Will our elected officials rein in our anti-democratic judges before it is too late?

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Posted as food for thought.

Opinions | The Weimar Republic has a warning for the U.S. about its judges​

Samuel Huneke - 5h ago

It was spring of 1920, and troops were marching on Berlin. Conservative officers, who had helped the Weimar Republic defeat communist insurgents, were now turning on the politicians who led the country. Paramilitary units occupied the capital, forcing panicked leaders to flee. They declared Wolfgang Kapp, a minor civil servant, the new chancellor of the German Reich. It was neither the first nor last time that the radical right would menace the young democracy.

The coup, known as the Kapp Putsch, quickly collapsed. Government leaders from the Social Democratic Party (SPD) called for a general strike — that is, for every adult in the capital to take to the streets, stop working and thereby paralyze the military government. Electricity halted, newspapers shut down, the bureaucracy closed its doors. The strike worked: A few days later the putsch was over.

You might expect that after an unsuccessful coup its leaders would have been arrested, tried and punished. But you’d be wrong. Many of the military conspirators were let off, and the parliament passed an amnesty law later that year. Few of those brought to trial were actually convicted by Weimar’s notoriously conservative courts.

Full article here:

 
soon the brown shirts were everywhere, like cockroaches


could be said about several other 'groups', especially those who know the 'funny handshakes' and have madames and johns who get busted, disappear, die at their own hands, those who sell children to people we don't even know...


it's everywhere, like murderers and thieves if only because they now serve little / no time as any type of punishment, and the norm is now to blame the victim

"shouldn't have been standing in the path of that bullet...stupid child"
 
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