Beryllin wrote:
Diamondeye wrote:
Your position is absurd; that absolutely no requirement whatsoever can be allowed to stand in the way of getting children out of the country for any reason.
Strawman much? I'm talking about medical flights out for injured children who need immediate help, and getting 33 children to a place with food, water, and shelter. That's hardly "for any reason", not to mention that it's been clear that the detained group did try to work with the authorities. Should the missionaries have just let them starve or die of thirst, since the authorities were more interested in the red tape than the survival of those children?
No, I'm not strawmanning. You've claimed that making people have proper documentation is "red tape" and "no defense" for slowing the exit of children from the country for medical treatment.
However, since
all children would need documentation to need the country, removing that requirement is saying exactly that: Regardless of the reason for the requirement, it cannot be allowed to stand int he way of getting children out of the country. You're just conveniently ignoring the fact that the law applies to all children leaving the country, and removing it means those not in need of medical attention could much more easily be kidnapped.
Furthermore, this is not "red tape" that's just predjudicial language for a perfectly sensible law. Not only that, but you're moving the goalposts; first it was urgent medical attention, now it's starvation and thirst - problems that can be dealt with much more easily than serious injuries without evacuating people. Why these particular 33 children were in need of evacuation because of hunger and thirst is beyond me.