SciFi Chick wrote:Well, this is worrisome. Political correctness is truly out of control.
Daniel Kilvington, 23, sent malicious messages to four young people, who he had never met, and all of whom had suffered personal tragedies in their lives.
He was found guilty of seven counts of sending malicious communications using social media between January and March last year.
District Judge Fred Rutherford sentenced Kilvington, of Spring Bank, to 18 weeks in prison when he appeared at Hull Magistrates Court this week.
...
"Kilvington sent malicious messages to four strangers on social media with the sole intention of causing them upset and anger.
"The victims had suffered personal tragedy and he chose to target them for no discernible reason.
"His actions made his victims lives misery and made already difficult situation worse.
Swift wrote:SciFi Chick wrote:Well, this is worrisome. Political correctness is truly out of control.
I'm a little unclear what you think is worrisome, the crime or the punishment, but the fact that you said "Political correctness is truly out of control" makes me think you think the punishment is out of control.
From the article:Daniel Kilvington, 23, sent malicious messages to four young people, who he had never met, and all of whom had suffered personal tragedies in their lives.
He was found guilty of seven counts of sending malicious communications using social media between January and March last year.
District Judge Fred Rutherford sentenced Kilvington, of Spring Bank, to 18 weeks in prison when he appeared at Hull Magistrates Court this week.
...
"Kilvington sent malicious messages to four strangers on social media with the sole intention of causing them upset and anger.
"The victims had suffered personal tragedy and he chose to target them for no discernible reason.
"His actions made his victims lives misery and made already difficult situation worse.
You really think that is political correctness out of control? He tries to make strangers deal with even more suffering than they are apparently already dealing with, and he shouldn't be punished for it. Its not like he was sentenced to life in prison or death; in the US 18 weeks would be for a misdemeanor.
If he had written them hasty letters or made nasty phone calls, would you call that political correctness out of control?
Rommie wrote:So I've poked around a bit but I haven't found anything- do you have examples of the type of stuff he said? Because all the article says is it's "disturbing."
The reason I ask is because death threats, for example, are illegal to make in most jurisdictions I'm aware of for pretty obvious reasons. I'm personally more than ok with this, because if you've ever seen the effects from that it's pretty damn terrifying, and it's also a pretty clear tool of coercion and witness intimidation. I happen to know a ton about this firsthand btw- there was a girl in my middle school who likely had mental issues, and was emailing anonymous death threats to her "friends." The FBI was involved, and eventually that girl was caught, and I have no idea what happened to her after she was expelled, but the idea that "all the victims had to do is block him" is one I 100% disagree with.
My point is unless we actually know what the messages were about, I'm not sure how you know this was just political correctness gone too far.
Rommie wrote:Sorry, I misread your comment earlier. Apologies!
Re: UK, they’ve had really odd internet censorship laws for awhile. Look up their rules to censor internet porn for example.
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