• @SuddenDownpour
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      121 year ago

      A democracy must follow rule of law and protect everyone’s constitutional rights. Publishing the names of those people means inviting others to commit a lynching, which goes against the foundations of democracy and sets us on the path to turn our countries into sad reflections of what Russia currently is.

      If a country’s body of home affairs notices that some people might be likely to commit particularly worrisome crimes, it is natural for them to put them under investigation, but they shouldn’t be punished unless they actually commit crimes. We don’t want to be Russia.

      • @[email protected]
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        -21 year ago

        they are a security risk in the first place as that democracy just said. there should be freedom to ask for the release of their names for sure. fuck russia anytime.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      I always wondered how the US could be so cruel to lock up 120.000 people into camps during WW2, for simply having Japanese descent. I thought we had outgrown such overt bigotry as a species. But it turns out the war machine whips even the most respectable people into a xenophobic frenzy.

      • @crushyerbones
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        1 year ago

        These are not Lithuanians of russian descent. They are specifically foreign citizens living in Lithuania.

    • @Aqarius
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      31 year ago

      Yes, it has kom time for an endsolution to the ruzzia qwestion, nicht wahr?