Sujet : Thought control??? (Was: Every D(D) simulated by H presents non-halting behavior to H ###)
De : gazelle (at) *nospam* shell.xmission.com (Kenny McCormack)
Groupes : comp.theory comp.lang.cDate : 21. May 2024, 18:16:32
Autres entêtes
Organisation : The official candy of the new Millennium
Message-ID : <v2iktg$18lc8$1@news.xmission.com>
References : 1 2 3 4
User-Agent : trn 4.0-test77 (Sep 1, 2010)
In article <
v2ih2b$lqek$2@dont-email.me>, immibis <
news@immibis.com> wrote:
On 21/05/24 17:48, James Kuyper wrote:
It also doesn't apply outside the legal system. If you actually
witnessed a crime, you're not required to pretend that the perpetrator
is innocent, and if you've witnessed something exonerating, you're not
required to accept the decision of a court that incorrectly found
someone guilty.
>
In Germany you may be required to. Implying that someone committed a
crime which a court found them innocent of may be considered defamation
or insult.
I think you are beginning to get why it is a bad idea to be discussing
legal issues on an international forum like this one. It all depends on
jurisdiction. So, anyone who makes sweeping statements like "Innocent
until proven guilty" is making a bad assumption that all jurisdictions are
the same - the same as the one(s) with which the speaker is familiar.
Also, even in Germany, they can't control people's thoughts. You are
still not required to *accept* trial court results. You can think what you
want; you just (apparently) can't talk about it.
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