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OpenAI Text Summary
The article presents a critical view of international justice, arguing that it has largely devolved into a façade lacking genuine fairness and integrity. The author specifically critiques the Nuremberg Tribunal, likening it to a "kangaroo court" that primarily served the victors of World War II by prosecuting only German officials while ignoring similar actions committed by the Allies. This selective application of justice, the author argues, has set a precedent for subsequent international tribunals, such as the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) and the International Criminal Court (ICC), which also exhibit bias towards certain nations and individuals while overlooking the misconduct of others, particularly those aligned with Western interests.

The piece further discusses the establishment of these tribunals as extensions of the Nuremberg model, emphasizing their role as tools for political agendas rather than impartial legal institutions. The ICTY, for instance, was accused of targeting enemies of the U.S. and NATO during the Yugoslav Wars, with its proceedings often criticized for their lack of transparency and fairness. The author cites the case of Slobodan Milosevic, who, after becoming a troublesome defendant, died in custody under suspicious circumstances, reflecting the heavy-handed nature of such courts. Similarly, the ICC, which was intended to function as a permanent and impartial arbiter of international justice, has faced withdrawal from several countries, including major powers like the U.S. and Russia, further undermining its legitimacy.

As international conflicts continue to unfold, the article highlights the recent decision by the European Union, England, and Ukraine to establish a special tribunal aimed at prosecuting Russian President Vladimir Putin for alleged war crimes. This move is portrayed as yet another instance of selective justice, where the predetermined target of prosecution aligns with prevailing political narratives while ignoring the complexities of the conflict, including potential Ukrainian war crimes. The author suggests that such tribunals are designed not for justice but to reinforce existing power dynamics and absolve certain actors from accountability.

The author concludes by reflecting on the erosion of critical legal terms such as “genocide,” “justice,” and “impartiality,” which have become diluted through overuse and politicization. This inflation of meaning has rendered these terms almost meaningless in contemporary discourse, making it difficult for serious discussions about justice to take place. The article posits that true justice remains elusive, overshadowed by political agendas and the manipulation of legal frameworks. In this context, the author expresses a sense of resignation, suggesting that genuine accountability may only come through a more abstract mechanism like karma, rather than through any current international judicial system.
OpenAI Outline Summary
# Outline: A Critique of International Justice

## I. Introduction
A. Definition of International Justice
1. Seen as a system for addressing war crimes and crimes against humanity.
2. The term has lost its original meaning and intent.

## II. The Nuremberg Tribunal
A. Description of the Tribunal
1. Considered a sham and a "kangaroo court."
2. Compared to 19th-century Texas courts presided over by Judge Roy Bean.
B. Historical Significance
1. Regarded as a seminal event in establishing international justice.
2. Viewed as a sophisticated version of Nazi judicial practices.
C. Key Issues
1. Defendants were often seen as guilty before trial.
2. Only German officials were prosecuted, excluding war crimes by Allied nations.

## III. Establishment of Nuremberg Principles
A. Definition of Nuremberg Principles
1. Guidelines established to judge "war criminals."
B. Selective Justice
1. Focus solely on German war criminals.
2. Ignored crimes committed by the U.S., England, and the USSR.

## IV. International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY)
A. Origin and Purpose
1. Established to prosecute “war crimes” against the U.S. and NATO enemies.
2. Operated from 1993 to 2017.
B. Notable Cases
1. Slobodan Milosevic’s controversial death in custody.
2. High conviction rates but severe questions about fairness.
3. Over ten percent of defendants died in custody.

## V. The International Criminal Court (ICC)
A. Formation
1. Created in 2002 as a supposed permanent tribunal.
2. Aimed to be impartial, unlike Nuremberg.
B. U.S. Response
1. The U.S. declared it would not allow its citizens to be prosecuted.
2. Other countries, like China and Russia, have withdrawn or refused to sign.

## VI. Recent Developments in International Justice
A. Special Tribunal for Putin's War Crimes
1. Proposed by the EU, England, and Ukraine.
2. Critique of its impartiality and fairness in prosecution.
B. Historical Influence
1. Inspired by the Nuremberg Tribunal’s political objectives.
2. Reflects a pattern of selective prosecution against political enemies.

