violating sanctions is a victimless crime. the crime is the theft of taxes on trade within the country (to fund violence), or if you trade directly with the government of the evil country, and fund them.
doing business with someone (not in government) in a country subject to sanctions is morally just. so is teaching in a sanctioned country.
what happened to virgil griffith is absolutely shameful. he is in jail for teaching.
@PeterSanchez murder is a violation of human rights of others. many many many laws exist which prohibit things that harm no one and have no victim, and are simply tyrannical control. you are using false equivalence. many laws are inherently unjust and may be broken without moral issue. many laws (such as the prohibition on murder, which you cite) are just and murdering people is also immoral.
you're intentionally conflating just laws and unjust laws for the sake of argument.
@PeterSanchez literally no one is harmed by breaking sanctions; the laws prohibiting trade to sanctioned countries are victimless and without justification. they're simply the state claiming sovereignty and treating you like chattel.
@PeterSanchez using laws as moral justification is thus invalid
@PeterSanchez not all laws are just
@m0xee doesnt matter what is being taught or to whom. he was jailed for teaching.
@m0xee what is wrong with it? he was jailed for teaching.
@m0xee whataboutism.jpg
The USA will throw you in jail for speaking at conferences in countries they don't want you speaking in.
Land of the free, eh?
fix is here if anyone is interested
https://superuser.com/questions/1702899/gpg-periodically-loses-connection-to-yubikey-on-monterey
@solidsanek nope
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