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Wikileaks Founder Advised To Avoid American Gov't

eldavojohn writes "Media darling Julian Assange, founder of Wikileaks, has been told by his lawyers to avoid the United States on the grounds that the US military would like to ask him a few questions about his source of the Collateral Murder video. Assange claims to be holding yet more video (of a US attack on a village that allegedly killed 140 civilians in May of 2009), as well as a quarter million sensitive cables relating to the current foreign war operations from the US State Department. Assange surfaced for the cameras in Brussels while speaking about the need for the freedom of information. Can he build a high enough profile to protect himself from danger?"

632 comments

  1. The Whistleblowers' Blues by elrous0 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The best thing he can do is get as much press as possible, make as many speeches as possible, engage in as much public activity as possible, and stay in a group at all times (no late night strolls alone). If the general public and press don't know who he is, the U.S. government can just grab him and quietly throw him in a secret jail cell somewhere (or even render him to a country willing to get their hands dirty torturing him with more than a little waterboarding).

    It would be nice to live in a world where whistleblowers were rewarded and praised for their efforts. But the truth is that whistleblowers almost always suffer for their sacrifice. At best, they lose their jobs and/or are harassed. At worst, they end up in a filthy jail cell with electrodes on their balls.

    --
    SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    1. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by rolfwind · · Score: 1

      At worst, they end up in a filthy jail cell with electrodes on their balls.

      Don't you mean dead in a ditch somewhere?

    2. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by mikael_j · · Score: 1

      No, that's simply a likely outcome of the "filthy jail" option.

      --
      Greylisting is to SMTP as NAT is to IPv4
    3. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Prikolist · · Score: 1

      Well first they will torture out all the sources. After that - sure

      --
      I think Linux isn't better than Windows hence in the slashdot realm I'm a troll
    4. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 0, Troll

      The Whistleblower is already in custody.

      When it comes to pissing off the United States Government, well getting big and public doesn't always work.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saddam_Hussein
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernie_Madoff
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slobodan_Milosevic
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Calley

      Some were big, really big and one went public, and it didn't help them.

    5. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Both in many cases...

    6. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by MrNaz · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Or perhaps a bathtub in a motel.

      --
      I hate printers.
    7. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by lowrydr310 · · Score: 0

      The Whistleblower is already in custody.

      There's a big difference between blowing a whistle, and breaking the law by divulging classified information.

      The reality is that there's a lot of information that doesn't belong in the public domain, and it's in the best interest of the country/corporation/individual to keep secured.

    8. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by tmassa99 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Obama, like Bush, has a horrendous track record of using "States Secrets" to cover the collective asses of this government and shield us from the big bad wars. Things like covering the illegal rendition and torture of innocents, like Maher Arar. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maher_Arar

      He's also using it to continually detain a man proven in court to be innocent, Mohamed Hassan Odaini, who has been wrongfully imprisoned for the last 8 years, in defiance of a court order that he be released. Why? Because mid-term elections are coming up soon.
      http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/glenn_greenwald/2010/06/21/pundits/index.html

      The US government and MIC are monsters dressed in the stars and stripes and I thank %deityOfChoice% that there are sites like Wikileaks, and governments like Iceland who are beginning to see the light that is cast by transparency.

      With the SCOTUS decision yesterday, the US can just put Wikileaks on the list of terrorist organizations, and Mr. Assange won't even be able to get a lawyer in the US, assuming he's still alive. The US government, or its people at large, don't care about rights of US citizens, who can now be extra-judicially assassinated (i.e. murdered). What do you think anyone would say if some Australian journalist disappears?

      Only sites like Wikileaks can save us from ourselves. Getting the genie back into the bottle is a difficult task, indeed.

    9. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Tolkien · · Score: 0, Redundant

      In school they call a whistleblower a tattletail. Many teachers even frown upon kids tattling on others. It's sad, it's engrained from a very young age that things that weren't seen should remain unseen.

    10. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Remus+Shepherd · · Score: 1

      The problem is that fame doesn't last, but the memories of the military and intelligence institutions is forever. Eventually the cameras will get tired of him. Then they will be able to come for him with little or no press.

      It sounds like he's hoping to change those institutions so that they would be too ashamed to go after him. I don't know if changing the world is a good strategy for self-defense, but I admire anyone with the balls to try it.

      --
      Genocide Man -- Life is funny. Death is funnier. Mass murder can be hilarious.
    11. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Xtravar · · Score: 1

      How little faith you have in LIBERTY!

      --
      Buckle your ROFL belt, we're in for some LOLs.
    12. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Bryan3000000 · · Score: 1

      Dead in a ditch is significantly less painful, long term. There are fates worse than death, both for an individual and for an individual's family.

    13. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1

      The sword is already on top of his head. If he wants to be really famous, he should quickly post these 250,000 cables and the videos he has. Then, there will be a very good case to see where US army stands, respective to the first amendment. US troops are supposed to bring freedom, including freedom of speech. Lead by the example.

      --
      The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
    14. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by MoriT · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The reality is that there is a lot of information that should be in the public domain, but it's in the best interest of the country/corporation/individual to keep it secured to avoid embarrassment, bad publicity or criminal charges.

    15. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by ElectricTurtle · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Really, are you so intellectually dishonest that you're comparing a guy who makes sensitive information available to genocidal dictators and multi-million dollar frauds? The reason that those you use as examples were so easy to get through the justice system is that they had already been convicted in the court of public opinion. Assange is becoming something of a folk hero, and that makes him poisonous politically to actually put through a wringer. Now I'm not going to say that Assange is the Dalai llama, but if not in magnitude it's ethically the same sort of thing, who would arrest him and extradite him to China?

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    16. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      Crap like "Stop Snitching" makes it impossible to fight gangs and crime now too.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    17. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by MadJo · · Score: 1

      To bad mainstream media is probably not interested in this. :(
      It's not juicy enough.

    18. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      About the only way they're going to report on it is if Lindsey Lohan does a sex tape with him.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    19. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by HungryHobo · · Score: 0

      sure but the problem is that once you establish a system for "information that doesn't belong in the public domain" suddenly everything embarrassing or unpopular starts to get marked with the appropriate stamp with no regard whatsoever to whether or not it's in the best interest of the country to keep it secured.

    20. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by sortius_nod · · Score: 1

      I'd say more his life is in danger.

      He's not a US citizen.
      He's got damning information about their spying.
      He's about to release it.

      His danger is not distant, I'd say it's sooner rather than later. Unfortunately he'll be targeted by some of the best equipped spies in the business... then again, they don't seem to be able to hold on to their data well enough to keep it out of Wikileaks, I think an assassination may be beyond them these days.

    21. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by elucido · · Score: 1

      Really, are you so intellectually dishonest that you're comparing a guy who makes sensitive information available to genocidal dictators and multi-million dollar frauds? The reason that those you use as examples were so easy to get through the justice system is that they had already been convicted in the court of public opinion. Assange is becoming something of a folk hero, and that makes him poisonous politically to actually put through a wringer. Now I'm not going to say that Assange is the Dalai llama, but if not in magnitude it's ethically the same sort of thing, who would arrest him and extradite him to China?

      Maybe thats not how you see it but thats probably how the government sees it.

    22. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by braeldiil · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Whistleblowers should suffer, at least a little. If there's no pain involved, then it changes from a self-sacrificing, possibly noble act, to crass political manuvering and meaningless, punkish rebellion. For instance, the leaker of the video. The video is probably a defensible leak, but a quarter of a million classified diplomatic messages? That's not a leak to expose a specific incident - that's a stunt to try and build up the biggest Wikileaks e-peen. And the Wikileaks founder? He's not a whistleblower - he's a publisher. With all the manipulations and story-building exercises of any other publisher.

    23. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by TheCarp · · Score: 5, Interesting

      > The reality is that there's a lot of information that doesn't belong in the public domain, and it's in the best interest of the
      > country/corporation/individual to keep secured.

      For an indivudual, or a corporation sure. However, a corporation has share holders and/or trustees. There is no legitimate reason for a "corporation" to withhold information from them. They are the owners, the final deciders.

      With a government, or at least, any organization that I am willing to consider as such in a legitimate fashion, the people are the share holders, we are the board. There is no legitimate reason to hide information from even the lowest of us. We OWN IT. It is OUR SECRET.

      Keeping information (with the VERY narrow exception of individuals personally identifiable information like tax, employment, or social security records) is corruption. plain and simple. Justice Roberts claims the government deserves a lot of "leeway" in "national security" matters. I argue it deserves no leeway at all, ever, in any circumstance.

      The single most important function of government is to provide checks and balances against its own corruption. Even defense should be secondary.

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    24. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by BitZtream · · Score: 1

      Theres a difference between a whistle blower and Julian Assangen. Posting anything someone sends you, regardless of its true nature and without any consideration of those who it could litterally get killed is not a whistle blower.

      He's a punk ass bitch who will post someone elses secrets, which he doesn't even obtain with any effort of his own, without any thought about what doing so means.

      I'm all for protecting real whistle blowers. This douche bag deserves to be beaten into a pulp. He's just an attention whore with no limits.

      --
      Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
    25. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      No. I am using examples of people the US government goes out of their way to find and deal with

      How about
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Randy_Weaver
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Koresh

      Better links?

    26. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Bakkster · · Score: 0

      I fail to see how much of the information leaked should be public domain. I can see a case for releasing a declassified video of civilian deaths, but not the rest. Classified state department communications en masse? I guarantee that not all of them are criminal, or even embarassing. Some of them likely have legitimate state secrets that will cause harm if released.

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      Write your representatives! Repeal the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics!
    27. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Won't be long till someone accuses him of rape or child porn..

    28. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by ArsonSmith · · Score: 3, Insightful

      A little information and suddenly you think it's all brand new. The transparent stuff that we know about today was stuff that got people labeled as crazy gun nuts 30 years ago. Just because most people didn't know about it it's not like it wasn't happening. And happening a lot more than it does now.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    29. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by mrogers · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Try this one, then:

      https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/Martin_Luther_King,_Jr.

      A high profile isn't much of a bulletproof vest.

    30. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by melikamp · · Score: 1

      I guarantee that not all of them are criminal, or even embarassing.

      You are funny. How can you guarantee anything while everything is still classified? You will never find out how much the government is abusing the classification system unless it leaks.

    31. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by drewhk · · Score: 1

      Assange's answer to this is that they (WikiLeaks) are super-national, so the concept of national security or state secret is irrelevant for them.

    32. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Bakkster · · Score: 0

      And if you don't, then you have no counterintelligence capabilities. You are correct that stuff falls through the cracks (because nobody wants to spend the time to declassify information that didn't need to be classified) and I'm sure there are abuses, but the legitimate uses make that a necessary evil.

      So the issue with this whistle-blower is he dumped a lot of information, and a lot of it was likely classified for good reason, or arguably wasn't worth releasing (the 'Collateral Murder' video mirrored the official Army investigation findings). Even if he did break the law for what he felt was a good reason, I'm also willing to bet that somewhere in those 'cables' is legitimate classified information with no illegal, immoral, or embarassing content. Thus he still certainly commited a felony and deserves no protection for those acts.

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      Write your representatives! Repeal the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics!
    33. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      I love stop snitching. I just think of it as a gang fighting tool. That is the gang that calls itself a legitimate government, all the while stealing my money for torture programs, wasteful and uneeded wars, and tossing people in jail for the crusade on drugs. The "government" has, in my eyes, no more right to claim legitimacy than MS-13 with a track record like theirs.

      They are easily responsible for more senseless murders. Their prisons put the people trafficking industries to shame. At least gangs like MS-13, if they have a problem with you, they just go out and kill you. They don't need to wrap it in a flag and wash their own hands by turning it into some drone flying video game.

      Stop Snitchin!

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    34. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by FriendlyLurker · · Score: 2, Informative

      Florida computer programmer build vote rigging software and squeals, then the inspector related to the investigating found dead in bathtub over state lines where no autopsy made on suicide victims. What a story - thanks!

    35. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Bakkster · · Score: 2, Insightful

      How can you guarantee anything while everything is still classified?

      The law of averages. He grabbed communications in bulk, so he didn't verify all of them were of 'wrong-doing'. Perhaps I should say 'practically guarantee'.

      That said, something can be embarassing yet still worthy of remaining classified. Unless they are all evidence of criminal wrong-doing (according to a guy who himself breaks the law and gets in fist-fights), I would still say he should be prosecuted for that crime.

      I agree that it's a burden of trust, but do you have an alternative system that protects legitimate state secrets without potential for abuse?

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    36. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Bakkster · · Score: 1

      Assange's answer to this is that they (WikiLeaks) are super-national, so the concept of national security or state secret is irrelevant for them.

      But it doesn't matter that Wikileaks thinks it is ok, they aren't the ones who decide whether or not to prosecute people. It only matters that the US government told him not to do it, he agreed not to, then did it anyway knowing he was in violation of the law.

      That said, the fact that he gave the information to foreign nationals makes it even more severe from the US's POV.

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    37. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by melikamp · · Score: 1

      I agree that it's a burden of trust, but do you have an alternative system that protects legitimate state secrets without potential for abuse?

      Yes. It is a very effective system that we all used since forever. The military should simply not give sensitive information to people they don't trust; that is the way we all have to do it, and they aren't an exception. What they are doing to Manning and Assange is the worst kind of censorship: hands-on. They are not protecting a secret, since it is no longer a secret. They are censoring political speech by making an example of those who dare to speak.

    38. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Bakkster · · Score: 3, Insightful

      With a government, or at least, any organization that I am willing to consider as such in a legitimate fashion, the people are the share holders, we are the board. There is no legitimate reason to hide information from even the lowest of us. We OWN IT. It is OUR SECRET.

      And the problem is that some people are really shitty at keeping a secret. If we have the right to know all these secrets, then they won't be secret anymore, and not just within our country. Instead it's a privelege to those who need access to these secrets and have shown they can be trusted to keep them.

      That said, the system does need more protection against abuses. Any idea how? If not, I qualify this as an unfortunate, yet necessary evil.

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    39. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by commodore64_love · · Score: 4, Insightful

      >>>He's not a US citizen.
      >>>He's got damning information about their spying.
      >>>He's about to release it.
      >>>I'd say more his life is in danger.

      I'll be happy when we get rid of that damn Bush so these things stop happening. Oh. Wait.....

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    40. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Bakkster · · Score: 1

      I can perhaps agree on Assange. He was under no agreement initially not to disseminate this information, thus requests to not publish are best. However, if he now knows that publishing the information would be illegal, then I would expect him to be prosecuted if he visited America.

      Manning, on the other hand, has no reason to be surprised. He was not given this information (he seeked out info that he was not privy to), and did not let it slip (he intentionally released it). More importantly, he violated the contract he signed stating he would do neither action.

      I would also disagree with calling distributing classified information 'political speech'. That would be like claiming your right to liberty is being violated when the police enter the house you are robbing without receiving your permission to enter. Again, you could make a convincing argument for Assange (since as you say, the secret is already out by then), but this in no way protects Manning.

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    41. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is no legitimate reason to hide information from even the lowest of us.

      You sir are a dumb ass...I am sure that our military personnel whose lives are at risk would be happy if we shared their coordinates, strategies, and time frames with all Americans.

    42. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      oooooh, i can play this game to, what about Osama Bin Laden!!! I'll leave it to the reader to find out if there is a wiki page on him or not.

    43. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by PPH · · Score: 1

      When it comes to pissing off the United States Government, well getting big and public doesn't always work.

      Oh yeah?

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
    44. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1
    45. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by JWSmythe · · Score: 0, Troll

          Unfortunately, there are remnants of past administrations that stick around for a long time. It's not like Obama could sign an OE that said "undo everything bad that's happened before." Change takes time, but we're an instant gratification society.

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    46. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by jythie · · Score: 1

      Not really. Part of the point of classifying information is so you can punish people who talk about it. There is a small amount that really does need to be kept out of the public domain, but the vast majority is either classified 'by default' or because it is politicly dangerous to powerful people's jobs. Part of the problem is there is minimal oversight and massive misuse of the classified system that has been spiraling out of control over the last 50 years to the point 'classified information' is almost meaningless except as a legal tool to stop whistle blowing.

    47. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Possibly. That said, the media here in Europe (well, here in Germany) at least generally seem to be more sympathetic than not to Wikileaks' cause, and if Assange was indeed arrested by the US government (especially in a, shall we say, irregular way - e.g. kidnapped by the CIA, or something similar), then there would be quite an uproar. Journalists consider him... well, perhaps not quite one of their own, but an ally, at least, and given how crucial journalists are to shaping public opinion, governments will generally tread lightly when journalists and their interests are at stake.

      The US media might care less, and thus, the US government may, too, but he's got a significant backing in the press here, at least.

    48. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      And what makes you think Obambi wants to change anything in the first place ? Surely he's had the chance to end numerous "controversial" programs already. Take the drone strikes. They've intensified.

      You know ... it might even be ... *gasp* ... that there's a reason these programs exist.

    49. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Iamthecheese · · Score: 4, Informative

      You're sure there are abuses? well so am I. In fact I have no doubt personally that the abuses far outweigh any possible good that can come of the classification system. Time after time throughout history the US government has classified information for the sole reason that it's embarrassing to those currently in power. Until we require a judge to review every classification for legality (and I mean every one from presidential orgies to black ops) the abuses will continue. The government's record on this is absolutely unacceptable.

      --
      If video games influenced behavior the Pac Man generation would be eating pills and running away from their problems.
    50. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by drewhk · · Score: 1

      Of course. They do not believe in state secrets but states do. So states will try to silence them.

    51. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by rawler · · Score: 1

      Of course there are things that by necessity must remain secret, such as firing codes for weapons etc.

      Potential evidence of things that can/should lead to investigation and prosecution however, is never a justifiable secret, (not even in a corporation, for that matter).

    52. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by V!NCENT · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      But it doesn't matter that Wikileaks thinks it is ok, they aren't the ones who decide whether or not to prosecute people.

      Excuse me, but WTF. It is not a matter of who has the right to play the king of the hill, it is a matter of who manages to play the king of the hill. This is planet earth, who the hell wants their asses to be ruled by governments and who the hell likes the fact that those that take your life hostage by means of 'government' keep secrets from you that might include... hmmmm... I don't know... the fact that they killed innocent people that didn't want to take part in the RL "let's kill each other" game?

      In other words; PUT THAT IGNORENCE OF YOURS BACK INTO YOUR ASS, THANK YOU VERY MUCH!

      It only matters that the US government told him not to do it, he agreed not to, then did it anyway knowing he was in violation of the law.

      Oooooooooh Q_Q cry me a river.

      --
      Here be signatures
    53. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by chill · · Score: 2

      Wow, I clicked on the wrong article! I was reading the headline about William Shatner being on the shortlist for Canadian Governor-General, then read your post about waterboarding him and rendering him to a country to be tortured. Yeah, his attempts at singing were bad, but give the guy a break!

      --
      Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    54. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      >>>there are remnants of past administrations that stick around for a long time

      True but then why did Obama do this?
      - sign the Patriot Renewal Act instead of letting it expire
      - allow his employees in the White House say it's okay to revoke Miranda Rights and interrogate US citizens immediately?

      I don't think you can blame George Duh Bush for these items.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    55. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by gfreeman · · Score: 1

      Talk about cruel and unusual torture. Somehow I suspect he'd prefer electrodes on his balls.

      --
      Ceci n'est pas un sig.
    56. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      He's just an attention whore with no limits.

      You're just drinking the Hatorade while engaging in a bunch of substance-free hand waiving.

    57. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Biggseye · · Score: 1

      the only problem is that with out independently sourced truths, and I mean something that can be proved to be accurate, this fools words, pictures, and video is no more evidence of anything. Like the phony pictures and video from all over the internet, there is nothing to say this is not a fabrication. I for one need proof. Not his word, not your word. Proof. Until there is proof, this whole issue is moot. He may be a whistle-blower, he may also be a fake out to make a big splash and a political killing. Too many time in the recent past have these great expose' been nothing more than faked politically motivated BS. The fake but accurate( yeah, right) documents Dan Rather put out as the truth is but one example, the captured GI Joe, the fireproof, dirt proof doll from Gaza, the Bombs supposedly dropped by US planes that turned out to be Russian made artillery shells, complete with handling rings. The list goes on and on. The real issue is that this is not proof of anything, if he is so sure he is right, let him prove it in a court of Law. Stop running like a chicken sh*t and stand up and take the consequences. The true whistle blower is will to stand up and take it.

