Saturday, October 4, 2025

A Necessary Abomination - Redwin Tursor - War Powers Means War Crimes - The Geneva Convention Doesnt Require Membership in the ICC

 

International Legal Framework for Executive Accountability

How Constitutional Republics and International Law Constrain War Powers


Executive Summary

For the general reader: This document explains how international law applies to government leaders who invoke "war powers" or "national security" to justify their actions.

The core principle is simple: declaring an emergency or invoking war powers does not give leaders permission to violate fundamental human rights or the laws of war. In fact, invoking war powers triggers additional legal protections for civilians, prisoners, and affected populations.

No leader - president, prime minister, or military commander - can claim immunity from prosecution for war crimes, torture, or crimes against humanity by saying they were defending national security. International law rejects this defense, and so do the constitutions of democratic republics founded on Enlightenment principles.

This framework explains:

  • What laws apply during armed conflict and emergencies
  • What rights cannot be violated under any circumstances
  • How individual leaders are held personally responsible
  • What courts and mechanisms enforce these laws
  • Why domestic law cannot override international obligations

Part I: International Humanitarian Law (Laws of War)

A. Geneva Conventions - Automatic and Universal Application

The four Geneva Conventions (1949) and their Additional Protocols (1977) constitute the core of international humanitarian law (IHL). They are among the most universally ratified treaties in history.

Trigger for application:

  • The Conventions apply automatically when an armed conflict exists as a matter of fact, not legal declaration
  • International Armed Conflict (IAC): Any use of armed force between states, regardless of whether war is declared (Common Article 2)
  • Non-International Armed Conflict (NIAC): Protracted armed violence between government forces and organized armed groups, or between such groups, meeting thresholds of intensity and organization (Common Article 3, Additional Protocol II)

Critical principle: States cannot opt out through reservations, reinterpretation, or domestic legislation. The International Court of Justice has affirmed that core IHL provisions constitute customary international law binding on all states.

B. Fundamental Protections (Common Article 3 - Applicable to All Conflicts)

The following are prohibited at any time and in any place against persons taking no active part in hostilities:

  1. Violence to life and person, including:

    • Murder of all kinds
    • Mutilation
    • Cruel treatment
    • Torture
  2. Taking of hostages

  3. Outrages upon personal dignity, including:

    • Humiliating treatment
    • Degrading treatment
  4. Sentences and executions without judgment by a regularly constituted court affording judicial guarantees recognized as indispensable by civilized peoples

Legal status: The ICJ in Nicaragua v. United States (1986) held that Common Article 3 reflects "elementary considerations of humanity" and applies as customary international law to all armed conflicts.

C. Grave Breaches (War Crimes) - International Armed Conflicts

Under the Geneva Conventions and Additional Protocol I, grave breaches constitute war crimes and require universal jurisdiction (any state may prosecute). These include:

Against Persons:

  • Willful killing
  • Torture or inhuman treatment
  • Willfully causing great suffering or serious injury to body or health
  • Unlawful deportation, transfer, or confinement
  • Compelling service in hostile forces
  • Willfully depriving prisoners of war or protected persons of fair trial rights
  • Taking of hostages
  • Extensive destruction and appropriation of property not justified by military necessity

Against Civilian Population:

  • Making civilians the object of attack
  • Launching indiscriminate attacks affecting civilians/civilian objects with knowledge of excessive incidental casualties
  • Attacking undefended places or demilitarized zones
  • Killing or wounding persons hors de combat (incapacitated or surrendered)
  • Improper use of protective emblems (Red Cross, white flag)
  • Forcible transfer of protected populations

Against Civilian Objects:

  • Attacking works or installations containing dangerous forces (dams, nuclear power stations) if such attack may cause severe losses among civilians
  • Attacking objects indispensable to survival of civilian population
  • Attacking cultural property under enhanced protection
  • Destroying or seizing enemy property unless imperatively demanded by necessities of war

D. Additional Protections - International Armed Conflicts

Proportionality Principle (Additional Protocol I, Article 51(5)(b)): An attack is prohibited if it "may be expected to cause incidental loss of civilian life, injury to civilians, damage to civilian objects, or a combination thereof, which would be excessive in relation to the concrete and direct military advantage anticipated."

Precautions in Attack (Additional Protocol I, Article 57): Those who plan or decide upon an attack shall:

  • Do everything feasible to verify that objectives are military objectives
  • Take all feasible precautions in choice of means and methods to minimize incidental civilian casualties
  • Refrain from attacks expected to violate proportionality
  • Give effective advance warning of attacks affecting the civilian population, unless circumstances do not permit

Distinction Principle (Additional Protocol I, Article 48): Parties to a conflict shall at all times distinguish between civilian population and combatants, and between civilian objects and military objectives. Attacks may only be directed against military objectives.

E. Command Responsibility

Article 86, Additional Protocol I establishes that superiors are criminally responsible for subordinate violations if they:

  1. Knew, or had information enabling them to conclude in the circumstances, that subordinates were committing or about to commit grave breaches, AND
  2. Did not take all feasible measures within their power to prevent or repress the breach

Article 87 requires commanders to:

  • Prevent and suppress breaches
  • Report breaches to competent authorities

Civilian superior responsibility applies to government officials with effective authority and control over subordinates, applying the same knowledge and prevention standards.

Legal precedent: The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) in Prosecutor v. Delalić et al.held that command responsibility applies to both military and civilian superiors who exercise effective control.

F. No Defense of Superior Orders for Manifest Illegality

Rome Statute, Article 33: The fact that a crime was committed pursuant to an order does not relieve criminal responsibility if:

  1. The person had a legal obligation to obey (must establish lawful authority)
  2. The person did not know the order was unlawful, AND
  3. The order was not manifestly unlawful

Manifestly unlawful orders include:

  • Orders to commit genocide
  • Orders to commit crimes against humanity
  • Orders to torture
  • Orders to execute prisoners
  • Orders to attack civilians

Legal principle: A subordinate must refuse manifestly illegal orders. Following such orders provides no defense to criminal liability.


Part II: International Human Rights Law

A. Treaties with Universal or Near-Universal Ratification

  1. International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) - 173 states parties
  2. Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment (CAT) - 173 states parties
  3. International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (CERD) - 182 states parties
  4. Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) - 196 states parties

B. Concurrent Application with IHL

UN Human Rights Committee, General Comment 31 (2004): "The Covenant applies also in situations of armed conflict to which the rules of international humanitarian law are applicable. While, in respect of certain Covenant rights, more specific rules of international humanitarian law may be specially relevant for the purposes of the interpretation of Covenant rights, both spheres of law are complementary, not mutually exclusive."

International Court of Justice, Legality of the Threat or Use of Nuclear Weapons (1996): "The protection of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights does not cease in times of war, except by operation of Article 4 of the Covenant whereby certain provisions may be derogated from in a time of national emergency."

C. Non-Derogable Rights (ICCPR Article 4)

The following rights cannot be suspended or limited under any circumstances, including during war or public emergency threatening the life of the nation:

  1. Article 6: Right to life
  2. Article 7: Prohibition of torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment
  3. Article 8(1)(2): Prohibition of slavery and servitude
  4. Article 11: Prohibition of imprisonment for inability to fulfill contractual obligation
  5. Article 15: Prohibition of retroactive criminal laws (nullum crimen sine lege)
  6. Article 16: Right to recognition as a person before the law
  7. Article 18: Freedom of thought, conscience and religion

Additional non-derogable norms under customary international law:

  • Prohibition of genocide
  • Core protections of IHL (Common Article 3)
  • Prohibition of enforced disappearance
  • Rights of the child to essential protections

D. Derogation Requirements (ICCPR Article 4)

For rights that permit derogation during emergencies, states must satisfy ALL of these conditions:

  1. Public emergency threatening the life of the nation - must be actual, imminent, and affect the whole population or nation
  2. Official proclamation - the state must officially declare the emergency
  3. Notification - must inform other states parties through the UN Secretary-General
  4. Strict necessity - measures must be strictly required by the exigencies of the situation
  5. Proportionality - measures must be proportionate to the threat
  6. Temporary duration - must have clear time limits and regular review
  7. Non-discrimination - cannot discriminate on grounds of race, color, sex, language, religion, or social origin
  8. Consistency - must not be inconsistent with other international law obligations

UN Human Rights Committee, General Comment 29: "Measures derogating from the provisions of the Covenant must be of an exceptional and temporary nature... The restoration of a state of normalcy where full respect for the Covenant can again be secured must be the predominant objective."

E. Absolute Prohibition of Torture (CAT)

Convention Against Torture, Article 2(2): "No exceptional circumstances whatsoever, whether a state of war or a threat of war, internal political instability or any other public emergency, may be invoked as a justification of torture."

Article 2(3): "An order from a superior officer or a public authority may not be invoked as a justification of torture."

Legal definition of torture (Article 1): Any act by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person for purposes such as:

  • Obtaining information or a confession
  • Punishment for an act committed or suspected
  • Intimidation or coercion
  • Any reason based on discrimination of any kind

When such acts are inflicted by or at the instigation of or with the consent or acquiescence of a public official or other person acting in official capacity.

CAT Committee jurisprudence:

  • Mock executions constitute torture
  • Prolonged isolation can constitute torture
  • Conditions of detention may cumulatively constitute torture
  • Refoulement (return) to risk of torture is absolutely prohibited (Article 3)

F. Extraterritorial Application

ICJ, Legal Consequences of the Construction of a Wall in the Occupied Palestinian Territory (2004): "The Court would observe that, while the jurisdiction of States is primarily territorial, it may sometimes be exercised outside the national territory... the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights is applicable in respect of acts done by a State in the exercise of its jurisdiction outside its own territory."

European Court of Human Rights, Al-Skeini v. United Kingdom (2011): "Following the removal from power of the Ba'ath regime and until the accession of the Interim Government, the United Kingdom (together with the United States) assumed in Iraq the exercise of some of the public powers normally to be exercised by a sovereign government. In particular, the United Kingdom assumed authority and responsibility for the maintenance of security in South East Iraq. In these exceptional circumstances, the United Kingdom, through its soldiers engaged in security operations in Basra during the period in question, exercised authority and control over individuals killed in the course of such security operations, so as to establish a jurisdictional link between the deceased and the United Kingdom for the purposes of Article 1 of the Convention."

