VioletVortex
Well-Known Member
Talk about a right wing, authoritarian police state...
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I am characterizing what you claimed and posted from others on this "crusade" to reveal the jail time and fines of these laws. That has been your claims this entire time. I have been pointing out it didn't happen, even after your own source tested the law out, thought for sure he would face consequences, but nothing happened except for his own efforts into proving himself an ***.SW - this is about the fifth time that you've mischaracterized my position, despite my continued restatements. Why is that? It's almost as if you want to make a strawman
Ultimately, they'll face nothing because even if the jail time and fines were real and true as the doomsday prophets claim, the Supreme Court would inevitably strike it down.So you're maintaining that things like this are toothless then. So what do violators actually face?
I am characterizing what you claimed and posted from others on this "crusade" to reveal the jail time and fines of these laws.
You've no idea what I read when I first saw this post.Perhaps you're misattributing?
You've no idea what I read when I first saw this post.
Talk to all the authors of the articles, I didn't write any of it. Just shared what it says.Thanks for sharing the misleading clickbait.
From the text of the bill:
1439.51.
(a) Except as provided in subdivision (b), it shall be unlawful for a long-term care facility or facility staff to take any of the following actions wholly or partially on the basis of a person’s actual or perceived sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, or human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) status:
(1) Deny admission to a long-term care facility, transfer or refuse to transfer a resident within a facility or to another facility, or discharge or evict a resident from a facility.
(2) Deny a request by residents to share a room.
(3) Where rooms are assigned by gender, assigning, reassigning, or refusing to assign a room to a transgender resident other than in accordance with the transgender resident’s gender identity, unless at the transgender resident’s request.
(4) Prohibit a resident from using, or harass a resident who seeks to use or does use, a restroom available to other persons of the same gender identity, regardless of whether the resident is making a gender transition or appears to be gender-nonconforming. Harassment includes, but is not limited to, requiring a resident to show identity documents in order to gain entrance to a restroom available to other persons of the same gender identity.
(5) Willfully and repeatedly fail to use a resident’s preferred name or pronouns after being clearly informed of the preferred name or pronouns.
(6) Deny a resident the right to wear or be dressed in clothing, accessories, or cosmetics that are permitted for any other resident.
(7) Restrict a resident’s right to associate with other residents or with visitors, including the right to consensual sexual relations, unless the restriction is uniformly applied to all residents in a nondiscriminatory manner. This section does not preclude a facility from banning or restricting sexual relations, as long as the ban or restriction is applied uniformly and in a nondiscriminatory manner.
(8) Deny or restrict medical or nonmedical care that is appropriate to a resident’s organs and bodily needs, or provide medical or nonmedical care in a manner that, to a similarly situated reasonable person, unduly demeans the resident’s dignity or causes avoidable discomfort.
As long as you recognize that you are misrepresenting it.Well, at least I'm not the only one misrepresenting it.
... without critical thought, apparently.Talk to all the authors of the articles, I didn't write any of it. Just shared what it says.
We went over this in Icehorse's thread. People are so concerned about this, but it doesn't happen. Until there is verifiable proof this is going on (especially in the face of those never punished who were so sure they would be punished), it should be taken as nothing more than anti-trans rhetoric. Gay parents turn their kids gay and all that stuff, after all.
Have you considered using critical thinking when reading these articles?
The penalty and jail time is still in the bill. Even if it's the maximum it still doesn't make it right. I can see the penalty, but why did they put jail time in there?Have you considered using critical thinking when reading these articles?
Let's say you have a group that runs a number of nursing homes in California (like the Catholic church).
Let's that group has a history of openly, publicly, and strongly opposing GLBT rights (like the Catholic church's opposition to gay marriage).
Let's say California was about pass a law preventing nursing homes from evicting GLBT patients, or from withholding medical or non-medical care from those patients.
How would that organization go about preserving its ability to discriminate, while looking like it was the victim, rather than the victimizer?
To me, the obvious solution would be to take the strongest penalty in the proposed bill ($1,000 fine + 1 yr in jail), apply that to the smallest offense in the bill (willfully refusing to use the preferred pronouns), and then pretend that was what the entire bill was about.
Because beyond the small element the article you linked focused on, the bill also covers what could involve serious abuse of vulnerable patients. Like pretty much all criminal legislation, it will allow for a wide range of punishments which a judge (or sometimes jury) in individual cases can select from as appropriate for the level of seriousness and circumstances of the individual convictions in their case.The penalty and jail time is still in the bill. Even if it's the maximum it still doesn't make it right. I can see the penalty, but why did they put jail time in there?
The penalty and jail time is still in the bill. Even if it's the maximum it still doesn't make it right. I can see the penalty, but why did they put jail time in there?
Ding, ding, ding!Because beyond the small element the article you linked focused on, the bill also covers what could involve serious abuse of vulnerable patients.
I sure don't.Ding, ding, ding!
HonestJoe nailed it.
My great aunt Louise and her partner, Karen moved into a nursing home when they were about 80. Louise was childless. She was suffering from Alzheimer's. Her nearest living relatives (her nephews) all lived over 1,000 miles away.
If they had been evicted (especially after their respective conditions deteriorated), how would they have found a new place ... when they were barely able to carry on a simple conversation? How would they have contacted relatives, when they didn't remember the names of those relatives, much less their phone numbers? How would they have sought justice, when they no longer had the capability to testify on their own behalf?
Evicting a vulnerable person can be a matter of life or death. Withholding medication can be a matter of life or death. Withholding non-medical care (like food) can be a matter of life or death. Do you really think a one year jail sentence is harsh or extreme, given the offense?
For withholding medical treatment, you should be fined and jailed (and license to practice revoked), period, no ifs ands or buts, no defense, for whatever the reason. This should apply to medical practitioners who would withhold care from any patient, regardless of who the patient is as a person. More-or-less, it should be charged on a level that is about on par with murder or manslaughter, IMO.The penalty and jail time is still in the bill. Even if it's the maximum it still doesn't make it right. I can see the penalty, but why did they put jail time in there?
Provided the judicial branch doesn't play a role as the legislative branch and attempts to rewrite the Constitution and laws of the country.The supreme court is meant to function as an upholder of the constitution. If it actually abides by its purpose, than this cannot happen.