let's just...not rage so hard that we shoot people. k? k.
let's just...not rage so hard that we shoot people. k? k.
Through the darkness of futures past,
The magician longs to see
One chants out between two worlds:
Fire, walk with me.
No no no, it's not that fighting is included for one and not another. It's that assault, without a weapon, resulting in serious bodily injury or in Canada, Assault 1, is included in the Canadian statistic. It is NOT included in the American statistic. So if I went out and kicked a guy in the nose until he was in a coma for 2 months, it wouldn't affect the American stat, but if Cyber did it, it would include in the Canadian statistic, plus he'd go to jail for being a Mexican that committed a hate crime.
What you all are also forgetting is that in large urban and rural areas in America the police will not be called for many violent crimes. Crime that is not reported is not included in the statistics. The school of thought with these areas is that police will only exacerbate problems if not cause unnecessary problems for the reporting individual. Anyways, comparing which countries are more violent than one another is silly as everyone here can agree that crime is reported differently country to country.
Another issue, which is why I questioned Star's stance, is that violence as defined by the W.H.O. is not congruent with what is reported as violent crime. Sexual assault can be a misdemeanor and by Star's stance that is not violent however as defined by the W.H.O. it is in fact violence.
Putting someone in a coma would never be common assault, that's aggravated assault which doesn't need the element of consent to be issued.
I'm pretty sure you're wrong on that one, as sexual assault is always an indictable offense. Don't mistake a hybrid offense as a lower conviction, it's done that way so there are more opportunities to arrest someone for committing it.
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Hopefully now:
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And not:
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