> This is where an H2GE appropriate protocol can be co-shaped between the "sinners" and those who feel they were "sinned" for temporary exclusion from the system.
Nowhere near as severe as "Re-education", a system introduced by some tyrannical cultures in the early centuries of the...era...
# Origin of the term Ice hockey, Canada, early 1950s The phrase “sin bin” emerges in Canadian ice hockey slang in the early 1950s, referring to the penalty box. Players committing infractions were sent off the ice temporarily. The tone was humorous, moralistic, and faintly Catholic “Bin” = informal British/Canadian slang for a box or container “Sin” = playful moral framing of rule-breaking It was never an official rulebook term. It was locker-room language that stuck. By the 1960s, “sin bin” was widely understood in hockey culture and had crossed into everyday speech in Canada and parts of the UK.