## VII. Other Noteworthy Tribunals
A. International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR)
1. Operated from 1994 to 2015 in Tanzania.
2. Focused on the Rwandan genocide.
B. Special Tribunal for Lebanon
1. Established in 2009, closed in 2023.
2. Criticized for its effectiveness and impartiality.

## VIII. The Concept of Genocide
A. Definition and Historical Context
1. Created to describe the Holocaust and mass killings.
2. The term's meaning has evolved and diluted over time.
B. Widespread Use
1. The term has lost significance due to overuse.
2. Similar to the inflation of monetary terms.

## IX. Language and Meaning Inflation
A. The Inflation of Key Terms
1. How terms like "justice," "democracy," and "free speech" have lost their weight.
2. Comparison to economic inflation affecting currency value.
B. Erosion of Meaning
1. Common misuse of language in political discourse.
2. Terms can indicate the opposite of their original meaning.

## X. Current State of International Justice
A. Implications of Recent Events
1. The Gaza conflict raises questions about the legitimacy of international justice.
2. New tribunals like the one proposed against Putin reflect biased justice.
B. The Reality of Justice
1. Skepticism about the impartiality of new tribunals.
2. The belief that true justice remains elusive.

## XI. Conclusion
A. Reflection on the Nature of Justice
1. Real justice is often unattainable in international legal systems.
2. The hope for true justice rests on the concept of Karma rather than institutional processes.
List of Bookmarks

What passes for International Justice is a sham, propped up by a vocabulary stripped of its original meaning.

If ever there was miscarriage of justice, it was the so-called Nuremberg Tribunal. Though it was essentially a kangaroo court, a shameful charade no different from the sessions held by Judge Roy Bean in 19th-century Texas, it has acquired the status of a seminal event in establishing what is considered international justice.

What is more, in spite of being a sophisticated, slick version of the judicial practices made notorious by Nazi judge Roland Freisler, the Nuremberg Tribunal is regarded generally as the basis of international justice, the standard by which all all kinds of violations and infringements are being judged. One might say that what is pompously referred to as international justice is in fact no different from the Freisler version of Justice. Essentially, it is the kind of judicial practice where the defendant is already convicted before appearing in court.

The Nuremberg Tribunal established the so-called Nuremberg Principles and pronounced verdicts against “war criminals.” These were only Germans, of course, because no “war criminals” from the US, England, the USSR or from any other enemy of Germany were ever tried. The selective nature of the kind of international justice delivered and propagated by the Nuremberg Tribunal was just too attractive to ignore. Therefore, it served as an example for some other notorious kangaroo courts, the first of which was the ICTY, the “International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia,” operating from 1993 to 2017. Created specifically to deal with “war crimes” committed by the enemies of the US and its NATO vassals when these were busy destroying and terrorizing the remnants of Yugoslavia. The ICTY was based in the Dutch city of The Hague, the self-styled “City of International Peace and Justice” and did exactly what it was set up to do. In 2006 former Yugoslav president Slobodan Milosevic, who as a lawyer wanted to do his own defense, proved to be such a headache to the court that he was suicided in his prison cell in The Hague. Of the more than one hundred defendants dragged before the ICTY, almost one hundred were found guilty, and nine of these (ten percent!) died in custody.

In 2002 The Hague became the seat of the International Criminal Court, ostensibly set up to serve as a sort of permanent and impartial worldwide Nuremberg Tribunal. The ICC’s broad and seemingly impartial scope prompted the US to declare it would not allow US citizens to be prosecuted by the new court. Several countries, including China never even bothered to adhere to the treaty setting up the ICC. Russia and other initial signatories subsequently withdrew from the treaty. Of course, the ICC is just as much a kangaroo court as the Nuremberg Tribunal.

