Here we go (aka UK riots thread)

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Re: Here we go (aka UK riots thread)

Post by Hoboh » Fri Aug 26, 2011 11:06 pm

Lord Kangana wrote:Who's the victim in my scenario?
Probs the odd pigon or so?

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Re: Here we go (aka UK riots thread)

Post by Worthy4England » Fri Aug 26, 2011 11:06 pm

Lord Kangana wrote:Who's the victim in my scenario?
I didn't say their was one? What's your point?

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Re: Here we go (aka UK riots thread)

Post by Lord Kangana » Fri Aug 26, 2011 11:10 pm

I'm trying to establish if you're making a hierarchy of crime.
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Re: Here we go (aka UK riots thread)

Post by Lord Kangana » Fri Aug 26, 2011 11:12 pm

Hoboh wrote:
Lord Kangana wrote:Who's the victim in my scenario?
Probs the odd pigon or so?
No animals were harmed in this story.
You can judge the whole world on the sparkle that you think it lacks.
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Re: Here we go (aka UK riots thread)

Post by Hoboh » Fri Aug 26, 2011 11:14 pm

Lord Kangana wrote:I'm trying to establish if you're making a hierarchy of crime.
Play yer cards right I'll mek thee a Duke

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Re: Here we go (aka UK riots thread)

Post by Lord Kangana » Fri Aug 26, 2011 11:15 pm

I've always fancied Count to be honest.

Any chance?
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Re: Here we go (aka UK riots thread)

Post by Worthy4England » Fri Aug 26, 2011 11:16 pm

Lord Kangana wrote:I'm trying to establish if you're making a hierarchy of crime.
Must try harder. :D

There is already one in the sense that some crimes attract higher sentences than others.

I was just pointing out, that as crimes go, speeding seems to me to be victimless. Given that no one has yet given any credible victims of speeding, I'll stick with that notion thanks.

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Re: Here we go (aka UK riots thread)

Post by Lord Kangana » Fri Aug 26, 2011 11:21 pm

When you say credible victims, are you saying just from our small select group, or from the wider world?

After all, I've been the victim of a a motoring offence that wrote off the car I was in.

Again, people tend to rate crime based on what they themselves value within their lives. So for example, in your experience, as man with a family (as I recall), probably a mortgage, you consider breaking and entering to be a gretaer offence than a motoring one.

This isn't intended as an inflaming question, but would that change if a member of your family was injured because of a speeding drivers actions?
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Re: Here we go (aka UK riots thread)

Post by Worthy4England » Fri Aug 26, 2011 11:31 pm

Lord Kangana wrote:When you say credible victims, are you saying just from our small select group, or from the wider world?

After all, I've been the victim of a a motoring offence that wrote off the car I was in.

Again, people tend to rate crime based on what they themselves value within their lives. So for example, in your experience, as man with a family (as I recall), probably a mortgage, you consider breaking and entering to be a gretaer offence than a motoring one.

This isn't intended as an inflaming question, but would that change if a member of your family was injured because of a speeding drivers actions?
You're missing the point.

I'm not advocating speeding.

I have also been in a couple of write-offs, including one that rolled over a couple of times that I got cut out of (not me driving). I've also lost relatives in motoring accidents and saw my best mate killed when I was 11.

If a speeding driver injured a member of my family or worse, they would be charged with reckless driving, death by dangerous driving or suchlike, so not speeding...

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Re: Here we go (aka UK riots thread)

Post by Hoboh » Fri Aug 26, 2011 11:32 pm

Worthy4England wrote:
Lord Kangana wrote:When you say credible victims, are you saying just from our small select group, or from the wider world?

After all, I've been the victim of a a motoring offence that wrote off the car I was in.

Again, people tend to rate crime based on what they themselves value within their lives. So for example, in your experience, as man with a family (as I recall), probably a mortgage, you consider breaking and entering to be a gretaer offence than a motoring one.

This isn't intended as an inflaming question, but would that change if a member of your family was injured because of a speeding drivers actions?
You're missing the point.

I'm not advocating speeding.

I have also been in a couple of write-offs, including one that rolled over a couple of times that I got cut out of (not me driving). I've also lost relatives in motoring accidents and saw my best mate killed when I was 11.

If a speeding driver injured a member of my family or worse, they would be charged with reckless driving, death by dangerous driving or suchlike, so not speeding...

They'd be lynched mate!

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Re: Here we go (aka UK riots thread)

Post by Lord Kangana » Fri Aug 26, 2011 11:36 pm

Worthy4England wrote:
Lord Kangana wrote:When you say credible victims, are you saying just from our small select group, or from the wider world?

After all, I've been the victim of a a motoring offence that wrote off the car I was in.

Again, people tend to rate crime based on what they themselves value within their lives. So for example, in your experience, as man with a family (as I recall), probably a mortgage, you consider breaking and entering to be a gretaer offence than a motoring one.

This isn't intended as an inflaming question, but would that change if a member of your family was injured because of a speeding drivers actions?
You're missing the point.

I'm not advocating speeding.