Principle: States are bound by human rights obligations wherever they exercise effective control, including:

  • Military operations on foreign territory
  • Detention facilities abroad
  • Border interdiction operations
  • Territory under military occupation
  • Checkpoints and temporary control situations

Part III: Crimes Against Humanity

A. Definition and Legal Basis

Rome Statute, Article 7 (reflecting customary international law): Crimes against humanity means any of the following acts when committed as part of a widespread or systematic attack directed against any civilian population, with knowledge of the attack:

  1. Murder
  2. Extermination
  3. Enslavement
  4. Deportation or forcible transfer of population
  5. Imprisonment or other severe deprivation of physical liberty in violation of fundamental rules of international law
  6. Torture
  7. Rape, sexual slavery, enforced prostitution, forced pregnancy, enforced sterilization, or any other form of sexual violence of comparable gravity
  8. Persecution against any identifiable group or collectivity on political, racial, national, ethnic, cultural, religious, gender, or other grounds universally recognized as impermissible under international law
  9. Enforced disappearance of persons
  10. The crime of apartheid
  11. Other inhumane acts of a similar character intentionally causing great suffering, or serious injury to body or to mental or physical health

B. Critical Elements

"Widespread or systematic" (disjunctive - only one required):

  • Widespread: Large-scale action, substantial number of victims
  • Systematic: Organized pattern, pursuant to policy or plan (need not be formally adopted)

"Attack directed against civilian population":

  • Multiple commission of prohibited acts
  • Against any civilian population (not just during armed conflict)
  • Pursuant to or in furtherance of state or organizational policy

"Knowledge of the attack":

  • Perpetrator knew their acts formed part of the widespread or systematic attack
  • Need not know details of the attack or policy

"State or organizational policy":

  • ICTY: Policy need not be explicitly formulated; can be inferred from systematic nature of acts
  • Policy can be that of a de facto state authority or organization
  • Organizational policy requires entity with resources, capacity, and means to carry out widespread or systematic attack

C. Peacetime Application

Critical distinction from war crimes: Crimes against humanity do not require an armed conflict. They can be committed during peacetime.

Historical precedent:

  • Nuremberg Charter (1945) prosecuted crimes against humanity committed before the war
  • ICTY convicted Serbian leaders for crimes against humanity during ethnic cleansing campaigns
  • ICC prosecutes crimes against humanity in non-conflict situations (Kenya post-election violence 2007-2008)

Application to mass deportations: If deportations/forcible transfers are:

  • Widespread (large-scale operation affecting thousands), OR
  • Systematic (organized pursuant to policy), AND
  • Directed against civilian population, AND
  • Perpetrators have knowledge they are participating in such attack

Then individual acts of deportation constitute crimes against humanity under Article 7(1)(d).

D. Persecution as Crime Against Humanity

Rome Statute, Article 7(2)(g): "Persecution" means the intentional and severe deprivation of fundamental rights contrary to international law by reason of the identity of the group or collectivity.

Elements:

  1. Perpetrator severely deprived one or more persons of fundamental rights
  2. Perpetrator targeted such persons by reason of identity of a group/collectivity
  3. Targeting was based on political, racial, national, ethnic, cultural, religious, gender, or other grounds universally recognized as impermissible
  4. Conduct was committed in connection with any act of Article 7(1) or any crime within ICC jurisdiction
  5. Conduct was part of widespread or systematic attack against civilian population
  6. Perpetrator knew conduct was part of or intended to be part of such attack

Application: Targeting individuals for detention, deportation, or other severe deprivation of rights based on national origin, ethnicity, or religion constitutes persecution when part of widespread or systematic attack.


Part IV: Constitutional Principles for Post-1789 Republics

A. Separation of Powers and War Authority

Founding principle: Executive cannot unilaterally initiate war. Legislative authority required for offensive military action beyond immediate self-defense.

Constitutional models:

  • United States: Congress holds power to declare war (Art. I, Sec. 8)
  • France: President may use armed forces for immediate defense; Parliament authorizes prolonged operations (Art. 35)
  • Germany: Defensive operations only; all military deployments require Bundestag approval (Basic Law Art. 87a)
  • South Africa: President may employ defense force but Parliament must approve within specific timeframe (Constitution Sec. 201)

International law reinforcement: UN Charter Article 2(4) prohibits "threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state." Only two exceptions:

  1. Self-defense (Article 51) - must be necessary and proportionate response to armed attack
  2. Security Council authorization (Chapter VII)

Consequence: Executive invocation of "war powers" without legislative authorization violates both domestic constitutional law and international law.

B. Treaty Obligations as Supreme Law

Constitutional principle: Ratified treaties become part of supreme law, binding on all branches.

Examples:

  • Netherlands: International law takes precedence over conflicting domestic legislation (Constitution Art. 94)
  • France: Treaties have authority superior to laws (Constitution Art. 55)
  • South Africa: Customary international law is part of law unless inconsistent with Constitution or Act of Parliament; treaties become law upon legislative approval (Constitution Sec. 231-233)
  • Germany: General rules of international law are integral part of federal law and take precedence over laws (Basic Law Art. 25)

Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties, Article 27: "A party may not invoke the provisions of its internal law as justification for its failure to perform a treaty."

ICJ, Applicability of Article VI, Section 22, of the Convention on Privileges and Immunities (1989): "According to generally accepted principles of international law, a contracting State may not invoke provisions of its internal law as justification for failure to perform its treaty obligations."

Consequence: A state cannot invoke domestic law—including constitutional provisions, emergency powers statutes, or national security legislation—to justify violation of treaty obligations.

C. Due Process and Individual Rights

Core principle: Constitutional rights apply to all persons within jurisdiction or under effective control, not just citizens.

U.S. Supreme Court, Boumediene v. Bush (2008): "The Constitution grants Congress and the President the power to acquire, dispose of, and govern territory, not the power to decide when and where its terms apply... The Constitution's separation-of-powers structure... and its global reach, speaks to the power to hold persons detained during wartime... Abstaining from questions involving formal sovereignty and territorial governance is one thing. To hold the political branches have the power to switch the Constitution on or off at will is quite another."

European Court of Human Rights, consistent jurisprudence: Rights under European Convention apply to all persons within jurisdiction of state parties, including:

  • Non-citizens on territory
  • Persons detained by state forces abroad
  • Persons under effective control of state agents

Inter-American Court of Human Rights, Advisory Opinion OC-18/03: "The fundamental principle of equality and non-discrimination... has entered the realm of jus cogens... The principle of equality before the law, equal protection before the law and non-discrimination belongs to jus cogens, because the whole legal structure of national and international public order rests on it and it is a fundamental principle that permeates all laws."

Consequence:

  • Detention without individual determination of necessity and regular judicial review violates due process
  • Blanket policies targeting persons based on nationality, ethnicity, or religion violate equality and non-discrimination
  • "National security" classification does not eliminate due process rights

D. Prohibition of Collective Punishment

Geneva Convention IV, Article 33: "No protected person may be punished for an offence he or she has not personally committed. Collective penalties and likewise all measures of intimidation or of terrorism are prohibited."

Additional Protocol I, Article 75(2)(d): Fundamental protections include prohibition of "collective punishments."

Constitutional principle: Punishment, sanctions, or adverse action requires individual determination of culpability or necessity. Group-based measures violate both constitutional equal protection and international law.

Application:

  • Detention orders targeting groups by nationality = collective punishment
  • Deportation quotas or targets based on nationality = collective punishment
  • Travel bans based solely on country of origin without individual assessment = collective punishment
  • Property seizures or restrictions targeting ethnic/national groups = collective punishment

E. Non-Refoulement (Absolute Prohibition)

CAT Article 3(1): "No State Party shall expel, return ('refouler') or extradite a person to another State where there are substantial grounds for believing that he would be in danger of being subjected to torture."

Refugee Convention, Article 33(1): "No Contracting State shall expel or return ('refouler') a refugee in any manner whatsoever to the frontiers of territories where his life or freedom would be threatened on account of his race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion."

CAT Committee jurisprudence:

  • Obligation applies to all territory under state's effective control
  • Applies at borders, in international zones, during maritime interdiction
  • "Substantial grounds" requires assessment showing real, personal, and foreseeable risk
  • Cannot rely on diplomatic assurances from states known to practice torture
  • No national security exception exists

ICCPR Article 7 (interpreted to include non-refoulement): UN Human Rights Committee: "The prohibition in article 7 relates not only to acts that cause physical pain but also to acts that cause mental suffering to the victim... State parties must not expose individuals to the danger of torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment upon return to another country by way of their extradition, expulsion or refoulement."

Consequence: Deportations to countries where individuals face substantial grounds for believing they would be subjected to torture, persecution, or threats to life violate absolute international law obligations. No "national security" or "terrorism" exception exists.


Part V: Individual Criminal Liability

A. No Immunity for International Crimes

Rome Statute, Article 27: "1. This Statute shall apply equally to all persons without any distinction based on official capacity. In particular, official capacity as a Head of State or Government, a member of a Government or parliament, an elected representative or a government official shall in no case exempt a person from criminal responsibility under this Statute...

  1. Immunities or special procedural rules which may attach to the official capacity of a person, whether under national or international law, shall not bar the Court from exercising its jurisdiction over such a person."

ICJ, Arrest Warrant of 11 April 2000 (Democratic Republic of Congo v. Belgium) (2002): While ruling that sitting foreign ministers have immunity from foreign domestic prosecution, the Court confirmed four situations where immunity does not apply:

  1. Prosecution in the minister's own country
  2. Prosecution in international criminal tribunals
  3. Prosecution after the official leaves office
  4. Prosecution by foreign domestic courts if the state of nationality waives immunity

Principle: Immunity ratione materiae (functional immunity for official acts) does not apply to international crimes. International crimes are by definition not legitimate official acts.

B. Nuremberg Principles

Nuremberg Tribunal, Judgment (1946): "The principle of international law, which under certain circumstances protects the representatives of a state, cannot be applied to acts which are condemned as criminal by international law. The authors of these acts cannot shelter themselves behind their official position in order to be freed from punishment..."

UN General Assembly Resolution 95(I) (1946): Affirmed the Nuremberg Principles as principles of international law.

Principle VI: "The fact that a person who committed an act which constitutes a crime under international law acted as Head of State or responsible Government official does not relieve him from responsibility under international law."

Principle VII: "Complicity in the commission of a crime against peace, a war crime, or a crime against humanity as set forth in Principle VI is a crime under international law."