    58. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by dingDaShan · · Score: 1

      Obama, like Bush, has a horrendous track record of using "States Secrets" to cover the collective asses of this government and shield us from the big bad wars. Things like covering the illegal rendition and torture of innocents, like Maher Arar.

      First off, what about all of the cases that these "state secrets" protected information that should be protected? Are you saying that the vast majority of classified or senstitive documents are "State secrets" only to 'cover the asses' of X administration? The problem is, Wikileaks does not discriminate about what they want. They want people to post any and all classified, sentitive, or otherwise. Hell, why not just post a 'how to build nuclear weapons guide' for North Korea? Maybe all the military strike plans should be posted on wikileaks right before operations because everyone has the right to know? There is a reason for the classification system. It can be abused by the government just as it can be abused by Wikileaks. The difference is that the government has safeguards and oversight that is supposed to fight abuse--does Wikileaks have anything to do this?

    59. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by ground.zero.612 · · Score: 0

      The US government, or its people at large, don't care about rights of US citizens

      Citation needed.

      Hint: I'm a US citizen, aka person at large, and I care about the rights of other US citizens.

      Hint2: I don't really care about the rights of foreigners, and the main reason is that I feel they should fight for their own rights just as my ancestors fought for theirs/mine.

      Hint3: Your false dichotomy is wrong.

      --
      "Be prepared, son. That's my motto. Be prepared." --Joe Hallenbeck
    60. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Bakkster · · Score: 1

      I'm just saying that Wikileaks declaring themselves 'ultra-national' and thus not subject to laws of state secrets is no more or less legitimate than a nation declaring 'this is a state secret'. Thus the US being the one in charge and the rule-maker does give it the upper hand, for better or worse.

      Again, the problem is that either way the argument seems to become a straw-man (either it's always abuse, or always legitimate). There are legitimate secrets worth protecting with force of law, and there are embarassing non-secrets which those same laws can be abused to hide. Neither invalidates the other.

      --
      Write your representatives! Repeal the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics!
    61. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by JWSmythe · · Score: 2, Insightful

          Expiring the Patriot Act would have had severe political results (aka political suicide).

          As I recall, the Miranda Act issue was the removal of applying them to terror suspects (revoking their citizenship, therefore American law did not apply), introduced to Congress by Senator Lieberman. The other issue was a SCOTUS ruling that the Miranda warning did not need to be read.

          Unfortunately, the way politics work, to get some actions through that are not favored by the majority, you have to make concessions. It's a huge game of bartering. I want you to sign off on my bill, so I'll sign off on this one for you. Very little is done as a direct representation of what the people want. If you fail to play political politics correctly, it becomes a nasty war, where there is no forward progress, but there are lots of long winded speeches before Congress about why your way is right. After a few hundred hour long speeches of how each persons way is the "right" way, which usually are defined by party lines, the issue may be dropped, or dragged on so long that the actual issue at hand may already be dead.

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    62. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you think it's possible to prove someone to be innocent, you have a lot to learn about how our legal system is supposed to work. On top of that if people think you need to prove your innocence, we have already lost.

      That man was innocent, the failed to prove him guilty.

      Also, stop thanking fucking deities. They don't exist and peoples' reliance on such nonsense is what makes them so complacent as to allow shit like this to happen. Thank the people building these websites and putting their necks on the line, and then HELP THEM. Our government is committing atrocious acts in our name. They will never be held accountable unless WE hold them accountable. The people they're pissing off now will not be able to retaliate against them so they will retaliate against us, continuing a cycle of us screwing with other people's lives on the basis that they attacked us first when in reality they're merely trying to stop us from doing what we have already done in the past!

    63. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by jdgeorge · · Score: 3, Insightful

      In the US, we DO have a legitimate government, in the sense that the majority of voters have chosen it. That is as true today as it was when anyone else was president.

      Whether or not YOU voted for this government doesn't alter its legitimacy.

      This doesn't mean that everything the government does is wise, good, admirable; it just means that we, the people, have chosen those who are responsible for making our laws and making the decisions that "the government" must make.

    64. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by JWSmythe · · Score: 2, Insightful

          Drones are more cost effective to run than actual manned flights. They're cheaper to build, cheaper to operate, and if one goes down, you don't run the risk of a pilot being interrogated/tortured, and revealing any information to the enemy.

          Like I replied to someone else, politics are rarely about the wants and needs of the people. They are a bartering game. You can cherry pick any set of votes from any representative to show how good or evil they are. The reality is you have to figure out what *they* wanted, and you will see them vote for that, and vote for or against something else as a favor in return. Any player (including the POTUS) who doesn't play by these rules will find himself in a very dangerous position, where nothing can go in his/her favor, regardless of how good it will be for the people they represent.

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    65. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      > In the US, we DO have a legitimate government, in the sense that the majority of voters have chosen it. That is as true today as it was when
      > anyone else was president.

      You may feel that its so. I, on the other hand, feel that the voting system is completely gamed. Not only that but a recent rasmussen poll says that only about 20% of people feel that congress rules with the will of the people.

      I too however feel that they are as legitimate today as they were under any president....not at all.

      > Whether or not YOU voted for this government doesn't alter its legitimacy.

      Agreed. Its the fact that they are willing to use violence to enact social policy, against non-violent people that makes them illegitimate, in my eyes. No amount of voting by any number of people will change that.

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    66. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      > That said, the system does need more protection against abuses. Any idea how? If not, I qualify this as an unfortunate, yet necessary evil.

      That is indeed what they have a vested interest in getting you to believe.

      I fail to see how they are so necessary. Maybe if all they did was pave roads, hunt down bona-fide murderers. They do some necessary functions, but, those necessary functions make up such a small portion of their budget, that, frankly, I don't see how those few things are even worth mentioning.

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    67. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Applekid · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Expiring the Patriot Act would have had severe political results (aka political suicide).

      And yet, being a leak coordinator like Julian Assange puts his own life and livelihood at risk far worse than political suicide.

      It's clear that in a group of people consisting of the last 10 U.S. presidents, including Obama, plus Mr. Assange, only one of them is a true leader in character versus a leader just because of some election.

      If you fail to play political politics correctly, it becomes a nasty war, where there is no forward progress, but there are lots of long winded speeches before Congress about why your way is right.

      When the overwhelming majority of acts of congress revolve around taking rights away from people, I say GREAT: fewer chance for those stupid bills to actually become law.

      --
      More Twoson than Cupertino
    68. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      the U.S. government can just grab him and quietly throw him in a secret jail cell somewhere (or even render him to a country willing to get their hands dirty torturing him with more than a little waterboarding).

      Torture doesn't work. I believe there have been studies indicating this, but personal experience with pain tells me it won't work. You're more likely to tell them what you think they want to hear, which is why forced confessions are legally challengable. From an old journal:

      A year ago last December I suffered a torn retina. I found a very good specialist who welded it mostly back together with a laser, but the implant I have in that eye is on struts so it can focus, unlike older implants. He couldn't reach the whole tear with the laser beam so he had to finish the treatment with an older method, which involves supercooling a metal probe with liquid nitrogen and holding it to the sclera, the white of the eye, opposite the tear.

      If I'd been strapped to a chair at Guantanimo when they did that I'd have confessed to anything.

      The place where the tear had been has let loose bleeding inside my eyeball several times since then, the last time being last June or July. The symptoms of the bleeding are the same as that of a torn retina, so of course whenever that happened I hightailed it to Dr. Odin, my retina specialist. Once he was on vacation, so the office referred me to another specialist at one of the local hospitals where the guy was training an intern.

      "And there's where a cryotherapy was done... oh, that's right on a major nerve. Man, that really had to hurt!"

    69. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      "It only matters that the US government told him not to do it, he agreed not to, then did it anyway knowing he was in violation of the law. "

      So if the government of china contact you and tell you not to publish material critical of the chinese government and you do anyway it's ok for them to arrest you if you ever travel to a country with an extradition treaty with china?

      He's Australian, not an american.
      Once american state secrets reach him they are no longer american state secrets.

      It's passed on! This state secret is no more! it has ceased to be! it's expired and gone to meet it's maker! it's a stiff! Bereft of life, it rests in peace! If they hadn't nailed it to the perch it'd be pushing up the daisies! Is informatic processes are now 'istory! it's off the server! it's kicked the bucket, it's shuffled off it's confidential coil, run down the curtain and joined the bleedin' choir invisibile!! THIS IS AN EX-SECRET!!

    70. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      What you fail to understand is that once it reaches the journalists, wikileaks and others in foreign countries it is no longer a secret.
      The mechanisms to guard the secrets have failed.

      "Thus the US being the one in charge and the rule-maker does give it the upper hand, for better or worse. "
      Really?
      You guys are in charge of everyone are you now?

      Neither invalidates the other.
      They do however imply any such system should be watched like a hawk by the various branches of government for cases of abuse.

    71. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Can he build a high enough profile to protect himself from danger?"

      I think they meant to say:

      "Can he build a high enough profile to protect himself from the JEWS who run America?"

      You know, the JEWS who tell Congress what to do. The JEWS who run your entire media, and decide everything that gets onto your television screens, every book that is published, and every magazine and newspaper that are published.

      You know, the JEWS who were the ones screaming for the illegal invasion of Iraq, because it's in the precious JEWS' interests...

      The JEWS who are now calling for the invasion of Iran, which has no nuclear weapons, while Israel has over 200 nuclear weapons...

       

    72. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      That may be true on a meta level. But on a street level, if I had to live in a shithole neighborhood infested with drugs and gangbangers, I would be damn glad to have the cops come in and start busting some heads. There are corrupt cops out there, yes. But compared to the alternative (gangs, the mafia, etc.), they're saints.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    73. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by JWSmythe · · Score: 1

      When the overwhelming majority of acts of congress revolve around taking rights away from people, I say GREAT: fewer chance for those stupid bills to actually become law.

          I am frequently appalled when I see the system in action. Fewer stupid bills becoming laws still means stupid decisions are becoming laws. I'd prefer to see *GOOD* laws in the best interest of the people, rather than large budget special interest groups. The best interest of the people is not always reflected in the opinions of the people though, which leaves people believing the system doesn't work. I'd rather say that this is the way it is, but we all already know that it isn't.

          As I say frequently, it would take a significant change of our political system to make things right. That change isn't going to happen with the political system that we have, as it is now. Obama has made changes. He's had a few wins, but has made a lot of compromises to make that happen. As long as the people are voting for their elected officials, and the only information they have is scripted speeches and fancy ads, all we're doing is selecting representatives with the largest budget and the best PR people. We guess at who could do the best job, and once they're doing that job, it will be years before you can guess at someone better. If corporate hiring practices worked this way, no company would succeed. You'd end up with corporate officers who behave like this, or this, or this, or ... well, there are just too many to mention.

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    74. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Better link? Yeah.. Black Panther Party

    75. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your laws don't apply to citizens of other countries.

    76. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      I would make the distinction between the city/county level (which is mostly legitimate) and the federal level, which really isn't.

      Also, I don't see why you link gang bangers and drugs, wasn't that exactly what the police did? I mean, if the drug dealers in town were legally selling their product, how exactly would these gangs compete? pfizer or glaxco-smith-kline would put them out of business in days.

      Drugs and violence are hardly a foregone conclusion, only when you add prohibition does that end up being the case.

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    77. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No they are not covering their asses, they are saving face, thus leaving their asses exposed

    78. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      >>>Expiring the Patriot Act would have had severe political results (aka political suicide).

      Don't care. Obama should have vetoed its renewal. Sometimes principal matters more than whether or not you get reelected in 2012.
      .

      >>>As I recall, the Miranda Act issue was the removal of applying them to terror suspects (revoking their citizenship...))

      Which means ANYBODY'S citizenship can be revoked, and YOU no longer have a Bill of Rights protecting you from government abuse. The whole idea of revoking citizenship is absurd, and sounds like what FDR did to asian-Americans in the 1940s (put them in concentration camps and took their homes without due process), or what Woodrow Wilson did to Suffragettes during the 1910s (took-away first amendment rights).

      I don't see how you or anyone else can justify these actions

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    79. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by WNight · · Score: 1

      Actually, he could.

      If he formally forbid torture, unlawful wiretapping, etc, it'd go a long way to stopping it when it was discovered.

      But instead Obama chooses to condone it when he sees it.

    80. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Bakkster · · Score: 1

      What you fail to understand is that once it reaches the journalists, wikileaks and others in foreign countries it is no longer a secret. The mechanisms to guard the secrets have failed.

      And when somebody is murdered, they are no longer a living person. That doesn't mean we don't prosecute the killer because there is no living victim.

      I fail to see why if secrets are worth protecting in the first place, that once they are ex-secrets we should not punish those who caused them to become ex-secrets.

      WRT journalists, I think you have a point that a journalist may have a duty to publish. However, the idea that Wikileaks are 'super-national' and thus not subject to other nation's laws is silly. I expect them to be treated according to the same rules and laws as everybody else.

      "Thus the US being the one in charge and the rule-maker does give it the upper hand, for better or worse. " Really? You guys are in charge of everyone are you now?

      I was referring, of course, to US soil. If both people have equally tenuous arguments, the one that makes the rules wins.

      --
      Write your representatives! Repeal the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics!
    81. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      This is where you err ... " Until we require a judge to review every classification for legality (and I mean every one from presidential orgies to black ops) the abuses will continue."

      You put the sole responsibility upon ONE individual, a dictatorship. The problem, is that if you put the responsibility onto a group, eventually the group will break its confidence and expose that which it is charged to protect.

      The problem is, man (in general) is corrupt. Men, even the "best" among us, has critical flaws which can be exploited and exposed.

      Believing that government is a fix to the problem(s) it creates is just as flawed as anything else. Government cannot fix character flaws, it can only shift them elsewhere.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    82. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by WNight · · Score: 1

      No, not really. One is semantically a bit different, but also, tautologically just the same offense but against an organization with the power to declare its rules to be law.

      And no, there's no such thing. Censoring is always bad.

    83. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by JWSmythe · · Score: 1

          I'm not trying to justify anything. I have an amazing dislike of the way the political structure of the United States works.

          Political suicide is something any politician wants to avoid. Come election time, 90% of the population will have forgotten about him renewing the patriot act. Actually 90% of the population doesn't even realize (or care) it happened.

          I am aware that anyone can be classified as a "terrorist", and treated accordingly. The US has always been able to revoke citizenship of an individual, which will result in change of their legal protection. That was done long before Obama was POTUS. Years ago, I sat down with people and went over the bill of rights line item by line item. Your rights have been extremely limited for many years. As you mentioned, the Japanese internment camps are an excellent (and unfortunate) example of this. In our history, it wasn't the first, and I'm sure won't be the last instance of such things happening.

          The United States of America used to be land of the free, where people had an opportunity to thrive. It didn't matter what your old nationality was or what language you spoke. People came here to start fresh in a beautiful new place. That died a long time ago.

          To regain the liberties that our founding fathers gave us will take a significant change, and that change won't be by electing even the best person into a single office. If, and only if, we were able to elect responsible officials into every office, then we would have a chance at resuming society as it was intended. Until then, pay your taxes, keep your head down, and pray your neighbor doesn't report you as a suspected anything.

       

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    84. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by WNight · · Score: 1

      There are legitimate secrets worth protecting with force of law

      No. There are secrets worth protecting by being secretive, but censorship after the fact is doomed to fail and unjust.

      There are no secrets worth protecting with law because it merely drives them underground, like illegal weapons, so only the underworld possesses it.

      I'm just saying that Wikileaks declaring themselves 'ultra-national' and thus not subject to laws of state secrets is no more or less legitimate than a nation declaring 'this is a state secret'.

      They aren't declaring anything, they're simply acting for social justice.

      The specific inane kleptocratic nonsense a state spews is only as valid as its mandate to rule, which obviously can't truly be given when deceived any more than consent could be in a contract. As nobody could ever be said to consent to having facts withheld from them any government decision to do so merely de-legitimizes the government.

      And yes, that does mean we've been living without a valid government (by modern liberal standards) literally since forever.

    85. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by tmassa99 · · Score: 1
      Safeguards? Surely, ye jest.
      See: Bradley Manning
      http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2010-06-08/state-department-anxious-about-diplomatic-secrets-bradley-manning-allegedly-downloaded/

      Or
      http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/10/AR2006041001049.html

      The news was the court filing by Special Counsel Patrick J. Fitzgerald reporting that Bush, through Vice President Cheney, had authorized I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby to leak sensitive intelligence information in July 2003 to discredit claims made by former ambassador Joseph C. Wilson IV.

    86. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by WNight · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      All agreements were null and void when the government ordered Manning to commit war crimes.

      By ordering Manning to fake evidence against innocents they essentially required this, by international law and near-universal moral consensus.

    87. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      It's ok unless the act is legal in the country with the extradition treaty or the country in which it was published.

      Setting up a situation where something sucks because it's more draconian doesn't negate the reality we live in. It only makes us wish things were different more. There are government agents who damn well will be picked up and held if they enter a china friendly territory because they were spies. Isreal has people (supposedly) that will be picked up and extradited to several different middle eastern countries because of the acts supposedly committed by them (murder). If a violation of the law is a violation, then it's a violation pure and simple. The only recourse is to determine that the law didn't apply to you or that you somehow had a necessity that superseded the law or violation. Both of which can only be accomplished in court.

    88. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Bakkster · · Score: 1

      All agreements were null and void when the government ordered Manning to commit war crimes.

      By ordering Manning to fake evidence against innocents they essentially required this, by international law and near-universal moral consensus.

      When did this happen? My understanding is that Manning had no legitimate reason to access the video at all, only stumbling across it while looking for interesting classified info (a felony in itself).

      That said, what was there to fake? Where was the difference in the leaked classified video and the officially released Army report? The specific text that was faked. It might be there, but I haven't seen it.

      --
      Write your representatives! Repeal the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics!
    89. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by theNAM666 · · Score: 0, Troll

      Yep. Obama has a horrendous record of keeping all the things you write about secret, which is why you're here writing about them, and not rotting in a gulag somewhere.

    90. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Knowing how to build a nuclear weapon is actually pretty trivial knowledge to deduce on your own.

      Performing the actual machining of said nuclear weapon is another matter ENTIRELY.

    91. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by endymion.nz · · Score: 1

      Here's a hint, in some other countries, citizens care about the rights of *humans* not just 'citizens of the country'. The reason is, as humans, we feel that our humanity is diminished when we deprive other people of theirs. But then, you are Americans, and somehow different, right?

      --
      mediocrity rules, man
    92. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by endymion.nz · · Score: 1

      If you live in a neighborhood infested with drugs and gangbangers, the corrupt cops have already given up and are just guarding the gates.

      --
      mediocrity rules, man
    93. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of what a surprise, well known slashdot fascist supports facism, hiding behind a pathetic cloak of patriotism.

    94. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

      Speech doesn't have to be political to be guaranteed. Only in very strict situations related to imminent military action, IIRC, has a court allowed a temporary censorship. Others (like the Pentagon Papers) were reversed as improper.

      One could argue, of course, that that would be a proper use of speech. But it is also arguably deliberately aiding the enemy w.r.t. the military actions of democratically elected officials and war and harming your side by putting soldiers and the effort at increased risk.

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    95. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

      Assange's answer to this is that they (WikiLeaks) are super-national, so the concept of national security or state secret is irrelevant for them.

      Like most reporters, they put on blinders and treat as equivalent the other side who'd execute them en mass without batting an eye. Freedom and dictatorship are not equally arbitrary, and thus equally valid, viewpoints.

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    96. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Tolkien · · Score: 1

      Exactly how is my observation redundant? There are indeed people who teach their kids that tattling is wrong. Clearly whoever modded me is of that very belief.

      "Tattling" is a good thing. If your kids "tattle" all they're doing is telling you what they know. What happens is based on your judgement call. Any problems that arise from "tattling" are due to you mishandling the situation. It's nobody elses' fault.

    97. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, I'm not enjoying his third term any more than his first two.

    98. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      in that case show me the australian law against publishing american secrets.

    99. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      we're talking here about prosecuting a journalist for publishing stuff someone else passed to him.

      Once it reaches the journalist it is no longer a secret.

