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Libtards of the world are MAD PRESSED over the successful capture of a dictator. Global leaders are mad that they weren’t informed and some bullshit about sovereignty, the very thing NONE of them respect of ours.

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BREAKING:Outrage, Hypocrisy, and the Politics of Sovereignty

The successful capture of a dictator should have been a moment of rare international consensus.

Instead, it triggered outrage from critics who appear less concerned with justice and more concerned with protocol, optics, and power.

Across global political and media circles, the reaction has been predictable: anger over not being informed, complaints about violations of sovereignty, and loud declarations about international norms.

These objections might carry weight if they came from actors who consistently respected those same principles. But history tells a different story.

Many of the loudest voices criticizing the operation belong to governments that have repeatedly violated the sovereignty of other nations when it suited their interests—through sanctions, covert actions, military interventions, and political interference.

To suddenly discover a deep reverence for sovereignty only when excluded from the decision-making process is not principled; it’s convenient.

The core issue here isn’t legality or morality—it’s control.

The frustration stems from being sidelined, from not having a seat at the table, from losing influence over a major geopolitical event.

When powerful actors aren’t the ones calling the shots, they reframe the outcome as reckless or unlawful, even when the result is the removal of an oppressive ruler responsible for widespread suffering.

This selective outrage also ignores the victims. Dictators do not rule in a vacuum.

Their power is maintained through violence, repression, and fear. For the people who lived under that regime, the capture represents accountability—something international institutions often promise but rarely deliver.

That doesn’t mean questions shouldn’t be asked. Transparency, due process, and long-term stability matter.

But those discussions should be honest, not wrapped in moral posturing by leaders whose own records undermine their claims.

If sovereignty truly mattered equally to all nations, it would be defended consistently—not only when convenient, not only when prestige is at stake, and not only when the outcome wasn’t personally managed.

The anger on display reveals more about global power politics than about justice.

And in that sense, the reaction to the dictator’s capture is less surprising than it is telling.

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