Truth and Reconciliation time
Trump release every employees blackmail control file on Forgiveness Day
What is forgiveness day?
Forgiveness day is when all the blackmail is made public
There is a collective agreement signed by all the participating baddies. It acts as a group plea deal. Here are some of the terms.
- They have to admit to the the crime that they are blackmailed for, publicly.*
- They have to apologize to the people of the united states, and anyone injured by their activity.*
- They won't go to prison but they must resign and never work for government or any gov contractor or subcontractor ever again.
- They also must have some equivalent of an ankle bracelet that tracks them. Could be a nanotechnology or an embedded device under their skin*
*And they will have to know that their bank and financial accounts will be consolidated to one managed joint-controlled-account with the NSA, so that the government can easily monitor all their debits and credits. They are allowed to buy anything that is legal to buy. They aren't allowed to give to NGOs, Charities or any other 501c3 organizations again. They're allowed to give money away within the legal limits of the IRS gift policies.
I dint like it but the punishment of walking the earth after identifying their treason, people wont let them walk down the street.
Light conquers dark
This could encompass thousands of people
No.
Do they get to keep their "ill gotten gains"? It's hardly punishment if they're still basking in millions of bucks.
The early church had public confessions. It didn't do well to attract converts after the novelty wore off. Your idea sounds pretty, but I think doing that and releasing then into public life would open up revenge violence. If everything becomes public and there's no obvious penance, reparation, something, then they'd need to be isolated someplace on a distant Island or something, their families can choose whether to be with them or not, send some pastors or priests over occasionally, let them work for their own food.
Bullets are cheaper and a better deterrent for future potential civil service criminals.
No.