      I'm not sure which country wikileaks is currently nominally based from but I imagine it'll be iceland soon enough.
      even if it's american secrets and americans can read it does not mean that it's happening in america when the net is involved.

    100. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by melikamp · · Score: 1

      I would also disagree with calling distributing classified information 'political speech'.

      Political speech is political because of its meaning and context. Of course not all state secrets are that. But are you willing to argue that the "Collateral Murder" video is not political speech?

    101. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      You wouldn't need a specific law making it illegal. The problem is that as long as it's a state secret, it belongs to that state. IF Australia has a law against illegal possession of goods or items or possession of items that were stolen, or as one law in the US implies- conversion, then those laws in the AU would apply. BTW, just because you come into possession of a document or commit a crime and flee to another country, it doesn't mean you are scott free. We've ended that a long time ago and AU will extradite you for violations of US law when they can be applied. And if you think getting something off the internet doesn't mean they apply, then I would suggest looking back into Sharman networks who offered services to US citizens which then allowed US courts to have jurisdiction in one of the lawsuits brought against them. The Au government was more then happy to raid their offices and confiscate servers on behalf of the US courts.

    102. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by elucido · · Score: 1

      That and compromising politicians is generally a common practice. This one cheated on his wife. That one took a bribe. This one is gay and fears being outed. Eventually corporate intelligence has enough dirt on every politician to control their actions.

      So no politicians do not have free will. I hope that much is understood. If politicians had free will it might not necessarily be better, but it definitely wouldn't be worse. So the game is chess and whoever controls the pawns/politicians controls the board.

    103. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by QuantumRiff · · Score: 1

      Your right, like the way WikiLeaks leaked info on how some Swiss banks were illegally handling funds, to help people escape taxes. Info the government has used to damn near disband UBS in the US, and force the banks to release all info. Heck, they even offered a "pay us what you owe by this date, and we won't come after you with pentalties" get out of jail card to people, and netted something like 15 billion. Transparency goes both ways..

      --

      What are we going to do tonight Brain?
    104. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by JWSmythe · · Score: 2, Informative

          They don't even need real dirt on a politician. If the word gets out that a politician was sleeping with an intern, even with a blurry photoshoped picture, it can be enough to ruin a career.

          Consider the U.S. Representative Gary Condit (R - California) and Chandra Levy. She went missing in 2001, and her remains were found in 2002. Mainly because of the implication that he may have been involved, fed by the media, not investigators, he lost his 2002 re-election bid. He was in congress for 12 years, and was a career politician. He wasn't a suspect. There was no evidence to suggest he was involved. It wasn't until 2009 that a person who significantly matched the evidence was charged.

          The man did nothing wrong. Well, other than sleeping with an intern, which is usually ignored unless someone wants to hurt a candidates position (note: promiscuity in politicians has been well known for pretty much the history of politics. I won't say *every* president has had a mistress, but it's well known that many have. Even good ol' George Washington, founding father, 1st president, can't lie about the cherry tree, had Sally Fairfax. It's hard to find documentation of affairs between politicians and their mistresses/concubines/escorts, since they are suppose to be discrete affairs.

          It's pretty much assumed that many of our leaders smoked pot, or at least up until the 1900's. States began outlawing it in 1906, and by 1932 it was illegal nationally. 130 years where growing, smoking, and trading had been perfectly legal were done away with. That can be partly (not entirely) thanks to DuPont patenting the process to use wood pulp to make paper in 1932.

          So lets look at the worse evils of the world. Extramarital sex, it's been there since the beginning of the US. Drugs, it's been there since the beginning of the US. Rock and roll, well, that's newer, so we won't discuss it.

          Bribes and extortion have been around forever. "Lobbyist" by name have been around for an awful long time, generally attributed to the Grant administration (special interest representatives who met with Grant in the lobby of the hotel he stayed in), but was seen in print before that. A good lobbyist may try to win their site through a well spoken argument for their side, or a container (envelope or bag) with sufficient funds to sway the politicians opinion.

          It's always possible to get your way, through money, extortion, threats, or violence. Oh, and sometimes voting works too.

          The only way to get a honest politician would be to make sure they have everything they could ever want (remove the bribe potential), have no way that extortion could work (absolute control of the media and/or not care what lies come up), and absolute security. Absolute security doesn't extend to just friends and family. If someone threatened to say execute 10,000 people, it would sway a persons opinion to ensure their safety.

          Finding enough strong leaders would be a damned near impossible task, especially finding strong leaders who won't be corrupted by the power they have. That's one of the inherent evils of power.

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    105. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by shentino · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure also that it wasn't a government hit job.

      You piss off a local crime ring, you can expect a bullet. The government has more red tape to go through.

    106. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Kidding? Ever heard of proportional voting. Your first past the post system is the sort of crap that got Hitler elected.

    107. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by mrogers · · Score: 1

      You piss off a local crime ring, you can expect a bullet.

      Likewise if you piss off a bunch of "patriots" by leaking videos that embarrass the military. The US government doesn't need to kill Assange, it just needs to look the other way.

    108. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only if it's really a fair and informed choice. Why do you think corporations and other wealthy interests spend so much money influencing the media and politicians? It's because it works.

      If you spend enough money and control enough people, you can swing the vote whatever way you want. Sad but true.

    109. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

      Some of them likely have legitimate state secrets that will cause harm if released.

      I'd dispute your use of "legitimate" in respect of any "state secrets that will cause harm if released". At the very least, they'd show that the state representatives in question are guilty of hypocrisy ; more likely guilty of something more heinous, such as racism, stupidity, bigotry, prejudice ... all the unpleasant aspects of the normal human psyche which we employ our state representatives to leave at the reception desk when they check in for work.
      (Note : I'm not attacking the right of the representatives to hold and talk about unpleasant views on their own time ; just not when they're at work.)

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
    110. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      That's exactly why I support legalization. Right now, the law plays right into the hands of all the wrong people (Mexican cartels, gangs, etc.).

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    111. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Bakkster · · Score: 1

      Speech doesn't have to be political to be guaranteed. Only in very strict situations related to imminent military action, IIRC, has a court allowed a temporary censorship. Others (like the Pentagon Papers) were reversed as improper.

      Speech is not guaranteed, in an unlimited sense. It's limited in the case of a clear and present danger, which could probably apply in the case of private, frank state-department discussions. It was used to apply to speech against the draft during war-time, it could probably apply here due to the potential damage to diplomatic relations. It's also likely that the US could attempt a prior restraint case (against wikileaks), though I'm not sure what the outcome would be. Again, Manning is up poop creek without a paddle (such is the risk of civil disobedience), but wikileaks might be scot-free.

      --
      Write your representatives! Repeal the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics!
    112. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Auldclootie · · Score: 1

      This is the grovelling dickheads viewpoint - 'Please protect me from my own stupidity!" Governments should not - and do not have the right - to keep secrets from their people. They are our servants and representatives... not our nannies... remember?

    113. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by gpronger · · Score: 1

      For what its worth; no clue why you've been mod'ed down to "0" as flamebait. Your point may be disagreeable to some, but its a valid point to bring forward.

    114. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Proteus+Child · · Score: 1

      The words "enemy combatant" suddenly spring to mind...

      --

      Proteus' Child

      Doko ni datte; hito wa, tsunagette iru.

    115. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Bakkster · · Score: 1

      This is the grovelling dickheads viewpoint - 'Please protect me from my own stupidity!" Governments should not - and do not have the right - to keep secrets from their people.

      Not at all. They are keeping secrets from OTHER people who would use such information against us. Unfortunately, the only effective way to do that involves keeping it from most of us blabbermouths.

      You can't reasonably believe that information such as weapon designs, launch codes, information that can be used to counter our weapons, our troop movements and numbers, reports prepared for diplomats entering negotiations (as showing our hand would let them take advantage of us), or details of defensive preperations shouldn't be protected from foreign nations.

      I agree that doesn't allow the gov't to mis-classify embarrasing information purely to keep us from holding them accountable. However, I think there's still a compelling case that national security can still justify state secrets, in at least some (or many) cases, in the same way corporate proprietary information is protected.

      They are our servants and representatives... not our nannies... remember?

      And part of how they serve us is militarily, and part of how they represent us is diplomatically. For them to do so effectively can require secrecy from other nations.

      Domestically, I agree entirely. All Senate dealings relating to purely domestic issues (for example) should be public record.

      --
      Write your representatives! Repeal the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics!
    116. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by ground.zero.612 · · Score: 0

      Here's a hint, in some other countries, citizens care about the rights of *humans* not just 'citizens of the country'. The reason is, as humans, we feel that our humanity is diminished when we deprive other people of theirs. But then, you are Americans, and somehow different, right?

      Hint4: endymion.nz is OffTopic.

      Hint5: Even when us US citizens don't explicitly state this to appease hate-mongering foreigners like endymion.nz, we care about human rights more than most countries do. (citations: US Civil War, WW1, WW2, plus many of the Chinese and other oppressive culture Civil Rights movements we have here in the US)

      Hint6: Yes, we Americans are somehow different, that is correct.

      Refuting trolls is like sprinkling arsenic in their food. Enjoy the meal!

      --
      "Be prepared, son. That's my motto. Be prepared." --Joe Hallenbeck
    117. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by Vlado · · Score: 1

      As I recall, the Miranda Act issue was the removal of applying them to terror suspects (revoking their citizenship, therefore American law did not apply)

      I wasn't aware that Miranda only applies to US citizens. Are you sure that's the case?

    118. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by KC7JHO · · Score: 1

      And so if you as a soldier were ask to go to a foreign country and transport supplies to our troupes, you think it should be perfectly reasonable for us to know the name and address of your daughter? Mother? What do you think the enemy gov would do with this kind of information? Say they can already determine that information but can't make the connection beyond the fact that you are a solider some where in their country, should they be able to find out exactly where you are? What mission you are assigned to do? Where you are going to be and at what time? Do you think, even for an instant, that they would not hesitate to threaten you with the lives of your family if they thought it would cause you to stop doing your job? Oh you think that these secrets should only be available to US citizens? Citizens for how long? (time square bomber ring any bells) Would YOU want details of a mission YOU were on given to the people you were sent to stop? Their are secrets that protect the lives of our soldiers and their families, but also that protect our NATIONAL interest as well. This is not just about covering up some crap that some one did.

    119. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      "as long as it's a state secret, it belongs to that state."

      And it ceases to be a secret the moment a journalist has possession of it.
      copies of confidential documents are not considered the same as stolen property in most places in the world.
      the journalist may have a copy but that is his copy now.

    120. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      I think you are purposely dropping the State portion of it. It doesn't matter if it's still a secrete or not, it's still the property of the state as the possessive connotation of "state secret" implies.

      And yes, when the property is a particular piece of information, it is stolen property when it is stolen. It doesn't matter how many copies are made or not, the information is still an object and possession of that object carries consequences. Maybe less severe consequences when it's a copy, but they don't automagically disappear.

      BTW, the copy itself isn't the issue at hand here. It's the information in the copy itself which is considered the state's secrete. Knowingly disclosing that information, being a journalist or not, can and probably will have legal ramifications pertaining to the release of the information. Now if it is something everyone already knows about, then it's news you are reporting, but when it's still largely a secrete, then it's state secrets you are revealing.

    121. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by theNAM666 · · Score: 1

      Man, I love jerks who mark any contrarian opinion a troll. The reality here is that the US, like many modern regimes, exercises much more careful means of social control than throwing dissenters into gulags. But I guess I'm supposed to sugar coat my point and lick the OP's *** when replying, if I don't want to be modded down.

      Hmm. Oddly, this sort of demonstrates my point.

    122. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by ps2os2 · · Score: 0

      IF Cheney and Bush were still in office, I think water boarding would be more likely because if its ever photographed they would claim its not Torture D

    123. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by uninformedLuddite · · Score: 1

      Those poor conspiracy nuts with their claims that the government had black helicopters

      --
      The new right fascists are bilingual. They speak English and Bullshit.
    124. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      A) I made an exception for personally identifiable information of employees, nice try.
      B) I am pretty anti-war and anti-soldier. They are not MY troops. I don't support anyones troops. They can all fuck off and die for all I care.

      Also yes, the times square bomber rings bells, I mentioned him too. He sounds like every other soldier out there rationalizing his job and the atrocities that he is willing to commit "for his country". I have as much respect for him as I do any soldier... none at all.

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    125. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      "the information is still an object"

      Congratulation.
      You've just lived up to your name.

    126. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by jdgeorge · · Score: 1

      That's a fair response, but I think I disagree somewhat with your terminology. The fact that the people chose who will perform the offices of government makes them legitimate according to the US Constitution. If those who were elected then act against the will of the people who voted for them, they may be corrupt, but the government is still generally legitimate.

      In any case, the difference between illegitimate and corrupt is debateable, and your general point still holds.

      On the other hand, I contend that the violent actions performed by the government do NOT make the government illegitimate. If the people support such actions, I argue they are legitimate. Those actions may indicate that the government (and constituency) is morally reprehensible, but that is totally separate from its legitimacy.

      Ultimately, you may reject the authority of the government in general because of it's moral failures, but to reject the legitimacy of the government implicitly rejects its founding principles embodied in the US Constitution.If you do, indeed, reject the legitimacy of the constitutional foundation of the US government, then I stand fully corrected, and to you, the US government by its very definition is illegitimate.

    127. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Yawn.. I guess you have ran out of intelligent things to say.

      Would it be better if I said the information is still an object as defined by law? Either way, it's an object and no amount of attempted insults or inference to avoid that will change it.

    128. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      you might be making something similar to sense if you claimed the digital documents were objects but the information itself?
      Fuck no, you'd just be displaying your ignorance some more.

      If what you claimed were true you could be charged with theft/possession of stolen property for merely knowing secrets.

    129. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      Doing some reading your wierd ideas about what constitutes "objects" seems to have little or no relevence in America or most western countries.
      Funnily enough chinas approach is pretty close though.

    130. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      If the information isn't an object, then how is obtaining it without permission illegal? How is having the information or divulging it to the wrong people illegal?

      You see, the laws treat the information as an object whether they are in reality or not. The information that someone is a covert agent is not an object in reality, but giving that information or object of concern to foreign nationals is completely illegal. So if information cannot be treated as an object, then how is it illegal to give information to certain parties? Of course the answer to that is that the law treats it as an object whether you like it or not.

    131. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Maybe you should do some more reading. You will find there is a lot of relevance in America and most western countries. The law makes then an object for the enforcement of the law. You can disagree but you would be wrong.

      Here is a quick test you can do, giving classified information to foreign nationals is illegal. What is illegal about it? Not giving them information, it's only illegal to give them certain kinds of information as classified by law. So you can tell Iran how to cook dinner or how to get a sun tan without getting a sun burn, but you can't tell them how to make their centrifuge for enriching uranium more efficient and you can't tell them the troop strength of the initial response force geared as responding to an attack by Iran. Why, because the law made that information an object and placed restrictions on it's possession, use, and dissemination. So you can be an Iranian working for the Iranian government, you can obtain the information about cooking or sun bathing, but possession of military or state secretes or otherwise restricted information is enough for you to be arrested in most western countries. Now how is that possible is the law doesn't treat the information as an object?

    132. Re:The Whistleblowers' Blues by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      there's a reason americans have to sign an agreement waiving some of their free speach rights before being given access to clasified information.
      If a journalist who has never signed up for that gets given the information he is not bound as such.

      Sharing clasified information with someone after you have agreed to keep it secret is illegal in america.
      citation: see United States v. The Progressive where the defendents refused to accept security clearances and as such were not able to attend their own in camera trial as it would have put restraints on their right to free speech.
      That one was dropped partly for fear that the supreme court would rule the act they were being charged under unconstitutional and partly because the cat was already well and truly out of the bag.

      "obtaining it without permission " is not illegal assuming you didn't break any real(ie exist outside your delusions) laws in the process like laws against breaking and entering or hacking etc etc.
      If someone mails you clasified information that's their problem, not yours.
      Citation:
      New York Times Co. v. United States
      The New York Times obtained a massive quantity of clasified information and the government wanted to stop them publishing anything about it.
      The government got shot down by the supreme court and told that screaming "STATE SECRET!!! STATE SECRET!!!" was not enough to make the first amendment disappear in a puff of smoke. Particularly when the information included governmental misjudgments and misconducts, that being exactly why the First Amendment exists.

  2. Good on him by Pojut · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I understand the need to keep things secret, and I understand that in war shit happens...but that doesn't mean when things go awry, we the people shouldn't know about it. For the same reason why I think uncensored war footage should be shown on the nightly news, maybe if the average civilian actually saw what goes on in war, the public would be less likely to stand by idly while our government spends billions on killing people on the other side of the planet.

    Just my $.02

    1. Re:Good on him by Aqualung812 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I agree with you, but let's show both the killing on both sides and the good things that are done as well. Let people make an informed decision.

      --
      Grammer Nazis - I mod you "troll" unless you actually add something on-topic. Yes, I know I have mispellings in my sig.
    2. Re:Good on him by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean that I should not care about any USA citizens as long as they don't start hunting down and killing KKK members?

    3. Re:Good on him by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think certain elements on "their side" of the planet would say exactly the same thing. We can argue about who initiated the current mess of strikes and counter strikes but the fact is that the groundwork has been laid over the course of hundreds of years of disagreement and conflict, so it's not really possible to say "that's what kicked it off, it was them / us".

    4. Re:Good on him by magarity · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I understand the need to keep things secret, and I understand that in war shit happens...but that doesn't mean when things go awry, we the people shouldn't know about it
       
      Which is why in the US with the first amendment guaranteeing freedom of the press one had to find a professional journalist and convince him/her and the editor and publisher that breaking a secret story was worth the potential penalties. With Wikileaks this process is reduced to a snickering game of airing dirty laundry just for the sake of doing it. One day truly serious info will be released and cause the bad sort of trouble that will make the Rosenbergs look like common gossips.

    5. Re:Good on him by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

      That sounds a lot like one of the 19th century arguments for public hanging, beheading, and firing squads to be used as the principle means of execution. The idea was that if that public saw the brutality of killing someone, they would be less inclined to support execution as a punishment except in the most extreme cases. Ultimately, the argument failed to sway state legislatures (particularly New York) because it turns out that public executions can actually be a catalyst for further crimes (i.e. the crowd is more likely to commit capital offenses after watching an execution) and because there was an easy alternative: private executions.

      Likewise with war footage: the easy alternative is to simply make it unavailable, or to only make available videos that do not show the brutality of war (e.g. a video of an aerial bombing, taken from the airplane).

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    6. Re:Good on him by radtea · · Score: 5, Informative

      But, do you agree with editing exculpatory footage out of videos and then treating the video as the whole story?

      Except that you have no evidence of that other than the Pentagon's say-so, and they aren't known for their honesty and forthrightness. Furthermore, the footage you're talking about is not the least exculpatory: it purportedly shows the same gun crew that asked permission to shoot and kill the good samaritans who were aiding the wounded victims of their previous attack, and then shot and killed the good samaritans who were aiding the wounded victims of their previous attack, did not kill another group of completely innocent people previous to shooting and killing the good samaritans who were aiding the wounded victims of their previous attack.

      Only in the mind of someone deluded or evil would not killing innocent people prior to killing innocent good samaritans who are aiding the victims of your previous attack count as "exculpatory."

      As to the rest: yeah, we'll stop killing them when they stop killing us; and they'll stop killing us when we stop killing them. Sounds like the security-industrial complex is going to be a major profit center for America for decades to come, building all that deadweightloss gear so young American men and women can go off to kill and be killed. Not a bad gig: getting taxpayers to fund the wanton destruction--body and soul--of their own children, all in the name of bigger profits for Lockheed, Haliburton and Blackwaster(Xe).

      --
      Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
    7. Re:Good on him by dave420 · · Score: 1

      That might just desensitize people to the horror of war, making war more prevalent.

    8. Re:Good on him by e2d2 · · Score: 1

      But there are already systems in place to handle these issues inside the DoD. This guy isn't who they want. They want the person in their midst leaking information, going around the chain of command and leaking things to the press, so they can nail their balls to a wall and retrain them on proper procedure. They (DoD/JAG) have to follow the law even if they don't like it.

    9. Re:Good on him by ausrob · · Score: 1

      This would be the "war on terror", right? Seems a lot more like a war on Iraqis..