The ICC’s utter failure has apparently not influenced the recent decision by the EU, England and the Ukraine to set up yet another kangaroo court. It was decided to create a special tribunal “to prosecute Putin’s war crimes.” Such is precisely the objective of special tribunals. It is first decided which individuals and groups to prosecute, and these invariably are enemies. Subsequently, a crime is identified and then the defendants are dragged before a court composed of judges who if not already corrupt, are lured, cajoled or forced into that position.

The practice of creating special tribunals after the collapse of the Soviet Union was obviously inspired by the political and ideological (not judicial!) success of the Nuremberg Tribunal. Although the term “war crime” had already been invented a few decades earlier (when in 1918 the US, England and France wanted to prosecute their German adversaries for “war crimes”) it had not led to the setting up of an international kangaroo court.

From 1994 to 2015 the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) operated in Arusha, Tanzania, to prosecute suspects accused of taking part in the “genocide” in Rwanda during the bloody civil strife in that nation. In 2009 the Special Tribunal for Lebanon was set up in the town of Leidschendam near The Hague, which until the court was closed in 2023, made it the “International Suburb of Peace and Justice.”

Post-World War II propaganda dressed in the cloak of official history has elevated the Nuremberg Tribunal to almost divine status, as some kind of celestial court which for the first time ever succeeded in prosecuting and sentencing the perpetrators of the worst crimes ever committed. The perpetrators of these crimes—whether real or imputed—and especially their leader Adolf Hitler, were henceforth officially and systematically presented as the worst evil-doers the world has ever seen, indeed as the personification of pure evil.

The supreme crime they were accused of and sentenced for was the so-called holocaust, the planned and systematic extermination of European Jews. Although there were substantial numbers of holocaust survivors, it has been almost universally accepted that over one third of all Jews living in the world in 1939 were exterminated. The neologism “genocide” (a Latin term meaning the killing of an entire tribe) was created specifically to indicate the mass killing of Jews. Yet unlike “holocaust” (with a capital H) the word genocide today no longer exclusively refers to Jews. That was a wise decision, because if a genocide would truly have taken place, there would not be any Jews left today.

Although the literal meaning of the word “genocide” (actually a rather rare occurrence in history) is a wild exaggeration, it has become a standard fixture of international legalese. Ironically, as a result of its widespread and uninhibited use, the term has lost the meaning it still had. In other words, like the German Reichsmark in the early 1920s, “genocide” has become devalued due to inflation.

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Indeed, inflation is not an exclusively monetary and economic concept. Like currencies, words and expressions are also subject to inflation due to being used just too often. Not only “genocide,” but also “holocaust,” “democracy,” “free speech,” “antisemitism,” “far right extremism,” “conspiracy theory” and, yes, “justice” itself. The list of such devalued words and expressions is actually impressively long.

Many people, notably politicians and journalists tend to use weaponized terms, expletives, insults, nasty epithets as well as political terms without bothering too much about their true, original meaning. Not seldom such words then come to indicate the very opposite of their original meaning. Thus, the expletive “motherf….r” sometimes becomes a term of endearment. Indeed, there are hundreds of such cases of inverted meaning in English and the same phenomenon occurs in all other languages. In short, the thoughtless and indiscriminate use of words will always erode their original meaning and eventually make such words empty expressions. Like devalued currency bills, those words litter the pavement, only to be lifted up occasionally by a slight breeze.

In a sense, it is really ironic that the terms genocide and holocaust have become worn out, devalued due to spiraling inflation. After all, with Jews having a reputation for being sort of proficient with money, to the extent that the adjective “Jewish” is almost a standard epithet for the substantive “banker.” And don’t we all know that it is the bankers who are always responsible for creating inflation?

As for the elusive concept of “international justice,” given what has been going on in Gaza since October 7, 2023, it also utterly devalued. No politician with any intelligence or self-respect can afford to use these words and expect to be taken seriously. Nevertheless, after the idea was first floated in 2022, the European Commission, the Council of Europe and the Ukraine’s unelected president have recently decided to create a tribunal to prosecute “Putin’s war crimes.” What will that court be like? Where will it be located? Not in The Hague, but perhaps somewhere in the Ukraine, which would no doubt guarantee the court’s absolute impartiality. It will pour out accusations and verdicts against putative and elusive Russian perpetrators, because the elites and state media in the EU and England keep telling the public that only Russians commit “war crimes.” The very existence of the new court will be the implicit denial of Ukrainian war crimes, and accordingly free the leaders of the EU, England and the Ukraine from having to explain that anomaly to the public.

