Polijā turpina graut tiesiskumu: https://t.co/9cxLU2CHuA 6 atbildes

juriskazha
(2020-01-29 11:40:09)
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Polijā turpina graut tiesiskumu: https://t.co/9cxLU2CHuA
Ainis Sproģis
(2020-01-29 12:22:46)
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@juriskazha Visu cieņu poļiem
juriskazha
(2020-01-29 13:18:44)
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@ainissprogis Tas ir OK (1): "A functioning democracy, whether in Warsaw or Washington, requires, at a minimum, the rule of law, fealty to a constitution, and some basic respect for the judges, lawyers, and everyone else who makes the legal system work...
juriskazha
(2020-01-29 13:19:25)
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@ainissprogis Tas ir OK(2) “If senior figures in the Ministry of Justice, people whose salaries are paid by taxpayers, were willing to organize covert intimidation campaigns against judges, then what else might they be capable of? We may be about to find out."
juriskazha
(2020-01-29 13:21:47)
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@ainissprogis Tiešām? "Finally, the government has waged a different sort of propaganda campaign abroad, one designed to convince gullible foreigners that Polish judges are Communists left over from the bad old days, and that they therefore deserve to be purged...
juriskazha
(2020-01-29 13:22:33)
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@ainissprogis A bit of math disproves this claim: The Berlin Wall fell 30 years ago, while the average age of a Polish judge is 42. The vast majority were not old enough to be Communists, or even anti-Communists, at all.
juriskazha
(2020-01-29 13:22:46)
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@ainissprogis A little history helps, too. The upper ranks of the Polish judiciary were indeed purged, in the 1990s. Those judges who were then allowed to stay—and only a tiny handful of them now remain—were relatively young and had been involved only in strictly criminal, apolitical cases.

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