I read the article about the trail on Wikipedia
Well researched then
I read the article about the trail on Wikipedia
This however does not prevent me and my fellow citizens from concluding he did murder people, and it does not preclude me or my fellow citizens from treating him like a murderer by refusing him service in restaurants.
The only real difference between OJ and Hitler/Stalin is one of scale. Oh, and Hitler/Stalin were never any good at football.
Head -> desk.
I rest my case. You can't teach sheep to fly.
You're welcome to rest your case but I don't think it's been conclusively argued yet.
I shall repeat one more time, maybe some people will eventually get it:
JURY NULLIFICATION!
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I shall repeat one more time, maybe some people will eventually get it:
JURY NULLIFICATION!
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You're welcome to rest your case but I don't think it's been conclusively argued yet.
Well, there's also no possible conclusion in sight.
This is all very interesting but I think you're missing the point. The crux of the matter is surely whether the proprietor of an eating establishment has the right to refuse to serve a customer without giving a reason. If this is the case the 'race card' is irrelevant. I believe the landlord (or manager) of a public house in the UK has this right in law but I'm not sure about other businesses or other countries.
In the US, a private business owner has the right to refuse service/entry(exluding discriminatory actions such as race, religion, creed, gender,age, et.al covered by the constition or local ordinance)
In the US, a private business owner has the right to refuse service/entry(exluding discriminatory actions such as race, religion, creed, gender,age, et.al covered by the constition or local ordinance)
That appears to cover almost every situation. It's not clear who could be refused service & this could possibly vary in different parts of the country. In the end it's the proprietor's word against the customer's so which one do you believe? He might deny racial discrimination but does refusal to serve a cleared murder suspect count as a discriminatory action? What about convicted criminals who've served their sentences? I would say that OJ has a very good chance of a successful claim even without playing the race card.
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