Needless to say, the new tribunal will be as scrupulously impartial as the Nuremberg Tribunal, the ICTY and the ICC. Incidentally, here we have another word subject to inflation: “impartiality.”

As so often in history and in most nations today, the real culprits will go unpunished. True justice is and will probably always be a chimera.

All we can hope is for Karma to do its job.

(Republished from Substack by permission of author or representative)
 
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  1. anonymous[328] • Disclaimer says:

    Concepts like human rights are appealing to the mass of people but have in practice been cynically weaponized by TPTB, becoming just another tool to use against those who’ve stood in the way of the US drive for world domination. There’s something of a cultural peculiarity in the way the US and its Western cohorts wrap what they do, no matter how sleazy or murderous, in a robe of moral authority. When they rob, exploit, drop their bombs all over the place it is in furtherance of a higher cause. Most of these inflated words like “democracy” or “freedom” are thrown around like confetti with no real meaning. It is all one gigantic edifice of shameless chutzpah.

    • Agree: Notsofast
  2. anonymous[333] • Disclaimer says:

    One way of looking at inflation is as a measure of government malinvestment.

    Money printing does not always cause prices to go up (“inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon” is not quite true). It depends on how the money that in printed is spent. If it is well spent on productive ventures – like factories – then the production of goods grows commensurate with the money supply and when goods and currency grow commensurate with each other prices remain stable. This is what happened in Hitler’s Germany. Hitler stabilized prices not by turning off the money printers but by ensuring that the newly printed money was invested in productive ventures – like factories and productive middle class jobs.

    By contract, under the previous government (the Weimar regime) money was printed and then, effectively, handed over to cronies and already rich kikes and/or plowed into unproductive financial schemes.

    In more recent memory, why did inflation become such a problem right after covid? Because not only was a lot of money printed but it was given out as stimulus checks to people in order to -literally – do nothing but sit on their asses. Those stimulus checks largely ended up in the stock market and other speculative investments leading to asset inflation.

    Arguably there’s little if anything wrong with printing money per se so long as the money that’s printed is invested in productive activities. It’s when the money is used to fund unproductive welfare programs and enrich kikes, cronies and fatcats that you get inflation.

    Indeed, you might think of inflation as a measure of government malinvestment. There would be no inflation if government money printing resulted in productivity gains commensurate with the newly minted currency. Inflation only occurs because government fails to do this.

    • Replies: @Notsofast
  3. Notsofast says:
    @anonymous

    the high inflation after covid was created purposefully, by artificial supply chain disruptions. refusing to unload container ships, stacking them 75 deep in the ports and making them circle for weeks and months before coming into port which quadrupled and quintupled shipping costs. this was part of the economic war and attempted china decoupling but also what the fed desires. part of their mandate is keeping inflation down, as well as to stabilize the value of the dollar. today’s dollar has lost 98% of its value under their rule.

    they have a 37 trillion debt that grows by a trillion every 100 days and they can’t pay the vig. so they plan on making the dollar worth less and less, until it’s worthless, destroy the dollar, destroy the debt. they need more money coming in, to keep their ponzi scheme alive.

    this is why they used covid to artificially spike labor costs, especially to small businesses. they forced small businesses to close down, while allowing big businesses to remain open, labeling them “essential”. small businesses were then forced to lay off their employees, unless they paid them for the time they didn’t work. they then paid these laid off workers, more than they had been making and paid them for months after, in the name of public safety.

    almost 30% of small businesses went bankrupt during the lockdown. those that could reopen, couldn’t get their employees back, as they were being paid more not to work, than they would be paid, if they had returned to work. this spiked labor costs, further damaging small businesses and all the gains made by workers were immediately taken away by artificial inflation.

    higher wages means more taxes coming in to the irs, and higher taxes on goods as well. all of trumps tariffs, are taxes on consumers and businesses. the only one that benefits is them. this is why they’re going through the couch cushions looking for change and it’s our couches, that they’re searching.