    10. Re:Good on him by socrplayr813 · · Score: 1

      I might agree with you, except for the fact that people don't want to put themselves in those situations. Eventually the military won't have enough boots on the ground to get involved like that.

      --
      The confidence of ignorance will always overcome the indecision of knowledge.
    11. Re:Good on him by darjen · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Any of the "good things" that might possibly come out of war can also be done without war.

    12. Re:Good on him by Lumpy · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Like in Vietnam.. News covered how the Americans were butchers, killing women and children. And how they were unrefined even killing their own officers.

      Yet the truth was that GI's were fragging officers because they would order them to kill the children or the scumbag enemy were forcing women to fight or they would kill their children (Sounds like the current cowards), or put the team in un-necessary danger... Oops 4 grenades went off in Lt. Dan's tent.... He must have been depressed....

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    13. Re:Good on him by Hatta · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But there are already systems in place to handle these issues inside the DoD.

      And those systems are obviously broken. Top Secret information must cause "exceptionally grave damage" to national security if leaked. This information leaked, and has caused no damage to national security. The only person who deserves their balls nailed to a wall is the person who classified this inappropriately.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    14. Re:Good on him by Aqualung812 · · Score: 1

      I agree with you in some cases. However, some times the people that have been getting their way for centuries though fear and intimidation start shooting at you when you help the people they prey on. So, do you leave and not do the "good things", or do you shoot back?

      --
      Grammer Nazis - I mod you "troll" unless you actually add something on-topic. Yes, I know I have mispellings in my sig.
    15. Re:Good on him by strack · · Score: 3, Insightful

      thats a great idea. and we gotta start somewhere, and footage that the US military has deemed classified due to its negative propaganda value is a great place to start.

    16. Re:Good on him by grumbel · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I will feel sorry for the people on the other side of the planet just as soon as they start hunting down and killing the people on their side of the planet that are sending people to this side,

      It might be news for you, but Iraq had nothing whatsoever to do with 911. Zero, Nada, Zilch.

      I also find it a bit hypocritical to complain about a few missing minutes (in which likely nothing of interest happened), when the military is censoring the whole fucking war. We are not taking about minutes of footage here, but months or even years of footage then ended up on the cutting floor or never being released in the first place.

    17. Re:Good on him by BobMcD · · Score: 1

      One day truly serious info will be released and cause the bad sort of trouble that will make the Rosenbergs look like common gossips.

      Which is why we need to adapt. In the IT industry we've long understood that security by obscurity doesn't work. The military and political worlds had better start catching up. If it needs to be secret, find a way to remedy it, and quick. Make all your secrets public, and you'll have nothing to fear from Wikileaks and the like.

      Same is good advice if you're about to take on the Scientologists, by the way.

    18. Re:Good on him by MrNaz · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Tell me, what is the worst that could be released on Wikileaks? Total schematics for the F35 aircraft along with source code? What would the Afghans do with it? Build one out of moistened sand? How about the Chinese? Trust me, the so-called free-world has nothing to fear from a poorly injection-molded plastic F35.

      The military might of the US lies in its industrial output, not its secrets. Secrets only protect the US regime from its own population.

      --
      I hate printers.
    19. Re:Good on him by ncy · · Score: 1

      unfortunately, it's hard to make an informed decision when the media chooses what it reports and how. even if there was an even number of "good" and "bad" news stories on both sides of the war, i'm sure the media can sway the public's opinion to favor one side or the other regardless of what's really going on.

    20. Re:Good on him by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Al Jazera shows quite a bit of footage of "the other side" killing Americans/UN soldiers.

    21. Re:Good on him by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

      Maybe they could spend a couple minutes once a year on the news displaying footage of why we're at war, then. You know, something like those "feed a kid in Africa for $1/day" videos, except with the cause of the hunger and depravity.

      It makes absolutely no sense to air the consequences of war without understanding the causes. It's like lauding students for getting straight As but never once mentioning that hard study is typically/should be required for such a feat to be accomplished.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    22. Re:Good on him by Aqualung812 · · Score: 0

      Agreed. Post the video, but leave out disinformation in the editorial on the place that you're posting it (i.e. collateralmurder.com). Let the bloggers and news places add their own editorial and start digging for truth once the video is released.

      --
      Grammer Nazis - I mod you "troll" unless you actually add something on-topic. Yes, I know I have mispellings in my sig.
    23. Re:Good on him by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But, do you agree with editing exculpatory footage out of videos and then treating the video as the whole story?

      In a sense, yes, provided the "other side" has the full footage, which they can use to rebut.

      Wikileaks rarely, possibly never, has capacity to present "the whole story" on any subject. What they can do, is show people that a story exists. The story so far seems to be

      • The government did a violent thing (and hey, that's what government is for).
      • The government appeared to have no good reason for doing it (that's not what government is for), but it's hard to be sure. The public is curious (overall; obviously different factions have different biases, some screaming "murder!" and some screaming "right on, kill the towelheads!" but with most people saying "huh? what happened here, and why?").
      • The government, instead of presenting the unedited footage, elects to not do so. This creates a default judgment against the government. Ergo, it probably was unjustified murder and outside the scope of the military's purpose. Maybe not, but if they don't have any arguments in their favor, then it's probably because there Aren't any arguments in their favor. Most people, when wrongly accused of murder, say, "I didn't do it."
      • Not content with losing the battle of presenting this incident, the government decides to clamp down on the presentation of information. Someone high up could have said, "Three cheers for wikileaks! Some of my underlings were being naughty (and they've been fired)." Instead they said, "We don't want the public to know about things."

      I will feel sorry for the people on the other side of the planet just as soon...

      Whoa there, this story isn't about those people anymore. Don't you feel sorry for you? The violence was only the preamble to the full story. Regardless of whatever is happening to innocent (or not-so-innocent through inaction, as you suggest) people elsewhere, your own government has been caught working against you. I don't mean by failing to condemn people getting killed; I mean by not only failing to support wikileaks, but by being hostile to wikileaks, getting information to the public, and allowing you to know whether or not your interests are being represented.

    24. Re:Good on him by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Any of the "good things" that might possibly come out of war can also be done without war.

      Truly, there will be peace in our time.

    25. Re:Good on him by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      Absolutely true, however it takes both sides of a potential conflict to realise this before it becomes a viable option.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    26. Re:Good on him by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Any of the "good things" that might possibly come out of war can also be done without war.

      This statement is only true if you assume humans to be completely rational and wholly logical automatons. This assumption is simply, utterly, absolutely, and beautifully not true.

    27. Re:Good on him by AhabTheArab · · Score: 1

      I'm a member of Iraq Veterans Against the War (IVAW). In the past, IVAW has conducted "Operation First Casualty" in a few major cities across the US. In war, the first casualty is the truth. Essentially this was street theater. These Iraq Veterans conducted a mock unmounted patrol through Manhattan, downtown Chicago and other pedestrian heavy areas to give Americans a taste of how things really are in Iraq. Here is a great video of OFC in Manhattan.

    28. Re:Good on him by ElectricTurtle · · Score: 1

      At what cost? How many generations must suffer before the weak efforts of economic and political pressure may finally achieve a goal that might take an army a few years?

      Genocides are usually completed or mostly completed by the time anything less than armed conflict has a positive effect.

      --
      I support the Slashcott and will not be reading or commenting from 2/10/14 to 2/17/14. Beta is steaming pile of dog shit
    29. Re:Good on him by Myopic · · Score: 2

      Sadly, I disagree. Some things can't be solved without resorting to violence. But, gladly, most things can -- almost everything. We should work toward that goal.

    30. Re:Good on him by Feyshtey · · Score: 5, Insightful

      For the same reason why I think uncensored war footage should be shown on the nightly news, maybe if the average civilian actually saw what goes on in war, the public would be less likely to stand by idly while our government spends billions on killing people on the other side of the planet.

      Just my $.02

      Hey, I'm good with that. Lets bring all the troops home, stop spending money "killing people on the other side of the planet", and only show the footage of the what other people do. How's that grab ya?

      Just think, we can have hours of news footage daily of the plight of Muslim women alone. Being arrested for having a suntan? Being beaten, caned and stoned to death. Marital rape being legal? How about footage of rapes before their beheadings? How about child marriages? How about female castrations as punishment?

      Would you like to talk about kids being strapped with explosives? That'll be juicy footage. How about bombs set off in weddings and funerals? How about 7 year old kids being murdered because their grandfather spoke out against the violence of the Taliban?

      The point is that you're so quick to condemn the military on this situation. And if they were actually knowingly murdering innocent people then they should be condemned. But the fact is that you dont have all the facts, and yet you want desperately to see them all hanged along with the entire US military establishments. You casually ignore the attrocities commited around the world, many of which we have military might in place to help prevent. But the world media is so complicit that they don't report on those things, except for a by-line here and there quickly denouncing the act and distancing themselves, governments, and religions from them. It's glossed over as if to say "Yeah, that's a real shame... So anyway lets get those US Soldiers and hang 'em high!".

      You think that we should show the world how brutal we are? Fine. As soon as we show the world how brutal the WORLD is I'll be right there with you. As soon as we start showing people WHY we are in many of the places we are, instead of shielding everyone here from the horrible acts that people outside our rubber-bumber nation commit then we can start showing them how all people compare. You don't want to show both sides. You don't want to give context. You don't want people here to see how bad some of these dictators and regimes are because you know it will do nothing if not ensure the resolve our nation has for kicking the crap out of some of the nutjobs out there.

      War sucks. It's horrible. It's ugly. It changes people forever. But quite frankly, better that than live in a world where everyone's too afraid to stand up and fight the tyrants because it's not politically correct. You can hope for flowers and bunnies all you want. But there will always be people who really don't care what you hope for and are willing to crush any dream you ever had for your kids. And I'll always be supportive of us not standing there watching and doing nothing, while shielding our citizens because it might damage their delicate psyche's.

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    31. Re:Good on him by darjen · · Score: 1

      If it's truly in self defense, then sure, by all means shoot back. As far as I can tell though, most governments and most wars are not faught in self defense. It's up to the people of every country to figure out how we can hold government accountable for their wars. If people can figure out how to create democracy, I think they can eventually figure this out as well.

    32. Re:Good on him by intheshelter · · Score: 1

      Except that is not why they attacked us on 9-11. They said themselves that they wanted us out of their holy lands.

      Let's face it, we stuck our nose in their business time and time again, killed their people first, and then we got mad when they took a swing back at us. I want them caught as much as the next person, but these wars are no longer about terrorism, and more about profiteering by the defense industry and blinding the populace with rabid patriotism. We need to leave Iraq, we had no business there, and we need to go into Pakistan and whack Bin Laden for good and then leave the area. We need to quit bullying others because while I think the average American is a decent person, our government is run by corrupt, incompetent scumbags who think war is a solution and not a last resort.

    33. Re:Good on him by delt0r · · Score: 1

      Better that the a veil of arbitrary secrecy.

      --
      If information wants to be free, why does my internet connection cost so much?
    34. Re:Good on him by hedwards · · Score: 1, Troll

      They want the guy making the leaks, because the people that were in charge aren't going to be prosecuted. Given the degree to which the White House was involved in the war crimes, it's an absolute embarrassment that not a single Bush administration official will be put on trial, let alone sent to prison for committing what are very clearly war crimes. I can sort of understand not wanting to convict CIA operatives, but at very least the people who ordered the criminal activities must be brought to justice or there's no saying how often it will happen in the future.

      Granted a trial is no assurance of future compliance with international law, but it does give people that are considering violating the law something to think about.

    35. Re:Good on him by Myopic · · Score: 1

      Hmmm. I'd say a list of our international spy network members. Subterfuge prevents outright war, so if the enemy could eliminate our spying by eliminating our spies, we'd have to resort to nuking them. That would be sad.

      Or, perhaps the methods of protecting our military infrastructure. For instance, if Al Qaeda knew that the password for our nuclear bombs was 12345, that would be bad for everyone involved.

      Or, perhaps just as bad would be information released which, without sufficient context or completeness, caused people to make incorrect conclusions and support the wrong side. You know, classic disinformation. It's easy to imagine many such scenarios.

      That was a good straw man argument on your part, though. If you were debating with young children who couldn't pick apart transparent logical fallacies, then you might have scored a point.

    36. Re:Good on him by Low+Ranked+Craig · · Score: 2, Funny

      So you're saying that the Europeans made political and military decisions based on the availability and cost of oil? That's unpossible! Everyone knows that the US is the only imperialist nation left on the planet and the Europeans have nothing but the best interests of the world and would never make decisions of that magnitude based on self interest.

      --
      I still cannot find the droids I am looking for...
    37. Re:Good on him by darjen · · Score: 1

      I would argue that is still less than the cost of full, all-out war, which could take at least a decade to complete and decades more to recover.

    38. Re:Good on him by tibman · · Score: 1

      That wasn't top secret information. Just routine stuff a low level intel guy had access to. I don't think top secret is even allowed on the SIPRnet? My guess is that whistleblower grabbed anything and everything he could.. no matter what it was. The kid was already in trouble and on his way to getting kicked out.

      --
      http://soylentnews.org/~tibman
    39. Re:Good on him by BitZtream · · Score: 1

      Only when you live in a fantasy world.

      --
      Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
    40. Re:Good on him by mea37 · · Score: 1

      Perhaps. But either you want people informed, or you don't.

      Or are you one of those who thinks that "informed" means "given the information that supports my particular agenda"?

    41. Re:Good on him by babblefrog · · Score: 1

      If I read you right, you seem to be saying that the goal of the US military should be to take down tyrants all over the world, and stop them from tyrannizing their innocent subjects? This is an interesting opinion, but you are probably going to have a hard time selling it to the people whose sons and daughters are going to have to sacrifice their lives for this noble plan.

    42. Re:Good on him by Pojut · · Score: 1

      The point is that you're so quick to condemn the military on this situation. And if they were actually knowingly murdering innocent people then they should be condemned. But the fact is that you dont have all the facts, and yet you want desperately to see them all hanged along with the entire US military establishments.

      I don't want them condemned or hung, I just want the truth to be told. Is that such a bad thing to ask for?

      So anyway lets get those US Soldiers and hang 'em high!".

      ::sigh:: Are we really going back to this bullshit? "If you don't agree with the war, you're against the troops"? Seriously?

      You think that we should show the world how brutal we are? Fine. As soon as we show the world how brutal the WORLD is I'll be right there with you. As soon as we start showing people WHY we are in many of the places we are, instead of shielding everyone here from the horrible acts that people outside our rubber-bumber nation commit then we can start showing them how all people compare. You don't want to show both sides. You don't want to give context. You don't want people here to see how bad some of these dictators and regimes are because you know it will do nothing if not ensure the resolve our nation has for kicking the crap out of some of the nutjobs out there.

      There are plenty of places around the planet that were and are FAR worse off than the Middle East...yet it seems like that is the only place we pay attention to when the general populace is oppressed. Why is that?

    43. Re:Good on him by DogDude · · Score: 1

      "You casually ignore the attrocities commited around the world, many of which we have military might in place to help prevent."

      You have tasted the Kool-Aid and it is good.

      We have military might in place to make money for a few people. The US government doesn't give a flying shit about atrocities, as is evidenced by both the people we kill and the people we don't kill.

      --
      I don't respond to AC's.
    44. Re:Good on him by Xest · · Score: 1

      It's not even new ground. Britain went to war in Iraq with the US however misguided that venture was and lost some troops to friendly fire from a US A10, and the US refused to even release the gun camera to the British coroner who did the investigation and inquiry into the deaths to see if anything could be learnt and mistakes avoided in future, there was no talk of prosecuting the pilot or anything.

      Yet, the US wouldn't even do that- not even when one of their pilots killed troops of one of their allies that had stood by them in going to war.

      It just seems to be the US military way- if you fuck up, cover it up. Learning from mistakes? trying to avoid similar mistakes in future? what does that mean? This probably goes a long way to explaining why the US military has such an atrocious friendly fire record in the first place. Perhaps if they got over it and started acknowledging and properly investigating mistakes instead of covering them up then they'd have less to even need to think about covering up in the first place.

    45. Re:Good on him by Omnifarious · · Score: 1

      Or, perhaps just as bad would be information released which, without sufficient context or completeness, caused people to make incorrect conclusions and support the wrong side. You know, classic disinformation. It's easy to imagine many such scenarios.

      Well, your other examples were great, but this one is really stupid. Mostly because there is an easy solution to it. Release the full context so people can make up there own minds. The solution to disinformation is not to prevent information from being released, it's releasing good information.

    46. Re:Good on him by MrNaz · · Score: 1

      Subterfuge prevents outright war

      Except that subterfuge really is just a method of waging war without the inconvenience of actually having to declare it. The US never sent troops to Chile, but that didn't stop millions from dying in the US sponsored dictatorship there during the 80s. More people died due to US interventions in Latin America than in most of the European wars, but other than a few scuffles, the US never actually declared war there.

      --
      I hate printers.
    47. Re:Good on him by Phoobarnvaz · · Score: 1

      I understand the need to keep things secret, and I understand that in war shit happens...but that doesn't mean when things go awry, we the people shouldn't know about it.

      Look at what happened during the Vietnam War. Nixon went ape over the Pentagon Papers being released. Had a hell of a time saying everything we've done was on the up & up while at the same time you had the Pentagon's own advisers saying privately how badly things had gone bad.

      During jr's administration...you had the executive order that no bodies at Dover were to be shown unloading off the plane. For some reason...the administration felt by seeing the bodies...along with the numbers being quoted on the news...it would reinforce how badly they screwed up in having people die for their stupid political aims.

      --
      Don't worry about the world coming to an end today. It's already tomorrow in Australia. - Charles M. Schulz
    48. Re:Good on him by kernelcache · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      I think that you are a little incorrect in your assertion that the leaked data has caused "no damage to national security." For example if you ignore locking up your house when you know that there are people out there willing and able to harm you and your family then that obviously damages the security of your house. Furthermore, since people like you have little sense of regarding patriotism for the USA I wonder how long it will be before you and others like you relegate this great country to a place where people cannot feel secure in their own homes. Patriotism is not allowing those who want to harm you to even get a foothold.

    49. Re:Good on him by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Was there disinformation in the edited collateral damage video? They also posted the full, uncut version, too.

    50. Re:Good on him by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Wow. There's a load of bullshit in that post. Firstly you are confusing Wahhabism with Islam, a common mistake for Americans. Also "collective punishment", the policy you are proposing, is so awful that it's outlawed by the Geneva Convention in military actions. The people being killed in the videos that have been (and will be) released show innocent people trying to survive, being killed for doing nothing more than living where they were born. You're a nice guy.

    51. Re:Good on him by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Stop whining about the edits already, Wikileaks immediately posted both a short and full version of the video

    52. Re:Good on him by aliquis · · Score: 1

      If the UN wasn't as fucked up as it is then that would be much easier.

      If it was UN sanctioned safe-keeping then it would probably had been good.
      If it was a country acting on it's own then maybe not so much.

      But all the veto rights make UN toothless plus many countries aren't just willing to waste people and money into business not really affecting them that much. So now the US pick that roll onto themselves, though they do choose their own cases and when it will benefit them.

      I appreciate the US for some of its work in keeping the planet safe and people free, but sometimes one could question whatever it was right or showing support for the right party. And sadly in many cases people get stuck in the shit they are in because no-one benefits enough to help them out.

    53. Re:Good on him by dave420 · · Score: 1

      You fucking retard. Seriously. I had no idea your level of critical thought doesn't extend to the Pentagon. The "enemies" you say were fucking journalists, and some guys with AK-47s (perfectly legal in Iraq). So I guess when US medics help injured Iraqis, those medics should be shot? You are seriously asking for the bombing of US medical facilities that treat wounded Iraqis? How fucked-up is your head? It's logically-bankrupt attitudes like yours that started this whole fiasco, and apparently want it to continue indefinitely. Pathetic.

    54. Re:Good on him by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you been around war? Have you seen videos of terrorists beheading innocents? Should those be shown on the news too?

    55. Re:Good on him by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      "Only in the mind of someone who is an evil, selfish, deluded coward would shooting at people who are trying to help one's enemies be considered wrong."

      You need to be shot, since you're helping terrorists. Seriously.

