Hate crime laws. Well intentioned? Let's assume they are well intentioned. Let's ignore the abuse of the law(s) and presume that they are only applied as intended.
In itself, hate crime laws make certain lines of thought a crime. Such laws can not be tolerated in a country of supposed freedom/liberty and free speech. So, it's a crime to think X thought? No. So, it's a crime to think X thought while committing a crime, as a stack-able charge? Yes.
How is this logical?
Frankly, it does not matter what the 'hate crime' offender was thinking. All that matters is what they physically do. In fact, as ironic as it may seem at first, you have to defend the offender's right to think what they want, if what you want is a country that is as the forefathers of this country intended. If one supports enforcement of thought crime, I do not see how one can truly desire a country of freedom/liberty. The two things directly conflict.
If the 'hate' is accompanied by a tangible crime, the crime itself is prosecutable. Just because someone thinks something(they have the explicit right to think what they want), does not mean they have the right to substantiate their thoughts, when such directly and physically violates another person's basic right(s), such as physical violence, for example.
So what is the real issue here?
I propose that the issue is nothing more than political bullsh*t brought about to create popular issues to gain voter support for certain politicians. It's easy to make the law seem justified, as it plays on popular emotional biases that at first glance to most people, may seem like genuinely good ideas. This is all that seems to matter to most politicians(a seemingly good new idea in order to win votes).
-Chris