We are working on a brand new version of the game! If you want to stay informed, read our blog and register for our mailing list.
Bill: Protection of Human Value Act of 2692
Details
Submitted by[?]: Democratic Party of Dorvik
Status[?]: passed
Votes: This is an ordinary bill. It requires more yes votes than no votes. This bill will not pass any sooner than the deadline.
Voting deadline: November 2693
Description[?]:
Capital punishment is inhuman which lowers us on the level of a criminal while weakening the respect for human life in the society as a whole. We should be better than criminals, not worse. Torture should never be an option and it's inhumane, immoral thing to do. |
Proposals
Article 1
Proposal[?] to change Government policy with respect to the death penalty.
Old value:: The death penalty is applied for capital crimes.
Current: The death penalty is not applied, except for terrorism, treason and crimes against mankind.
Proposed: The death penalty is illegal and is never to be applied.
Article 2
Proposal[?] to change The use of torture for obtaining information.
Old value:: Suspects can only be tortured under grave emergencies where the information is vital.
Current: Suspects can only be tortured under grave emergencies where the information is vital.
Proposed: Torture is never allowed.
Debate
These messages have been posted to debate on this bill:
Date | 12:49:30, January 08, 2009 CET | From | Proletariat | To | Debating the Protection of Human Value Act of 2692 |
Message | We will support! Stop state brutality! |
subscribe to this discussion - unsubscribe
Voting
Vote | Seats | |||
yes |
Total Seats: 248 | |||
no | Total Seats: 148 | |||
abstain | Total Seats: 29 |
Random fact: The people in your nation don't like inactive parties. When you often abstain from voting for a bill, they will dislike your party and your visibility to the electorate will decrease significantly. Low visibility will means you are likely to lose seats. So keep in mind: voting Yes or No is always better than Abstaining. |
Random quote: "Even when laws have been written down, they ought not always to remain unaltered." - Aristotle |