    56. Re:Good on him by Feyshtey · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Actually that's not my position. I'd rather we not have to have this conversation because we can snuggle up here at home all warm and cozy. But the reality is that that's not an option. We are on foreign soil today, for better or for worse, rightly or wrongly. We cant realistically just pull out and come home and everyone will forgive and forget our 'intrusions' or 'crimes' or whatever else.

      The point of what I posted was to point out that if you want to condemn the US Military for its brutal activities, be consistent and be fair. If you want to display the evil of our soldiers, display the evil of all soldiers. If you want to prove how bad we are by display all information, then display all information about how bad those we fight are too. Give all the info, and let people actually make some self-judgements rather than expecting us to just swallow the spoon fed self-loathing of the far left.

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    57. Re:Good on him by Hatta · · Score: 1

      I think that you are a little incorrect in your assertion that the leaked data has caused "no damage to national security." For example if you ignore locking up your house when you know that there are people out there willing and able to harm you and your family then that obviously damages the security of your house.

      LOLWUT? In what way does the second sentence relate to the first?

      Furthermore, since people like you have little sense of regarding patriotism for the USA I wonder how long it will be before you and others like you relegate this great country to a place where people cannot feel secure in their own homes

      I already don't feel secure in my own home. The threat I fear is my own government.

      Patriotism is not allowing those who want to harm you to even get a foothold.

      Patriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    58. Re:Good on him by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Whatever it takes to make people think twice, or thrice, before going to war.

    59. Re:Good on him by Pojut · · Score: 1

      The point of what I posted was to point out that if you want to condemn the US Military for its brutal activities, be consistent and be fair. If you want to display the evil of our soldiers, display the evil of all soldiers. If you want to prove how bad we are by display all information, then display all information about how bad those we fight are too. Give all the info, and let people actually make some self-judgements

      If you weren't so quick to be an asshole, you would have noticed that this is exactly what I was advocating.

      rather than expecting us to just swallow the spoon fed self-loathing of the far left.

      yeah...because what the far right spoon-feeds us is so much better. Shouldn't you be focusing on the "spoon fed" part more than the "far left" part?

      Remember kids...agreeing with it doesn't make it unbiased!

    60. Re:Good on him by Hatta · · Score: 1

      I haven't found any reliable information on the actual classification status of this video. However, it's been repeatedly reported that the fellow who got arrested for leaking this information had Top Secret/SCI clearance. So he wasn't just a "low level intel guy".

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    61. Re:Good on him by daem0n1x · · Score: 2, Insightful

      They show footage of oil wells all the time on TV, what's your point?

    62. Re:Good on him by k8to · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Nice non-sequitor.

      The problems you describe (beating of innocents, opression of women) are not problems that are solved by military force, nor occupation. If those are your sufficient justifications for imperialism, occupation, and our own breed of opression, then you are an easy tool of evil.

      --
      -josh
    63. Re:Good on him by Cyberax · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "One day truly serious info will be released and cause the bad sort of trouble that will make the Rosenbergs look like common gossips."

      Any half-competent engineer can build a gun-type nuclear weapon. Should we censor all information about U-235 neutron cross-section because of this? Or maybe require a government-issued license to read particle physics journals?

      The fact of life: you need large industrial base to use any advanced technology. And only state-level actors have it.

    64. Re:Good on him by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      "Subterfuge prevents outright war"

      And what if it turns out that US is actively fomenting wars? Would it be OK to reveal US spy networks in this case?

    65. Re:Good on him by jellyfrog · · Score: 1

      The funny thing is that when I first read your post I thought you were talking about America.

    66. Re:Good on him by Cyberax · · Score: 1, Troll

      "And if they were actually knowingly murdering innocent people then they should be condemned. But the fact is that you dont have all the facts, and yet you want desperately to see them all hanged along with the entire US military establishments. You casually ignore the attrocities commited around the world, many of which we have military might in place to help prevent."

      And many of which US military helped to create in the first place.

    67. Re:Good on him by Feyshtey · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Actually I completely agree with you. If you want the truth to be told, tell the whole truth! How can you not know that these soldiers snapped because they saw nearly a decade of absolute brutality in the way the 'innocent' people of the region treat women and children? You sure as hell arent hearing stories of that brutality on the news beyond an occasional snipit. As I said, I dont forgive soldiers who (might) have commited cold-blooded murder. But I dont forgive barbarism either. And neither should you. You should be exactly as pissed and exactly as interested in all US citizens knowing about all the barbarism as you are in all the US citizens know about these alledged murdering US soldiers.

      But you dont appear to be. You arent calling for the heads of people who will murder a 7 year old boy, or rape a woman so that she can be beheaded. The left will instead find every reason why we just don't understand their culture, and they sure as hell dont advertise that kind of behavior to our public.

      And you're precisely right about the rest of the world too! There are barbaric tyrants worldwide! But it's convenient for us to by clothes made in china, and toys from here, and oil from there, and blah blah blah. We don't report how brutal they are to their citizens because if we keep our mouths shut and foster a "world economy" we can get their shit cheap.

      I don't mind condemning soldiers who step across the line. But I have a real problem with the hypocricy of forgiving everyone else in the world for their sins and being the first to step up onto the soap box to condemn our own.

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    68. Re:Good on him by drewhk · · Score: 1

      You are right, this is not about the war itself, it is about the Govs acting as our Big Brother deciding in his infinite wiseness what is "best for us".

      For the greater good.

    69. Re:Good on him by HeckRuler · · Score: 1

      came on to the field of battle and assisted the enemy during a firefight

      "the field of battle" Also known as 7th street next to the ice-cream shop. It's in a city dude. They live there. And while there was sort of an empty lot next to the area, it's hardly a field. From the footage, there had to be some explosions from the gunship's fire, but several minutes passed before the arrival of the van. The "battle" was over in a couple of seconds.

      "the enemy" IE, civilians, neighbors, countrymen. Now, maybe the locals have a better clue about who is who on the ground then our own troops, but people don't gain a red outline indicating them as "the enemy" simply because we chose to shoot them.

      "during a firefight" Well I already mentioned this, but the fight was over. Time had passed. The van then approached the wounded and corpses.


      So you're being ridiculously biased. You are spinning the details of this event into something they are not. Granted, calling the people in the van "good Samaritans" is also a bit of spin. That is indeed one possibility. They could also have been evil extremists who got called for an evac while taking their kids to daycare. I don't know, and neither do you. But I want you to realize that your perception of this event is simply wrong. The judgments and actions you take in reference to this event will be based on lies. Please try to fix that.
      Also, grow up and get that anger in check.

      Only in the mind of someone who is an evil, selfish, deluded coward shooting at people who are trying to help one's enemies be considered wrong.

      We have rules to hold fire against the red cross and their like. Shooting them would be evil, no matter who they are treating.

    70. Re:Good on him by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      Really? Ask Kim Jung Il 'pretty please' and he'll stop trying to get a nuke? Ask Ahmadinejad to 'pretty please' not threaten to drive the jews burning bodies into the ocean and he'll somehow find compassion? How about we ask the blood diamond miners to 'pretty please' stop? This list could go on indefinately.

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    71. Re:Good on him by ArcherB · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Any of the "good things" that might possibly come out of war can also be done without war.

      Pol Pot
      Hitler
      Hussien
      Mugabe
      Al-Bashir
      Kim Jong-Il
      Sayyid Ali Khamenei/Ahmadinejad
      Castro
      Stalin
      Mao Tse-Tung
      Milosevic ...
      and many many more...

      None of these dictators could have been/can be removed from office without the use of force. No amount of talk, sanctions, or shame will cause these evil men to willingly give up their power. War is the only answer sometimes. Yes, war is a horror unto itself, but it is nothing compared to the wasted lives and absolute horror people are forced to endure every day under tyrants. Wars almost always end in a few years. Tyrants survive a life time and usually hand pick their successors who are just as bad or even worse. People like you who insist on trying to talk these sons of bitches down only cause their people to suffer more. By refusing to make the hard decisions, people like you are just as guilty of the suffering and needless death of the innocents.

      Another fine example.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    72. Re:Good on him by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      That's exactly what you proposed? That's why you specifically pointed out how the truth would make our people not stand idly by while our government spent billions killing people overseas? Yeah, you're right. That's sounded completely unbiased...

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    73. Re:Good on him by Pojut · · Score: 1

      Actually I completely agree with you. If you want the truth to be told, tell the whole truth! How can you not know that these soldiers snapped because they saw nearly a decade of absolute brutality in the way the 'innocent' people of the region treat women and children? You sure as hell arent hearing stories of that brutality on the news beyond an occasional snipit. As I said, I dont forgive soldiers who (might) have commited cold-blooded murder. But I dont forgive barbarism either. And neither should you. You should be exactly as pissed and exactly as interested in all US citizens knowing about all the barbarism as you are in all the US citizens know about these alledged murdering US soldiers.

      That's not entirely true...you hear on the news all the time about bodies found beheaded, or women killed for questioning a man's authority, or any number of other things. Granted, they aren't given much air time, but these things are reported.

      The primary problem is that the average person doesn't want to hear these things, which is why they aren't covered nearly as much as they should be. There's no one person or "media outlet" that can be blamed for that.

      But you dont appear to be. You arent calling for the heads of people who will murder a 7 year old boy, or rape a woman so that she can be beheaded. The left will instead find every reason why we just don't understand their culture, and they sure as hell dont advertise that kind of behavior to our public.

      I refuse to respond to a statement (true or not) that shows obvious, heavily one-sided political bias. Sorry.

      There are barbaric tyrants worldwide! But it's convenient for us to by clothes made in china, and toys from here, and oil from there, and blah blah blah. We don't report how brutal they are to their citizens because if we keep our mouths shut and foster a "world economy" we can get their shit cheap.

      Sadly true. It shouldn't be that way, but it is.

      I don't mind condemning soldiers who step across the line. But I have a real problem with the hypocricy of forgiving everyone else in the world for their sins and being the first to step up onto the soap box to condemn our own.

      To play devil's advocate here, that's what makes us "better" than them...caring about our own actions, regardless of theirs.

    74. Re:Good on him by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      I agree with you completely. We are, largely speaking, alligned with really bad people out of self-interest. China and the Saudi's being the tip of the iceburg. Again, why is it we'll condemn our soldiers so quickly, and never discuss the crimes against humanity of those two regimes? Because we're fostering a "global market"...

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    75. Re:Good on him by slimshady945 · · Score: 1

      Yes, that sort of thing requires a manufacturing capability that much of the world, who could access wikileaks, would not have.

      However, someone could post unit numbers, troop movements, perhaps names of ships that supplies are being sent on, or routes used for supply convoys in country. If I was planning to blow up some people, it would be real handy to know where they will be, and if possible, when they are expected to be there. Or how about names and homes of record of people serving overseas? Mohammed and Akbar may not be able to build a jet, but I don't see what would stop them from paying a local thug or gang to shoot up your house. How many troops are going to duck deployments if they think their family would get killed? Information is more powerful than people think. The biggest bomb in the world won't do anything unless you know who to drop it on.

      That's not to say that wikileaks does not serve an important purpose. There are some forms of classified and sensitive information that the world at large does not need to know.

    76. Re:Good on him by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      I didn't meant to suggest that military occupation would solve them. Only that I'm sick of hearing about how our military is so evil, and giving a complete pass to barbarism of anyone not in our military.

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    77. Re:Good on him by Pojut · · Score: 1

      From my original post:

      For the same reason why I think uncensored war footage should be shown on the nightly news, maybe if the average civilian actually saw what goes on in war, the public would be less likely to stand by idly while our government spends billions on killing people on the other side of the planet.

      If you noticed, I never said a specific side or even a specific country...I simply said what goes on in a war, using the "our government" as an example because I'm American. If I were British, I instead would have said "Southeast of us". I'll be sure to leave personal geographics out of my next post though, sorry it confused you.

      Anyway, the point is that, by showing raw uncensored footage, the public would see how bad war is from ALL sides. That's the whole point behind it being uncensored or "raw"...let the people decide for themselves, which you've been repeateing throughout this conversation.

    78. Re:Good on him by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      Please enlighten me: How did the US Military bring about Sharia Law? How did it bring about Communist North Korea that is attempting to gain nukes? How did it bring about the 1 child law due to overpopulation in China that allows for murdering daughters because they are less valued? Again... this list can go on indefinately.

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    79. Re:Good on him by intheshelter · · Score: 1

      WTF are you talking about? They shot some journalists and the people guiding them. Then they shot someone who happened to drive by and help them as they bled to death. Not one of them was the enemy. Not one of them was engaged in any sort of a firefight. Learn what you are talking about before you wrap yourself in the flag and spew this BS.

    80. Re:Good on him by CAIMLAS · · Score: 2, Funny

      Evidently, my point is somewhere you are not.

      In what world does an oil spill in the Gulf cause starvation and deprivation in Africa, the Middle East, Mexico, etc.? Last I checked, regional warlords, backwards traditions and culture, totalitarian states, and the like tend to cause such symptoms.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    81. Re:Good on him by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1

      The "enemies" you say were fucking journalists, and some guys with AK-47s (perfectly legal in Iraq).

      At the time, those journalists were identified as enemy combatants. That's the first fuck-up. The second fuck-up would be identifying the civilians rendering aid as also collecting weapons. If what had been identified was actually happening, there would be no issue.

    82. Re:Good on him by Aqualung812 · · Score: 1

      Not in the video itself. The website claims "murder". Murder is much different than mistaking journalists for hostiles that were operating in the same area.

      --
      Grammer Nazis - I mod you "troll" unless you actually add something on-topic. Yes, I know I have mispellings in my sig.
    83. Re:Good on him by Pojut · · Score: 1

      Yes, they should.

      Notice in my original post I didn't say video from any particular side, I simply said video.

      American Citizens are too complacent about this stuff. Hearing "A firefight broke out in Fallujah today following a suicide bombing. 25 people were killed, and hundreds were injured" is EXTREMELY different than seeing video of that happening or the aftermath of it.

      Likewise, hearing about a beheading video and SEEING that beheading video are two very different things as well.

      That being said, as far as Iraq and Afghanistan are concerned, no one was beheading and shooting our soldiers before we put them there...

    84. Re:Good on him by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      You're backpeddling, and you know it.

      You suggest that 'the public' would not likely stand 'idly by' ... That suggests that if they saw how bad war was they would not allow the war to continue. Particularly because we're spending 'billions on killing people'.

      The flip side of that argument is, that if 'the public' could see in color on television nightly children strapped with explosives blowing up funerals, the 'the public' might well get pissed off enough at how evil an act like that is that they would be supportive of getting even more involved.

      You suggest that the Truth would prevent our presence there. It might well have the opposite effect, but you've made your judgement apparent in your argument. You've already defined your version of the "Truth".

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    85. Re:Good on him by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      Please note, that I'm not saying that US is responsible for ALL of the atrocities. But US directly caused a fair share of them.

    86. Re:Good on him by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't say there's lack of information of atrocities on either side on the conflict. Aside from the chopper video, you can easily find various beheading recordings on the Net (and someone will always link to one from comments, anyway).

    87. Re:Good on him by Pojut · · Score: 1

      The flip side of that argument is, that if 'the public' could see in color on television nightly children strapped with explosives blowing up funerals, the 'the public' might well get pissed off enough at how evil an act like that is that they would be supportive of getting even more involved.

      Very good! You're able to see both sides of an argument without someone having to spell it out for you! I'm so proud.

      You suggest that the Truth would prevent our presence there. It might well have the opposite effect, but you've made your judgement apparent in your argument. You've already defined your version of the "Truth".

      You did notice that "just my $.02" part of my original post, correct?

    88. Re:Good on him by daem0n1x · · Score: 1

      Who said anything about oil spills? I guess it's MY point you're not.

    89. Re:Good on him by sheph · · Score: 1

      I would question the intentions though. The last video left out a few key details, and was edited ala Michael Moore style to make a point rather than present all the facts. Ultimately that hurt our military. You can disagree with fighting, the war, the reasons behind the war, etc. But those in the field are just doing their job, and we shouldn't be hell bent on making that job harder than it already is. Take it up with your congressman, write the president if you feel that strongly, get out in the streets and protest, and execise your rights to be heard. All those are good ways to make your point. Disparaging our military to promote your political agenda is tantamount to treason in my mind.

      --
      I don't believe in karma, I just call it like I see it.
    90. Re:Good on him by darjen · · Score: 1

      We should also think about prosecuting the troops involved. Presumably they are old enough to know the difference between right and wrong. They volunteered to do the criminal government's bidding and voluntarily pulled the trigger on what were clearly innocent people.

    91. Re:Good on him by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      The last video left out a few key details

      Not relevant details.

      and was edited ala Michael Moore style to make a point rather than present all the facts

      Translation: Michael Moore and Wikileaks should do the work of proving their critics points for them in advance.

    92. Re:Good on him by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      Only that I'm sick of hearing about how our military is so evil, and giving a complete pass to barbarism of anyone not in our military.

      Um, what? Our tax dollars aren't going to fund any of the barbarisms you're speaking of. Just how stupid are you, really?

    93. Re:Good on him by Bigjeff5 · · Score: 1

      I think you highly over-estimate what it takes to get top secret clearance. Many military guards in sensitive positions have Top Secret security clearance.

      My brother did four years as a Marine infantry grunt and he had top secret clearance. Granted, most infantry grunts never have a need for top secret clearance, but my brother had it because he was on a special guard detail. It helped him quite a bit getting a decent security gig when his tour was up.

      So yes, the guy with top secret clearance definitely could have been a "low level intel guy". I would expect all intel guys to have at least secret clearance, and a few of them would probably need a top secret clearance. I myself worked in an IT post on an army guard base for about six months (I'm non-military), and due to the fact that I had access to every hard drive on the network I was required to have confidential level clearance (one below secret). Also note that those with secret level clearance can be given top secret clearance by department heads on a case by case basis.

      It's well within the realm of possibility that a low level intel guy (or even more likely, a non-intel related staff member of someone with top secret clearance) could seize an opportunity to grab some top secret videos - that's actually the most likely scenario, as top secret candidates are very well screened, and are highly unlikely to breach protocol.

      --
      Security is mostly a superstition... Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. - Helen Keller
    94. Re:Good on him by Feyshtey · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I will concede that the US has made some really poor policy decisions in the past, some of which have involved the military and have caused serious harm. But to suggest that the US military has been a direct cause of a fair share of the barbarism in the world is dishonest and disgusting.

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    95. Re:Good on him by Macrat · · Score: 1

      For the same reason why I think uncensored war footage should be shown on the nightly news, maybe if the average civilian actually saw what goes on in war, the public would be less likely to stand by idly while our government spends billions on killing people on the other side of the planet.

      Americans are only OK with violence in fictional entertainment. The real thing or boobies is not acceptable.

    96. Re:Good on him by Wildclaw · · Score: 2

      You may use the excuse for the first time they opened fire, even though the RPG excuse is lame at best.

      However, when they shot at people trying to help already wounded people, they committed murder, plain and simple.

    97. Re:Good on him by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We all see that on the news, constantly and without context, to the extent that ignorant people think that those cultures have no value. But I don't think kill them all and let god sort them out is a valid solution. Nor do I recall voting for the USA to be the judge and executioner in such matters.

    98. Re:Good on him by Uberbah · · Score: 3, Informative

      None of these dictators could have been/can be removed from office without the use of force

      Pretty much all of the dictators on your list came to power as the result of war. So your list is kind of...pointless. And one, Ahmadinejad, isn't even close to be a dictator - he's a figurehead for the clerics that hold the actual power.

    99. Re:Good on him by AGMW · · Score: 1
      Whatever it takes to make people think twice, or thrice, before going to war.

      Unfortunately the people who decide we need to go to war are seldom the ones who actually go!

      --
      Eclectic beats from Leeds, UK
      handmadehands.co.uk
    100. Re:Good on him by e2d2 · · Score: 1

      Agreed. I've seen Top Secret/SCI with full lifestyle poly for fairly low level positions. H

    101. Re:Good on him by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      Why? Because it's true?

      The US _is_ responsible for a lot barbarism. And keeps on doing stupid actions. That's why the view that only because of the US there's some peace in the Middle East is quite misguided.

      So no, you can't use the argument "but we try to support peace" to support killing of civilians.

    102. Re:Good on him by mdielmann · · Score: 1

      An excellent premise, and correct, so long as one assumes that all people will act rationally. We have thousands of years of evidence to show that isn't always the case. Sometimes people just have to stand up and say "No!", no matter what the consequences. If that means war, so be it.