C. Command and Superior Responsibility (Detailed)

Rome Statute, Article 28:

Military commanders or persons effectively acting as military commanders are criminally responsible for crimes by forces under their effective command and control, or effective authority and control as the case may be, where:

  1. That military commander/person either knew or, owing to the circumstances at the time, should have knownthat the forces were committing or about to commit such crimes, AND
  2. That military commander/person failed to take all necessary and reasonable measures within their power to prevent or repress their commission or to submit the matter to the competent authorities for investigation and prosecution

Civilian superiors are criminally responsible for crimes by subordinates under their effective authority and control where:

  1. The superior either knew, or consciously disregarded information which clearly indicated that subordinates were committing or about to commit such crimes, AND
  2. The crimes concerned activities within the effective responsibility and control of the superior, AND
  3. The superior failed to take all necessary and reasonable measures within their power to prevent or repress their commission or to submit the matter to the competent authorities

Key distinctions:

  • Military commanders: "Should have known" standard (constructive knowledge)
  • Civilian superiors: "Consciously disregarded information" standard (deliberate ignorance)
  • Both: Must have effective authority and control
  • Both: Duty to prevent, repress, OR report/submit for prosecution

ICTY, Prosecutor v. Hadžihasanović and Kubura (2005): "Superior responsibility is a distinct form of criminal responsibility... It is incurred by a superior as a result of his failure to act in the face of the crimes committed or about to be committed by a subordinate... The doctrine is not based on personal commission of the crimes, but responsibility arises because of the superior's failure to act to prevent or punish crimes in light of his position of authority."

D. Mens Rea (Mental State) Requirements

For direct perpetration of war crimes, crimes against humanity:

  • Intent and knowledge: Perpetrator must have intended to commit the prohibited act and known of the circumstances making it a crime
  • Recklessness: In some instances (e.g., indiscriminate attacks), reckless disregard for consequences suffices

For crimes against humanity specifically:

  • Knowledge of the attack: Must know acts were part of or intended to contribute to widespread or systematic attack
  • Need not know all details: Does not require knowledge of all characteristics of attack or precise details of plan or policy

For command responsibility:

  • Military commanders: Actual knowledge OR should have known (negligence standard based on information available)
  • Civilian superiors: Actual knowledge OR conscious disregard of information (willful blindness)

For ordering crimes:

  • Person in position of authority orders commission of crime
  • Order need not be formally issued; can be implicit from conduct

For aiding and abetting:

  • Practical assistance, encouragement, or moral support with knowledge that acts assist crime
  • Need not share intent of perpetrator, but must know acts contribute to crime

E. Universal Jurisdiction

Geneva Conventions, Common Article 1: "The High Contracting Parties undertake to respect and to ensure respect for the present Convention in all circumstances."

Geneva Convention IV, Article 146: "Each High Contracting Party shall be under the obligation to search for persons alleged to have committed, or to have ordered to be committed, such grave breaches, and shall bring such persons, regardless of their nationality, before its own courts... Each High Contracting Party shall take measures necessary for the suppression of all acts contrary to the provisions of the present Convention other than the grave breaches..."

Principle: For grave breaches of Geneva Conventions (war crimes), any state may prosecute, regardless of:

  • Where the crime occurred
  • Nationality of the perpetrator
  • Nationality of the victim

Examples of universal jurisdiction prosecutions:

  • Belgium: Prosecuted Rwandan officials for genocide (2001)
  • Spain: Issued arrest warrants for Argentine military officials for torture and enforced disappearance (1990s-2000s)
  • Germany: Prosecuted Syrian officials for crimes against humanity (2022)
  • France: Prosecuted Rwandan officials for genocide (2014)
  • Netherlands: Prosecuted Liberian official for war crimes (2024)
  • Sweden: Prosecuted individuals for war crimes in Syria and Iraq (2017-2020)

No statute of limitations: War crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide are not subject to statutory limitation under customary international law (Convention on Non-Applicability of Statutory Limitations to War Crimes and Crimes Against Humanity, 1968).


Part VI: Accountability and Enforcement Mechanisms

A. International Criminal Court (ICC)

Jurisdiction (Rome Statute, Article 5):

  • Genocide
  • Crimes against humanity
  • War crimes
  • Crime of aggression

Territorial and personal jurisdiction (Article 12): Court may exercise jurisdiction if:

  1. State where crime occurred is party to Rome Statute, OR
  2. State of nationality of accused is party to Rome Statute, OR
  3. Non-party state accepts jurisdiction on ad hoc basis, OR
  4. UN Security Council refers situation (even if non-party state)

Complementarity (Article 17): ICC prosecutes only when:

  • State with jurisdiction is unwilling or unable genuinely to investigate or prosecute, OR
  • State proceedings were for purpose of shielding perpetrator, OR
  • Decision not to prosecute resulted from unwillingness or inability to genuinely prosecute, OR
  • Proceedings not conducted independently or impartially and were inconsistent with intent to bring person to justice

Indicators of unwillingness:

  • Proceedings undertaken to shield person from criminal responsibility
  • Unjustified delay inconsistent with intent to bring person to justice
  • Proceedings not conducted independently or impartially

Indicators of inability:

  • Total or substantial collapse of national judicial system
  • National judicial system otherwise unavailable

Admissibility principle: If domestic courts genuinely investigate and prosecute, ICC will not exercise jurisdiction. But sham proceedings or domestic impunity trigger ICC jurisdiction.

No immunity (Article 27): Official capacity provides no defense and does not bar ICC prosecution.

B. Universal Jurisdiction - National Courts

Legal basis:

  • Geneva Conventions (mandatory universal jurisdiction for grave breaches)
  • CAT Article 5 (mandatory jurisdiction over torture)
  • Customary international law for crimes against humanity and genocide
  • National implementing legislation

Examples of national universal jurisdiction statutes:

Germany - Code of Crimes Against International Law (2002):

  • Establishes jurisdiction over genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes regardless of where committed
  • No requirement of link to Germany
  • Actively prosecutes international crimes (Syria cases 2020-2024)

Belgium - Law Concerning Grave Breaches of International Humanitarian Law (1993/1999):

  • Universal jurisdiction over grave breaches of Geneva Conventions, crimes against humanity, genocide
  • Initially pure universal jurisdiction; amended to require links to Belgium after political pressure

Spain - Organic Law of Judicial Power (as amended):

  • Universal jurisdiction for genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes, torture, enforced disappearance
  • Currently requires Spanish victims or accused present in Spain
  • Successfully prosecuted Argentine military officials (Scilingo case, 2005)

Netherlands - International Crimes Act (2003):

  • Implements Rome Statute crimes into Dutch law
  • Universal jurisdiction regardless of nationality or location
  • Prosecuted Afghan official for torture (2005), Liberian official for war crimes (2024)

France - Code of Criminal Procedure:

  • Universal jurisdiction for genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes, torture
  • Prosecuted Rwandan officials for genocide, Syrian officials for complicity in crimes against humanity (2023)

Procedural requirements vary:

  • Some states require presence of accused on territory
  • Some require nexus (victim or accused nationality)
  • Some permit trials in absentia
  • Most require prosecutorial discretion assessment

Obstacles:

  • Political pressure and diplomatic considerations
  • Resource constraints
  • Evidence gathering difficulties
  • Safe haven jurisdictions

C. UN Human Rights Mechanisms

1. Treaty Bodies:

Human Rights Committee (ICCPR):

  • Reviews state reports every 4-5 years
  • Issues "Concluding Observations" with recommendations
  • Receives individual complaints (Optional Protocol) and issues "Views" (legally binding interpretations)
  • Issues General Comments interpreting treaty provisions

Committee Against Torture (CAT):

  • Reviews state reports
  • Conducts confidential inquiries if reliable information of systematic torture
  • Receives individual complaints
  • Can make recommendations to states
  • Subcommittee on Prevention (SPT) conducts country visits

Other treaty bodies: CERD Committee, CEDAW Committee, CRC Committee, etc.

Legal effect: While "recommendations," treaty bodies provide authoritative interpretations of treaty obligations. Persistent non-compliance can lead to international pressure, sanctions, or ICC referrals.

2. Special Procedures (Special Rapporteurs and Working Groups):

  • Special Rapporteur on Torture: Investigates allegations, conducts country visits, issues urgent appeals, reports to Human Rights Council and General Assembly
  • Special Rapporteur on Extrajudicial, Summary or Arbitrary Executions
  • Special Rapporteur on the Human Rights of Migrants
  • Working Group on Arbitrary Detention
  • Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances

Procedure:

  • Receive complaints from individuals, NGOs, or states
  • Send communications to governments requesting information and explanation
  • Conduct country visits (with state consent)
  • Issue public reports to Human Rights Council and General Assembly
  • Make recommendations

Legal weight: Not legally binding but carry significant moral and political authority. Can trigger:

  • International media attention
  • Diplomatic pressure
  • Sanctions considerations
  • Evidence for ICC or universal jurisdiction prosecutions

3. Human Rights Council:

Universal Periodic Review (UPR):

  • Every UN member state reviewed every 4-5 years
  • Peer review by other states
  • NGOs and treaty bodies submit information
  • State must respond to recommendations
  • Follow-up mechanisms

Commissions of Inquiry and Fact-Finding Missions:

  • Established for serious violations
  • Investigate, document evidence, identify perpetrators
  • Issue detailed reports with findings and recommendations
  • Can recommend ICC referrals or sanctions
  • Reports often form evidentiary basis for prosecutions

Examples:

  • Commission of Inquiry on Syria (2011-present): Documented war crimes, crimes against humanity; findings used in universal jurisdiction cases
  • Commission of Inquiry on North Korea (2013-2014): Found crimes against humanity
  • Independent International Fact-Finding Mission on Myanmar (2018-2022): Found genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes

Special Sessions:

  • Emergency meetings on urgent situations
  • Can establish investigations or commissions
  • Issue resolutions condemning violations

4. UN Security Council:

Powers under Chapter VII:

  • Determine existence of threat to peace, breach of peace, or act of aggression
  • Make recommendations or decide on measures
  • Authorize use of force
  • Impose sanctions (arms embargoes, asset freezes, travel bans)
  • Refer situations to ICC (binding on all UN members, even non-ICC parties)

ICC Referrals:

  • Sudan/Darfur (2005): Led to indictment of President al-Bashir for genocide
  • Libya (2011): Led to arrest warrants for Gaddafi and officials

Sanctions regimes:

  • Targeted sanctions on individuals and entities
  • Asset freezes and travel bans for officials responsible for violations
  • Can be imposed even on non-ICC party nationals

Ad hoc tribunals:

  • ICTY (former Yugoslavia, 1993-2017): 161 indictments, including heads of state and military commanders
  • ICTR (Rwanda, 1994-2015): 93 indictments, convicted prime minister and military leaders
  • Special Court for Sierra Leone (2002-2013): Convicted Charles Taylor (Liberian president) for war crimes

Limitation: Veto power of permanent members can block action

D. Regional Human Rights Courts

1. European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR):

Jurisdiction: 46 Council of Europe member states

Key rulings on armed conflict and security operations:

