Germany has apparently changed its laws to ban lockdowns unless a disease as dangerous as Ebola strikes.
Meanwhile in Britain there’s an inquiry into why Covid lockdowns weren’t tough enough (yes, that’s really a thing).
Russia still technically has restrictions in place for public health measures but it’s really a cover to shut down protests by gays, pro Ukraine protestors and not really enforced for muh covid. For example: a few months ago degenerate subversive homosexual Artyom Sakharov held a rally in which he had a memorial for Ukrainian soldiers and western mercenaries killed by the russian army, read poems by gays, and announced his hope that Russia loses the special military operation. He was convicted of breaching Covid 19 rules but those rules were just a cover to convict him for his fag poetry reading. Russia didn’t really enforce Covid rules on people just walking down the street with a friend or sitting on a park bench like the British and the French did.
I know Spain had its court rule that its lockdown in 2020 was illegal but that was a procedural ruling. The court ruled that lockdowns are not illegal per se, but they have to be passed by parliament and not just the prime minister and his or her cabinet as the 2020 lockdown was. This means that Spain can still impose lockdowns in the future unlike Germany who amended its constitution to ban lockdowns, but they have to be voted on by parliament not by the prime minister and his or her select favorite colleagues. Spanish people who’d been fined for breaching Covid rules still had to pay their fines because the court ruled that so much time had passed by the time they made their ruling striking down lockdown that people who fined were out of time to appeal. This is something you expect in Britain, Russia or Singapore lol.
I’m just wondering about other countries.
Any law can be easily overturned if you sprinkle a little $$$$$ on some greasy paws, no?
Exactly.