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d-23805House OversightOther

Opinion piece on Dominique Strauss‑Kahn rape allegations and victim‑perpetrator narratives

The excerpt is a rhetorical commentary on the DSK case, offering no new factual leads, names beyond the well‑known subject, nor specific transactions or dates. It merely restates known controversy, pr Mentions Dominique Strauss‑Kahn as a potential victim if accusations are false. Critiques media and feminist responses to sexual‑assault allegations. Emphasizes the principle of presumption of innoce

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #029941
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The excerpt is a rhetorical commentary on the DSK case, offering no new factual leads, names beyond the well‑known subject, nor specific transactions or dates. It merely restates known controversy, pr Mentions Dominique Strauss‑Kahn as a potential victim if accusations are false. Critiques media and feminist responses to sexual‑assault allegations. Emphasizes the principle of presumption of innoce

Tags

public-narrativelegal-perceptionpresumption-of-innocencesexual-assaultdominique-strausskahnmedia-criticismhouse-oversight

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Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
10 decades of struggle so that “equality of rights” wouldn’t be empty words, and so that rape, for example, would be recognized as a crime. But giving voice to the lowly is one thing. Considering this voice as Gospel is quite another—which can be the source of new and dreadful injustices. Yet this is exactly what has happened with his accuser’s charges. And I am still asking myself how so many editorialists, so many great consciences and, by the way, so many feminists could take it as a given that the word of this woman—of whom we knew only what filtered through the incomplete language of justice—was necessarily infallible. The truth is that we have passed from one extreme to the other. The era when the word of the System’s victims was, on principle, discredited has given way to one in which it is—also on principle— attributed all prestige. Yet I repeat: To be a victim of society is one thing, and no one doubts that the alleged victim of the supposed rape is at least the victim of a social order that pays its hotel maids peanuts and treats them like livestock. But to be the victim of aggression is another thing entirely and of an entirely different nature. It must be established methodically, scrupulously, and with discretion, by comparing evidence, viewpoints and witness accounts and by avoiding the interference of emotion, even when justified, that may motivate one and another. This is a question of principle. 5. Finally, as I immediately emphasized, there is already a victim in this case and that is the very principle, in the United States, of the presumption of innocence. Soon there will be another, I mean another victim, should it be verified that the accuser also lied about what actually happened in this now-legendary suite at the Sofitel, and that will be Dominique Strauss-Kahn himself. But from now on, there

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