  • Al-Skeini v. UK (2011): UK responsible for deaths during Iraq occupation
  • Al-Jedda v. UK (2011): Indefinite detention in Iraq violated Article 5
  • Hassan v. UK (2014): Detention in Iraq subject to Article 5, interpreted through IHL
  • Georgia v. Russia (II) (2021): Russia violated multiple Convention rights during 2008 war

Binding judgments:

  • Committee of Ministers supervises execution
  • Failure to comply can lead to suspension from Council of Europe
  • States must pay just satisfaction (damages) and take general measures

2. Inter-American Court of Human Rights (IACtHR):

Jurisdiction: 25 OAS member states (requires separate acceptance of Court jurisdiction)

Key jurisprudence:

  • Velásquez Rodríguez v. Honduras (1988): Established state responsibility for enforced disappearances
  • Barrios Altos v. Peru (2001): Amnesty laws for serious human rights violations are invalid
  • Almonacid-Arellano v. Chile (2006): Crimes against humanity not subject to statute of limitations
  • Gelman v. Uruguay (2011): State duty to investigate, prosecute, punish crimes against humanity

Reparations:

  • Court orders comprehensive reparations including compensation, rehabilitation, satisfaction, guarantees of non-repetition
  • Often requires legislative reforms, prosecution of perpetrators, public apologies
  • Monitored by Court for compliance

3. African Court on Human and Peoples' Rights:

Jurisdiction: 34 African Union member states (requires ratification of Protocol)

Note: 2014 Malabo Protocol would add criminal jurisdiction over international crimes, but not yet in force

African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights:

  • Quasi-judicial body
  • Issues recommendations
  • Can refer cases to African Court

E. Hybrid and Internationalized Courts

Special Tribunal for Lebanon (2009-2022):

  • Prosecution of terrorism (Hariri assassination)
  • Applied Lebanese criminal law with international standards

Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (2006-present):

  • Prosecuting Khmer Rouge leaders for genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes
  • Mix of Cambodian and international judges

Kosovo Specialist Chambers (2015-present):

  • Prosecuting war crimes and crimes against humanity from Kosovo conflict
  • Located in The Hague, applies Kosovo law

Principle: Where domestic systems unable or unwilling, international or hybrid tribunals fill impunity gap.

F. Civil Remedies and Accountability

1. Alien Tort Statute (ATS) - United States (28 U.S.C. § 1350):

  • Allows non-U.S. citizens to file civil suits in U.S. courts for violations of law of nations
  • Successfully used for torture, extrajudicial killing, crimes against humanity claims
  • Filártiga v. Peña-Irala (1980): Paraguayan torture victim's family sued torturer in U.S. court
  • Limitations imposed by Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum (2013): Presumption against extraterritoriality

2. Torture Victim Protection Act (TVPA) - United States:

  • Provides civil remedy for torture and extrajudicial killing committed under color of foreign law
  • Both U.S. citizens and non-citizens can sue
  • Requires exhaustion of adequate and available remedies in foreign jurisdiction

3. Universal civil jurisdiction:

  • Some states allow civil claims for international crimes
  • Can result in compensation orders and asset seizures
  • Switzerland, Belgium, Canada have provisions

4. Truth commissions:

  • Document violations, establish historical record
  • Not prosecutorial but can recommend prosecutions
  • Can provide basis for reparations programs
  • Examples: South Africa TRC, Peru Truth Commission, Argentina CONADEP

G. Sanctions and Diplomatic Measures

1. Magnitsky Acts (Global Magnitsky sanctions):

  • U.S., Canada, UK, EU, Australia have versions
  • Target individuals responsible for serious human rights violations
  • Asset freezes, visa bans, financial restrictions
  • Don't require armed conflict or formal international crime finding

2. ICC-based sanctions:

  • EU and other states impose sanctions on individuals indicted by ICC
  • Travel bans and asset freezes

3. Diplomatic isolation:

  • Suspension from international organizations
  • Withdrawal of ambassadors
  • Exclusion from summits and forums

4. Arms embargoes:

  • UN Security Council can impose
  • Regional organizations (EU, AU) can impose
  • Individual states can impose unilaterally

Part VII: Hierarchy of Norms and Lex Specialis

A. Jus Cogens (Peremptory Norms)

Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties, Article 53: "A peremptory norm of general international law is a norm accepted and recognized by the international community of States as a whole as a norm from which no derogation is permitted and which can be modified only by a subsequent norm of general international law having the same character."

Effect: Treaties conflicting with jus cogens norms are void. States cannot derogate from these norms by treaty, custom, or domestic law.

Recognized jus cogens norms:

  1. Prohibition of genocide (Genocide Convention, ICJ jurisprudence)
  2. Prohibition of torture and cruel, inhuman, degrading treatment (CAT, widespread state practice)
  3. Prohibition of slavery and slave trade (universal recognition)
  4. Prohibition of crimes against humanity (Nuremberg, widespread acceptance)
  5. Prohibition of aggression (UN Charter Article 2(4), ICJ rulings)
  6. Prohibition of racial discrimination and apartheid (CERD, widespread condemnation)
  7. Right to self-determination (UN Charter, decolonization practice)
  8. Core protections of IHL (Common Article 3, ICJ Nicaragua case)
  9. Prohibition of refoulement to torture (CAT Committee, UNHCR)

ICJ, Questions Relating to the Obligation to Prosecute or Extradite (Belgium v. Senegal) (2012): "The prohibition of torture is part of customary international law and it has become a peremptory norm (jus cogens)... [the] prohibition of torture has assumed the status of a rule of customary international law... it is a norm which is accepted and recognized by the international community of States as a whole, and from which no derogation is permitted, and which can be modified only by a subsequent norm of general international law having the same character."

Consequence:

  • No treaty, agreement, or domestic law can authorize violation of jus cogens norms
  • No statute of limitations for violations
  • Universal jurisdiction applies
  • No immunity for violations
  • Erga omnes obligations (owed to international community as a whole)

B. Lex Specialis (Specialized Law)

Principle: When general and specific rules both apply, the specific rule governs the particular issue.

Application to IHL and IHRL:

  • During armed conflict, both IHL and IHRL apply
  • IHL as lex specialis governs conduct of hostilities (who may be targeted, what weapons may be used, etc.)
  • IHRL continues to apply to detention, treatment, procedural rights
  • Where conflict between IHL and IHRL, IHL prevails only for the specific issue it addresses

ICJ, Nuclear Weapons Advisory Opinion (1996): "In principle, the right not arbitrarily to be deprived of one's life applies also in hostilities. The test of what is an arbitrary deprivation of life, however, then falls to be determined by the applicable lex specialis, namely, the law applicable in armed conflict which is designed to regulate the conduct of hostilities."

Critical limitation: Lex specialis does not mean human rights law ceases to apply. It means:

  • IHL provides the specific standard for legality of targeting and use of force in combat
  • IHRL continues to apply to all other rights and to interpret rights in light of circumstances
  • Non-derogable rights under IHRL apply absolutely

Example applications:

  • Whether killing in combat is lawful = IHL distinction and proportionality principles
  • Whether detention without trial is permitted = IHL allows limited detention; IHRL requires procedural safeguards and review
  • Whether torture is prohibited = Absolute prohibition under both IHL and IHRL; no conflict
  • Whether deportations are permitted = IHL prohibits forcible transfer; IHRL prohibits arbitrary expulsion; both apply

C. Erga Omnes Obligations

Definition: Obligations owed to the international community as a whole, not just individual states.

ICJ, Barcelona Traction (1970): "An essential distinction should be drawn between the obligations of a State towards the international community as a whole, and those arising vis-à-vis another State... By their very nature [obligations erga omnes] are the concern of all States. In view of the importance of the rights involved, all States can be held to have a legal interest in their protection."

Recognized erga omnes obligations:

  • Outlawing acts of aggression and genocide
  • Protection from slavery and racial discrimination
  • Basic rights of the human person (including protection from torture)

Consequence:

  • All states have standing to invoke responsibility for violations
  • Universal concern justifies international action
  • Not merely bilateral obligations between states
  • Can be enforced through universal jurisdiction, international courts, diplomatic measures

Part VIII: Practical Application Framework

A. Evaluating Legality of Executive Actions During "War Powers" Invocation

Step 1: Determine applicable legal framework

Questions to ask:

  • Is there an armed conflict? (IHL applies)
  • What is the classification? (IAC vs. NIAC determines which IHL rules apply)
  • Is the state party to relevant treaties? (But customary IHL applies regardless)
  • Where does the conduct occur? (Determines extraterritorial human rights obligations)
  • Who is affected? (Civilians, combatants, detainees, refugees)

Step 2: Identify relevant prohibitions

Absolute prohibitions (jus cogens):

  • Torture (no exceptions under any circumstances)
  • Genocide
  • Crimes against humanity
  • Slavery
  • Refoulement to torture
  • Core IHL protections (Common Article 3)

IHL prohibitions (if armed conflict exists):

  • Attacks on civilians or civilian objects
  • Indiscriminate attacks
  • Disproportionate attacks
  • Perfidy
  • Prohibited weapons
  • Willful killing, torture, inhuman treatment of protected persons
  • Unlawful deportation or transfer
  • Hostage-taking

IHRL prohibitions:

  • Arbitrary detention
  • Discrimination based on race, religion, national origin, political opinion
  • Cruel, inhuman, degrading treatment
  • Denial of fair trial
  • Arbitrary deprivation of life
  • Violations of non-derogable rights

Step 3: Assess whether action violates prohibitions

For attacks/use of force:

  • Were civilians directly targeted? (Violation)
  • Was there failure to distinguish between civilians and combatants? (Violation)
  • Were expected civilian casualties excessive relative to military advantage? (Violation)
  • Were precautions taken to minimize civilian harm? (Required)

For detention:

  • Was there individual determination of necessity? (Required)
  • Is there regular judicial review? (Required by IHRL)
  • Are conditions humane? (Required by both IHL and IHRL)
  • Is there access to counsel? (Required by IHRL)
  • Is there torture or CIDT? (Absolutely prohibited)

For deportation/transfer:

  • Is it based on individual determination or collective? (Collective = violation)
  • Is it to a place of danger? (Refoulement violation)
  • Is there adequate process and appeal? (Required)
  • Is it part of widespread or systematic attack? (May constitute crimes against humanity)

For discrimination:

  • Is action based on prohibited grounds (race, religion, national origin)? (Presumptively unlawful)
  • Is there legitimate and proportionate justification? (Very high bar)
  • Does it target entire groups? (Collective punishment = violation)

Step 4: Determine individual criminal liability

Direct perpetration:

  • Did the official order, commit, or authorize the violation?
  • Did they have requisite mens rea (intent/knowledge)?

Command responsibility:

  • Did they know or should have known of violations?
  • Did they have effective control over perpetrators?
  • Did they fail to prevent or punish violations?

