Posted: Sun Jul 31, 2005 6:46 am
The hippies and marijuana activists were out today protesting the arrests. Apparently this guy could face life in prison in the US.
Your world is waiting...
https://quake3world.com/forum/
doesn't matter. check the sig.Denz wrote:I have no clue why we have to police the world, but it's true. Personally don't like it. But what can you do?
And my many soon-to-be day trips to Canada.Massive Quasars wrote:I eagerly await the legalization of marijuana. No more grow-op criminal activity, no more wasted effort trying to reign them in. As well as the added bonus of frustrating the US to no end.
One word: sovereignty. Follow along, they want him extradited to the US where he potentially faces life in prison. If he is to be charged, it should be done here in Canada, or not at all.emoticon wrote:Turn it around. If an American was doing something that was legal in the US/illegal in Canada, selling the product to Canadians, and the Canadian authorities asked the US to step in, would you be so upset?
Is that a yes or a no?Massive Quasars wrote:One word: sovereignty. Follow along, they want him extradited to the US where he potentially faces life in prison. If he is to be charged, it should be done here in Canada, or not at all.emoticon wrote:Turn it around. If an American was doing something that was legal in the US/illegal in Canada, selling the product to Canadians, and the Canadian authorities asked the US to step in, would you be so upset?
OK, forget my "flawed" question. What if the situation was reversed? Would you be upset?Massive Quasars wrote:Your question was flawed, keep up.
If the US had asked Canada to step in and stop him from selling his products to Americans, I wouldn't be so frustrated. Even if he was charged with a crime in Canada as a result. Instead, they went a step further and requested he be extradited to the US to face charges over there. What part of this is not registering?
Yes, we shouldn't compel other countries to extradite their citizens to Canada to face charges for the silliest of reasons. Extradition is a serious matter IMO, more serious than it seems to be treated sometimes.emoticon wrote: OK, forget my "flawed" question. What if the situation was reversed? Would you be upset?