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Sugar Cookie

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Scotland may pardon thousands of individuals tried and executed for witchcraft.

Scotland is preparing to posthumously pardon thousands of people who were charged and executed for witchcraft between the 16th and 18th centuries.

Between the 16th and 18th century 3,873 people were accused of witchcraft, according to The Times of London. Of those accused, 2,600 were convicted and executed. They were typically strangled and burnt at the stake after they were subjected to torture.

Nearly 300 years after Scotland’s witchcraft laws were repealed, a bill in the Scottish parliament is gaining traction following a two-year campaign to have the names cleared for crimes such as cursing the king’s ships or turning into an owl, the paper reported.

Attorney Claire Mitchell leads activist group Witches of Scotland, which wants to have the names of the convicted legally cleared, a written apology letter from the government and a monument established in their memory.

“Per capita, during the period between the 16th to the 18th century, we executed five times as many people as elsewhere in Europe, the vast majority of them women,” Mitchell told The Times.

“To put that into perspective, in Salem 300 people were accused and 19 people were executed. We absolutely excelled at finding women to burn in Scotland. Those executed weren’t guilty, so they should be acquitted.”

In 2001, The Massachusetts House of Representatives officially proclaimed those tried for witchcraft in Salem as innocent.

The Church of Scotland is expected to issue an apology for its role in the “mistreatment and execution” of the thousands accused of witchcraft.
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Reminds me of an Englishman named Matthew Hopkins, whose official title was Witchfinder General. He was reputed as the "best of the best" of witch hunters, and was extremely prolific in Europe. And his prices were exorbitant, asking for money that would amount to perhaps one seventh of a town's GDP in order to interrogate and weed out their "witches". He died in 1647, in a pathetic state; despite being only roughly 27, he already outlived his relevance.

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With that said, one thing that the government of Scotland can do is to raise the executed witches from the dead so that they can live full lives. "Hey everyone, witchcraft and necromancy are totally cool now! Even the government's doing it! BUT NOT COMMUNISM! We're still burning those pinkos."

 
The following tweet by "Robert Hidalgo" was linked to the attached NY Post article:

Pardons for the innocent seem orderly. Pardons for those practicing witchcraft should remain un pardoned. Why mock Scottish-born Saint Patrick’s fight against witchcraft? Witches wanting witches pardoned for practicing witchcraft seems diabolical.

Dude is too dumb to realise that the REAL witches protected themselves with divination and witchcraft and were never caught, let alone executed. The ones that were put to death were simply too pretty, too old or too free thinking.
 
First Minister Nicola Sturgeon offered a formal apology on International Women's Day 2022.

In January 2025, Witches of Scotland registered a tartan design with the Scottish Register of Tartans to serve as a memorial symbol for the victims of the witch trials. The tartan makes use of symbolic colors such as black, grey, red, and pink, respectively representing dark times, ashes, blood, and legal tape. Additionally, the sewing of the tartan uses numerical symbolism by invoking the years 1563 and 1736, as well as the 173 years during which the witch trials took place.

A formal pardon has not been given.
 
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