#meanwhile ...in Germany 🇩🇪
This is a children's book in a public library in Germany.
Jamaica is in no hurry to abandon the Queen. Her colonial laws are working perfectly for them in this 21st century to subjugate black disenfranchised ghetto youths to unlawful detention under State of Emergency (SOE) and such. Their minister of justice has used a colonial tool called "Executive Detention" to incarcerate countless young men, having them lingering in jails without trial for months on end. Now their Supreme Court is saying the practice was unconstitutional all long. Until Jamaica gets rid of the con artist Queen and GG...then gets a Pan-African mindset leader, we wont see any meaningful changes in our lifetime. Because as it stands these Bastard colonial Overseers they have left in charge have more hate and malice for I and I than the Slave master.
History of the use of executive detention in Britain during World War II under Regulation 18B of the Defence (General) Regulations; this enabled the government to imprison citizens thought to be dangerous to national security without charge, trial, or term set, under what Herbert Morrison, who administered the system during most of the war, described as ‘a terrible power’. Just under 2,000 individuals were so imprisoned in as gross an invasion of British civil liberty as could be conceived, only justifiable, if at all, by the grim necessity of the time. Imprisonment is of course commonplace, and is indeed the typical punishment imposed for serious breaches of the criminal law. But "executive detention" is designed to be employed in advance; hence detainees languish in prison not for what they have done, but for what they might do in the future if they remained at liberty. Also, detention is typically imposed as a result of an administrative decision, taken in private, by state officials, without any form of prior trial.
Happy birthday, broski Eddie Lawrence 💙🎉🎊🎂👑🥳