ISIS Shamima Begum Petition
#1
Posted 2019-February-16, 04:27
https://petition.par...etitions/231521
#2
Posted 2019-February-16, 04:43
euclidz, on 2019-February-16, 04:27, said:
https://petition.par...etitions/231521
I most certainly won't.
#4
Posted 2019-February-16, 05:46
By all means lock her up when she gets here and try her incourt, but she has to be allowed to come back. We don't however have to bust a gut to help her return.
#8
Posted 2019-February-16, 06:37
Cyberyeti, on 2019-February-16, 05:46, said:
Quite. I choose rule of law over rule of populist petition.
#10
Posted 2019-February-16, 07:47
euclidz, on 2019-February-16, 07:08, said:
Petition now at 300K up 20K in the last couple of hours
1 Hard cases make bad law.
2 300k signatures = 0.5% of the UK population. We have a representative democracy for good reason.
I have no wish to get bogged down in fruitless exchanges with you, so I won't be responding further.
#11
Posted 2019-February-16, 09:35
euclidz, on 2019-February-16, 07:08, said:
Petition now at 300K up 20K in the last couple of hours
Trying to recall, aren't you living in the country that voted for Brexit?
Nice learning curve you got there...
#12
Posted 2019-February-16, 09:35
euclidz, on 2019-February-16, 07:08, said:
Yes.
This is why I live in a Republic.
#13
Posted 2019-February-16, 13:23
euclidz, on 2019-February-16, 06:31, said:
It's a links course then?
#15
Posted 2019-February-16, 16:51
I'm going to guess at answer to that - it's because you think of her, in your mind, as alien and thus not deserving of rights.
#16
Posted 2019-February-16, 17:01
#17
Posted 2019-February-16, 20:43
Cyberyeti, on 2019-February-16, 13:46, said:
That’s not fair. If Begum returns to the UK, it is fairly likely that she will never live here as a free person.
However, it must be remembered that prison is where a lot of radicalisation occurs, so she will still be a danger to the community. So it is not unreasonable to not want her to return, even though she must be allowed by law to return. Unless, of course, she was handed over to Syria to face trial there.
#18
Posted 2019-February-17, 03:53
Vampyr, on 2019-February-16, 20:43, said:
However, it must be remembered that prison is where a lot of radicalisation occurs, so she will still be a danger to the community. So it is not unreasonable to not want her to return, even though she must be allowed by law to return. Unless, of course, she was handed over to Syria to face trial there.
Which would also be illegal as we don't hand people over to countries where torture and capital punishment are possible (and yes we hand people over to the US, but only after the death penalty is taken off the table)
#19
Posted 2019-February-17, 09:55
Vampyr, on 2019-February-16, 20:43, said:
However, it must be remembered that prison is where a lot of radicalisation occurs, so she will still be a danger to the community. So it is not unreasonable to not want her to return, even though she must be allowed by law to return. Unless, of course, she was handed over to Syria to face trial there.
I'd be curious as to how you came up with the idea that she'll never be free. As far as reports have suggested, she's only committed S11 and S12 offences under the terrorism act 2000. The max sentence for either of those is 10 years, and given that she's a radicalised teenager, it'd be difficult to justify the whole amount. No one is suggesting she's any particular danger to the public, as well. So it's hard to imagine that she could stay in prison past the age of 40 or so.
And yes, she poses some risk of radicalising people in a british prison. So do domestic terrorists. Drug dealers and addicts contribute to drugs being a vast problem in prisons. Violent offenders contribute to violence in prisons. And yet we don't hand them over to Syria and stop them from seeing their child for the rest of their lives.
#20
Posted 2019-February-19, 10:39
euclidz, on 2019-February-16, 07:08, said:
Representative democracy is about the people selecting smart legislators to do it for them.
Direct democracy results in fiascos like Brexit.
If "the people" made the laws, the US probably wouldn't have the Civil Rights Bill.