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Woman who killed 3 children at a bus stop released early thanks to bible study

poker

Everyone's hero's, tell everyone's lies.
Jun 1, 2006
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poker

Everyone's hero's, tell everyone's lies.
Jun 1, 2006
7,733
6,010
113
Niagara
What if your Atheist?
 

poker

Everyone's hero's, tell everyone's lies.
Jun 1, 2006
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Niagara
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NotADcotor

His most imperial galactic atheistic majesty.
Mar 8, 2017
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What if your Atheist?
Well how can you learn to be a good person without reading about how God hates everything from shellfish to homosexual and wants the death penalty for everything from working to Sunday to again being the ghey. You can't learn to be good without all those positive examples like how God commanded that people of neighbouring tribes be slaughtered or sometimes exterminated except for the virgin girls who were to be kept for the old in and out. Don't forget God's instructions on slavery and how it's perfectly fine as long as you take them from the nations around you and how if you love someone and they don't love you back you should burn them forever.

He said sarcastically.
 
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JeanGary Diablo

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Aug 5, 2017
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Then legally, the punishment should be harsher. We're such wimps as a culture when it comes to punishing people.

Actually, this story happened in Indiana, which is in the USA, and therefore speaks absolutely nothing to the legal system in Canada, so not sure where you're getting this "we're such wimps" stuff.

I might also add that the Christian religion plays a significantly smaller role in Canadian society compared to the US, and I doubt a Canadian prisoner attending Bible classes would make any impression on a parole board in this country.

Also, despite the fact this was a very reckless and stupid crime, it also was not a malicious crime -- being stupid and reckless does not equate to malice. Intended malice is a massive part of determining the severity of a crime.

My two cents.
 
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jalimon

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Jan 10, 2016
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Actually, this story happened in Indiana, which is in the USA, and therefore speaks absolutely nothing to the legal system in Canada, so not sure where you're getting this "we're such wimps" stuff.

I might also add that the Christian religion plays a significantly smaller role in Canadian society compared to the US, and I doubt a Canadian prisoner attending Bible classes would make any impression on a parole board in this country.

Also, despite the fact this was a very reckless and stupid crime, it also was not a malicious crime -- being stupid and reckless does not equate to malice. Intended malice is a massive part of determining the severity of a crime.

My two cents.
Even tho I agree with what you say I must say outcomes would have been very different if she would have been of color... Even if more religious then the pope a girl of color would have rotten in jail.
 
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poker

Everyone's hero's, tell everyone's lies.
Jun 1, 2006
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Niagara

Actually, this story happened in Indiana, which is in the USA, and therefore speaks absolutely nothing to the legal system in Canada, so not sure where you're getting this "we're such wimps" stuff.

I might also add that the Christian religion plays a significantly smaller role in Canadian society compared to the US, and I doubt a Canadian prisoner attending Bible classes would make any impression on a parole board in this country.

Also, despite the fact this was a very reckless and stupid crime, it also was not a malicious crime -- being stupid and reckless does not equate to malice. Intended malice is a massive part of determining the severity of a crime.

My two cents.
The problem is…. The lack of malice was already dealt with, and a release date had been set. It got moved up because of the class. Atheists have no such recourse apparently.
 

Tirgo

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Mar 13, 2022
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Actually, this story happened in Indiana, which is in the USA, and therefore speaks absolutely nothing to the legal system in Canada, so not sure where you're getting this "we're such wimps" stuff.

I might also add that the Christian religion plays a significantly smaller role in Canadian society compared to the US, and I doubt a Canadian prisoner attending Bible classes would make any impression on a parole board in this country.

Also, despite the fact this was a very reckless and stupid crime, it also was not a malicious crime -- being stupid and reckless does not equate to malice. Intended malice is a massive part of determining the severity of a crime.

My two cents.
Fair enough, but it's true of western society in general these days so my point stands. Canada is in fact generally more lenient than the US.

You think the parents of those dead kids give a fuck that the crime wasn't "malicious?" How the fuck do you not see the bus stopped, with the stop sign out, lights flashing and kids walking? She's trash and needs a way harsher punishment.
 
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nottyboi

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May 14, 2008
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It’s a legal system. Not a justice system.
Justice is simply not attainable in situations like this. I doubt anyone of us could discribe what would constitute "justice" in such a tragic situation.
 
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