Message from @Maw
Discord ID: 783893710865825852
@ReclaimTheLaw It's based on the average, reasonable person, yes?
Which, let's be fair, is a fairly low bar.
It is certainly a mountain sized assumption. I don't believe people are rational, only rationalizing, which changes the definition of what is reasonable.
@Maw the average reasonable person does not exist, each person is unique, which is why each case has to be judged on its own merits
Sure, but reasonableness is important to the way our system works, yes? Particularly when it comes to defense.
@ReclaimTheLaw I agree with that assessment. I also maintain that ceteris paribus the same action is justifiable or not regardless of who performs that act.
Did anyone else see this?
Dint see that
Didn't know if troll.
I'm just curious if he got a yes. Haha
@Sage256 If the election is not valid then Nancy Pelosi becomes President on Jan. 20th.
I know a lot of people said: "don't leave them hanging" snerk
unless they hold a contingent election to be justified.
that is why there are 2 tests of what is reasonable, the subjective (what the person thought was reasonable) and the objective 9what an observer would thinkwas reasonable) . . . Iwould saythat a person who had received training in restraint would be held to a higher standard than someone who had no trainiing , , , , , the uniform standard between the two people beiinig what was "reasonable"
@ReclaimTheLaw Thank you, I'm glad we agree.
Just like I wouldn't treat a child to the same standard as an adult.
right
I wouldn't treat an average American without formal police training to the same standard as police.
Especially since police can, and have positions of authority within our society.
E.g: Speeding.
@ReclaimTheLaw I am arguing that that is a justification for double standards. If you justify a greater responsibility because someone is trained, then you excuse liability for someone that is not trained. Therefore it is better for a person that is not an officer to enforce the law because they will be safer legally from repercussions.
neither would I, except to hold them both to the standard of that which is reasonable, which would be different for each person 🙂
I friend of mine works in a hospital in NYC. She says they will start vaccinating them December 15..for Covid19.
_highfives._
People who are not authorities may not take actions that authorities take @Whithers That's been my entire argument.
The statement is Ceteris Paribus. Two persons commit the exact same action under the exact same conditions, then the standards of performance are the same no matter who or what they are.
They can't commit the same action.
You over estimate the value of authority.
They can commit the same action.
I at least acknowledge it exists.
The last thing I want to see is a bunch of batmen running around the streets.
I also acknowledge authority exists. It is always performed by humans. All humans fail. All humans succeed. Either the action was just or it was not.
Ending up in situations like Ahmaud Arbery.
The person performing the action is irrelevant.
@Whithers we are all subject to the standard of that which is (judged to be ) reasonable, but it is different for each person and each circumstance . . .. .in a sense there are as many tiers in the justice system as there are individual people and cicumstances ! (practically infinite!)
The standard of the law must be the same standard. You are saying that the law must be legislated in infinite variations to accommodate every potential possibility in existence. There is not enough hard drive in the universe for one law.
Yes...
Law isn't black and white.
That's exactly what we're saying.