Editor’s Note: When Marxists speak, you have to decode what they intend to signify by the buzz words they use. That is why the Straits Times, which quotes the actual words of the illegally elected Leo XIV — a juridical fact which makes him an “antipope”, that is, a false claimant to the office of Bishop of Rome — whereas, here at FromRome.Info, I nearly always place a leader on the article which explains the meaning of the news in plain language, as a Christian ought to do.
Mistreatment, as a concept in jurisprudence, presupposes that a person has the rights to be treated in a certain way. Human rights, as a concept of jurisprudence, are those rights which all human beings have by the fact of being a human being. However, the treatment of persons who are involved in the violation of other persons rights requires an intervention of some force on behalf of justice; and such intervention usually involves the imposition of penalties or strictures, which would not otherwise be used against certain “human rights”, if the “victims” of these “abuses” were not involved in unjust activities. — In this way, we can see that on each side of the boarders of this legal debate are two concepts of how human language should describe the realities of a legal issue. “Illegal alien” is the correct term, thus, to present the entire issue in its proper light. — Antipopes, inasmuch as they be “antichrists”, as they are since they are schismatics, at the least, and also heretics, when fully such, are on the other side of the border in this legal controversy. As for Prevost, this is true in both senses of the words, “other side of the border”.
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The Straits Times is Singapore’s newspaper of record.
Singapore is a country that takes illegal drugs very seriously indeed.
Physical arrival cards issued to foreigners visiting Singapore stated clearly in large red text:
WARNING
DEATH FOR DRUG TRAFFICKERS
UNDER SINGAPORE LAW
and the stub with this and name and passport details had to be retained by the visitor until departure.
The penalty is the same whether one is a Singaporean citizen or not and is according to – very small – weight thresholds, such as 15 grammes for pure heroin, with very long jail sentences for amounts under this threshold.
No doubt, many would state that this is a violation of human rights, but relatively few violate this law.