Home » Well, at least Strauss-Kahn isn’t being accused of hypocrisy…

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Well, at least Strauss-Kahn isn’t being accused of hypocrisy… — 25 Comments

  1. The behavior of this individual is despicable. Beyond that essential fact, this event has brought other lesser, but still disturbing, revelations to light.

    The IMF, with significant funding from U.S. taxpayers, supports $3,000/night hotel rooms. This guy has a “deal” with Air France that allows him to obtain a First Class seat on any Air France flight with no notice. Just the latest example of international bureaucrats living like royalty at public expense.

    Sometimes I really feel like it is time for the peasants to reach for their pitchforks.

  2. If he is the “Great Seducer”, this doesn’t speak well France’s standards in that department ,does it?
    Looks like he will be spending some time on Riker’s Island. He needs time to think about what it is to be a Mensch.

  3. “Just the latest example of international bureaucrats living like royalty at public expense.”

    Just the latest example of a ^socialist^ living like royalty. Just think — I once actually believed socialists were of the proletariat and dwelt among them as equals. Stoopid me.

  4. They put a socialist in charge of money?

    Good thinking.

    And a dirtbag socialist at that? Or is that a superfluous qualifier?

    Keep in Riker’s Island until trial (to avoid his doing a Polanski). Let this socialist meet and greet the proletariat. At length.

  5. “Keep in Riker’s Island until trial (to avoid his doing a Polanski). Let this socialist meet and greet the proletariat. At length.”

    Or maybe up close and more personal than he’d like.

  6. Roger Simon has an update to his post on this at PJM. Apparently the IMF is saying that it didn’t pay for the hotel–it was a private trip. The Germans seem more concerned about what will happen to the Greek bailout. No one here is defending hiim or calling us prudes, at least not yet. We’ll have to give the artsy-crafties a few days to get their opinion pieces in the papers.

    WRT the French presidency, I think the mood is more anti Sarkosy than pro DSK. Given Sarkosy’s sometimes rather strange inconsistant positions, it could be that people are just uneasy with him.

  7. expat – I thought Le Pen’s daughter was doing well, though? What happened to her?

  8. Some possible defenses:

    He was confused. He had been listening to Queen and thought the words went “We will, we will rape you.”

    He thought he was in Algeria.

    She slipped him Viagra and plans on making a mint.

    Take off the mask and it’s really Al Gore.

    At least it wasn’t a homosexual attack.

    This is the way they do it at the United Nations.

    Who ya gonna believe? The important guy or her.

    Temporary insanity. She looked too good. Plus, the soup nazi guy had just refused him soup. That would drive anybody crazy.

    He couldn’t have done it because he knows his past is so bad it would be obvious he did do it.

    Bush did it.

    His understanding was the hotel offered her as a perk.

  9. What gets me is that from what lawyers on some websites are saying, based on International agreements the U.S. has signed and their codification in U.S. Law, such high level UN and International organization personnel have diplomatic immunity, if they were “on duty. ” But, since the IMF released a statement that did not claim such diplomatic immunity for our boy, and said that he was paying the $3K a night tab for his hotel room himself, he was apparently not “on duty,” and therefore not immune to arrest and trial.

    Of course, that is what they say today, but tomorrow could be a different story.

  10. One message that is sent by the picture of this VIP in handcuffs, treated like a common criminal, is that the US is indeed “different”. So the accused may have a discreet but powerful ally in no less a person than our own, multi-lateral, post-national, model citizen of the world, Barak H. Obama. Everybody who matters wants this to go away asap.

  11. armchair pessimist
    One message that is sent by the picture of this VIP in handcuffs, treated like a common criminal, is that the US is indeed “different”….Everybody who matters wants this to go away asap.

    Richard Fernandez/Wretchard the Cat at Belmont Club has mirrored your thoughts in
    The Wrath of Khanat comment #25:

    I think you may find that the mission to get Osama bin Laden and the arrest of Dominique Strauss-Kahn has raised American prestige in the Third World to heights unprecedented since the invasion of Iraq quite unintentionally. I know the conventional wisdom says that America was hated from the moment it invaded Iraq, but as Lee Smith recounts in his book, the Strong Horse and as I myself witnessed in Lebanon, it positively thrilled much of the Arab street, only they will only confess it in secret.
    If you go down to the Times of India you will read comment after comment that says “only in America could such a powerful man be taken off an airplane and made to parade in a police lineup”; “this is true democracy” and “my faith in the world has been restored”. For a world that is accustomed to watching the powerful stamp on the faces of the common man, this the arrest is wonderous, almost unbelievable and nearly on par with the sight of SEALs fleeting through Abbottabad.
    I do not say this to prejudge DSK, who may be innocent, only to point out that this is the way much of the world likes to see America; mighty, confident and meting out almost magical justice with seeming effortlessness…..
    The truth is that nobody loves an America that goes around shopping apologies. Nor do they like an America that acts like the old Soviet Union. But they do unabashedly love a USA as it dreams to be; with the FBI running down the bad guys and the Marines shooting up the extraterrestrial monsters in Los Angeles. When Superman stands on a skyscraper and proudly proclaims that he aims to uphold Truth, Justice and the American Way he is expressing a secret fantasy felt in so many of the downtroddden parts of the world. “Gee how I wish we had someone like that!” And if you look carefully at the faces staring at the screen, you will see no sophisticated derision; only tears of hopeful joy.

