: Tea and Consent. (YouTube, 2:49 min)
(BTW, the MetaFilter thread on the Brock Turner case is still going strong.)
(Update below.)
I’m sure you’ve all heard of the case in which a Stanford student was sentenced to less than minimum sentence after being found guilty of raping a woman. In case you haven’t, this got a wide audience because of the victim’s statement:
Buzzfeed: Here Is The Powerful Letter The Stanford Victim Read Aloud To Her Attacker.
“A former Stanford swimmer who sexually assaulted an unconscious woman was sentenced to six months in jail because a longer sentence would have “a severe impact on him,“ according to a judge. At his sentencing Thursday, his victim read him a letter describing the “severe impact“ the assault had on her.”
Brock Turner’s statement is here, and his father’s here.
I’d like to highlight a few articles on the case:
John Pavlovitz: To Brock Turner’s Father, From Another Father.
“Dear Mr. Turner,
I’ve read your letter to the judge on behalf of your son Brock, asking for leniency in his rape conviction.
I need you to understand something, and I say this as a father who dearly loves my son as much as you must love yours:
Brock is not the victim here.
His victim is the victim.
She is the wounded one.
He is the damager.”
Mimesis Law: Brock Allen Turner: the sort of defendant who is spared “severe impact”.
“Judge Aaron Persky empathized with Brock Allen Turner and could easily imagine what it would be like to lose sports fame (as Persky enjoyed), to lose a Sanford education (as Persky enjoyed), to lose the sort of easy success and high regard that a young, reasonably affluent Stanford graduate (like Persky was) can expect as a matter of right. Judge Persky could easily imagine how dramatically different a state prison is from Stanford frat parties, and how calamitous was Turner’s fall. That’s how Judge Persky convinced himself to hand such a ludicrously light sentence for such a grotesque violation of another human being.
But most people fed into the criminal justice system aren’t champion athletes with Stanford scholarships. Most aren’t even high school graduates. Most are people who have lived lives that are alien and inscrutable to someone successful enough to become a judge. Judges might be able to empathize with having to quit their beloved college, but how many can empathize with a defendant who lost a minimum-wage job because they couldn’t make bail? How many can empathize with someone more likely to sleep by a dumpster than exit a frat party next to one? They can conceive of the humiliation of being on the sex offender registry after getting into an elite university, but can they conceive of the humiliation of being stopped, frisked, detained, and beaten with impunity because of the color of their skin? Experience teaches that the answer is usually no.
This means that the system is generally friendly to defendants who look like Brock Allen Turner and generally indifferent or cruel to people who don’t look like him. No high school dropout who rapes an unconscious girl behind a dumpster is getting six months in jail and a solicitous speech from the likes of Judge Persky. Judges take their youth as a sign that they are “superpredators,“ not as grounds for leniency. If you tell a judge that they aren’t a danger to others, the judge will peer over his or her glasses and remark that people who rape unconscious girls in the dirt are self-evidently dangerous, and don’t be ridiculous. Judges don’t think that a good state prison stretch will have too severe an impact – after all, what are they missing, really?”
Democracy Now: Meet the Law Professor Leading a Bid to Recall the Judge Who Sentenced Stanford Rapist to 6 Months. (video & transcript)
“A Stanford University law professor has launched a campaign to recall the judge who sentenced former Stanford swimmer Brock Allen Turner to six months in jail after he was convicted of three felony counts for sexually assaulting an unconscious woman behind a dumpster. Judge Aaron Persky expressed concern a longer sentence would have “a severe impact” on Turner. Under California law, Turner’s crime carries a minimum punishment of two years in prison. But Stanford law professor Michele Landis Dauber says Judge Persky “really bent over backwards in order to give this defendant a very light sentence.” We speak with Michele Landis Dauber and read part of the powerful statement Turner’s victim delivered in court.”
Vox: Brock Turner’s sexual assault victim explains why she’s remaining anonymous “Turner’s accuser: “I am every woman.“ ”
Buzzfeed News: Joe Biden Writes An Open Letter To Stanford Survivor.
“The vice president, in an open letter sent to BuzzFeed News, said “a lot of people failed“ the Stanford sexual assault survivor and that she will “save lives“ thanks to the powerful message she read to her assailant in court.”
Some links via MetaFilter: “Lighthouses… just stand there shining.”.
Deutsche Welle: Exclusive: Boko Haram victim tells DW of captivity near Chibok girls. “Christina Ijabla was held kidnapped by Boko Haram for two years. She told DW about life in an Islamist militant prison camp and how she had seen the elusive Chibok girls whose seizure sparked international outrage.”
Deutsche Welle: Boko-Haram-Geisel: “Und dann wurde sie vor unseren Augen erschossen”. “Fast zwei Jahre lang wurde Christina Ijabla von Boko Haram festgehalten, dann gelang ihr die Flucht. Im exklusiven DW-Interview erzählt sie von der Gefangenschaft – und vom Schicksal der entführten Chibok-Schülerinnen.”
Valerio Vincenzo: Borderline, Frontiers of Peace.
“Today, with 26 countries belonging to the Schengen Area, 16,500 km of borders can be freely crossed. The attribution of the Nobel Peace Prize to Europe in 2012 has confirmed the historical importance of this slow, almost imperceptible, but radical change.
With the help of a GPS and detailed maps, I have conducted many trips along these “erased” borderlines, with the intention of capturing the essence of these now-peaceful crossings.
Even if sometimes these pictures have been taken thousands of km away from each other, they all provide images that are far from the stereotype that we tend to associate with the notion of border. What is a border anyway?”
Link via MetaFilter.
Update: I accidentally linked to the first article twice, instead of to the third one I meant to link. Swapped the third link and article for the right one.
Democracy: US President Barack Obama calls Germany’s Angela Merkel a ‘trusted partner’. “The US president praised Chancellor Angela Merkel as a “trusted partner” and described her handling of the refugee crisis as “courageous.” Obama is in Germany’s Hanover to talk free trade and security.”
Democracy: Barack Obama goes to Hanover: How they made it happen. “The world’s largest industrial technology trade fair is hosting the United States as its partner country. And President Barack Obama has even made a personal appearance in Hanover. So how did organizers make that happen?”
Bilateral Relations: Barack Obama showers praise on Germany and its leader. “In an interview given to the daily “Bild” a day before he visits Germany, US President Barack Obama has praised German Chancellor Angela Merkel in high tones. Obama called her actions in the refugee crisis ‘courageous.'”
Die drei Artikel gibt es auch auf Deutsch:
Deutschland / USA: Auf der richtigen Seite der Geschichte”. “Die Hannover Messe eröffnen, mit der Bundeskanzlerin über politische Krisen reden, TTIP pushen: US-Präsident Obama hatte einen straffen ersten Besuchstag. Über den berichtet Sabine Kinkartz aus Hannover.”
Hannover Messe: Obama in Hannover: Wie es dazu kam. “Zum ersten Mal in der Geschichte der größten Industriemesse der Welt sind die USA das Partnerland. Und Präsident Obama lässt es sich nicht nehmen, eigens dafür nach Hannover zu reisen. Wie hat die Messe das geschafft?”
USA / Deutschland: Obama: “Stolz auf Freundin Angela”. “Vor seinem Treffen mit Angela Merkel an diesem Wochenende hat US-Präsident Obama die Kanzlerin als führungsstarke Persönlichkeit gewürdigt. In einem Zeitungsinterview lobt er vor allem ihre Flüchtlingspolitik.”
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