The answer to your question is Germany.
The bill of rights was not included in the original constitution because some delegates thought that a federal bill of rights was irrelevant because most state constitutions were already included in some form of guaranteed rights; while others ted out that outlining certain rights would imply that those were the only rights reserved to the people.
Neville Chamberlain believed that the Munich Agreement had brought peace in Europe and thus supported it. On the other hand, Winston Churchill strongly opposed it.
More about Munich Agreement:
On September 30, 1938, Germany, the United Kingdom, France, and Italy reached an agreement in Munich. Despite a 1924 alliance agreement and a 1925 military treaty between France and the Czechoslovak Republic, it gave "cession to Germany of the Sudeten German area," for which it is also known as the Munich Betrayal.
The Munich Agreement is now largely viewed as a futile attempt at appeasement, and the phrase "a byword for the failure of appeasing expansionist totalitarian governments" has been used to describe it.
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But for Lincoln’s death, there might have been some postwar investigations of the profiteers who supplied the Union Army with lousy war materiel. Soldiers in the field complained about leaky boots, spoiled meat, and biscuits that, when unpacked from their barrels, were crawling with maggots.
Again, but for his death, the biggest scandal of Lincoln’s career might have been the Sultana disaster.
Lincoln’s role in the explosion and sinking of the Sultana: the ship was dangerously overcrowded because Lt. Col. Reuben Hatch, quartermaster at Vicksburg, was taking kickbacks to cram as many Union soldiers as possible aboard it. Hatch already had a record of corruption when he was appointed quartermaster at Vicksburg—by none other than Lincoln. Some historians believe that Lincoln did so as a favor to Ozias Hatch, an old friend and political ally from Illinois and Reuben’s father.
But because the Sultana disaster happened so soon after Lincoln’s assassination, Congress had other priorities and little stomach for an investigation which might sully the memory of the martyred president. Besides, even if Reuben Hatch had been found responsible, he had already left the Army as quickly as possible after the disaster. So there was no possibility of his being court-martialed, and civilian courts had no jurisdiction.