    • Replies: @lamont cranston
  4. Anon001 says:

    In 2006 former Yugoslav president Slobodan Milosevic, who as a lawyer wanted to do his own defense, proved to be such a headache to the court that he was suicided in his prison cell in The Hague. Of the more than one hundred defendants dragged before the ICTY, almost one hundred were found guilty, and nine of these (ten percent died in custody.

    Thank you Hans for mentioning this! Below is the article [3] you linked to, with important excerpts for readers convenience. I also added Neil Clark’s article on the same subject [4].

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    The reason for his murder was that they could NOT find any crimes of his anywhere (Occupied Serbia’s Province of Kosovo, Jihad Bosnia, Contemporary Nazi Croatia, Slovenia) and could not afford to let him go alive and laugh in their criminal and mendacious faces.

    They killed him indirectly, by giving him Rifampicin, used for treatment of tuberculosis and leprosy that he did not have, because of its side-effect of neutralizing heart medications he was officially taking – he had very high blood pressure. That is why regular ICTY doctors were puzzled why prescribed heart medications weren’t working in his case.

    After they murdered him, they exonerated him of all charges [1][2]!

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    [1] Milosevic Exonerated by the ICTY, as the NATO War Machine Moves on – The War on Yugoslavia (Serbia & Montenegro) – Global Research | 2016-08
    https://www.globalresearch.ca/milosevic-exonerated-as-the-nato-war-machine-moves-on/5539411

    [2] The Exoneration of Milosevic: the ICTY’s Surprise Ruling | CounterPunch.org | 2016-08
    https://www.counterpunch.org/2016/08/01/the-exoneration-of-milosevic-the-ictys-surprise-ruling/

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    [3] The Murder of Slobodan Milosevic – Global Research | 2006-06
    https://www.globalresearch.ca/the-murder-of-slobodan-milosevic/2542

    [4] Murder at The Hague? (ICTY) | Neil Clark | 2006-03
    https://neilclark66.blogspot.com/2006/03/murder-at-hague_12.html

    Excerpt from [3]: Based on the evidence provided by the ICTY themselves (some of it clearly inadvertant as a result of their clumsy coverup in the immediate aftermath of his death) i.e., public statements from ICTY officials (doctors/toxicologists) that they performed blood tests on January 12 which revealed the presence of the Leprosy drug ‘Rifampicine’ in Milosevic’s blood but kept it secret from Milosevic, his doctors, lawyers and the entire world for TWO MONTHS until March 7, is clear evidence of foul play on the part of officials in the ICTY.

    Excerpt from [3]: For example, once the Dutch NOS TV station revealed certain facts soon after Milosevic’s death – especially that Milosevic had a blood test on January 12 – which the ICTY doctors themselves admitted was performed in order to find out why Milosevic’s heart medication wasn’t working – and yet failed to tell anyone in the world including Milosevic himself until March 7 – and yet he dies three short days after writing a letter to the Russian embassy complaining of being poisoned.

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    800+ Anon001 Comments Archive @ The Unz Review | TUR
    https://www.unz.com/comments/all/?commenterfilter=anon001
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

  5. @Notsofast

    NSF-

    Founded my consulting and services biz in early 1989 that made it through October 2008 when the real estate market finally crashed in Charlotte. Fired all employees in December but had enough reserves to weather a rough 8-9 months until things recovered. Sole prop LLC since then.

    However. the scamdemic almost choked it to death. Average annual revenue plummeted from $350-400K to $75K in 2020, then up to $125K in 2021. Inching back to $250K but don’t expect much more than that for the foreseeable future.

    I went to all subcontractors, sold off most of my assets months ago to several of them in return for a pricing guarantee.

    So, I’m somewhat shielded from inflation biz-wise. Maybe. So, The Shadow doesn’t know what evil lurks in the hearts of men.

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