Friday, July 08, 2011

Casey Anthony and the American lynch mob...


Perhaps not since the feds hanged Mary Surratt for Abe Lincoln's assassination have so many been so happy at the thought of seeing a woman lynched. To the outrage of bloodthirsty, bleary-eyed couch potatoes from sea to shining sea, Casey Anthony was found not guilty of the murder of her daughter.

The case itself is far less interesting than the reaction to it. In spite of all the drama that the despicable "news" media attempted to inject into it, the actual trial was humdrum. In typical fashion, the prosecution built its case on mostly circumstantial evidence and on character assassination. The jury concluded that the prosecution had not proven guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. A not-guilty verdict was returned. Case closed.

This is exactly how the legal system is supposed to work. People are supposed to be innocent until proven guilty, and guilt must be established beyond a reasonable doubt. We're not supposed to convict people of capital crimes because we find them distasteful or annoying.

(...)

And of course, how many toddlers have been incinerated by American bombs or poisoned by American depleted uranium in Iraq and Afghanistan over the past decade? Who cares? Those toddlers didn't even have the decency to be cute Anglo-Saxons.

But, before we throw a noose over a tree branch for Casey Anthony, there are a few lessons we can first learn from the trial: Full story...

Don't miss:
  1. Aafia Siddiqui : a grievous miscarriage of justice...
  2. Morally indignant sharks circle Libya...
  3. The persecution of John Demjanjuk...
  4. Justice for Martine: How a girl's murder led to a boycott of Coca-Cola...
  5. Arundhati Roy: Pity the nation that needs to jail those who ask for justice... 

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