I have also been in a couple of write-offs, including one that rolled over a couple of times that I got cut out of (not me driving). I've also lost relatives in motoring accidents and saw my best mate killed when I was 11.

If a speeding driver injured a member of my family or worse, they would be charged with reckless driving, death by dangerous driving or suchlike, so not speeding...
So surely prevention being far better than scraping people up off the road and investigating the crime, a prudent society would try to reduce the potential for road deaths by introducing laws that made an offence of one of the ingredients, and therefore root causes, of road accidents?
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Re: Here we go (aka UK riots thread)

Post by Worthy4England » Fri Aug 26, 2011 11:38 pm

Lord Kangana wrote:
Worthy4England wrote:
Lord Kangana wrote:When you say credible victims, are you saying just from our small select group, or from the wider world?

After all, I've been the victim of a a motoring offence that wrote off the car I was in.

Again, people tend to rate crime based on what they themselves value within their lives. So for example, in your experience, as man with a family (as I recall), probably a mortgage, you consider breaking and entering to be a gretaer offence than a motoring one.

This isn't intended as an inflaming question, but would that change if a member of your family was injured because of a speeding drivers actions?
You're missing the point.

I'm not advocating speeding.

I have also been in a couple of write-offs, including one that rolled over a couple of times that I got cut out of (not me driving). I've also lost relatives in motoring accidents and saw my best mate killed when I was 11.

If a speeding driver injured a member of my family or worse, they would be charged with reckless driving, death by dangerous driving or suchlike, so not speeding...
So surely prevention being far better than scraping people up off the road and investigating the crime, a prudent society would try to reduce the potential for road deaths by introducing laws that made an offence of one of the ingredients, and therefore root causes, of road accidents?
I don't recall suggesting society shouldn't...

I still haven't identified any victims of speeding...

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Re: Here we go (aka UK riots thread)

Post by Lord Kangana » Fri Aug 26, 2011 11:42 pm

But if you break any crime down into its component parts, there will be important actions that helped facilitate the crime but didn't necessarily have a direct impact upon the victim.

I mean, I doubt you'd be an advocate of something such as twocking, but your argument seems to sail perilously close to that avenue of thought.
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Re: Here we go (aka UK riots thread)

Post by Hoboh » Fri Aug 26, 2011 11:43 pm

Lord Kangana wrote:
Worthy4England wrote:
Lord Kangana wrote:When you say credible victims, are you saying just from our small select group, or from the wider world?

After all, I've been the victim of a a motoring offence that wrote off the car I was in.

Again, people tend to rate crime based on what they themselves value within their lives. So for example, in your experience, as man with a family (as I recall), probably a mortgage, you consider breaking and entering to be a gretaer offence than a motoring one.

This isn't intended as an inflaming question, but would that change if a member of your family was injured because of a speeding drivers actions?
You're missing the point.

I'm not advocating speeding.

I have also been in a couple of write-offs, including one that rolled over a couple of times that I got cut out of (not me driving). I've also lost relatives in motoring accidents and saw my best mate killed when I was 11.

If a speeding driver injured a member of my family or worse, they would be charged with reckless driving, death by dangerous driving or suchlike, so not speeding...
So surely prevention being far better than scraping people up off the road and investigating the crime, a prudent society would try to reduce the potential for road deaths by introducing laws that made an offence of one of the ingredients, and therefore root causes, of road accidents?

Your being very clever tonight, intentional?

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Re: Here we go (aka UK riots thread)

Post by Worthy4England » Fri Aug 26, 2011 11:44 pm

Lord Kangana wrote:But if you break any crime down into its component parts, there will be important actions that helped facilitate the crime but didn't necessarily have a direct impact upon the victim.

I mean, I doubt you'd be an advocate of something such as twocking, but your argument seems to sail perilously close to that avenue of thought.
My argument sails in a completely different hemisphere.

TWOC has a victim. The car owner.

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Re: Here we go (aka UK riots thread)

Post by Lord Kangana » Fri Aug 26, 2011 11:47 pm

But it remains a lesser offence because it is easier to argue that there wasn't an intention to permanently deprive the owner of the vehicule.

Which brings us neatly back to the original argument, as twocking created a merry-go-round of short sentences and a revolving door of perpetrators.
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Re: Here we go (aka UK riots thread)

Post by Worthy4England » Fri Aug 26, 2011 11:57 pm

Well yes, we could argue lots of possibilities, other than that we can fairly easily find the victim of it.

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Re: Here we go (aka UK riots thread)

Post by Lord Kangana » Fri Aug 26, 2011 11:58 pm

If you're on holiday and someone twocks your car, is there a victim if you don't know about it?
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Re: Here we go (aka UK riots thread)

Post by Worthy4England » Sat Aug 27, 2011 12:06 am

Lord Kangana wrote:If you're on holiday and someone twocks your car, is there a victim if you don't know about it?
How'd they get into it? They going to pay for the wear and tear on the tyres? What about the reduction in value for the additional mileage they've put on it?

You found any victims of speeding yet?

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Re: Here we go (aka UK riots thread)

Post by Lord Kangana » Sat Aug 27, 2011 12:10 am

You left it unlocked. They put it on a flat bed.
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