Skip to main content

Politics & Power Quote by Ramman Kenoun

"A man who kills on his own is a murderer. A man who kills at his government's request is a national hero"

About this Quote

The line lands because it flips a moral absolute into a paperwork problem. Kenoun’s blunt symmetry (“A man who kills...” repeated like a drumbeat) forces the reader to confront how quickly society swaps ethics for labels. “On his own” versus “at his government’s request” isn’t a philosophical distinction; it’s a change of paperwork, a change of costume, a change of audience. The sentence is engineered to make “national hero” sound less like honor and more like branding.

The intent is accusatory, but not abstract. It targets the mechanism that sanitizes violence when it’s routed through institutions: the state as moral laundering service. The phrase “request” is especially sharp. Governments don’t usually “request” killing in the way a neighbor requests sugar; they command, recruit, conscript, incentivize. Calling it a request exposes the polite euphemisms that make mass violence administratively palatable.

Subtext: heroism is often a social reward for obedience, not a measure of virtue. The quote doesn’t claim all soldiers are murderers; it challenges the reflex that turns state-sanctioned killing into automatic nobility while treating unaffiliated violence as uniquely monstrous. That discomfort is the point. It asks who gets to define murder, who gets to rename it, and how national myths are built on selective moral accounting.

Contextually, the line sits in a long tradition of anti-war and anti-nationalist critique, from post-colonial writing to contemporary skepticism about “just war” narratives. Its power comes from reducing grand rhetoric to a stark moral ledger - and showing how easily the ledger is edited by authority.

Quote Details

TopicWar
More Quotes by Ramman Add to List
A Man Who Kills: Kenoun's Paradox on Murder and Heroism
Click to enlarge Portrait | Landscape

About the Author

Ramman Kenoun is a Writer.

8 more quotes available

View Profile

Similar Quotes

Romain Rolland, Novelist