"Catholic" Trump Defending The Ill Done: Granting Immunity To Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in Suspected Assassination Attempt


Nine Ways of being Accessory to Another’s Sin
  1. By counsel — talking one into sin.
  2. By command — telling one to sin.
  3. By consent — agreeing with the sin.
  4. By provocation — to pressure one into sin.
  5. By praise or flattery — congratulating the sin committed by others.
  6. By concealment — covering up the sin for another.
  7. By partaking — approving sin by assisting in it.
  8. By silence — by not speaking up against the sin whenever he is bound to do it.
  9. By defending of something evil — justifying somebody else’s evil.

Nine ways of being accessory to another's sin - lets see:

I think "Catholic" Trump is an accessory to the evil MBS commited - at least in these 5 ways

  1. By praise or flattery — congratulating the sin committed by others.
  2. By concealment — covering up the sin for another.
  3. By partaking — approving sin by assisting in it.
  4. By silence — by not speaking up against the sin whenever he is bound to do it.
  5. By defending of something evil — justifying somebody else’s evil.
Trump administration considering granting Saudi prince legal immunity for alleged assassination plot, sources say  

(CNN) The Trump administration is considering granting Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman legal immunity from a federal lawsuit alleging that he ordered an assassination squad to kill a former top Saudi intelligence official who shared information with the US, according to sources familiar with the situation. 

Saad Aljabri alleges in his lawsuit in DC District Court that the Saudi prince sent members of the same assassination squad that killed journalist Jamal Khashoggi to Canada, where Aljabri now lives in exile, to target him as well. 

The State Department sent a series of questions to Aljabri's legal team this month to "help high-level officials" there decide whether to advise the Department of Justice to grant the crown prince immunity, according to the questionnaire, which was provided to CNN for review from a source close to Aljabri. It is common for the US to grant sovereign immunity for sitting heads of state and even foreign government officials, a step that is often justified as necessary under international law. Immunity is waived from time to time, however, particularly if US policy is to put pressure on a foreign government. Source



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