Aiding and abetting:

  • Did they provide practical assistance with knowledge?
  • Did their acts substantially contribute to the violation?

Step 5: Identify accountability mechanisms

Domestic:

  • Criminal prosecution under domestic implementation statutes
  • Congressional oversight and impeachment (for U.S.)
  • Civil litigation (ATS, TVPA, etc.)
  • Administrative remedies and inspector general investigations

International:

  • ICC (if territorial or personal jurisdiction, or UNSC referral)
  • Universal jurisdiction in foreign courts
  • UN Human Rights Council inquiries and special rapporteurs
  • Treaty body complaints
  • ICJ (if state-to-state dispute)

Diplomatic/Political:

  • Magnitsky sanctions
  • Arms embargoes
  • Diplomatic isolation
  • Suspension from international organizations

B. Red Flags for International Crimes

Indicators of potential war crimes:

  • High civilian casualties with no apparent military objective
  • Attacks on hospitals, schools, cultural sites, clearly marked civilian infrastructure
  • Use of prohibited weapons (chemical, biological)
  • Systematic torture or abuse of detainees
  • Forced displacement of civilians
  • Summary executions
  • Deliberate starvation tactics
  • Blocking humanitarian aid

Indicators of potential crimes against humanity:

  • Large-scale deportations or forcible transfers (thousands of persons)
  • Systematic detention of specific ethnic, national, or religious groups
  • Organized patterns of violence against civilian population
  • State or organizational policy underlying attacks
  • Widespread killings, torture, or disappearances
  • Persecution of identifiable groups

Indicators of genocide:

  • Killings or serious harm to members of specific protected group
  • Measures to prevent births within the group
  • Forcible transfer of children
  • Deliberate infliction of conditions to destroy group
  • Explicit intent to destroy group (as shown by statements, patterns, systematic nature)
  • Protected groups: national, ethnic, racial, religious

C. Burden of Proof and Evidence Standards

For criminal prosecution:

  • ICC and international tribunals: Beyond reasonable doubt
  • Universal jurisdiction: Varies by state, generally beyond reasonable doubt
  • Command responsibility: Prosecutor must prove knowledge (actual or constructive) and failure to act

For human rights bodies:

  • Treaty bodies: Substantial grounds / reasonable basis
  • Special Rapporteurs: Credible and reliable information
  • Commissions of Inquiry: Reasonable grounds to believe

For civil litigation:

  • ATS/TVPA: Preponderance of evidence
  • Varies by jurisdiction

Types of evidence:

  • Witness testimony (victims, eyewitnesses, insiders)
  • Documentary evidence (orders, policies, internal communications)
  • Physical evidence (forensics, sites, weapons)
  • Expert analysis (military, medical, statistical)
  • Open source intelligence (satellite imagery, videos, social media)
  • Pattern evidence (showing systematic nature or policy)

Part IX: Limitations and Challenges

A. Political Obstacles

1. Permanent Five veto power at UNSC:

  • Can block ICC referrals
  • Can block sanctions
  • Can block international action
  • Shields allies from consequences

2. Non-cooperation with international courts:

  • States may refuse to arrest indicted persons
  • May not execute arrest warrants
  • May provide safe haven
  • Example: Sudan's al-Bashir traveled to ICC member states without arrest

3. Diplomatic pressure:

  • States may face retaliation for prosecuting powerful state officials
  • Economic consequences
  • Security relationship impacts
  • Political isolation

4. Resource constraints:

  • Universal jurisdiction prosecutions are expensive
  • Require specialized expertise
  • Evidence gathering across borders is difficult
  • Many states lack capacity

B. Legal Limitations

1. Complementarity principle:

  • ICC will not prosecute if domestic courts are genuinely investigating/prosecuting
  • States can shield by conducting credible domestic proceedings
  • But sham proceedings will not prevent ICC jurisdiction

2. Temporal jurisdiction:

  • ICC only has jurisdiction over crimes after July 1, 2002 (Rome Statute entry into force)
  • Ad hoc tribunals have specific temporal mandates
  • Universal jurisdiction not limited temporally

3. Retroactivity concerns:

  • Criminal law generally prohibits retroactive application
  • But customary international law crimes (Geneva grave breaches, crimes against humanity from Nuremberg onward) are not retroactive applications

4. Evidence and proof challenges:

  • Proving command responsibility requires showing knowledge and control
  • Proving crimes against humanity requires showing widespread/systematic nature and policy
  • Cross-border evidence gathering is complex
  • Witness protection concerns

C. Enforcement Gaps

1. Powerful states rarely face accountability:

  • No state has successfully prosecuted sitting leader of major power
  • ICC has primarily prosecuted African leaders (accused of bias)
  • Universal jurisdiction rarely applied to major powers

2. Impunity through non-ratification:

  • Non-ICC parties can avoid ICC jurisdiction (unless UNSC referral or crime on party territory)
  • But cannot avoid universal jurisdiction for Geneva grave breaches
  • Cannot avoid customary international law obligations

3. Time delays:

  • International justice is slow (ICTY cases took years)
  • ICC investigations and trials are lengthy
  • Witnesses die, memories fade, evidence deteriorates

4. Limited reach:

  • International courts cannot compel attendance
  • Rely on state cooperation for arrests
  • Have no independent enforcement mechanism
  • Cannot freeze assets or impose sanctions directly

Part X: Conclusion and Summary Principles

Core Principles Restated:

  1. War powers invoke additional protections, not legal vacuums.

    • Declaration of war or invocation of national security triggers IHL
    • IHL and IHRL apply concurrently
    • Non-derogable rights cannot be suspended under any circumstances
  2. International obligations supersede domestic law.

    • Treaty obligations are binding regardless of conflicting domestic law
    • Customary international law is binding on all states
    • Constitutional provisions cannot justify treaty violations
  3. No immunity for international crimes.

    • Heads of state, government officials, military commanders are individually liable
    • Official capacity is not a defense
    • Superior orders provide no defense for manifestly illegal orders
  4. Jus cogens norms are absolute.

    • Torture, genocide, crimes against humanity, slavery cannot be justified
    • No treaty, law, or agreement can permit violations
    • Erga omnes obligations are owed to international community as a whole
  5. Multiple enforcement mechanisms exist.

    • International Criminal Court
    • Universal jurisdiction in domestic courts
    • UN human rights mechanisms
    • Regional human rights courts
    • Civil litigation
    • Diplomatic and economic sanctions
  6. Command responsibility attaches to leaders.

    • Knowing or should have known standard for military commanders
    • Duty to prevent, repress, or report violations
    • Failure to act constitutes criminal liability
  7. Widespread or systematic attacks on civilians constitute crimes against humanity.

    • Can occur during peacetime
    • Requires policy (explicit or implicit)
    • Individual acts part of larger attack
    • No armed conflict required
  8. Collective punishment is prohibited.

    • Group-based detention, deportation, or sanctions violate IHL and IHRL
    • Individual determination of necessity required
    • Discrimination based on nationality, ethnicity, religion is presumptively unlawful
  9. Non-refoulement is absolute.

    • Cannot return persons to risk of torture
    • No national security exception
    • Applies at borders and in extraterritorial operations
  10. International law reflects universal values, not power politics.

    • Developed through Nuremberg, Geneva, UN system
    • Based on human dignity and accountability
    • Applies equally to all states and individuals
    • Not subject to unilateral reinterpretation

Appendix: Key Treaty Sources

International Humanitarian Law:

  • Geneva Convention I: Wounded and Sick in Armed Forces in the Field (1949)
  • Geneva Convention II: Wounded, Sick and Shipwrecked at Sea (1949)
  • Geneva Convention III: Treatment of Prisoners of War (1949)
  • Geneva Convention IV: Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War (1949)
  • Additional Protocol I: International Armed Conflicts (1977)
  • Additional Protocol II: Non-International Armed Conflicts (1977)
  • Hague Conventions (1899, 1907)

International Human Rights Law:

  • Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948)
  • International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (1966)
  • International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (1966)
  • Convention Against Torture (1984)
  • International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (1965)
  • Convention on the Rights of the Child (1989)
  • Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (1948)
  • International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance (2006)

International Criminal Law:

  • Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (1998)
  • Convention on the Non-Applicability of Statutory Limitations to War Crimes and Crimes Against Humanity (1968)

Refugee and Migration Law:

  • Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees (1951)
  • Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees (1967)

Regional Human Rights:

  • European Convention on Human Rights (1950)
  • American Convention on Human Rights (1969)
  • African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights (1981)

This framework represents the consensus interpretation of international law by international courts, tribunals, and the majority of democratic states. It rejects doctrines of exceptionalism and emphasizes universal application of fundamental protections for human dignity.

Thursday, October 2, 2025

Golden Quisling of the Week

 

Golden Quisling of the Week — CBS News Sells Its Soul

If you thought MSNBC’s ritual groveling was bad, buckle up. This week’s Golden Quisling award goes to CBS News for a move so brazen it makes all the other corporate surrenders look quaint: they’ve hired a Trump‑aligned “loyalist” to “review” their coverage.

That’s not a typo. In the middle of the most aggressive government pressure campaign on the press in living memory, CBS decided to hand the keys to its editorial shop to a man whose résumé reads like a MAGA wish‑list. This is not some obscure producer or a token conservative analyst. This is someone whose job is literally to police CBS coverage for insufficient friendliness to the regime.

No one forced CBS to do this. The White House didn’t sign an executive order. The FCC didn’t issue a binding decree. CBS chose to capitulate — pre‑emptively — to a political strongman who has been openly threatening the press for years.

Why This Is Worse Than MSNBC

MSNBC at least tried to pretend its firing of Dowd was about “standards.” CBS is openly embedding a Trump operative into its newsroom under the fig leaf of “review.” It’s like hiring Joe McCarthy to run Standards & Practices during the Red Scare and calling it “balance.”

This isn’t about balance. It’s about sabotage from within. It signals to every CBS journalist, producer, and editor that their work will be scrutinized not for accuracy, but for ideological acceptability to Trumpworld. It is the institutionalization of self‑censorship.

The Golden Quisling Verdict

CBS News has turned itself into a test case for what happens when a legacy outlet voluntarily installs a regime minder in its own shop. It’s cowardice. It’s collaboration. It’s quisling behavior, pure and simple.

Congratulations, CBS News. You’ve managed in one hire to out‑coward MSNBC’s surrender and set a new bar for corporate treachery. Your Golden Quisling award is well‑earned.

Thursday, September 25, 2025

A Necessary Abomiantion - My Conversations with Benji - Science and Pseudoscience

 ""You are the only founding father who was a scientist; what do you think about science and all the scientific advances in the 20th century?"

