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Originally Posted by LexusLover
Yea, like selling beer to a minor! The bar can loose its license, the bartender can be arrested, and the drunk under-aged drinker can go kill someone driving home when they are not mature enough to make a rational decision. So sweet-cheeks who wiggles her ass at the bouncer to get in, and the bartender to have a drink while flashing her tits and fake driver's license is potentially "harming" someone ... including the bar owner and all the employees while it's shut down!
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All you did was demonstrate that something else can be considered harm. The fact that this is also harm doesn't change the fact that loss of funding is also harm.
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Whether one harm is greater than another is a political/social decision.
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Agreed. I couldn't care less which is a greater harm, only that it fits the definition of the word.
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I'm not "misinterpreting" it at all.
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I understand you think this, now defend the position.
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I'll address discretionary prosecution and enforcement like this: years ago I happened to hear a judge (he was the presiding criminal judge in the county (not Harris BTW)) fuming in his office on a Monday morning about some "sweep's" in the "better part of the city" .... scooping up 100's of young people for engaging in the "unmentionable" on here ... AFTER the "bad parts of town" had already been hit .... the judge made the statement in a loud voice that no judge at the courthouse was going to get any campaign contributions with that "shit going on"!!!!! Don't "they" know that?"""" (a fair paraphrase of his angry comments .... before he slammed down the phone and complained his phone was ringing off the desk!....no computers in those days for email .... or his email account would have been exploding)
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Sorry, I don't take anecdotes from individuals I don't know as good proof. Besides, even if it was "discretionary" in that case, does not mean it is here.
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Decisions to prosecute or not are political ones when people are elected, and when people's opportunity for advancement by appointment are at risk. That is exactly the basis for the argument by the Black community regarding the Criminal Justice system in this country. They base their complaint on the system being politically/socially motivated...and thereby biased against Blacks.
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But this argument seems very weak in the current situation. It is a conservative state and she is a conservative DA. The idea that politics played into her decision to prosecute these two seems tenuous, at best. It's more likely that the evidence was so compelling that she pressed charges
despite political pressure.
But this is all speculation. You are simply stating, without any proof, that it is politically motivated. The reality is that it seems like they have a pretty good case. Again, IANAL, but I have yet to see someone here make a compelling case that they didn't violate the law. You made a point that looked good superficial, but a little critical reading leads me to believe it isn't going to be a defense for them because they didn't use the license for a "government's purpose."