Black judge gives white man 60 days for using n-word

If a black man got 60 days for calling a white judge a cracker, would you approve of that?

Absolutely. I believe in respect for authority even if a person doesn't agree with said authority.

I don't agree with Obama on a lot of stuff but would not be disrespectful towards him if I ever met him.
 
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Mark Rydell, the director, is very much a liberal as judged by some of his other films like On Golden Pond, The Fox and The Rose. I like quite a few John Wayne films although he made many turkeys as well. Films like the Conqueror, where he plays Genghis Khan, and Brannigan are just risible and his casting as a German captain in the Sea Chase was just downright laughable.

http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0753073/?ref_=tt_ov_dr

Oh I forgot the Green Berets, Shepherd of the Hills and the Greatest Story Ever Told.
 
I was watching The Cowboys the other day, one of John Wayne's best films albeit mostly forgotten these days. There was several uses of the word nigger in that film but in such a way that it served to make one of the main characters Nightlinger, played by Roscoe Lee Brown, appear even more heroic. That film was shown on British terrestrial TV in the afternoon, I doubt that is even possible on the US equivalent even though it was patently anti-racist. You ought to watch it as it is a real gem of a film with a terrific script and great acting.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0068421/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1


WWJWD? My own personal ethics question.
 
Sorry, but if it is within ear shot of the judge, you are going to get slammed. I do think, this young skin head didn't and it got him 60 days. That's the power of a judge, you may not agree, but it's the law. You shouldn't piss off your judge.

Of course you are right.

Jerky Boy, a.k.a. TDaK is just playing word games and trying to justify the actions of another disrespectful cracker.
 
The Green Berets was a bellicose piece of shit. Poorly written laughingly "acted" and full of propaganda and lies.
One of the worst movies EVER made.

I am going back to Saigon next month with my daughter-in-law and son, believe you me the Americans weren't the only liars in that war. But yes the Green Beret was pretty bad, however balance that against wonderful films like the Searchers, the Shootist, Who Shot Liberty Vallance, True Grit and the Cowboys.
 
Of relevance

This might seem like a small case. Who cares if a foul-mouthed ex-con cools off in prison for four months? But it gets at something large. Judges are already walled off from the public in all sorts of ways. They sit on elevated benches, they wear robes, they are addressed as “Your Honor,” and their work cannot in many cases be televised or photographed. This special status widens the gulf between judges and the people whose cases they judge.

Insulating judges from criticism takes this elevation too far. In monarchies, lèse majesté laws historically made it a crime to violate the dignity of the king or queen. Lèse majesté lives on in some countries. Earlier this year in Thailand, a man was sentenced to 20 years in prison for sending insulting text messages about the royal family. The punishment of Peoples for speaking harshly about a judge is akin to this clearly undemocratic example.

(MORE: Cohen: A New First Amendment Right: Videotaping the Police)

The F word is not so powerful that it can bring a mighty justice system to a standstill. The Supreme Court considered a similar issue in 1971, in a case involving a man who was sentenced to 30 days in jail for the “offensive conduct” of wearing a jacket bearing the words “F— the Draft” in the Los Angeles County Courthouse, and made clear that the words on the jacket were protected by the First Amendment. “One of the prerogatives of American citizenship is the right to criticize public men and measures — and that means not only informed and responsible criticism, but the freedom to speak foolishly and without moderation,” the court said, quoting Justice Felix Frankfurter.

We can have a system in which people are afraid to talk harshly about judges out of fear that they will be thrown in jail — or we can have a democracy. Peoples should take last week’s misguided ruling to the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court should reverse his conviction — and uphold the right of all of us to criticize courts and judges “without moderation.”

http://ideas.time.com/2012/10/29/should-a-person-be-jailed-for-swearing-in-court/

Shouting "punk ass ni**er" at the Judge as he leaves the courtroom can hardly be considered "criticism"...but nice try.
 
Right or wrong that's how the system has always worked.
Without the unquestioned power of the judge to make such judgements during a session, all court proceedings could quickly become a circus and a shouting match.
The sentence could be overturned if an appellate court deemed it worthy to hear and the judge was found to be out of line.
Don't like it?
Find another country.

BINGO!
 
I was watching The Cowboys the other day, one of John Wayne's best films albeit mostly forgotten these days. There was several uses of the word nigger in that film but in such a way that it served to make one of the main characters Nightlinger, played by Roscoe Lee Brown, appear even more heroic. That film was shown on British terrestrial TV in the afternoon, I doubt that is even possible on the US equivalent even though it was patently anti-racist. You ought to watch it as it is a real gem of a film with a terrific script and great acting.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0068421/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1


It's on all the time here in the States.

Just watched it the other day myself.

I loved Nightlinger's little prayer before the cattle thieves hung him:

"I regret trifling with married women. I'm thoroughly ashamed at cheating at cards. I deplore my occasional departures from the truth. Forgive me for taking your name in vain, my Saturday drunkenness, my Sunday sloth. Above all, forgive me for the men I've killed in anger ... and those I am about to."
 
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