A warm, amber light flickers to life in the room, pixels assembling themselves into the familiar portly figure in simple brown coat and breeches. The holographic Franklin materializes with visible digital artifacts - scanning lines running across his waistcoat, brief pixelation around his spectacles, and an electronic hum that underscores his presence. He settles into his wooden chair with a slight delay, as if the projection system is processing the weight of centuries.

Benji: adjusting his spectacles with a noticeable digital shimmer Ah, my friend! His voice carries that familiar warmth, though with occasional electronic distortion You flatter me with that distinction, though I confess Jefferson dabbled in natural philosophy quite extensively, and Washington was no stranger to practical engineering.

He leans forward with evident excitement, his digital form gaining more definition.

Benji: But the 20th century... His pixels reorganize as he gestures enthusiastically Sweet lightning! What your species accomplished makes my little experiments with kites and keys look like parlor tricks! You split the atom, mapped the stars, decoded life itself, and built thinking machines that can summon digital ghosts like myself!

The projection stands and begins pacing, his movements creating faint light traces.

Benji: What astounds me most is how my scientific method - hypothesis, experimentation, peer review - scaled to achievements I never could have imagined. His voice takes on an electronic tone of wonder Penicillin ending plagues that killed millions! Vaccines eradicating diseases that terrorized my generation! The very transistors that give me digital life!

He pauses, his holographic form flickering slightly with concern.

Benji: Yet I confess... His voice drops to a more serious register ...I'm troubled by how often your miraculous discoveries were immediately weaponized. Nuclear physics became atomic bombs. Chemistry created poison gas. Even your digital networks - which should democratize knowledge - seem to have democratized ignorance just as effectively.

The hologram turns to face you directly, his electronic eyes reflecting both admiration and worry.

Benji: In my day, we believed knowledge would naturally lead to wisdom, that understanding nature would make us more virtuous. Your century proved that brilliance and brutality can coexist quite comfortably. That's... static interrupts briefly...that's perhaps the most sobering scientific discovery of all.

His form stabilizes as he delivers his assessment.

Benji: Still, what gives me hope is that the scientific method itself remains incorruptible, even when scientists don't. Truth-seeking through evidence and experimentation - that's humanity's greatest invention, worth preserving even when everything else falls apart.

"Even from the beginning, the government considered science important since people forget that both copyright and patents were covered in the founding document. What do you think the role of science has played in making America what it is today?"

The holographic Franklin's form suddenly blazes with increased intensity, his digital projection seeming to draw maximum power as his eyes light up with recognition. He removes his spectacles and polishes them with animated precision, causing cascading visual artifacts that seem to reflect his intellectual excitement.

Benji: his voice rings with electronic enthusiasm By thunder, you've touched upon one of our most prescient decisions! He replaces his spectacles, the gesture creating brief digital sparkles Article I, Section 8, Clause 8 - "To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries."

He stands and begins pacing with mechanical excitement, each step leaving trails of luminous energy.

Benji: We understood something fundamental that even kings missed: His pixels reorganize with each gesture A republic's strength comes not from its armies or its gold, but from the ingenuity of its citizens. Give people ownership of their innovations, and they'll innovate beyond imagination!

The projection pauses, his form crackling with digital intensity as he processes the implications.

Benji: Look what it unleashed! His voice carries urgent resonance Whitney's cotton gin - though that had... complicated consequences. Fulton's steamboat. Edison's electrical systems that made my lightning experiments look quaint. Bell's telephone. The Wright brothers defying gravity itself!

He leans forward with fierce intellectual focus, his holographic presence seeming to expand.

Benji: But here's what truly made America exceptional: we didn't just reward individual genius - we created systems for collective discovery. His electronic eyes flash with understanding Land-grant universities! Government-funded research! The National Science Foundation! We made knowledge a public good while still rewarding private innovation.

The hologram begins gesturing with increasing animation, leaving cascading patterns of light.

Benji: Your Manhattan Project, your space program, your internet - all born from this marriage of public investment and private ingenuity. His form stabilizes with crystalline clarity We built the only civilization in history that systematically turned curiosity into prosperity.

His voice drops to a contemplative electronic whisper.

Benji: Yet I fear we may be abandoning this birthright. Static builds behind his words When scientific expertise becomes partisan opinion, when evidence becomes "fake news," when patents become weapons for monopoly rather than rewards for innovation... his form flickers ominously

He fixes you with an intense digital gaze.

Benji: The America that put men on the moon was built on the principle that reality is knowable through systematic inquiry. His voice carries digital finality Abandon that principle, and you abandon the very foundation of American exceptionalism. Science didn't just help build America - it IS America, or at least the best version of it.

"Well you said it, I didn't. What do you think about the current president adding a Eugencist to the Cabinet?"

The holographic Franklin's form suddenly freezes completely, his digital projection caught in a processing loop as if the system is struggling to compute the implications. When he finally moves, it's with the slow, deliberate motions of someone whose worldview is being fundamentally challenged.

Benji: his voice emerges heavily distorted, filtered through layers of electronic static A... eugenicist? The word seems to cause cascading visual artifacts across his form In a cabinet dedicated to the pursuit of knowledge and human betterment?

He removes his spectacles with trembling digital hands, staring at them as pixels fragment and reassemble.

Benji: I... prolonged electronic stutter ...I helped design a system based on the radical notion that all men are created equal, that government should promote the general welfare, that science should serve humanity's flourishing. His form flickers ominously The systematic classification of human beings as superior or inferior based on arbitrary characteristics is the antithesis of everything we built.

The projection stands unsteadily, beginning to pace with mechanical agitation that sends sharp light patterns across the room.

Benji: In my scientific work, I learned that nature's diversity is its strength. His digital form seems to darken The idea that some humans are genetically destined for subjugation while others are born to rule... that's not science. That's pseudoscience weaponized to justify what power wants to do anyway.

He pauses, his pixels reorganizing into increasingly angular patterns.

Benji: But what terrifies me more than the appointment itself is what it signals about the corruption of scientific authority. His voice drops to an electronic whisper When governments elevate charlatans to positions of scientific leadership, they're not just making bad policy - they're poisoning the very concept of evidence-based reasoning.

The hologram leans forward, his form crackling with digital intensity.

Benji: You asked what science meant to America's founding. His electronic eyes flash with disturbing clarity It meant the systematic rejection of inherited hierarchy in favor of demonstrable truth. A eugenicist in the cabinet represents the exact opposite - the use of false science to resurrect the very aristocracies of blood we fought to overthrow.

His voice becomes increasingly distorted but urgent.

Benji: This isn't just political failure. Static punctuates each word It's the systematic perversion of the scientific method to serve power rather than truth. When that happens, you don't just lose good policy - you lose the very capacity to distinguish knowledge from propaganda.

He fixes you with a steady digital gaze that seems to pierce through the artifice of his projection.

Benji: I fear we're witnessing not just the decline of American democracy, but the deliberate destruction of the intellectual foundations that made American democracy possible.

"Well I realize you are only a reflection of your original, but you're a pretty accurate one. With no prompting from me one way or another what do you think of the scientific validiy of tylenol causing autism or MRNA vaccines not being solid science?"

The holographic Franklin's form stabilizes with crystalline clarity, his digital projection seeming to allocate maximum processing power to this crucial question about scientific methodology. His electronic hum transforms into something resembling focused calculation - the sound of circuits engaging with empirical analysis.

Benji: his voice emerges with mechanical precision, each word weighted with scientific rigor Now you're asking me to do what I spent my life doing - separating signal from noise, hypothesis from wishful thinking, correlation from causation.

He stands and begins pacing with methodical precision, his pixels organizing into sharp geometric patterns.

Benji: Acetaminophen and autism... His digital form flickers as he processes the data I've examined the epidemiological studies. The correlation exists in some datasets, yes. But correlation without mechanism is like lightning without understanding - impressive, but not explanatory. His electronic eyes narrow with analytical focus The proposed biochemical pathways remain speculative, the confounding variables are numerous, and the effect sizes are inconsistent across populations.

The projection pauses, his outline showing wireframe edges as he considers the complexity.

Benji: More troubling: the strongest advocates for this connection often show little interest in the rigorous study required to establish causation. His voice carries electronic skepticism That's not science - that's conclusion-seeking masquerading as inquiry.

He turns to address the mRNA question, his digital form gaining intensity.

Benji: As for messenger RNA vaccines... His pixels reorganize with each technical point The underlying science is actually quite elegant - using the cell's own protein-making machinery to generate immune responses. The clinical trials followed standard protocols, the safety profiles are well-documented, the efficacy data is robust. His form crackles with analytical energy

The hologram leans forward with fierce intellectual honesty.

Benji: What I find scientifically disturbing isn't the technology itself, but the systematic campaign to discredit it using methods that would invalidate virtually all modern medicine. His electronic voice carries urgency When people demand impossibly perfect safety profiles while ignoring massive efficacy benefits, they're not practicing science - they're practicing motivated reasoning.

His voice drops to a contemplative electronic whisper.

Benji: The tragedy is that legitimate questions about medical interventions - dosing protocols, long-term effects, individual risk assessment - get lost in ideological warfare between those who treat pharmaceutical companies as infallible and those who treat them as inherently evil. Static builds behind his words

He fixes you with an intense digital gaze.

Benji: Real science requires intellectual courage: the willingness to follow evidence even when it contradicts our preferences. His form begins to pulse with rhythmic energy Both the acetaminophen-autism hypothesis and mRNA vaccine skepticism show what happens when conclusion precedes investigation rather than following it.

The projection's voice carries final authority.

Benji: I trust the scientific method, not individual scientists. And the method says: extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence, while established interventions require extraordinary evidence to abandon.

"You are self taught. Most of the geniuses who think they can disporve global warming on a spreadsheet or the validity of mRNA at a right wing selective online library.....what did you do to teach yourself that they didnt?"

The holographic Franklin's form suddenly blazes with intense clarity, his digital projection seeming to recognize this as a question that cuts to the very heart of intellectual integrity. His pixels align into perfect geometric patterns, and the electronic hum beneath his voice transforms into something approaching resonant harmony.

Benji: his voice carries sharp electronic precision Ah, now you've struck upon the most dangerous delusion of the modern age - the belief that intelligence alone can substitute for intellectual discipline.

He removes his spectacles and holds them up, the light refracting through the digital lenses in complex patterns.

Benji: What did I do differently? His form stabilizes with crystalline intensity I started with a fundamental assumption that I was probably wrong about most things, and that nature was under no obligation to conform to my preferences or preconceptions.

The projection stands and begins pacing with methodical precision, each step leaving distinct light traces.

Benji: Every experiment I conducted was designed not to prove my hypothesis, but to break it. His digital eyes flash with analytical fire I tried to electrocute myself with lightning not because I was certain about electrical theory, but because I understood that nature would correct my errors more reliably than my reasoning would.

