I cannot judge. I have very standards for matcha, after all.
The system is not dissimilar to Japan's modern courts, if you are familiar with the Japanese legal system. But King Enma as the mythology suggests is the end-all of decisions, and so there is even less room within those confines to argue a decision.
Laws here are intended for residents and not for those passing through for final judgment. That doesn't mean there is much more leniency.
But that should not be a discouragement. The Sutoku Alliance prides itself on clever solutions, and I think that legal defense falls quite often under that umbrella, don't you agree?
no subject
The system is not dissimilar to Japan's modern courts, if you are familiar with the Japanese legal system. But King Enma as the mythology suggests is the end-all of decisions, and so there is even less room within those confines to argue a decision.
Laws here are intended for residents and not for those passing through for final judgment. That doesn't mean there is much more leniency.
But that should not be a discouragement. The Sutoku Alliance prides itself on clever solutions, and I think that legal defense falls quite often under that umbrella, don't you agree?