      --
      Sure I'm paranoid, but am I paranoid enough?
    103. Re:Good on him by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      Ask Kim Jung Il 'pretty please' and he'll stop trying to get a nuke?

      Um, they already have nukes.

      Ask Ahmadinejad to 'pretty please' not threaten to drive the jews burning bodies into the ocean and he'll somehow find compassion?

      Except he's never talked about doing anything of the kind.

    104. Re:Good on him by mandelbr0t · · Score: 2, Informative

      Give all the info, and let people actually make some self-judgements rather than expecting us to just swallow the spoon fed self-loathing of the far left.

      Like the no-bid oil contracts that everyone wanted to keep quiet? I don't argue that the Taliban and Saddam Hussein have done horrible things. I do, however, argue that the United States' reasoning for being in places like Iraq and Afghanistan is not as virtuous as you would like people to believe. The U.S. is there to profit from the war. The fact that occassionally positive side effects will come from it allows for the PR position that you take.

      --
      "Please describe the scientific nature of the 'whammy'" - Agent Scully
    105. Re:Good on him by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Just think, we can have hours of news footage daily of the plight of Muslim women alone. Being arrested for having a suntan? Being beaten, caned and stoned to death. Marital rape being legal? How about footage of rapes before their beheadings? How about child marriages?

      All the things that you have listed are going on under the recognized (by UN) government of Afghanistan, which is propped by Western military might. The "liberated" Afghanistan is still an Islamic republic, with its newly written Constitution explicitly declaring Shari'a to be the supreme law of the land (any law or constitutional provision contradicting Shari'a is void), and those parts of the Constitution are furthermore immutable and cannot be amended. And this isn't theory - people are sentenced to death for "apostasy" and "blasphemy" under the new regime (though in a few high-profile cases, such as the one I linked to, Western govts pressure Afghan government to use extrajudicial means - such as presidential pardons - to circumvent this).

      The problem is that you cannot "fight the tyrants" there, because the people are the tyrants. When this guy was sentenced to death for apostasy and then pardoned, there were protests all over the country against that - the people wanted him dead for "insulting Islam".

      You can't fight cultures with guns.

    106. Re:Good on him by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Crock of shit ranting. You picked up a gun lately?

    107. Re:Good on him by budgenator · · Score: 1

      After years of everything from Chinese military cyber-attacks to Aspies like Gary McKinnon poking around in their systems, I wouldn't be surprised if they hadn't set up more than a few honey-pots; a low level Army intel analyst stumbling into that many state department docs with out much trouble strains the my credibility. My hunch is some people really kissed the tar-baby here.
      As far as,

      Top Secret information must cause "exceptionally grave damage" to national security if leaked.

      remember we once had a president that said "it depends on what your definition of "is" is"

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    108. Re:Good on him by Aqualung812 · · Score: 1
      There are rules of engagement in war. From what I saw, the US troops followed the rules. That van was not marked as an ambulance. It was a black van driving in giving assistance to what the gunner thought were hostile troops. The video also points out that some of the men that were killed WERE armed. It isn't a hard leap to assume a shoulder-mounted box is an RPG when you see assault rifles on the men next to him.

      These guys were in a active warzone. They weren't strolling around with kids and dogs running about, the streets were empty. They walked in the middle of a battle and were mistaken for the enemy. It is tragic, but it was preventable, like most "friendly fire" cases.

      --
      Grammer Nazis - I mod you "troll" unless you actually add something on-topic. Yes, I know I have mispellings in my sig.
    109. Re:Good on him by jvkjvk · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately with great power comes great responsibility.

      Or are you one of those folks who think Individuals aren't responsible for their actions?

      When you use that great power, you become liable for ALL of the consequences, not just those you happen to like. That extends to unintended consequences

      But to suggest that the US military has been a direct cause of a fair share of the barbarism in the world is dishonest and disgusting.

      To suggest that we not own up to a fair share of the barbarism in places where we exerted our power is even more dishonest and disgusting.

      Regards

    110. Re:Good on him by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "
      Just think, we can have hours of news footage daily of the plight of Muslim women alone. Being arrested for having a suntan? Being beaten, caned and stoned to death. Marital rape being legal? How about footage of rapes before their beheadings? How about child marriages? How about female castrations as punishment?
      "

      There is nothing wrong with marital rape and marrying girls off once they are able to have children. It is a man's right to have relations with his wife at will. It is good for men to have young wives.

      You are absolute feminist scum and your society will not last forever as it is not reproducing. G

    111. Re:Good on him by wumpus188 · · Score: 1

      Well, Stalin died of an old age, as well as Mao. Nice try, but I'd suggest next time to check your facts before posting.

    112. Re:Good on him by darjen · · Score: 1

      The first replay to your post was right. Most of those leaders came to power as a result of war, even Hitler.

      Also, you seriously don't think any of those leaders could be assassinated without resorting to war?

      Not only that but you are VASTLY underestimating the cost of war. In most cases it is far greater than the cost to the people of a few years rule by a petty dictator. It takes a lot longer than the lifespan of one petty dictator to recover from war when your entire country is blown up and large swaths of your productive capacity is shut down. People like you are the ones who are guilty of causing far more death and suffering as a result of war than would otherwise happen if someone remained in power for a few years.

    113. Re:Good on him by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Girls should be married off once they are able to have children. That is commonly at age 12, 13, and 14. Men like young women as wives. People like you made the democracies ban this practices and then bribe the third world to start banning it too. There's nowhere for men who want european-decendant young virgin obedient females as wives to go now. You destroyed our world and we have nothing to live for because of this. We should destroy people like you.

      There is nothing wrong with marital rape. Men enjoy ruling over their wives and being dominant towards them. It is a man's right to have relations with his wife or wives when he wishes to.

      People like you, the men and the women of "the west", have outlawed both these practices. You have ruined the lives of countless men and you should be killed for this. When your feminist, pro-women's rights, anti-masculine society ends it will be a glorious dawn for the "bad" men of the world.

      You, the good men, who support women's rights and persecute men for marrying sweet younger females or raping their female charges, you have to be killed. You ruined our world. The early 1990s was the last years of freedom for men (young women (12, 13, 14) were still married off in the south, domestic violence and marital rape laws were not enforced) of the west. It's over now. We have nothing to continue to exist for: there is nothing to work for, no reward.

      Death To women's Rights.
      Viva Men's Liberty.
      --MikeeUSA--

    114. Re:Good on him by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 1
      Murder is also much different from mistaking children for ... children, who ummm, "shouldn't have been being driven through a warzone, err, their home town anyway"...

      Err, wait...

    115. Re:Good on him by Myopic · · Score: 1

      Maybe. It's impossible to say now, and would probably be impossible to say at the time.

    116. Re:Good on him by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a quality Engineer for an aircraft machine shop (We make parts for other major aviation companies as part of their outsourcing programs) I can tell you that for some things, the blueprints are very destructive toward utility.

      Take for instance, the blueprints for a radar system.

      With the blueprints, you can not only reproduce said radar system, but you now also have the means to create very effective deterrents to that radar system. (Since you know the size of the waveguide, and the type of driving circuit used, you automatically know what the operating frequency ranges are, etc. These are non-trivially linked with the design.) This means that what previously was helping detect hostile targets, is now totally useless, as those targets are now employing jamming technologies CUSTOM MADE to combat being scanned by our troops.

      Now, for something like what we usually get through our end "Fire escape door hinge assembly", Etc, it is highly unlikely that such information would be in any way useful to a foreign government. (but for military aircraft, still has the "YOU MAY NOT DISCLOSE ANYTHING WHATSOEVER ABOUT THIS TO ANY FOREIGN PERSON, EVER!" rhetoric stamped all over it.) So for that reason I can't even discuss what it is we make, even though it's benign.

      Also, it is unlikely that paper blueprints would be what are leaked. Most of the major vendors (BOEING and Pals) use CAD/CAM models to define their aircraft components these days, usually in either CATIA native, or Unigraphics formats. (I know, my JOB is to MAKE blueprints for internal use at our company, because BOEING and pals no longer make their own! They just release digital part models instead!)

      This means that savvy terrorist types could digitally assemble the plane, and look for technical weaknesses (like being unable to do a sharp turn in XXX conditions, in YYY direction) that could be exploited; no I don't mean like the deathstar plans, so don't bother. I mean more like the faults of Russian Migs, which prevented high-speed turns (the plane would literally fly apart if it tried.) That kind of information would put US pilots at a tactical disadvantage, and should be avoided.

      However, information like this leaked video of US forces shooting civilians, NEEDS to be spread far and wide.

    117. Re:Good on him by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      Well, Stalin died of an old age, as well as Mao. Nice try, but I'd suggest next time to check your facts before posting.

      Right! Everyone on the list either died of old age or was forced from office by force. None of them gave up power as a result of international pressure that lacked the use of force. For that matter, no brutal dictator has ever, in the history of man, willingly given up power except to resign after handing power to a handpicked successor, such as a relative. They have all either died or been forced from office by war.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    118. Re:Good on him by Chardish · · Score: 1

      If it's really about protecting the citizens of other countries from their evil regimes, why is the U.S. military is involved in Iraq and Afghanistan and not Saudi Arabia, the UAE, or Iran, let alone Rwanda, Libya, Sudan, Burma, Venezuela, or North Korea?

      I reject the notion that you can end tyranny by killing people and blowing up things until it goes away.

    119. Re:Good on him by daem0n1x · · Score: 1

      Some of the examples you gave were supported at some time by the USA, while they were doing those "absolute horrors". Also, you forgot a very, very long list of tyrants and mass murderers that were/are all hugs and kisses with the USA while spreading the same "absolute horror". Some of them were even put in power by the USA directly!

      Hipocrisy of gigantic proportions.

    120. Re:Good on him by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      It's a bad example. If someone uncovers your spy network - too bad. Try better next time. By doing covert operations, which usually are illegal in the countries where they are conducted, you accept the risks. Also, if such material leaks to public domain, it probably had already leaked to other intelligence agencies.

      Better example might be WikiLeaks blowing off operational security on a major anti-terror strike, for example. But usually most of these problems can be avoided if you wait a little (say, one year).

    121. Re:Good on him by slapout · · Score: 1

      Really? How would you have handled Hitler?

      --
      Coder's Stone: The programming language quick ref for iPad
    122. Re:Good on him by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      Not only that but you are VASTLY underestimating the cost of war. In most cases it is far greater than the cost to the people of a few years rule by a petty dictator. It takes a lot longer than the lifespan of one petty dictator to recover from war when your entire country is blown up and large swaths of your productive capacity is shut down. People like you are the ones who are guilty of causing far more death and suffering as a result of war than would otherwise happen if someone remained in power for a few years.

      So are you saying that South Korea is just as bad off and N. Korea? Both are the product of war. Unfortunately, only the Southern half was liberated (by war) and the North was left alone in the hope that some sort of political resolution could be reached. So, tell me, how's that worked out? Which was worse, the few years that the Korean War lasted or the generational misery that awaits those stuck in N. Korea.

      Don't like my Korean example? Let's take a look at Iraq. In the years that Saddam Hussein was in power, over half a million children died from preventable diseases because Saddam's corruption of the Oil for Food program. Both Iraqi wars took far less than half a million lives and the people there are better off now than they would have been if left under Saddam Hussein. Of course, you will say that if we left Saddam alone, the Iraqi people would have been better off. What about the people of Kuwait? Remember, Saddam started all this by invading that country.

      How about the old standby, WWII? Do you think the six million Jews that were gassed in fake showers or literally worked to death would have been better off if there was no war? You say Hitler was the result of war? How did WWI cause the deaths of six million Jews?

      How about American slavery. Do you think that African Americans would be better off living under slavery than they are today due to the Civil War?

      Tell you what, I can give examples all day long. How about you give me one, just one brutal dictator that willingly gave up power to improve the lives of the citizens. Just one.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    123. Re:Good on him by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Total schematics for the F35 aircraft along with source code? What would the Afghans do with it? Build one out of moistened sand? How about the Chinese?

      Save billions of dollars (OK, yuan) and several years of R&D because they knew precisely where to start and how our R&D in materials science could be leveraged with their own independent discoveries to build something better?

      The military might of the US lies in its industrial output, not its secrets. Secrets only protect the US regime from its own population.

      Then why do third-world nations have better telecom infrastructures than we do? Because we spent a century building a continent-sized network of copper, then added fiber to it, and then started to fill in the baps with wireless. Other countries simply leapfrogged us and started with 3G and/or fiber to the home.

      Our industrial output is pretty neat, but there are still places for secrets.

    124. Re:Good on him by Aqualung812 · · Score: 1

      You mean the children that were in the back of a van that the chopper gunner could not see? You make it sound like he saw children running in the street and said "Watch this! You just don't lead the kids as much!".

      --
      Grammer Nazis - I mod you "troll" unless you actually add something on-topic. Yes, I know I have mispellings in my sig.
    125. Re:Good on him by Myopic · · Score: 1

      I see your point. Still, there is no such thing as "full" context, only more or less context. (No person can see or know everything.) For instance, the current Wikileaks hoopla is about some footage not yet released. Some people claim that is essential context, some say it's not, but even if it were released that certainly wouldn't be "full" context. It's easy to imagine the whole video still not providing the full story.

      Anyway, I disagree that the example is stupid, but I definitely see where you are coming from. I bet we would agree that, generally, more openness is better.

    126. Re:Good on him by Scroatzilla · · Score: 1

      IOW, War = Peace.

      Riiiiight.

    127. Re:Good on him by Alef · · Score: 3, Informative
      You are asserting a lot of things which aren't necessarily true.
      • You gave a lot of examples of dictators, claiming a war is/would be needed to remove them, yet very few of them lost their power due to being invaded. Looking at history, I'd say the proven ways in which a country has gotten rid of a dictator are: Due to him(/her?) dying of old age; due to being overthrown by the people (not seldom quite peacefully, as those siding with the dictator generally tend to give up when they realize they cannot win -- as an example, read up on how Otpor! overthrew Milosevic, which you incidentally claimed could only have been removed by force); or by gradually giving up his/her power, as has been the case with many European countries as they progressed to become constitutional monarchies.
      • Invading a country and getting rid of a dictator doesn't automatically mean it makes the situation better for the people, even in a reasonably long term perspective. Iraq is still not a great place to live, in fact, right now it's likely worse than when Saddam ruled. The primary difference is perhaps that there is no longer a single individual at the top to which we can attribute all the horrors going on.
      • And finally, this whole argument that sometimes you need to go to war to overthrow dictators is rather academical given that nations never go to war unless they think it ultimately gains their own population, or in some cases the political leadership. If they do, the leaders are not doing their job properly. You may not agree this is how it should work, but this is how it works.

      Considering how expensive, brutal and dehumanizing a war is, you'd have to come up with more than simple assertions to convince me, and hopefully most others, that there is absolutely no other workable recourse.

    128. Re:Good on him by darjen · · Score: 1

      USA lost Vietnam war to the commies. Vietnam is clearly much better off today, and much more open, than North Korea. If Americans completely stayed out of Vietnam it would have been even more advanced, not having to spend as much effort recovering from the war.

      Korea could have been the same. If USA stayed out of there completely, and let it remain as one country, they could wholly avoided the animosity it is now causing.

      The rise of Hitler was a direct result of US entry into WW1. Without that it would have likely been a stalemate at some point. No treaty of versailles, no reparations, no beef that Hitler could use to gain power.

      The Civil War could have been avoided too. Slavery would have likely died out eventually. Why is it that every other civilized country in the would managed to get rid of it without such a massive slaughter? Still they fought it and the aftermath managed to enact laws that held blacks down well into the 20th century. Laws that were ultimately backed by government and military. Let the south leave. Let them try and maintain slavery with a free country right next door that wouldn't return slaves who ran away. Many abolitionists advocated secession of the North so it could become a free refuge for runaways from the south.

      The vast majority of wars almost always cost more in human life and freedom than what you're trying to save people from. I could go on and on too.

    129. Re:Good on him by Draek · · Score: 1

      Which is why in the US with the first amendment guaranteeing freedom of the press one had to find a professional journalist and convince him/her and the editor and publisher that breaking a secret story was worth the potential penalties.

      Which is why in the US even with the first amendment guaranteeing freedom of the press all you had to do to control the flow of information was to raise the potential penalties so high no journalist would ever dare break a story you don't like.

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    130. Re:Good on him by Draek · · Score: 1

      If the world is so terrible then use the fucking UN, that's what it was created for. Too little teeth? give them weapons and training then, but leave them *independant* and stop trying to control them for your own gain.

      The problem of your "solution" of having the US invade any country whose regime they don't like is that there's no measure put in place if the US itself begins acting like a goddamned cowboy where if you're not with them, you're against them and deserve to be crushed. Besides, if *you* have the right why not China as well, or Russia? and then it's the Cold War all over again.

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    131. Re:Good on him by magarity · · Score: 1

      this one is really stupid. Mostly because there is an easy solution to it. Release the full context so people can make up there own mind
       
      Yes, because everyone who watched the 20 seconds of Rodney King being beaten by the police were suspicious and researched the full video of him beating the cops for 20 minutes prior. Good thing the full information being available prevented anything like riots breaking out.

    132. Re:Good on him by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      None of these dictators could have been/can be removed from office without the use of force.

      And everyone of those you listed came to power as an eventual result of a war and use of force.

    133. Re:Good on him by tpg0007 · · Score: 1

      People don't like living under tyrants, but they like being invaded by a foreign power even less.

    134. Re:Good on him by Omnifarious · · Score: 1

      Well, at the time it wasn't easy to find the full video unless the mainstream news media showed it to you. I think the mainstream media was irresponsible for not showing it.

      Now, that's not so much the case. Wikileaks is not the only source of information. Information is easy to come by. Anybody who wants to comment and claim the video lacks essential context can go and link to the essential context if they so choose.

    135. Re:Good on him by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 1
      No, I mean the children that were shot after they got out of the van.

      Even your reasoning makes no sense. "I can't see my target, I'm not sure if it's clear. What the hell, I'll just open up with my grenade size cannon anyway..."

    136. Re:Good on him by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      USA lost Vietnam war to the commies. Vietnam is clearly much better off today, and much more open, than North Korea. If Americans completely stayed out of Vietnam it would have been even more advanced, not having to spend as much effort recovering from the war.

      Go find any one of the thousands of refugees that fled to America from Vietnam because those commies were killing them and their families. I guess you are right, we should have stayed out and let them slaughter those that wanted to keep their property.

      Korea could have been the same. If USA stayed out of there completely, and let it remain as one country, they could wholly avoided the animosity it is now causing.

      No, the communists would have taken all of Korea, not just the northern half and all of Korea would be like N. Korea is today. Also note that Korea was a UN action, not a US one.

      The Civil War could have been avoided too. Slavery would have likely died out eventually.

      This one is my favorite. So you would tell those that are in shackles to simply wait it out? "Don't worry there, Kunte Kente, your great, great, great grandkids may be free, give of take a few generations." How long should an enslaved people wait before their captors tired of the wealth gained from the labor of others?

      Also, I noticed that you didn't respond to Rwanda. Are those people better off than they would have been if we had taken action? You know, better than being tortured, raped and killed? Rwanda is a fine example of what happens when good people do nothing. Kosovo is an example of what happens when good people tire of seeing thugs rape, torture and kill innocents.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    137. Re:Good on him by Altus · · Score: 1

      and when war is outlawed, only the outlaws will have war.

      I am no fan of armed conflict and many are undeniably bad, but to suggest that we could eliminate it and have everyone play nice is pretty naive.

      --

      "In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women..." -H. Simpson

    138. Re:Good on him by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your post smacks of self-righteousness. I get the distinct impression that you think we have a moral mandate to stop all the horrible things you mention by military force and replace their systems of government with our own, because, clearly, that's the reason all of that happened. I, for one, don't feel the urge to spend my money (and it IS my money, and yours, and everyone else's) to go into another country and force them to stop doing it, causing them to hate us for it in the process. If we disapprove of how other countries are run, we need to exercise diplomatic and economic measures, not military ones. Not. Our. Job.

    139. Re:Good on him by Omnifarious · · Score: 1

      I was, possibly, slightly harsh in my use of the term stupid. I feel, a lot of the time, that I'm arguing against people who think our military should be untouchable and beyond reproach of any kind whatsoever. So, it's hard not to choose language that lashes out.

