Permanent Ban is means like Death Penalty IRL?

Day 583, 12:43 Published in USA USA by Nero Preto
eRepublik Laws: Permanent Ban

Amandement 4 ~ Properties obtained by a citizen through an illegal or unjust method will be impounded. Such types of actions may result in a permanent ban. Additionally, if these properties are sold or transferred before being impounded, entities involved in these transactions can receive a permanent ban.

Amandement 5 ~ A real user may express his/her will upon only one citizen.
Point 1 ~ Creating or administrating multiple citizen accounts is prohibited and will result in a permanent ban. The use of the same IP by more citizens is not considered to be a criterion to determine multipleaccounts.
Point 2 ~ Creating or using an unlawful or inappropriate avatar or citizen name is prohibited and will result in a permanent ban. Using real world brands as an avatar or citizen name is not recommended as you may be obliged to change it if the trademark owner requests it.

Amandement 9 ~ Every penalty applied will be counted in a user's forfeit points (FP).
Point 1 ~ For every break of the law a warning (0,5 FP), a temporary ban (FP equal to the number of banned days) or a permanent ban will be applied taking into consideration the severity and the frequency.
Point 2 ~ A permanent ban will also be applied if a total of five or more forfeit points are received.

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Death Penalty: IRL

Capital punishment, the death penalty or execution, is the killing of a person by judicial process for retribution, general deterrence, and incapacitation. Crimes that can result in a death penalty are known as capital crimes or capital offences. The term capital originates from Latin capitalis, literally "regarding the head" (Latin caput). Hence, a capital crime was originally one punished by the severing of the head.

Capital punishment has been practiced in virtually every society, and thus can be considered to be a cultural universal or close to it, excluding those with state religious proscriptions against it. It is a matter of active controversy in various countries and states, and positions can vary within a single political ideology or cultural region. A major exception is in Europe, where Article 2 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union prohibits the practice.[1]

Today, most countries are considered by Amnesty International as abolitionists,[2] which allowed a vote on a nonbinding resolution to the UN to promote the abolition of the death penalty.[3] But more than 60% of the worldwide pop