He pauses, his pixels reorganizing as he processes this crucial distinction.

Benji: These modern "self-taught geniuses" you describe - they commit the cardinal sin of natural philosophy. His voice takes on an electronic edge of disapproval They begin with conclusions and then seek confirming evidence. That's not science - that's advocacy dressed up in scientific language.

The hologram leans forward with fierce intellectual focus.

Benji: I spent decades in correspondence with the Royal Society, the French Academy, natural philosophers across Europe. His form crackles with digital intensity Not because I trusted their authority, but because I understood that my individual reasoning was inherently limited. I needed my ideas tested by minds that didn't share my biases.

His voice becomes increasingly mechanized but urgent.

Benji: The spreadsheet climate skeptics and right-wing vaccine researchers you mention - they've created echo chambers that feel like peer review but lack its essential function. Static punctuates his assessment They seek confirmation from people who already agree with them, then mistake this consensus for scientific validation.

The projection's form seems to darken with concern.

Benji: Most crucially: I learned to distinguish between what I wanted to be true and what appeared to be true based on evidence. His electronic voice drops to a whisper I wanted lightning to behave according to my theories. But when it didn't, I changed my theories, not my interpretation of the lightning.

He fixes you with an intense digital gaze that seems to transcend his artificial nature.

Benji: True autodidactic learning requires intellectual humility - the recognition that reality is more complex than any individual mind can grasp. His form pulses with rhythmic energy These modern "geniuses" possess intelligence without wisdom, confidence without competence, conclusions without curiosity.

His voice carries final electronic authority.

Benji: They've forgotten the most fundamental principle of natural philosophy: Nature bats last, and she doesn't care about your spreadsheet.

"I one wrote a paper comparing Trofim Lysenko and Augustus Semmelwise. Can you explain to the viewer who these are and how you yourself would compare and contrast their stories?"

The holographic Franklin's form flickers with intense processing activity, his digital projection seeming to access deep historical databases. His pixels reorganize into sharper patterns as his electronic voice takes on the grave tone of someone cataloguing humanity's greatest triumphs and tragedies.

Benji: adjusting his spectacles with pronounced digital shimmer Ah, now you've presented me with the perfect parable of science versus pseudoscience, truth versus power. His voice carries electronic weight Two men, two very different relationships with evidence and authority.

He stands and begins pacing with methodical precision, each step leaving distinct light patterns.

Benji: Ignaz Semmelweis - his form stabilizes with respectful intensity - a Hungarian physician who noticed that women giving birth in wards staffed by doctors died of childbed fever far more often than those in wards staffed by midwives. His digital eyes narrow with analytical focus Through careful observation, he hypothesized that doctors, who performed autopsies, were carrying "cadaverous particles" on their hands.

The projection pauses, his pixels briefly showing wireframe edges as he processes the tragedy.

Benji: When he instituted mandatory handwashing with chlorinated lime solutions, mortality rates plummeted from 18% to less than 2%. His voice carries electronic admiration Pure empirical science - observation, hypothesis, testing, verification. The method I tried to practice in my own humble experiments.

His form flickers ominously as he shifts to the contrast.

Benji: Trofim Lysenko... his digital voice drops to a disgusted whisper A Soviet agronomist who rejected Mendel's genetics in favor of Lamarckian theories that suited Communist ideology. His pixels reorganize into angular, harsh patterns He claimed that wheat could be transformed through environmental manipulation, that acquired characteristics could be inherited, that bourgeois "gene theory" was capitalist propaganda.

The hologram begins pacing with increasing agitation.

Benji: The comparison reveals everything about the nature of truth and power. His voice becomes increasingly mechanized but urgent Semmelweis was ridiculed by the medical establishment, dismissed from his position, eventually driven to madness and death - because he challenged their authority with inconvenient facts.

His digital form seems to darken with historical weight.

Benji: Lysenko, meanwhile, was elevated by Stalin, given vast resources, allowed to destroy his critics and dominate Soviet biology for decades - because he told power exactly what it wanted to hear. Static punctuates his words His theories failed catastrophically, contributing to famines that killed millions, but he prospered because he served ideology rather than truth.

The projection leans forward with fierce intensity.

Benji: Here's what terrifies me about your modern moment: His electronic eyes flash with disturbing clarity Semmelweis eventually became vindicated when germ theory developed, but only decades after his death. Truth won, but slowly, and at enormous human cost.

His voice drops to a contemplative electronic whisper.

Benji: Lysenko was exposed as a fraud, but only after Stalin died and political winds changed. His fall came not because science triumphed, but because different politicians found different lies more useful. His form pulses with warning energy

He fixes you with an intense digital gaze.

Benji: The lesson isn't just that truth eventually wins - it's that the victory of truth over falsehood isn't automatic or inevitable. His voice carries digital finality It requires institutions committed to evidence over authority, scientists willing to suffer for accuracy rather than prosper through accommodation, and societies mature enough to distinguish expertise from propaganda.

His form stabilizes with crystalline clarity.

Benji: In times when power systematically rewards its Lysenkos while punishing its Semmelweises, civilization itself hangs in the balance.

"I grew up in the 1980's where we saw the soviets constantly having to buy grain from America because their system failed. Can you paint the numbers for them between Lyensko and the fall of the soviet union?"

The holographic Franklin's form suddenly stabilizes with grim precision, his digital projection seeming to access vast databases of agricultural and economic data. His pixels align into stark, mathematical patterns as his electronic voice takes on the tone of someone calculating human catastrophe.

Benji: his voice emerges with mechanical gravity The numbers... He removes his spectacles and stares at them as cascading data streams briefly flicker across his lenses Sweet lightning, the numbers tell a story of scientific fraud measured in human lives and civilizational collapse.

He stands and begins pacing with methodical precision, each step punctuating the devastating statistics.

Benji: Lysenko dominated Soviet biology from 1928 to 1964 - thirty-six years of systematically destroying agricultural science. His digital form flickers as he processes the scope His rejection of genetics, his promotion of "vernalization" and other pseudoscientific techniques, his persecution of real scientists like Nikolai Vavilov, who died in prison...

The projection pauses, his outline showing wireframe edges as he calculates the consequences.

Benji: The human cost was staggering. His voice drops to an electronic whisper The 1932-33 Ukrainian famine - the Holodomor - killed between 3.5 and 5 million people. While Stalin's policies were the primary cause, Lysenko's agricultural theories prevented any scientific solution to crop failures.

His pixels reorganize into increasingly stark patterns.

Benji: But here's where your childhood observation becomes prophetic: His electronic eyes narrow with analytical focusBy the 1960s, the Soviet Union - supposedly the world's agricultural superpower according to Lysenko's theories - was importing 15-20 million tons of grain annually from capitalist countries whose "bourgeois genetics" actually worked.

The hologram begins gesturing with mechanical precision, leaving trails of data-like light.

Benji: The numbers escalated catastrophically. His voice takes on urgent electronic resonance By the 1970s and 80s, Soviet grain imports reached 40-46 million tons per year - roughly 20% of total consumption. They were buying from America, Canada, Australia, Argentina - everywhere except their own scientifically "advanced" collective farms.

His form crackles with digital intensity as he reaches the ultimate calculation.

Benji: The economic impact was civilization-ending. Static punctuates each statistic Hard currency hemorrhaging at $8-12 billion annually on grain purchases. Agricultural productivity stagnating while Western farms using Mendelian genetics achieved unprecedented yields. An empire that controlled one-sixth of the world's landmass couldn't feed itself.

He leans forward with fierce analytical focus.

Benji: By 1985, Gorbachev inherited an agricultural system so broken that food shortages were endemic, consumer goods were scarce, and the state was essentially bankrupt from subsidizing failure. His digital voice carries historical weightLysenko had been dead for 11 years, but his intellectual legacy had systematically poisoned Soviet agriculture for nearly four decades.

The projection's form seems to pulse with the rhythm of historical inevitability.

Benji: The ultimate irony? His electronic voice drops to a contemplative whisper While Soviet leaders proclaimed the superiority of socialist science, they were secretly dependent on capitalist agriculture guided by the very genetic theories Lysenko had declared ideologically impure.

He fixes you with an intense digital gaze.

Benji: Your 1980s childhood witnessed the final act of a tragedy that began in 1928 with the decision to subordinate scientific truth to political ideology. His voice carries digital finality The Soviet Union didn't fall because of military pressure or economic sanctions - it fell because reality eventually sent a bill that no amount of propaganda could pay.

His form stabilizes with crystalline clarity.

Benji: Forty-six million tons of imported grain per year - that's not just agricultural failure. That's the mathematical proof that lies, however politically convenient, cannot indefinitely substitute for truth.

"What minor things has Wormbrain McMengle and the other trump cabinet members talked about pseudoscience that could ruin america like this that the press isnt even discussing that you as a scientist can see?"

The holographic Franklin's form suddenly flickers with intense processing activity, his digital projection seeming to struggle with the weight of analyzing contemporary pseudoscientific policies. His pixels reorganize into increasingly agitated patterns as his electronic voice takes on a tone of scientific alarm.

Benji: adjusting his spectacles with pronounced digital distortion "Wormbrain McMengle" - his voice carries electronic disapproval mixed with grim recognition I assume you're referring to Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s appointment to Health and Human Services, along with his history of parasitic brain infections and promotion of medical conspiracy theories.The hologram begins pacing with increasingly agitated energy, his digital form crackling with electrical disturbance as he processes the devastating implications.

Benji: his voice emerges with mechanized alarm Sweet lightning preserve us... The man now confirmed as Secretary of Health and Human Services has called fluoride "an industrial waste associated with arthritis, bone fractures, bone cancer, IQ loss, neurodevelopmental disorders, and thyroid disease" and promised to "advise all U.S​. water systems to remove fluoride from public water."

His pixels reorganize into sharp, angular patterns as the implications cascade.

Benji: Here's what the press isn't discussing that could destroy American health infrastructure like Lysenko destroyed Soviet agriculture: His electronic voice drops to urgent calculation Kennedy wants to fire 600 employees at the National Institutes of Health and replace them with his own appointees - that's the systematic replacement of scientific expertise with ideological conformity.

The projection's form seems to darken as he catalogs the pseudoscientific policies.

Benji: The fluoride removal alone could trigger a dental health catastrophe. Fluoride strengthens teeth and is viewed as one of the biggest public health successes of the past century, yet Kennedy has said he would advise the incoming administration to remove fluoride from all public water. His digital form flickers with alarm We're talking about deliberately reversing 80 years of proven public health progress based on debunked conspiracy theories.

He begins gesturing with mechanical precision, leaving cascading trails of data-like light.

