cats7494 said:
Did not realize I was addressing you.
Oh come on, don't resort to juvenile or scatological responses, please.
We all agree that the judge, in this case, was far too liberal in the way he gave the perpetrator the opportunity to exchange prison time for questionable treatment.
A liberal, by definition, is open to new ideas for progress, tolerant of the ideas and behavior of others and is broad-minded. So, we should expect prominent liberals, members of the legislature or the judiciary for example, to be at the leading edge of those "new ideas for progress". We should, equally, expect the majority of the general public, both conservative and liberal, to disagree with those new ideas, at least in the beginning, and loudly say so.
To criticise this judge because of his liberalism is to criticise an ideology that assumes that new thinking must be good thinking, that change is always good and that something is automatically wrong because it hasn't come from an approved source.
To defend Liberals (note the capital letter), right or wrong, because your perceived enemy is attacking one of your own, not just for what he has done (which you agree is wrong) but because they have the temerity to attach blame to the ideology itself, is flawed.
Liberalism is a slippery slope that ends in anarchy unless common sense prevails and "progress" is halted. In this instance, public interest is best served by everybody agreeing that an error of judgement (no pun intended) has occurred and that changes need to be made to the due process to prevent it happening again.
ford family