"This demonstration of power, indifferent to the law, is highly dangerous"
About this Quote
A businessman doesn’t call something “highly dangerous” unless he’s trying to do more than complain; he’s issuing a warning about the rules of the game being rewritten in real time. Khodorkovsky’s phrase “demonstration of power” is pointedly theatrical: power isn’t just exercised, it’s performed, staged to be seen and absorbed. The audience isn’t only the courts or the public, but every other wealthy actor, regional boss, editor, or bureaucrat weighing how safe it is to act independently.
The most corrosive word here is “indifferent.” He’s not alleging a mistake or an overreach that could be corrected by better procedure. Indifference to law suggests the law has become décor: useful when it legitimizes decisions, irrelevant when it doesn’t. That’s a different charge than “illegal.” It implies a system where legality is optional, a toggle controlled by whoever holds the lever.
Context matters because Khodorkovsky is speaking from inside the elite sphere that normally assumes it can negotiate outcomes. In post-Soviet Russia, where privatization created oligarchic fortunes and the state later reasserted itself, his own prosecution became emblematic of how political authority can discipline capital. The subtext: if the state can pick a target and make the legal process follow the political script, then property rights, contracts, and personal safety become contingent. “Highly dangerous” isn’t melodrama; it’s an investor’s diagnosis of regime risk, translated into civic language.
The most corrosive word here is “indifferent.” He’s not alleging a mistake or an overreach that could be corrected by better procedure. Indifference to law suggests the law has become décor: useful when it legitimizes decisions, irrelevant when it doesn’t. That’s a different charge than “illegal.” It implies a system where legality is optional, a toggle controlled by whoever holds the lever.
Context matters because Khodorkovsky is speaking from inside the elite sphere that normally assumes it can negotiate outcomes. In post-Soviet Russia, where privatization created oligarchic fortunes and the state later reasserted itself, his own prosecution became emblematic of how political authority can discipline capital. The subtext: if the state can pick a target and make the legal process follow the political script, then property rights, contracts, and personal safety become contingent. “Highly dangerous” isn’t melodrama; it’s an investor’s diagnosis of regime risk, translated into civic language.
Quote Details
| Topic | Justice |
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