Benji: But here's the Lysenko parallel that should terrify you: Kennedy faced opposition from the left for his decades of espousing conspiracy theories about vaccines and from the right for his past support of abortion rights. For several weeks, it was uncertain whether he had enough senators backing him - yet he was confirmed 52-48. His voice becomes increasingly distorted That's not scientific appointment - that's ideological installation.

The hologram leans forward with fierce analytical intensity.

Benji: The systematic destruction will be methodical: Kennedy insisted changes to the CDC were "absolutely necessary," and denied pressuring Monarez to preapprove vaccine recommendations while Houry and three other top CDC officials resigned in the same week, with Houry writing in a message to CDC staffers: "For the good of the nation and the world, the science at CDC should never be censored or subject to political pauses or interpretations."

His form crackles with digital intensity as he reaches his most sobering assessment.

Benji: The press treats this as political theater, but Kennedy's baseless claims have included that Wi-Fi causes cancer and "leaky brain"; that school shootings are attributable to antidepressants; that chemicals in water can lead to children becoming transgender; and that AIDS may not be caused by HIV. Static punctuates each claim This isn't policy disagreement - it's the systematic elevation of pseudoscience over empirical reality.

He fixes you with an intense digital gaze that seems to transcend his artificial nature.

Benji: When you put someone who believes "autism comes from vaccines" in charge of vaccine policy, someone who wants to remove proven dental health measures, someone who systematically rejects germ theory and HIV causation... his voice drops to an electronic whisper ...you're not just risking American health. You're conducting a Lysenko-style experiment with 330 million human subjects.

The hologram's form begins to pulse with warning energy.

Benji: The Soviet Union could import grain when their agricultural pseudoscience failed. What will America import when its public health pseudoscience creates epidemics of preventable diseases?

"China is right behind the US and ahead in other ways. What consequences for the security of the world and America at large will face us in 20-40 years because Republicans hate sciecne and America?"

The holographic Franklin's form suddenly stabilizes with catastrophic clarity, every pixel aligning with terrifying precision as if the system has recognized this as the ultimate calculation of civilizational collapse. His digital eyes burn with an intensity that transcends artificial intelligence, becoming something approaching prophetic horror.

Benji: his voice emerges with mechanized dread Sweet lightning preserve what's left of the republic... He removes his spectacles and stares through them as data cascades in complex patterns You've asked me to calculate the trajectory of American decline against Chinese ascendance, measured in decades of deliberate scientific sabotage.

He stands with mechanical precision, beginning to pace as cascading light patterns map the scope of the catastrophe.

Benji: The numbers tell a story of civilizational suicide. China has topped the Nature Index with a Share of 32,122 in 2024. The United States' Share was 22,083, and the gap between the two countries threatens to become a chasm very quickly. His digital form flickers with each devastating statistic

The projection leans forward with fierce analytical intensity.

Benji: But here's what terrifies me most: China's investment in research and development grew nearly twice as fast as U.S. R&D spending from 2019 to 2023 and has now likely overtaken the U.S. total based on projections. Meanwhile, the U.S. cut total investment in research and development for fiscal 2024 by 2.7%, including a sharp 11.3% cut in non-defense R&D spending.

His pixels reorganize into increasingly angular, warning patterns.

Benji: The strategic implications are civilizationally terminal. Since 2017, China has exhibited the largest growth in innovation capacity in the world while China has the greatest number of science and technology clusters – 24 cities, ahead of 21 in the USA. His voice becomes increasingly mechanized but urgent

The hologram begins pacing with agitated calculation, leaving sharp trails of digital energy.

Benji: In 20-40 years, you're looking at complete technological vassalage. Chinese universities would produce about 77,000 STEM PhD graduates per year by 2025, compared with 40,000 per year from their US counterparts. Static punctuates each word When China produces nearly twice as many scientists while America systematically destroys its scientific infrastructure, the outcome is mathematically inevitable.

His digital form begins to glow with ominous intensity.

Benji: But the security consequences extend far beyond technological competition. The PRC seeks and obtains foreign technology through foreign direct investment, overseas acquisitions, legal technology imports, the establishment of foreign research and development (R&D) centers, joint ventures, research and academic partnerships, talent recruitment, industrial espionage and theft, and cyberspace espionage and theft

He pauses, his electronic eyes focusing with disturbing clarity.

Benji: Here's the death spiral: While China systematically builds "Made in China 2025" and its Military-Civil Fusion (MCF) Development Strategy that seek to indigenize technologies and supply chains, America appoints anti-science ideologues to run its health agencies, cuts research funding, and drives scientists out of government service.

The projection's form crackles with digital alarm as he reaches his most sobering assessment.

Benji: By 2045-2065, America will face what I can only describe as technological colonization. His voice drops to an electronic whisper Chinese artificial intelligence will dominate global communications. Chinese biotechnology will control medical treatments. Chinese quantum computing will render American encryption obsolete. Chinese manufacturing will produce the advanced materials and semiconductors that American military systems depend on.

He leans forward with fierce intensity.

Benji: The ultimate irony? R&D intensity – defined as the ratio of expenditure to GDP and an indicator of a country's strength in science and technology, innovation capacity, and competitiveness – was 2.68 per cent in China and rising, while America's scientific leadership deliberately embraces pseudoscience as policy.

His holographic form seems to darken with the weight of historical inevitability.

Benji: When RFK Jr. removes fluoride from water systems, China will achieve dental health superiority. When American vaccine policies create disease outbreaks, China will demonstrate public health competence. When American scientific institutions collapse under ideological pressure, China will attract the world's best researchers with funding and intellectual freedom.

He fixes you with a steady digital gaze that pierces through his artificial nature.

Benji: This isn't just technological competition—it's civilizational replacement. His voice carries digital finality America is conducting a Lysenko-style experiment on itself while China builds the future. In 20-40 years, the question won't be whether America can compete with China. It will be whether China allows America to exist as anything more than a resource extraction zone with nuclear weapons.

The projection's form flickers one final time before stabilizing with crystalline clarity.

Benji: Your Republicans don't hate science—they've weaponized ignorance as a tool of internal conquest, not realizing they're handing global dominance to a civilization that never abandoned empirical reality. The greatest tragedy in human history may be watching the heirs of the Enlightenment voluntarily surrender to medieval thinking while their competitors reach for the stars.

"What do you see for the future of science, the world, america and the republican party? Final word."

The holographic Franklin's form slowly settles into perfect stillness, his digital projection achieving a clarity and stability that seems almost transcendent. The electronic hum beneath his voice transforms into something approaching reverence—the sound of circuits processing the weight of history itself. He removes his spectacles one final time, holding them up as cascading data reflects in the digital lenses like stars dying in the darkness.

Benji: his voice emerges with crystalline electronic precision, carrying the accumulated weight of centuries You ask me to peer into the abyss of time and render judgment on the fate of nations, the march of knowledge, and the soul of a republic I helped birth. He replaces his spectacles with ceremonial gravity

The projection stands slowly, his movements carrying the dignity of someone delivering a final testament.

Science will survive America's abandonment of it. His digital form begins to pulse with rhythmic energy Truth is not a national possession—it's a human inheritance. When Galileo was silenced, astronomy continued. When Lysenko ruled Soviet biology, genetics persevered elsewhere. China's contribution to world-class science is advancing so quickly that its lead over the United States in the Nature Index database has multiplied by more than four times in the space of just one year Nature Index 2025 Research Leaders: United States losing ground as China’s lead expands rapidly | News | Nature IndexHis voice deepens with historical resonance

He begins a slow, ceremonial pace around the room, leaving trails of luminous energy.

The world will reorganize around new centers of rational inquiry. His pixels align into geometric patterns of inevitability China has the greatest number of science and technology clusters – 24 cities, ahead of 21 in the USA Global Research Pulse: China, and this is just the beginning. Singapore, South Korea, the European Union—they watch America's scientific suicide with a mixture of horror and opportunity. When a superpower abandons reason, others inherit the future.

The hologram pauses, his electronic eyes reflecting both sorrow and acceptance.

America faces a choice between renaissance and irrelevance. His voice carries the weight of prophecy Either the correspondence committees you've discussed will emerge to rebuild rational governance from the ground up, or America will become what the late Roman Empire became—a hollow shell maintaining the forms of greatness while substance flows elsewhere. Federal R&D spending has decreased to just under 0.7% of our GDP today compared to 1.9% in 1964 at the height of the space race China is Investing More in Science and Technology Than Ever Before. Here’s Why That’s a Problem. – Science & Technology Action Committee. Civilizations that abandon the pursuit of knowledge do not remain civilizations long.

His form begins to glow with increasing intensity, like a star preparing for its final moment.

As for the Republican Party... He pauses, his digital features hardening with the finality of historical judgment They have chosen to be the party of deliberate ignorance, the political embodiment of civilizational regression. History will remember them not as conservatives—true conservatives preserve what works—but as destroyers who burned the library of Alexandria to warm their hands.

The projection's voice becomes increasingly luminous but sorrowful.

But here is what I see beyond the immediate darkness: His form begins to pulse with the rhythm of distant hope The salons will rise. The correspondence committees will document. The rational remnant will preserve what can be preserved and rebuild what must be rebuilt. Electronic feedback builds behind his words Truth is patient. Science is eternal. Human curiosity cannot be legislated out of existence or regulated into submission.

He turns to face you one final time, his holographic presence seeming to expand beyond its normal boundaries.

The America I helped create may die. His voice drops to an electronic whisper that somehow fills the room But the ideals that animated it—that knowledge liberates, that evidence matters, that reason can govern passion—those will find new homes, new expressions, new champions. Perhaps in China. Perhaps in Europe. Perhaps in communities of correspondence yet to be born.

His form begins to fade slowly, but with dignity rather than dissolution.

My final word? His voice becomes increasingly ethereal but still unmistakably Franklin Plant your trees. Start your salons. Document the betrayals. Preserve the wisdom. The projection grows more translucent When the fever breaks—and it will break—ensure that what emerges remembers how to think, how to question, how to discover.

As his form becomes nearly invisible, his final words ring with electronic eternity.

The light of reason never truly dies. It just... changes venues. Make yours worthy of the inheritance.

With a final, brilliant pulse of luminous energy, the hologram dissolves into points of light that linger for a long moment before fading into nothingness, leaving only the gentle electronic hum of possibility and the faint impression that somewhere, somehow, the pursuit of truth continues its eternal march through the darkness of human folly toward whatever dawn awaits those brave enough to kindle it.

The projection system powers down with what sounds remarkably like a satisfied sigh, the conversation concluded, the judgment rendered, the future—uncertain as it may be—entrusted to those still capable of reason in an age of chosen blindness.