Boris Morozov
Member
- Jun 11, 2007
- 170
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Doesn't matter. Its a natural right of all human beings and not the governments jurisdiction to deny.
it shouldn't matter. but it does. government has always had jurisdiction over your natural rights.
Doesn't matter. Its a natural right of all human beings and not the governments jurisdiction to deny.
and what would those limits be?
It's the most basic human right that exists.
-snip-
Also , the US laws have no consideration about who is the cause
of the chain of events , so if as in this case the police would have
told someone to not try to arrest someone and the guy is still
proceding he can be condemned because it would be assumed
that he willfully provoked the death by not following the police instructions.
If I correctly understand the above you are incorrect on at least 2 items.
1. U.S. laws (actually they are state laws over here) DO have consideration about who starts a fight.
Some states do not allow the person who provokes or started the fight to later claim self-defense. Other states allow it, but only under strict and limited circumstances.
Generally, in states that do allow the person who provoked/started the fight to claim self-defense, they must, after starting the fight, make it clear that they want to stop and/or try to retreat. Only if the other person refuses to stop and prevents them from retreating can self-defense be claimed by the person starting the fight. This provision was put into law to allow women to claim self-defense. There were too many cases where a woman started the fight with her husband/boy friend and where, after the (abusive) husband/BF went 'crazy' beating the h3ll out of them, she later used a gun in self-defense but was convicted of murder because self-defense was not permitted as she started it.
FL law states fairly clearly what constitutes "provoking" a fight. Merely following someone is insufficient. It takes an actual physical attack to meet the definition of "provoke" under FL law. IIRC, a serious verbal threat of violence can also qualify.
But merely following someone or merely insulting them, whether it be racial epithet or whatever, does not qualify as "provoking".
Fern
Assault is a crime. If you dont agree go assault a police officer and see what happens .
In 2005, at the age of 21, Zimmerman was charged with assaulting a police officer and resisting arrest, after shoving an officer while a friend of Zimmerman's was being questioned about underage drinking. The charges were reduced, then dropped when Zimmerman entered a pre-trial diversion program.
Is what you wish to throw civilization out the window and live like animals?
You're not very bright, eh?
Go ahead and try it.
Not true....
exemple :
I m against violence.
Thank you for the precisions , this help studying the inherent
consequences about the eventual false claims of the remaining party.
I conclude that it was important for him to say that the weapon
wasnt visible when he confronted the youth....
Assault is a crime. If you dont agree go assault a police officer and see what happens .
Not true....
exemple :
In 2005, at the age of 21, Zimmerman was charged with assaulting a police officer and resisting arrest, after shoving an officer while a friend of Zimmerman's was being questioned about underage drinking. The charges were reduced, then dropped when Zimmerman entered a pre-trial diversion program.
Is what you wish to throw civilization out the window and live like animals?
I m against violence.
Of course people have the right to defend themselves, what a stupid question.
Of course people have the right to defend themselves, what a stupid question.
I m against violence.
So let me ask you this, is the state of California depriving me of my right to defend myself by not issuing a CCW permit?
One should not assault a police officer if you know they are one.
Zimmerman was unaware of such.
I still think GZ should have gotten disorderly conduct/disturbing the peace. If two guys get in a mutual scrap any other time, both usually end up with charges. In that light, I don't view the GZ case as being pure self-defense.
Unfortunately the best defense against violence is violence.
The sooner people realize and accept that, and the sooner people realize and accept that we can't decide when *other* people choose to initiate violence against *us* despite our best intentions to avoid violence, the better off the human race will be.
So let me ask you this, is the state of California depriving me of my right to defend myself by not issuing a CCW permit?
