• SatansMaggotyCumFart@piefed.world
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    1 hour ago

    The first article is showing that Russia’s excuse for their invasion which was them saving the Ukrainians from a genocide isn’t really flying in court and as for the second article which was part 3 of a series of article directly about the topic.

    In this final post of a three-part posting (Part 1Part 2), I will argue that the way Russia has conducted these transfers proves genocidal intent.  The first essay outlined what I have labeled the “cultural genocide exclusion doctrine,” or simply “exclusion,” which is epitomized by the International Law Commission’s twin claims that: 1) the Genocide Convention’s drafters omitted all acts of cultural genocide, and 2) that they intended to restrict the convention’s reach to instances where a perpetrator intends a group’s material destruction. I also pointed out that the Genocide Convention’s text contains no indication that it excludes matters of cultural genocide and in fact appears to embrace many cultural aspects of group life.

    I did read the articles and I’m questioning if you did.

    • ghost_laptop@lemmy.mlM
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      1 hour ago

      i read the first and there it talks about hyphothetics. nevertheless this isn’t proof, three hasn’t been a ruling about this, and this case is about both ukraine’s genocide allegation and russia’s.