Anonymous ID:cqNmS5nI Fri 06 Sep 2024 03:06:52 No.480772030 ViewReport
>>480758415The west turned into the soviet union, and so collective family punishment for noncomplaints are commonplace
Anonymous ID:c3D2r6Hf Fri 06 Sep 2024 00:50:57 No.480764672 ViewReport
>>480763840>soviet attacks on family collective punishment
Lets see that israeli flag.
/\nonymous ID:wfyT02pi Fri 06 Sep 2024 00:46:03 No.480764363 ViewReport
>>480761516Jews are all about collectivism... collective responsibility, collective punishment. It's why people keep kicking them out of societies. The only collectivism jews apply to themselves is victimhood.
Anonymous ID:0OhWGh6r Mon 02 Sep 2024 14:53:34 No.480411904 ViewReport
The Waco siege, which took place in 1993, saw the FBI commit a range of crimes against humanity. To be clear, this is a high-level statement, and the following descriptions emphasize the range and variety of crimes but may not represent the degree of intent or severity. Here are some potential crimes the FBI committed during the Waco siege:
Unlawful Killing: The raid on the Branch Davidian compound resulted in the murder of 76 individuals, including men, women, and children, some of whom did not actively partake in combat or directly resist the authorities. This constitutes multiple acts of mass murder, manslaughter, and extrajudicial killing.
Torture: As the compound burned, survivors and victims claimed the FBI used extreme physical violence and intimidation against those surrendering. Allegations of torture include severe beating, burning with flames, and crushing limbs, which may qualify as war crimes and crimes against humanity.
Collective Punishment: The destruction of the Branch Davidian complex amounts to an act of collective punishment, both physical and psychological. Many belonging to the group were executed or injured, while others suffered the traumatic destruction of their shared living space, an act that amplifies the anguish and sense of victimhood.
Anonymous ID:OsNT8E3A Mon 02 Sep 2024 07:04:28 No.480377098 ViewReport
>>480376819>Surely these sentences won't survive appeal?
The trick is to overcharge them with violent disorder. The CPS can then argue the sentences are in line with sentencing guidelines due to the disorder across the country being an aggravating factor. In other words, they're not being sentenced on the basis of their own conduct, but the conduct of everyone else. Essentially, it's collective punishment.
Anonymous ID:3lB9b4uI Sun 01 Sep 2024 11:03:04 No.480288771 ViewReport
>>480288337>suggest holding accountable not only the person evading conscription, but also his close relatives (children, spouses, parents, brothers, sisters, grandparents).
interesting.
collective punishment is a very ... jewish.. thing
and against EU law, for whatever its worth
Anonymous ID:5aDpfr1G Sat 31 Aug 2024 20:17:28 No.480233228 ViewReport
Bolshevik stories:
Physical sabotage:
30kg sack of flour dropped from height into production floor, made a mess, easily cleaned up, nobody will own up to it.
They were trying to work out who did it when it seemed more like a distraction. Took a look at ongoing HR disputes, asked about HR disputes which were expected but not filed. Boom. Bolshevik expected to get written up so got one of their cronies to throw flour everywhere. The hard part was convincing management that it didn't matter who physically threw the flour.
Physical sabotage:
Someone spread a poisonous chemical across equipment forcing everyone to clean it. Manager got a volunteer to clean it up overnight. People seemed angry at volunteer. Gut feeling: incident created as collective punishment, bait team into accusing staff member, staff member volunteered to avoid being accused, was effectively punished. Whole team knew who did it but just decided to pay out on this one guy.
Had to sack the guy, couldn't undo the damage at that point. Found the saboteur in surveying because everyone else's survey matched theirs, which was too well written. That was a person who was going to sabotage equipment over and over to keep everyone in fear. Rather than sack them I promoted them into an untenable position and we all got to watch them go totally mad.