It's because of this insect which is native to WA, and somehow that's the nickname we got. It beats "banana bender" I suppose..Hahah yeah I'm true blue.. No idea what sandgroper means but I assume it has something to do with Australia.
It's because of this insect which is native to WA, and somehow that's the nickname we got. It beats "banana bender" I suppose..Hahah yeah I'm true blue.. No idea what sandgroper means but I assume it has something to do with Australia.
I seeIt's because of this insect which is native to WA, and somehow that's the nickname we got. It beats "banana bender" I suppose..
Yeah, and it has to do with formal legal proceedings, not the ability of private citizens to come to their own conclusions outside the jurisdiction of a legal trial."Innocent until proven guilty"... I've heard of this concept. Wasn't it used in some countries?
Correct. Australia has historically (well, recently) stripped naturalized dual citizens of their Australian citizenship in some high-profile cases, mostly centered around ISIS members & supporters. The High Court (equivalent to SCOTUS) put a stop to that on legal grounds, but the current government recently announced plans to figure out a way to restart such strips.
If they ever did strip him of his Australian citizenship, it would be really interesting to see what happens next. If he's already renounced his American citizenship, then stripping him of his Australian citizenship would make him stateless - but Australia may not care about that.
If they ever did strip him of his Australian citizenship, it would be really interesting to see what happens next. If he's already renounced his American citizenship, then stripping him of his Australian citizenship would make him stateless - but Australia may not care about that.
Can the Commandant publicly strip him of the title for embarrassing the Corps?
True, I believe some establishments like ADFA require citizenship but you can still join the military without one, we have a lot of immigrants here.
"Innocent until proven guilty"... I've heard of this concept. Wasn't it used in some countries?
"Innocent until proven guilty"... I've heard of this concept. Wasn't it used in some countries?
Haha yeah but in this case they'd probably just say something like "Such a good man sharing our culture with the chinese government! A real win for diplomacy."Don't we just defer to mob justice and the cancel culture screen team now?
Amen. And until it becomes libel / slander, you are well within your 1st Amendment right.... then they have a First Amendment right to say that the court is full of shit and that, in their opinion, you're guilty AF.
Amen. And until it becomes libel / slander, you are well within your 1st Amendment right.
But "innocent until proven guilty" is still the law of the land,... at least in the US of A... right? Just checking.
Not that it matters: I'm sure the media articles are 100% accurate and unbiased.
“Well your honor…I have this passion for General Tao’s Chicken…”I am kind of curious to hear how he explains his actions to a judge.
If he liked shitty Chinese food, he should have stayed in the US of A.“Well your honor…I have this passion for General Tao’s Chicken…”