JizzFarmer
Werewolfmaxxed
- Joined
- Mar 8, 2020
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Got unmodded and just disappeared off the face of this site
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Only Serge would knowWhy did he get unmodded tho?
@SergeantOnly Serge would know
Abusing mod powers apparentlyWhy did he get unmodded tho?
Countries with laws prohibiting Holocaust denial, including 16 European countries and Israel, tend to have a stronger tradition of Civil Law–a legal system in which core principles are primarily codified in law–and to restrict other kinds of hate speech, with the aim of ensuring equal treatment to all. Some of these countries, such as Germany and Austria, strictly enforce restraints on the public display of Nazi symbols, such as the swastika, as well as Holocaust denial (in Germany a violator is subject to up to five years in prison), whereas others such as Romania and Lithuania have laws on the book that they laxly enforce. The countries without such laws, including the United States, the United Kingdom, and the Scandinavian countries, tend to place greater value on individual liberty and free speech. The United States, with a strong tradition of Common Law–a legal system in which principles are based primarily on judicial precedents–protects the public expression of Nazism under the First Amendment.
Laws against Holocaust denial were first enacted in Europe to curb far-right extremism, with Germany leading the way. After World War II, Germany criminalized and banned the Nazi Party to stifle any remainder of its message of ethnic hatred. Holocaust denial did exist in most of post-World War II Germany, but it did not attract wide-scale public attention until the 1970s, when it began to be featured increasingly in the propaganda of the far right. In response, Germany introduced a law in 1985 that outlawed Holocaust denial and other forms of Nazi symbols, and a subsequent law in 1994 that made Holocaust denial a more serious criminal offense under the general anti-incitement law. Considering its history, Germany felt a special obligation to curb anti-Semitic extremism, but throughout that decade, a handful of countries followed its example. France banned Holocaust denial in 1990 under the Gayssot Act. Austria, although it previously had laws to suppress any revival of Nazism, did not have laws banning specifically denial until 1992. Then came Belgium and Spain in 1995 (though Spain rescinded the law in 2007), Poland in 1998, and so on.
yeah truethe holocaust didn't happen