Pistol Pete’s Payback and Other Historic Vengeances

Pistol Pete’s Payback and Other Historic Vengeances

Khalid Elhassan - October 15, 2020

Pistol Pete’s Payback and Other Historic Vengeances
Quisling with SS chief Heinrich Himmler. Cotton Boll Conspiracy

14. Payback for a Collaborator

Quisling had bet on the wrong horse, and the Nazis whose boots he had spent years licking, lost. Captured after the war, he was tried by the Norwegians and was convicted of treason, murder, and embezzlement. Payback for his misdeeds was exacted in October of 1945, when he met his end before a firing squad.

Quisling’s name became synonymous with collaboration and treason. To this day, a “Quisling” is routinely used as an epithet to denote not a run-of-the-mill traitor, such as calling somebody a “Benedict Arnold”. Instead, a Quisling is a traitor of the lowest, grubbiest, and most despicable kind. The type of traitor who lords it over and represses his own people on behalf of a conquering enemy, and is ever eager to please the foreign occupier with shameless displays of obsequiousness.

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