    140. Re:Good on him by LatencyKills · · Score: 1

      Weeeelll, yes and no. Could Afghanistan copy the F-35? No. Could they figure out how it is made invisible to radar and adapt their radar systems accordingly? Maybe. Could they understand how we defeat guided missiles and modify them with improved CCM? Probably. Could they decode burst communications channels and get data on missions, flight plans, troop movements, etc? Yes. So while I'm not in the least concerned with them building one, I am concerned that they will negate much of the advantage we gain by building it ourselves.

      --
      Jealously hoarding mod points since 2007.
    141. Re:Good on him by Aqualung812 · · Score: 1

      "I can't see my target that is trying to kill my friends, I'm not sure if it's clear. What the hell, I'll just open up with my grenade size cannon anyway so I can protect my friends..."

      Fixed that for you. That isn't murder, that is a terrible mistake.

      Still, for us to have that debate here is fine. Back to my original point, Wikileaks should just present that information for people like you and I to debate. When they distribute it with a slant on it, they give places like the Pentagon legitimacy. If they just posted it out there, their point about allowing information to be free can be trusted.

      --
      Grammer Nazis - I mod you "troll" unless you actually add something on-topic. Yes, I know I have mispellings in my sig.
    142. Re:Good on him by jmhoule314 · · Score: 1

      People give tyrants power. If people did not submit to the authority of tyrants they would have no power. I believe the percentage of sociopaths in the world is around 1%. I don't think one percent of the population is a match for the other 99%. I'm not claiming that I know how to resolve these terrible conflicts peacefully. But, believing that there is no possibility of peaceful resolution is counter-productive. You are also wrong about Milosevic. He was peacefully removed from power. Or at least removed from power without war. So i guess some evil can be stopped without war.

      In the five-man presidential race held on September 24, 2000, Milosevic was defeated in the first round. The election was won by the opposition leader V.Kostunica, who won slightly more than 50% of votes. Initially refusing to acquiesce, Milosevi had to concede defeat amidst street protests. Following a warrant for his arrest by the Yugoslav authorities on charges of corruption and abuse of power, Milosevi was forced to surrender to security forces on 31 March 2001 following an armed stand off at his fortified villa in Belgrade. On 28 June of the same year, Milosevi was transferred by Yugoslav government officials from the jail in Belgrade where he was being held to United Nations custody just inside Bosnian territory. June 28 as vidovdan was possibly deliberately chosen as a significant date in Serbian history. He was then transported to the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia. The Yugoslav Constitution prohibited extradition of Yugoslav citizens and Kostunica formally on legal grounds opposed the transfer that has been ordered by Serbian Prime Minister Zoran ini.[125]

      Milosevic

      And here is the student group credited with removing milosevic from power

      Otpor

    143. Re:Good on him by Lord+Ender · · Score: 1

      China and Russia are both trying to expand their influence (effective borders). Neither nation is a fan of western liberalism, and either could reproduce our advanced military technology if the schematics were leaked.

      --
      A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
    144. Re:Good on him by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No sir, the victims are trying to defend their homeland. The American invaders are the enemy.. If they don't want to be a target, they should leave..

      You must be what is called a "Good German".. The authority of the state must not be questioned, right?

    145. Re:Good on him by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Overall I'm not disagreeing with you, but you are *entirely* missing the point of why the schematics are kept secret: someone analyzing them might find a flaw that could be exploited. Perhaps an understanding of its ECM to devise something that can defeat those measures. In the case of the USN and encryption devices, a means to decrypt intercepted messages. It isn't always, or even usually, a matter of duplicating the "product" so much as understanding it enough to defeat it.

    146. Re:Good on him by darjen · · Score: 1

      Go find any one of the thousands of refugees that fled to America from Vietnam because those commies were killing them and their families. I guess you are right, we should have stayed out and let them slaughter those that wanted to keep their property.

      Are you honestly trying to tell me, with a straight face, that the horiffic death of over 60,000 american lives and the vast amount of property damage to the countryside and environment was worth saving a few thousand refugees? And do you deny that the country of Vietnam is MUCH better off than North Korea is today?

      No, the communists would have taken all of Korea, not just the northern half and all of Korea would be like N. Korea is today. Also note that Korea was a UN action, not a US one.

      No, the whole country would have played out more like Vietnam. In other words, more prosperous, much less death and much less destruction of property and environment. And certainly no kim jung to boot.

      you would tell those that are in shackles to simply wait it out? "Don't worry there, Kunte Kente, your great, great, great grandkids may be free, give of take a few generations." How long should an enslaved people wait before their captors tired of the wealth gained from the labor of others?

      Yes, that is precisely what I would tell them. Who are you to say that over 600,000 people much be viciously murdered in order to free people who would have been free a few years later? They could have immediately begun a mass exodus from the south to the north if the north simply would have ignored the fugitive slave laws. Not a few generations as you ridiculously claim. No massively destructive war necessary.

      Also, I noticed that you didn't respond to Rwanda. Are those people better off than they would have been if we had taken action? You know, better than being tortured, raped and killed? Rwanda is a fine example of what happens when good people do nothing. Kosovo is an example of what happens when good people tire of seeing thugs rape, torture and kill innocents.

      As far as I know, nobody elected USA to be policeman of the world. If you think people should be forced to give up their life instead of sacrificing other lives from halfway around the world maybe you should pay for it yourself. Because most normal people certainly can't afford it. By the way, WW1 still stands as one of the most striking examples of folly.

    147. Re:Good on him by X86Daddy · · Score: 1

      All the morally reprehensible things done by the Taliban made me sick... made me wish we'd use our military might to remove them from power, back in the late 1990s when I read about them. But our government doesn't make its military decisions that way. The US invaded/liberated Afghanistan for all sorts of reasons, but the horrible shit perpetrated on the people by the theocracy was not one of those reasons. And then, without finishing the damn job, our government concocts an excuse to go play in Iraq. To liberate the one mostly secular nation in the neighborhood from the one guy who could keep animalistic Sunni/Shiite violence at bay with his even stronger threat of brutality. And the Taliban regained a foothold, retook parts of Afghanistan, killed and maimed more innocent people for doing things like letting girls go to school because they had the idiotic idea that they could resume having a civil culture now that the US ousted the Taliban... but our government had to get distracted. Our administration had to work the re-election angles. Our large military industrial contractors needed another country's wrecked infrastructure to rebuild. And so the Taliban are back. And the Taliban have spread. And when the US military leaves the region, the Taliban will control more than they did before the US military got involved. Heck of a job.

      Do not make the mistake of thinking the US military is ever deployed for reasons of morality, or justice, or freedom, or any such ideal. Those are ideals held by humans (and not enough of them). Governments, organized religions, corporations, etc... have different motivational structures, different needs, different everything.

    148. Re:Good on him by orient · · Score: 1

      You're right, they should present the evil deeds of all soldiers. But think of this: How many other nations have their soldiers occupying a foreign contry? As far as I know, the americans are the only soldiers commiting crimes against civilians in a country other than their own. Can you name another nation that has soldiers commiting crimes against another country's civilians?

      --
      Laudele lor desigur m-ar mahni peste masura.
    149. Re:Good on him by Grim+Beefer · · Score: 1

      You could have tried to rebuild Germany without crippling sanctions, avoiding the desperation and power vacuum necessary for an evil tyrant to rise to power. Or just put political pressure on Germany to not accept fascism as a legitimate form of government, and forbid others from investing in such a horrible idea financially. Or support the main political opponents at the time, the communists. Or seize control of the budding military apparatus of the state and dismantle it before rearmament had taken place. Or not appease Hitler when he violated the Versailles treaty. The list goes on. None of these needed a world war.

    150. Re:Good on him by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are multiple flaws in your logic:

      1. for better or for worse, rightly or wrongly: As long as this is one of the excuses for continuing anything bad, bad things can be and will be started at will and they have been, with clock like precision.

      2) We cant realistically just pull out and come home and everyone will forgive and forget our 'intrusions' or 'crimes' or whatever else: see above.

      3) ... be consistent and be fair. ... then display all information about how bad those we fight are too: We have no business being there in the first place. This is not a war, it is an invasion and "they" are doing whatever "they" can undermine "us". Just like "we" keep parroting "collateral damage" to cover our reckless cowardice, "they" too can. Lastly "terrorists" were not doing "bad things" in Iraq before we went there. If the terrorists are blowing up civilians and US military is doing the same thing, how are terrorists worse than military or how is military better than terrorists?

      The best we can do to rein in our Presidents and their underlings resorting to attacking other countries or even meddling other countries. This can be greatly helped only by opening every secret document connected with these two invasions, and throwing the people responsible for starting them into jail, if it turns out that (I am pretty sure it will) all along there were criminal intentions.

    151. Re:Good on him by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is a great mystery how anyone could believe that war is a gift from a benevolent aggressor.

      Seriously, do you think that the millions of Iraqi refugees and hundreds of thousand dead Iraqis were a gift to the world from America? Do you believe that America has spent trillions of dollars and sufferend tens of thousands of deaths or crippling injuries out of benevolance and altruistic sacrifice?

      Seriously, when you imagine a room full of Iraqi war orphans, do you imagine they're all trying to trying to say "thank you America" through their melted little faces while they hug you with their missing little arms?

    152. Re:Good on him by shermo · · Score: 1

      http://images.amazon.com/images/P/B00031TXTU.01.LZZZZZZZ.jpg

      Lots of bad shit happens in the world. The best way to combat it isn't to commit more bad shit yourself.

      --
      Insanity: voting in the same two parties over and over again and expecting different results
    153. Re:Good on him by Grim+Beefer · · Score: 1

      I don't have responsibility for what the rest of the world does. I have responsibility for what my nation and my tax dollars do. That's why our nation should have transparency, because we, as the people, are responsible for what it does. What you're expressing is relativism at it's worst. I'm also heavily opposed to kids being murdered because they're grandparents spoke out against the Taliban, but what does that have to do with this video shot in Iraq? It doesn't matter how evil your neighbors are. That doesn't excuse you from committing murder. The U.S. military IS committing murder, no matter if you call it collateral damage, soft targets, etc.. You can create some moral web of justification surrounding civilian deaths, but when it comes down to it, there's no excuse. We have created more death, disease, and chaos in Iraq than Saddam would have ever dreamed of. Two wrongs don't make a right.

    154. Re:Good on him by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, the they are evil so we can be evil argument.

      Are we not supposed to be the good guys?

      What a stupid attitude you have there.

    155. Re:Good on him by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      Are you honestly trying to tell me, with a straight face, that the horiffic death of over 60,000 american lives and the vast amount of property damage to the countryside and environment was worth saving a few thousand refugees? And do you deny that the country of Vietnam is MUCH better off than North Korea is today?

      Can you name the brutal dictator of Vietnam? No? Then it really doesn't apply here does it?

      Besides, I never said all wars were justified. I did say that sometimes war is the best and/or ONLY answer. In Vietnam's case, it may not have been. It was you that said that war was never justified and the same results could be achieve without it.

      Yes, that is precisely what I would tell them. Who are you to say that over 600,000 people much be viciously murdered in order to free people who would have been free a few years later? They could have immediately begun a mass exodus from the south to the north if the north simply would have ignored the fugitive slave laws. Not a few generations as you ridiculously claim. No massively destructive war necessary.

      Yep! Because freedom isn't free. Sometimes, you have to fight for it. I joined, trained, served and was ready to die not just for my own freedoms, but for the freedoms of the oppressed anywhere in the world. What makes me so special that I get freedom and someone else does not? And are you sure that slavery would have ended a few years later? Do you have a source for that? We lost more lives in the civil war than all other wars combined. I don't think that something that many people were willing to die for would have been abolished within a generation, much less a few years.

      As far as I know, nobody elected USA to be policeman of the world. If you think people should be forced to give up their life instead of sacrificing other lives from halfway around the world maybe you should pay for it yourself. Because most normal people certainly can't afford it. By the way, WW1 still stands as one of the most striking examples of folly.

      I never said the US had to be the policeman. I said that nothing short of war could have possibly saved the 800,000 people who were slaughtered. I don't care who did the fighting. The responsibility falls on the UN who has the legal obligation to stop this sort of thing. That is why the UN was formed. Do you honestly feel that genocide is better than war? Evidently. Even if you just look at the cold numbers, by the most liberal body count has Iraqi deaths at 100,000 (although that number has been repeatedly debunked).

      Either way, what you are really saying is, no, you can't name a single brutal dictator that has been deposed without war or non-violent death of the tyrant. Yet, for some reason, you still believe that war is never the answer, under any circumstances at any time, even if millions of men, women and children are being slaughtered by a brutal tyrant.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    156. Re:Good on him by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The other side that you allude to did not exist, at least in Iraq, to give us this noble opportunity of showing both sides killing. We created the other side by our illegal presence there. As long as most of us believe US is incapable of war crimes these things will be rationalized in infinite ways none that are logical.

      Here is a simple way to stop worrying about the leaks, waterboard Bush and his minions to find why we are there in the first place.

      With all this said, I would still cut some slack, a lot, for the actual soldiers involved, though. Military is trained to kill, without mercy, so 99% of responsibility for engaging military in civilian areas for prolonged time and resulting civilian deaths belongs at the highest level, which would be our beloved Obama.

      Realistically speaking, even the entire citizenry wanted the whole to stop, what can we actually do? Elect a different set of representatives? We tried it, didn't we?

    157. Re:Good on him by melikamp · · Score: 1

      Castro? The man who prevented a small and weak country from being colonized by the US? The man who provided some of the most effective social programs to all of his country's poor in the economy that was gutted by the murderous US sanctions? (Don't kid yourself: an effective embargo actually kills the civilian population more or less directly, and is a form of a genocide.) Oh, Castro is an evil-doer alright. Hitler and Stalin have a lot to learn from this man.

    158. Re:Good on him by elucido · · Score: 1

      No you wont. I don't think you'd feel sorry for anyone.

    159. Re:Good on him by hedwards · · Score: 1

      To a limited extent we did prosecute those involved with Abu Ghraib, just not any of the individual officers that were looking the other way, negligent in failing to notice it or ordering it.

      Without actually going up the chain of command, any sense of responsibility is pretty much non-existent.

    160. Re:Good on him by darjen · · Score: 1

      Can you name the brutal dictator of Vietnam? No? Then it really doesn't apply here does it?

      Why does it matter what his name is? I could easily look it up. We could have learned some valuable lessons from Korea but apparently didn't bother to apply them. We could and should have stayed out of both of them.

      Besides, I never said all wars were justified. I did say that sometimes war is the best and/or ONLY answer.

      Most wars aren't justified. The reason is that the human, economic, and environmental cost almost always outweigh any supposed benefits. I don't see how you have really shown otherwise.

      Yep! Because freedom isn't free. Sometimes, you have to fight for it.

      Sure, there's nothing wrong with self defense. The problem is that most governments aren't fighting for freedom or self defense. It's mostly for conquest, and that includes the American government. It's wrong that you are forcing me to spend my money on the death and destruction of people that are no threat to me, including women and children, who are thousands of miles away. What makes you think you have a right to use my resources to fight these bogeymen?

      Do you honestly feel that genocide is better than war?

      Straw man. They are both obviously terrible. But war is often worse than genocide. More innocent people are often forced to participate in war, who would rather not, including myself.

      I said that nothing short of war could have possibly saved the 800,000 people who were slaughtered.

      Perhaps, but that's not the point. The point is that engaging in war probably would have caused more than that. War always costs more than people initially think it will. Iraq is yet another perfect example of that.

      you still believe that war is never the answer, under any circumstances at any time, even if millions of men, women and children are being slaughtered by a brutal tyrant.

      If a brutal tyrant really is powerful enough to slaughter millions of men, women, and children, chances are pretty damn good that attempting fight him will do nothing more than cause millions of additional death and property destruction that otherwise wouldn't have happened.

    161. Re:Good on him by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      Why does it matter what his name is? I could easily look it up. We could have learned some valuable lessons from Korea but apparently didn't bother to apply them. We could and should have stayed out of both of them.

      That's your opinion. I'm sure the people of S. Korea disagree. For that matter, I'm sure many in the N. Korea wish we would finish the job.

      Most wars aren't justified. The reason is that the human, economic, and environmental cost almost always outweigh any supposed benefits. I don't see how you have really shown otherwise.

      Agreed. Many wars are not justified. BUT MANY ARE. We go out of our way to stay out of wars and when we are in them, we will place our soldiers at additional risk the lives of our soldiers in order to save the lives of the innocent. Very few other countries will do that. Still, your admission that "most wars aren't justified" means that some are, which goes counter to your original statement.
      As for your cost assessment, imagine the lives that could have been saved if we had jumped on Germany immediately after Hitler invaded Poland. Germany was fairly week at that point and it wouldn't have taken much to contain Germany and take Hitler out. Instead, we waited. We tried the diplomatic route and millions died. Not just the six million Jews, but the 20 million Russians, seven million Germans, 13.5 million Chinese (10 million civilians!) and 5.5 million Poles (5.3 million civilians).

      Straw man. They are both obviously terrible. But war is often worse than genocide. More innocent people are often forced to participate in war, who would rather not, including myself.

      NOT a straw man. A straw man argument is an informal fallacy based on misrepresentation of an opponent's position.[1] To "attack a straw man" is to create the illusion of having refuted a proposition by substituting a superficially similar yet weaker proposition (the "straw man"), and refuting it, without ever having actually refuted the original position. (obviously, Wikipedia). I never created any illusions of your argument. I said wars are necessary to stop things like genocide and to dispose of evil dictators (who are usually genocidal).

      You said it yourself, "But war is often worse than genocide." Um, do you know what genocide is? Genocide is the deliberate and systematic destruction, in whole or in part, of an ethnic, racial, religious, or national group.[1] That means the absolute extermination of a people, men, women and children with no exceptions. The only way that war could possibly be worse than genocide is if more than one genocide takes place, say in a nuclear war where both sides literally become extinct. In a non-nuclear exchange, that is not likely.

      Perhaps, but that's not the point. The point is that engaging in war probably would have caused more than that. War always costs more than people initially think it will. Iraq is yet another perfect example of that

      Um, no. Like I said, over 500,000 children (not total people, this is only the count of people under the age of 5) died due to Saddam Hussein. The entire body count for both Iraqi wars was less than 100,000. So... um.... no. Iraq is a perfect example of wars saving lives. See, 100,000 is less than 500,000. You can't argue with math.

      As for Rwanda, if UN soldiers had stood their ground, 800,000 innocent civilians would not have died. I can also promise you that 800,000 soldiers would not have died as there were not 800,000 soldiers in country! When bullets start flying, thugs usually flee.

      If a brutal tyrant really is powerful enough to slaughter millions of men, women, and children, chances are pretty damn good that attempting fight him will do nothing more than cause millions of additional death and property destruction that otherwise wouldn't have happened.

      Strange, that wasn't the case in Iraq. WWII, maybe, b

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    162. Re:Good on him by deathbait · · Score: 1

      the correct solution, as referenced in numerous science fiction plots, is not to fight a different culture just because it's different, no matter how barbaric or silly it may seem. Ever wonder what would have happened if you americans found an alien civilisation on the moon? It'll probably be nuked to death by now. Other than military superiority gained in partly your geological advantage during ww2, what makes you americans constantly think you're so much better?

    163. Re:Good on him by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't know, I'm not an American.

      What makes me think that American (and Western, in general) culture is better, however, is that in US, I can't be executed merely for saying or wearing something, while I can in Afghanistan.

      Cultural moral relativism? Fuck it. I don't mind different cultures, but some things are just evil - as the saying goes, "I know it when I see it". Well, guess what, beheading for apostasy and stoning to death for adultery is evil, no excuses.

    164. Re:Good on him by Myopic · · Score: 1

      Word. Slashdot is full of extremeist ideological black-and-white comments. I don't actually think most commenters think in such bifurcated ways, but that's the nature of internet dialogue. It can actually be really hard to make a moderate statement, because as you point out it's so easy to read someone's mild disagreement as stark raving disagreement. By the time you layer your point with enough qualifying statements, the point gets lost.

