Well, I think it can fairly be said that this Lively character has
every reason and incentive to inflate his importance, influence and significance, both in Africa and Russia...(the more important and effective he makes himself sound, the more money he is likely to be able to raise from the knuckle dragging bigot crowd)
And it's also not surprising that he would curry favor with Putin by spouting positions embraced by the despot...(good way to make sure that you can operate freely there; David Duke spends a lot of time in Russia as well.)
I think Putin may see him as being of marginal propaganda value, but I seriously doubt that he has any significant influence in Putin's decision making, no matter what he
claims his influence to be...
And oh yes, I almost forgot...
rube:
The path to perpetual ignorance leads through self-delusion.
I'm gonna save that one; I suspect it will come in handy....
ETA:
And he has been charged in U.S. federal court for crimes against humanity for his role in the Ugandan laws - charges which withstood a motion for dismissal by his lawyers, meaning that judge has decided there is sufficient evidence of his culpability in the Ugandan persecution of gays to stand trial.
Well okay, but in looking into this, even though it has the ominous sounding title "crimes against humanity" Lively isn't really being criminally charged or prosecuted for
anything; he's being sued:
Excerpted from:
http://www.slate.com/blogs/outward/2014 ... erica.html
With the help of the Center for Constitutional Rights, Lively is being sued by Ugandan human rights organization Sexual Minorities Uganda for violating international law by intentionally contributing to the persecution of Ugandan homosexuals and seeking to deprive LGBT members of the Ugandan population of their basic human rights....
Potentially a landmark case, since it is the first of its kind to address human rights violations based on sexual or gender orientation, Sexual Minorities Uganda v. Scott Lively has been brought into U.S. federal court under a centuries old, yet unusually modern act: the Alien Tort Statute.
One of America’s earliest statutes, passed in 1789 by the first Congress, the ATS provides non-U.S. citizens with jurisdiction for violations of international law. Human rights abuses were not part of legal discourse 200 years ago, but the 20th century witnessed a widening of accountability for abuse. Today, the ATS is used in cases of torture, genocide, war crimes, inhumane treatment, violence against women, and crimes against humanity....
As the Center for Justice and Accountability explains, ATS cases give plaintiffs “the chance to tell their stories and the stories of those who did not survive.” These cases provide a means for exposing abuses, entering them into the public record, and helping plaintiffs “put an end to the culture of impunity that exists in their home country.”...
Since ATS cases are civil lawsuits, guilty verdicts return monetary awards to the plaintiffs. If convicted, Lively will not serve jail time; rather, he will have to pay damages.