Arresting Henry Kissinger
The Village Voice has an article which approaches the question of how to make a citizen's arrest of Henry Kissinger: http://www.villagevoice.com/issues/0133/ridgeway.php The article is apparently hostile to Kissinger, but plays down the horror and extent of his crimes. Boilerplate excuses are offered. Outrage at murder and kidnapping is curiously absent. "Kissinger was simply a very loyal, opportunist subordinate." -- Daniel Ellsberg Does this exonerate other criminals under our laws? No. Is it the truth? No.
Well, "under our laws" may be a non sequitur here, as I don't think any of the discussion, with one possible exception, has involved any law of the US. As to other laws, most importantly the international body thereof, there is a respectable--note I do not say persuasive, as I don't have enough facts--that Kissinger as a "subordinate" was carrying out the policy of the state and, as such an actor, may be clothed with sovereign immunity. This is not an uncomplicated area of the law, and is one that gets very deep very fast. It's also one of those areas where the law is about as far divorced from common morality and decency as it ever gets. MacN On Wed, 22 Aug 2001, Anonymous wrote:
The Village Voice has an article which approaches the question of how to make a citizen's arrest of Henry Kissinger: http://www.villagevoice.com/issues/0133/ridgeway.php
The article is apparently hostile to Kissinger, but plays down the horror and extent of his crimes. Boilerplate excuses are offered. Outrage at murder and kidnapping is curiously absent.
"Kissinger was simply a very loyal, opportunist subordinate." -- Daniel Ellsberg
Does this exonerate other criminals under our laws? No. Is it the truth? No.
participants (2)
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Anonymous
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Mac Norton