Thank you Ryan! Restorative rather than retributive justice makes a lot of sense to me. And you've described a very real-world test case.
The question is how people like MTG can make amends, and how they are held accountable through unquestionably helpful, community-serving, measurable actions.
I think we need this throughout our justice system-- and politics are another great place to apply the idea.
Thank you Ryan! Restorative rather than retributive justice makes a lot of sense to me. And you've described a very real-world test case.
The question is how people like MTG can make amends, and how they are held accountable through unquestionably helpful, community-serving, measurable actions.
I think we need this throughout our justice system-- and politics are another great place to apply the idea.
Thanks Wade, appreciate you very much for engaging!