Dec 152009
 

In the US, we have the “Castle Doctrine” (at least in most states) which means that if someone breaks into your home and poses a threat, you can use deadly force to defend yourself, without first having to resort to running away and cowering in the furthest corner. Britain, on the other hand, does not seem to have that. When even millionaires can’t buy themselves some justice, you know the legal system is well and truly screwed. Witness the case of Munir Hussain:

Mr Hussain’s nightmare began on September 3 last year when he, his wife, 18-year-old daughter and two sons aged 18 and 15 returned from their mosque during Ramadan to find three intruders in their home in High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire.

They were tied up and told to get on the floor if they did not want to be killed. One of Mr Hussain’s sons managed to escape and alerted Mr Hussain’s younger brother Tokeer, 35, who lived a few doors away.

Mr Hussain made a break for freedom by throwing a coffee table at his attackers. He and Tokeer chased the gang and brought Salem to the ground in a front garden.

Reading Crown Court heard how Mr Hussain and his brother then beat Salem while he lay on the ground, using a cricket bat, a pole and a hockey stick – leaving him with a fractured skull and brain damage following the ‘sustained’ attack.

Alright, so far I imagine that most readers of the Unwanted Blog would have a reaction that is essentially “good job Mr. Hussain.” Violent criminals assaulted his family and presented them with terror and the immediate threat of death; when the opportunity came to turn the tables, Munir and his brother did so and laid a beatdown on a man who posed a clear and present danger to him, his wife and his *children.* Now, the proper response of society at large would be a handshake from the chief of police, a pat on the back from the mayor, and a loud “thank you” from a grateful public. But what actually happened?

Judge John Reddihough said some members of the public would think that 56-year-old Salem ‘deserved what happened to him’ and that Mr Hussain ‘should not have been prosecuted’.

But had he spared Mr Hussain jail, the judge said, the ‘rule of law’ would collapse.

He said: ‘If persons were permitted to take the law into their own hands and inflict their own instant and violent punishment on an apprehended offender rather than letting the criminal justice system take its course, then the rule of law and our system of criminal justice, which are hallmarks of a civilised society, would collapse.’

Munir Hussain has been sentenced to 30 months in prison, and his brother to 39. Waled Salem, the man who broke into Hussains home, threatened the family, then got his ass handed to him, has been given a “non custodial sentence.”

The article includes this helpful sidebar:

If you use force which is ‘not excessive’ against burglars then the law is on your side.
Last year’s Criminal Justice and Immigration Bill contained clauses to protect people from prosecution if they act instinctively and out of fear for their safety.
Justice Secretary Jack Straw said:

‘Law-abiding citizens should not be put off tackling criminals by fear of excessive investigation.
‘For a passer-by witnessing a street crime or a householder faced with a burglar, we are reassuring them that if they use force which is not excessive or disproportionate, the law really is behind them.’

The problem is that the British Nanny State does not seem to understand what “excessive” is in this context. Using a flamethrower or a heavy machinegun or an RPG against someone who has tried to kill your family is excessive, because the weapons themselves very likely will cause collateral damage to your neighbors and their property. But in this case, the weapons used were a pole, a hockey stick and a cricket bat. These will *not* cause collateral damage to innocent bystanders; they are in fact extremely short-ranged weapons. And since the threat posed was “death,” then no amount of force, so long as it is reasonably precise and focussed solely on the criminal, can be excessive. It’s not like you can kill the man twice.

So, for me there are two lessons to take from this:

1) The Founding Fathers knew what they were doign when they dragged us away from this sort of horrible governance

2) Always remember the the Rule Of SSS:

A) Shoot

B) Shovel

C) Shut up

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One other reason to be glad for the separation from Mother England:

Mother’s fury at Tesco Christmas card that pokes fun at ginger children

The actual story is not terribly important, but it is just another in a long, incomprehensible line of items that show that in Britain, redheads seem to be seen as lesser people or some such. While in the US, redheads – barring recent showings of a certain episode of South Park –  are not seen the same way. We see them… somewhat differently (go ahead and do a Google image search for “redhead” and try to find something that’s safe for work).
633517661118548215-hot-redhead-you-read-the-title-correctly-motivational.jpg

Any culture that responds instinctively to the word “readhead” with “ewww,” well, that just ain’t right.

 Posted by at 11:27 am

  10 Responses to “Thank Odin for the American Revolution”

  1. I’m a redhead, and I think the card is funny as hell. I can defend myself, however, and small children in school cannot. The card sends a simple message to simple minds, and school is not a place in which self-defense of any sort of taught. I think the card is a bad idea for that reason alone.

    I left a comment at the Times site, concerning the attack on Mr Hussain and his family. I remain wholeheartedly on the side of the Hussain family. Perhaps the reason that millionaire didn’t buy justice was because neither he nor anyone else felt that he would not get it from any reasonable court. I cannot imagine a sane excuse for the decision of the judge.

  2. > I’m a redhead, and I think the card is funny as hell.

    Kinda, yeah. But I’ve seen a lot of stuff come out of the UK to indicate that redheads are seriously frowned upon. Dunno why. And when a good lookin’ redheaded chick walks by, I’m completely stonkered as to why people would want to lay a beatdown upon her for her hair color. Jealousy, perhaps.

    (complete disclosure: my own hair is approximately the dullest shade of brown imaginable)

    > Perhaps the reason that millionaire didn’t buy justice was because neither he nor anyone else felt that he would not get it from any reasonable court.

    Something that occurs to me… Hussain and his brother are Muslims. His assailant, based on the name, is also probably a Muslim. This does not enter into any part of the story… until the sentencing. The British judicial system is now taking two Muslims who, from all appearances, are perfectly fine gents, and throwing them into the slammer with the scum of the earth for *years,* and unjustly IMO. What will be the end result of this? I’d say it’s not unreasonable to postulate that this might generate yet another round of extremified Muslims. And this time, Muslim extremists with money.

    Yeah. Good job.

  3. Redheads are associated with the Irish in Britain, and the Irish are looked down upon as lesser beings by some, and a subject of rude humor… such as the Irishman that got _so_ drunk that he kissed his wife and beat the Pope’s foot to a pulp with a coal shovel.
    Of course many Scots are red-headed also, but they wear skirts and argue over which sheep is the prettiest and most deserving of being raped, as whores are rumored to charge for the same service.

  4. I for one would take the redhead out of two pretty women.

    More later on the UK bit.

    Jim

  5. Pat, that last bit was disgusting.

  6. > Pat, that last bit was disgusting.

    The thing you have to understand about Pat is that he’s quite convinced of his own wit.

    It’s amazing the things that people can convince themselves of in the face of all reason.

  7. I thought as much…damnable protestants, one and all. ;-0

  8. Redhead=Irish=”lesser-being” for the longest time in England. Of course we have the wonderful saying here of “Beat them like a redheaded step-child” which we ‘imported’ along with other British and European cultural and racial bias’ which we’ve managed (for the most part) to overcome.

    I personally PREFER redheads to a blonde anyday and brunette most days…
    (I probably could beat Scott on “plain” brown hair though ;o)

    Ok, better Irish joke:
    An Irishman walks out of a bar… Hey, It COULD happen! :o)

    Randy

  9. “Redheads are associated with the Irish in Britain, and the Irish are looked down upon as lesser beings by some”

    Doubtful – first, there are more redheads in Scotland (13%) than in Ireland (10%). Additinally, even illustrious English people, like Queen Elizabeth the First, were redheads.

    Personally, I think the ridicule is just due to redheads being different – even in Ireland ‘Gingers’ are subject to ridicule.

  10. Just so you know, that’s Alyson Hannigan.

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