    Ideally, America is the land of the Common Man under Rule of Law, not Rule of the Powerful, where law trumps position.

  12. kolnai,

    I don’t really have a feeling about Le Pen. I read that she sounds more reasonable than her dad so that may allow her to pick up votes from the conservatives. There are just so many balls in the air now, who knows where they will land.

  13. 1. Per Neo and Wretchard, the presumption of innocence applies.

    2. Fifty years ago the incident would have been hushed up. The immigrant chambermaid would have been fired if she persisted in complaining–if she dared to complain at all.

    3. I’m very concerned about the nation’s current direction, but indeed we have come a long way.

    Hopefully we have not left essential things behind.

  14. In handcuffs and marched off to Riker’s Island. What a great consciousness-raising experience for this Marxist aristocrat.

  15. The report on Fox News says he tried to force this poor woman to fellate him, and he sodomized her as well. That when she knocked on the door and said “Housekeeping,” he answered the door buck-naked and grabbed her breasts.

    He got violent with her, they say. Sounds like rape to me. Glad they nailed him, and I hope they send him to the hoosegow for a long stretch, in the General Population.

  16. Too bad DSK didn’t have a more powerful position–like the governor of a state who has control of law enforcement to help him out of a pesky rape charge.

  17. Trivially enough, throughout the freetranslation.com translation into English of a Frankfurter Faz.Net article, Strauss-Kahn’s name in literal translation yields the sobriquet “Bouquet-Boat.” It may catch on, though I think it could attract a few contemptuous hoots in the slammer.

  18. From that UK article, the first sentence is incorrect:

    Dominque Strauss-Kahn was today spending his first night at New York’s notorious Rikers Island prison, . . .

    Rikers Island is a jail, for those awaiting trial and those sentenced to terms of less than one year. Prison is for longer sentences, as well as more serious and/or violent crimes. If this putz is convicted, he’ll wish he were in Rikers rather than one of upstate NY’s prisons, particularly those along the Canadian border which are quite frigid in winter.

    Strauss-Kahn faces a host of charges, including two counts of first-degree criminal sexual act, one count of first-degree attempted rape, one count of first-degree sexual abuse, one count of second-degree unlawful imprisonment, one count of forcible touching and one count of third-degree sexual abuse.

    “The top charge, criminal sexual act in the first degree, is a class B violent felony, carrying with it a maximum sentence of 25 years in prison,” the New York district attorney’s office said.

    If DSK is convicted of even a small portion of the charges against him, at 62, he’ll die in prison, which would not bother me at all. No matter how long his sentence, he’ll serve it in protective custody as some inmate will want to make their bones over his dead or maimed body. I can only hope he goes away for a long time, as he was an @sshole on a power trip who thought he could do with a hotel maid whatever the hell he wanted. He’s going to find out NYC ain’t France and we don’t take kindly to furriners rapin’ our women then trying to skedaddle on the next flight out.

  19. You know, I would have thought that the IMF would have been quick to jump to the defense of one of its “grandees,” and to assert that he had diplomatic immunity, but it appears that they have not yet made such an assertion.

    I would also have thought that they would have jumped to his defense just on general principles, because they didn’t want a precedent set that one of their exclusive and rarefied circle, one of the really “important” people, could be handled so roughly and with so little deference and respect; as one French paper put it “like a common criminal”

    However, I note that no less than four candidates for his job have already been proposed, and I am guessing that DSK was a real piece of work and had made a lot of enemies, so that pretty much everyone concerned it quite satisfied to see him brought low and kicked to the curb.

    He could even have been–as sources on the Left in France have accused–“set up” but, if so, it was apparently absurdly easy to do so given his “way with the ladies.”

    It says that he was a “former Communist.” Ever wonder what happened to all those Communists in Europe when the Wall fell and the U.S.S.R. disintegrated?

    Well, apparently, a few still called themselves “Communists,” but the majority took on new disguises as “Socialists,” and many now suddenly became ardent “Environmentalists.” I wonder if DSK was one of those guys.

  20. The Japanese have this idea that America pursues the Way of World Justice. This is seen alternatively as natural (for the strongest to have such a goal) and otherwise as annoying when it interferes with local affairs.

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