Skavau
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Well, that would be pragmatic of course - but it does not excuse the decision or grant a nation the moral right to impose itself on other people for acts they took outside of its jurisdiction. At the best of times, the very notion or objective to execute someone for 'witchcraft' or 'sorcery' or any familiar sounding fantasy concepts comes across as an extremely tribalistic, superstitious and paranoid idea. To decide to impose it on non-citizens that allegedly did it not in their nation is rather overstepping it further.τhε ṿαlε'ṡ lïlÿ;1318638 said:I guess the moral is don't commit a crime that will be shown on TV and then go to a country or live in a country that will persecute you for it!
all the best
Exusing my Godwin tendencies but I take it by your logic, by the way, that any returning Jews to Nazi Germany in the early to mid 1930's would have been given the same response? Nevermind the immorality of the persecution of a people, or of a group - the moral, the far most important moral is to not return to a state that will persecute you!