No, with the law in place you can not carry out a Tranquil Solution. Making a change in the laws so that the law would not forbid it is perfectly legal- which is why Alrik proposed a policy change.
Laws are not immutable things. Even fewer criminalize proposals to change them.
No, the better example would be when someone in the government advocates a change of laws and the criminalization of homosexuality. Which has happened, sad as it is. Laws can be changed for better and for worse.
But, sad as it is, the ability to suggest changes to established law is a very necessary and appropriate ability for a healthy society. Criminalizing even the attempt to propose a change is the mark of a static, inflexible society and system. Such systems break because they actively oppose efforts to adjust.
Rewarding the exposure of corruption also rewards corrupting the arbitrators in your favor. There's a reason why many anti-corruption drives are often little more than partisan attacks by one corrupt entity on another.
Yes, a system based on immediate severe punishment with no questions asked or strings attached is very much a system which punishes without proof. You might not have meant it, but that is the effect of what you proposed.
Still you need to slowly and gradually target the roots of laws one by one. Proposing something that big NEVER worked. I'd like an example if you claim as such.
My example is after the American civil war no one could propose to make slavery legal again.





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