RangerDave wrote:
Just like yo momma is!
Sorry, I was going for jovial sarcasm with my last reply, not actual snark. Guess it didn't come across that way. I'm in too good a mood to be snarky today.
Seriously, though, I think McArdle's point is valid. When majorities pass laws that disproportionately affect minorities, those laws will tend to be more intrusive than they would be if they applied to everyone, and conservatives embrace that insight with regards to taxes but seem wholly unwilling to do so with regards to racial profiling (and other crime-related practices).
That's because the crime in question is being disproportionately committed by one "race" (nationality, really) and for reasons directly related to their nationality - the crime is trying to move from another nation, which has a more ethnically homogenous propulation that tends to share certain appearance traits, to this one.
Complaints about racial profiling are valid when applied to situations where people are being stopped and scrutinized simply because their race makes the police believe they are doing
something illegal, or where a law that has no aspects to which race, ethnicity, nationality or whatever are relevant (the vast majority of laws). It's the thing of "group X is more likely to be committing a crime of some sort, so I'll pay special attention to members of that group in order to have a better likelyhood of catching them at
something."
In situations like this, the only reason for claims of "racial profiling" is the simple fact that the people committing the crime come from another country that happens to have a certain combination of ethnic backgrounds, that share common appearance similarities with each other. Everyone knows this, yet people are demanding that this be ignored by law enforcement simply to make people who bear a resemblance to the people committing the crime feel better. Not only that, but it's a specific crime; it's not as if this law makes it easier to stop and scrutinize this particular ethnic group without probable cause of some other crime that is
not related to race.
Moreover, it totally ignores the fact that when dealing with someone suspected of this crime, an officer will take into account far more than just appearance; if, for example a Hispanic person speaks excellent English, or has little to no Spanish accent, they are unlikely to be scrutinized, while a white person with, say, a strong German accent is fairly likely to be checked for an expired visa.
Complaining that this law is racial profiling would be like complaining that rape laws are sex profiling against men because men are far better equipped to commit rape than women.