    165. Re:Good on him by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Girls should be married off once they are able to have children. That is commonly at age 12, 13, and 14. Men like young women as wives. People like you made the democracies ban this practices and then bribe the third world to start banning it too. There's nowhere for men who want european-decendant young virgin obedient females as wives to go now. You destroyed our world and we have nothing to live for because of this. We should destroy people like you.

      There is nothing wrong with marital rape. Men enjoy ruling over their wives and being dominant towards them. It is a man's right to have relations with his wife or wives when he wishes to.

      People like you, the men and the women of "the west", have outlawed both these practices. You have ruined the lives of countless men and you should be killed for this. When your feminist, pro-women's rights, anti-masculine society ends it will be a glorious dawn for the "bad" men of the world.

      You, the good men, who support women's rights and persecute men for marrying sweet younger females or raping their female charges, you have to be killed. You ruined our world. The early 1990s was the last years of freedom for men (young women (12, 13, 14) were still married off in the south, domestic violence and marital rape laws were not enforced) of the west. It's over now. We have nothing to continue to exist for: there is nothing to work for, no reward.

      Death To women's Rights.
      Viva Men's Liberty.
      --MikeeUSA--
      .

    166. Re:Good on him by Xest · · Score: 1

      I'd agree with you if you didn't have Castro in your list. The only reason he's been so defiant for so long is because everywhere he turns the CIA has tried to stick a knife in him one way or another.

      America is as much responsible for Cuba's problems as Castro is, and it's easily a situation that could've been long resolved by more progressive and positive policies towards Cuba. Had the US lifted the embargo on Cuba about 30 years ago, Cuba would almost certainly be so Americanised now due to it's proximity with the US and the inevitable flood in of American products and people that the US would be able to consider it almost just another state.

      There's also the point that people like Saddam Hussein clearly actually made Iraq a safer place with less atrocities commited than America's installation of democracy has.

      Kim Jong-Il is a problem that'll solve itself one way or another too, he's old, he's dying. War may be necessary depending on the leader that replaces him, but it also may not, it may lead to an opening up of North Korea. Iran is a ticking time bomb too, there's so much anti-government sentiment that it's going to topple at some point or another.

      In terms of Bashir, he's only hanging on because other African nations are supporting him, so any military action would stir further problems in those nations. The ideal solution is to try and cut his support politically and then he'll fall too.

      Sure war is sometimes inevitable, sure change can take an awful long time, but as Iraq demonstrated, even a few thousand people a year being killed through extra-judicial killings is small fry compared to the scale of the killings we're seeing in Iraq and Afghanistan. War is generally only an option though when you've reached the point that not enough people support your viewpoint but you want to push it anyway. Even Hitler could've been stopped if the rest of Europe, the US and so forth had stood against him earlier on than they did, but many even outright supported him. The US didn't even care about Hitler until the war was already half over, let alone dealing with him during his rise.

    167. Re:Good on him by Bob_Who · · Score: 1

      Just my $.02

      ....More like your $2,000.00

    168. Re:Good on him by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At least two of those 'evil men' on your list were armed, trained and supported by the U.S. government. Sadly world politics are rarely as simple as they appear to be in your world.

    169. Re:Good on him by terryducks · · Score: 1

      You think that we should show the world how brutal we are? Fine. As soon as we show the world how brutal the WORLD is ...

      How many of those regimes were created to support U.S. "interests" in the area? Just look at power changes in Afganistan - The U.S. "meddles" too much. It's one thing to work openly and another to sneak around. Where is the line of morality? The people have a right to choose their own system of government without judgement from other cultures that have their own value system.

      Examine actions of the religious "spreaders" (what's the word?) on condom use. What's the reason that condoms are condemned ? Their use stops the spread of disease.

      Same problems as above, instead of being a positive force - it's negative to promote their own agenda.

    170. Re:Good on him by master_p · · Score: 1

      Your post is pointless because you ignore two facts:

      1) you have no right to be on foreign soil, no matter how hard is the situation there for the locals.

      2) there is a whole set of interests of the industrial, energy and military conglomerate behind the war that has nothing to do with bringing democracy to those people.

    171. Re:Good on him by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's a lot of horrible stuff going on in the world, but why are we the world's policeman? For that matter, why can we be? What is our authorization?

      Obviously, there aren't any international laws that grant us the right to invade other countries, even in cases where atrocities ARE happening. So why can we do it? Because it's anyone's duty to step in and stop these things? That's all fine and dandy; would you welcome other nations (no matter which - could be friends, like, Germany, could be others, like Russia or China) invading the USA when shit's hitting the fan here?

      This IS an important question. Why do you think institutions such as the UN and the Security Council exist? It's precisely because politicians recognize this: that if they give no justification, their own people won't be happy, and if they justify it by saying "it has to be done", others may well use that same justification against THEM in the future.

      All that is ignoring the question of whether going in and waging a war is even helping, of course (or, for that matter, whether helping is indeed what these invasions are about in the first place, but that really is another matter). Do the atrocities stop because we invade? Do they stop in towns and areas where we're not immediately present? Do they move from the public area to the private, where we can't see them anymore? (And if they do, do we knock on people's doors at night and search their homes to make sure they comply with the rules?) Will they resume again when we leave?

      Usually, the answer seems to be "no, they didn't stop - not really". Instead, they just diminish slightly, and when we leave, they flare back up again. And so we never leave: whether that's an unfortunate catch-22 or whether it's what our leaders intended right away is up to you.

      In reality, though, it seems that we need to come up with something better than this. Do you, generally, follow the law? Probably, and so do most others. Do you only do so because there's policemen watching you all the time and because your constitutional rights are suspended? No.

      The idea that the world will work if we just put enough of our policemen everywhere and give them lots of powers (e.g. to ignore local laws and people's rights, to be shielded from the local judicial system, and so on) is doomed to fail. It cannot work, and we should realize that and work on something better. What that is, I have no idea (beyond a very nebulous "let's educate people"), but I don't need to have a better idea to see that the current system you're arguing for is broken.

    172. Re:Good on him by qc_dk · · Score: 1

      We certainly should see the full horrors and then we can discuss who it was that unleashed the scourge of islamic fundementalism on Iraq.

      Women had it markedly better in Iraq under Hussein, than other Arabic countries. He had abolished Sharia law. He ran a, for the middle east, largely secular state.

      Do not delude yourself. This was not a crusade for justice and peace. It was, as the middle-age crusades, for political expediency and economic reasons. If it really was for making the world a better place, then why are we not heavily engaged in Somalia or North Korea?

      I don't mind condemning soldiers who step across the line. But I have a real problem with the hypocricy of forgiving everyone else in the world for their sins and being the first to step up onto the soap box to condemn our own.

      We are condemning them and more importantly their leaders for, exactly, hypocrisy. They were supposedly there to stop this kind of abuse. Instead they have perpetrated the very acts they were supposed to stop. Furthermore violence, ethnic/religious conflicts and fundamentalism has spread, again directly against the stated goal.

    173. Re:Good on him by phlinn · · Score: 1

      Augusto Pinochet? It is morbidly amusing to note that the only dictator to promote the free-market is the only dictator to voluntarily relinquish power.

      --
      "Pulling together is the aim of despotism and tyranny! Free men pull in all sorts of directions" -- Havelock Vetinari
    174. Re:Good on him by darjen · · Score: 1

      I appreciate your responses, but I'm afraid I have run out of time to go through your points today, since I have a lot of work to do. But I do appreciate the discussion and I always wonder what goes through the mind of people who defend and advocate America's involvement in various wars. now I will have some more to think about.

    175. Re:Good on him by sheph · · Score: 1

      No, translation: If the facts disprove their point then editing it to suggest otherwise is dishonest. I guess the fact that those journalists were in an area where there had been a confirmed run in with terrorists earlier that day isn't really relevant. I guess the fact that their cameras looked like weapons wasn't important either. I've seen the unedited video and it does look like they're carying weapons. But that's not nearly as sensational as leaving that out and making like the military is just a bunch of thugs killing innocent civilians for fun and profit.

      --
      I don't believe in karma, I just call it like I see it.
    176. Re:Good on him by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      How many other nations have their soldiers occupying a foreign contry?

      Seriously?

      First of all, the US isnt "occupying" any nation by strict definition. We do have troops deployed on foreign soil, but only at the discretion of that nation's government.

      Second, You don't "know" that the US troops are commiting any crimes against anyone. You might suspect it. You might even have a reasonable suspicion. But you don't "know" a damn thing unless you'd like to claim you've personaly witnessed something. That being said, how about Russia attacking Chechens? Some people would consider the army of Israel intercepting the Gaza Blocade runners being a crime against civilians. How about the attacks by the Chinese military against Tibet? How about the consistent combat between the Pakistani military, the Indian military, and civilians along their borders? How about the consistent crimes between North and South Korean military and civilians. How about between China and Singapore? How about between any number of central African nations and neighboring civilians?

      But just to play your game, let's talk about Afghanistan alone. In order of troop concentation the following nations have troops in Afghanistan :
      United States
      United Kingdom
      Germany
      Francy
      Italy
      Canada
      Poland
      Netherlands
      Turkey
      Australia
      Spain
      Romania
      Georgia
      Denmark
      Belgium
      Bulgaria
      Czech Republic
      Norway
      Sweden
      Hungary
      Slovakia
      Croatia
      Portugal
      Albania
      Lithuania
      Macedonia
      Latvia
      Estonia
      New Zeland
      Finland
      Azarbaijan
      Slovenia
      Armenia
      Greece
      Mongolia
      Singapore
      Montenegro
      United Arab Emerates
      Ukraine
      Luxembourg
      Bosnia and Herzegovina
      Ireland
      Jordan
      Iceland
      Austria


      What was your point again? ....

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    177. Re:Good on him by orient · · Score: 1

      First of all, the US isnt "occupying" any nation by strict definition. We do have troops deployed on foreign soil, but only at the discretion of that nation's government.

      Right, tell that to Iraq people.

      how about Russia attacking Chechens

      Fighting against terrorists.

      How about the attacks by the Chinese military against Tibet?

      Like it or not, Tibet is part of China, so it is no longer an invasion.

      How about the consistent combat between the Pakistani military, the Indian military, and civilians along their borders?

      Is there a peace treaty signed by both India and Pakistan? Even if there is, it is not the same situation (one country defeating, occupying and ruling another).

      How about the consistent crimes between North and South Korean military and civilians.

      They are at war, technically.

      How about between China and Singapore?

      What about them? China is not at war with any other country.

      How about between any number of central African nations and neighboring civilians?

      Here you've got it right! But this sets the american soldiers at the same ethic and moral level as the central african war lords...

      But just to play your game, let's talk about Afghanistan alone. In order of troop concentation the following nations have troops in Afghanistan [...]
      What was your point again?

      It's a UN sanctioned military operation and there is a large number of countries taking part, which is exactly my point: not a single country invading another.

      --
      Laudele lor desigur m-ar mahni peste masura.
    178. Re:Good on him by deathbait · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't know, I'm not an American.

      What makes me think that American (and Western, in general) culture is better, however, is that in US, I can't be executed merely for saying or wearing something, while I can in Afghanistan.

      Cultural moral relativism? Fuck it. I don't mind different cultures, but some things are just evil - as the saying goes, "I know it when I see it". Well, guess what, beheading for apostasy and stoning to death for adultery is evil, no excuses.

      you know evil when you see it? Guess what, so do these "fundamentalists". What? You're different? How? Oh right, because you're "free". Take a step back and see just how silly that sounds.

      In a way, we in the "free" societies are worse than the muslim fundamentalists. We have the choice of accepting them for what they are, but we refuse to. Anything different from our ideals must be evil and exterminated.

      Murder is more serious a crime than adultery only because society deems it so. Some civilizations deemed adultery worse than murder. Remember the religion they call christianity? I suppose that's evil too.

      Deuteronomy 22:22 "If a man is found sleeping with another man's wife, both the man who slept with her and the woman must die."

      Luke 16:18 "Anyone who divorces his wife and marries another woman commits adultery, and the man who marries a divorced woman commits adultery."

      Why don't you go out and tell the christians you see that they are either a)evil, or b)not really students of the bible.

      In line with the scifi idea, i guess your solution for the piggies in speaker for the dead would be to exterminate such evil.

    179. Re:Good on him by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      you know evil when you see it? Guess what, so do these "fundamentalists". What? You're different? How?

      I don't promote killing people, for one.

      In a way, we in the "free" societies are worse than the muslim fundamentalists. We have the choice of accepting them for what they are, but we refuse to. Anything different from our ideals must be evil and exterminated.

      I don't want to exterminate anyone. What I do want is to protect those who are being exterminated. Sometimes that involves killing the people engaging in such extermination, but we do try really hard to avoid that, and if it's unavoidable, to avoid any collateral damage. Unlike, you know, people who blow up skyscrapers.

      Thing is, when your neighbor is beating his wife, you don't sit there thinking, "well, maybe she deserved it, and maybe she even likes it that way". You go there and tell him to stop, and if he doesn't, then you force him to stop. Because beating people up is bad, okay?

      Murder is more serious a crime than adultery only because society deems it so.

      Murder is a crime because it actually has a victim, and because it causes extreme physical suffering to that victim. It is immoral for the same reason.

      Remember the religion they call christianity? I suppose that's evil too.

      When Christianity preached its norms as law of the land, and e.g. burned people for heresy - yes, absolutely, it was evil.

      When, today, it spreads FUD about AIDS and condom efficiency in Africa, it is evil, most certainly.

      When US Southern evangelists throw stones at homosexuals, they are evil, without a shadow of a doubt.

      When Christians preach love and forgiveness, as most do these days? I'm cool with that.

    180. Re:Good on him by deathbait · · Score: 1

      this back and forth will go nowhere. you've expressed your views, as have I. A parting reminder, though, that you advocated killing for well...Certain Reason, even though you opened that last statement with "I don't promote killing people"

      Hopefully that's something to think about. Also, might want to consider that they're blowing up your skyscrappers because you know, you're kinda putting the hurt on them over there. The much talked about virgins? That's not a prize. It's a eventuality. They expected to get them in any case, even if they lived to a thousand. There has to be another reason why they would prefer to do suicide runs.

    181. Re:Good on him by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I think you misunderstand my reasoning. I do recognize that morality, as such, is a product of human society (and evolution - see ethology), and nature itself is devoid of concepts of "good" and "evil". So, naturally, my own views on it are also not absolute. In that sense, I am a moral relativist. I also recognize that people blowing up skyscrapers genuinely believe they are right.

      However, moral relativism taken to the extreme is a self-defeating position - when a man comes to cut your throat, if you truly are a relativist, the only logical thing is to let him do as he wishes - after all, your very existence may be incompatible with his moral norms (as it was between Serbs and Ustashe, to give an example), and who are you to challenge them?

      If you forcibly deny him this, however, then by the very act of doing so you implicitly proclaim that your own point of view - which, in this case, boils down to your right to live - is above his. Once that is established, there is no reason to not extend it further - if you see the same guy cutting the throat of another person, it would be only logical to step in to defend them (after all, you could be next - you know how that saying goes...).

      From there comes the simplest working philosophy: be tolerant to anyone, except for those who are themselves intolerant to others. If you cut out that latter part, the whole thing collapses.

      For that reason, while I do not wish to see anyone die (or suffer), I do recognize the fact that it may be inevitable. The goal is to minimize that number. That which works against this goal is "bad" - and this, quite obviously, includes any culture that suppresses freedom of thought and conscience.

    182. Re:Good on him by deathbait · · Score: 1

      I intended to end this debate back there, but that crock of bullshit you just spewed requires a response.

      Stopping someone from cutting your throat doesn't equate to your life being more valuable than his as you're proclaiming here. It equates that you value your life more than you value his beliefs. There's no conflict here.

      The illusion to break here is that you're not tolerant of others. You're tolerant, to a point. But you're no more tolerant to people who have different views and beliefs as the people you denounce.

      Why do we put theives in jail anyway? Do they not suffer because we do so? We do it because making them suffer IS the punishment for breaking the law of the land.

      According to your logic, we should round all the policemen up as what they're doing is "bad". Catching thieves lead to their eventual suffering, and that's against the goal right?

      Basically, your entire disagreement eventually comes down to the fact that you disagree with their law. Guess what, not everybody totally agrees with your laws either, no matter where you're from. The reason your country isn't a war-torn wasteland is because no one else is taking that as an excuse to invade and change your way of life.

    183. Re:Good on him by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Stopping someone from cutting your throat doesn't equate to your life being more valuable than his as you're proclaiming here. It equates that you value your life more than you value his beliefs.

      Precisely. But note that your value of your own life is also a "belief".

      Why do we put theives in jail anyway? Do they not suffer because we do so?

      Because keeping them out of jail leads to more people suffering, in total, then keeping them in it.

      (it is, by the way, why I believe that penalties for breaking the law should be preventative and corrective, not punitive)

      The illusion to break here is that you're not tolerant of others. You're tolerant, to a point. But you're no more tolerant to people who have different views and beliefs as the people you denounce.

      I am tolerant of more people than they are. That's the whole point. You can't be tolerant of everyone, because those who are less tolerant than you will take over. What you can do is get to the point where the number of people tolerating each other is maximized. That still does mean that you have to be intolerant to a certain part of the population, that which, if their beliefs and practices are tolerated, would breed more overall intolerance.

      This can be taken as a mathematical function which never reaches 0, but does have a non-zero minimum which can be reached. Since reaching it would amount to least suffering overall, moving towards it is morally superior to moving away from it.

      Basically, your entire disagreement eventually comes down to the fact that you disagree with their law.

      I definitely disagree with a law under which I would be punished by death for my beliefs. Now why is that a surprise?

    184. Re:Good on him by deathbait · · Score: 1

      sadly, it's because you support punishing others with death for their beliefs.

    185. Re:Good on him by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I don't support punishing anyone for any beliefs. I believe in absolute freedom of conscience.

      Actions, though, are another matter.

    186. Re:Good on him by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      Ok, to sum up:

      - You're ok with someone's else's military fighting terrorists, just not our military.

      - You're ok with military crimes against civilians so long as the military and the civilians are in the same country. (We'll disregard that Tibet is part of China ... because China refuses to acknowledge Tibet's 90 years of claims to independence, and occupies it with military and issolates it from the world to prevent it becoming autonomous. There are consistent claims of military murdering residents of the Tibet region who speak out against China. This situation paralells that of Singapore in many regards. Including some pretty amazing claims of brutality against residents of Singapore in those occasions in which the Chinese mlitary finds themselves in a position to take them into custody.)

      - You're ok with military force against civilians, so long as the military only fire over the border, or kill any civilian that approaches it, rather than actually moving into the other country and staying there.

      - You're ok with military beating or killing unarmed civilians if there is a declared war.

      - You believe that the American military is equivilent to central African militaries that actively engage in genocide and slavery.

      - You believe that the US military is engaged in live operations on foreign soil, without the concent of the local government, and not as a part of a multi-nation initiative (the UN).

      Yeah, I think our conversation is pretty much over.

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    187. Re:Good on him by orient · · Score: 1

      US Army did all that - to native americans, to Nicaragua, Bolivia, Honduras, Panama, Iraq, Afghanistan, Chile, black US citizens during LA riots etc.

      For you it is ok when US Army does it, but it's not ok when other armies do it, right?
      It's clear as day and there's no reason to reply to your arguments anymore. Enjoy your life.

      --
      Laudele lor desigur m-ar mahni peste masura.
    188. Re:Good on him by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      Ok, here's the key point for everyone to recognize: You will say anything and distort any truth, and manipulate any scenario in order to portray US troops and the US as a whole as evil. This is readily apparent when you claim that the US Army 'did all that' to black US citizens during the LA riots.

      There was $1billion dollars worth of damage, and much more importantly 1000's of injuries and 53 deaths because of the RIOTERS.

      There was ONE death after the US military was deployed there, and it was a motorist whom the troops shot because they said he was trying to run them over. You don't have a damn thing to say about the 1000's of nutjobs who looted THEIR OWN NEIGHBORS and THEIR OWN COMMUNITIES. No, you condemn the military for 1 act of self-defense. You dont mention the completely innocent man who was drug from his truck and beaten nearly to death, and who still has serious disability. You don't say anything about the Hispanic man drug from his vehicle and beaten, had is ear nearly severed from his head, and had his face caved in with a car stereo. The police could not even attempt to help in either case because they were ordered to retreat the area for their own safety.

      But your reaction is to condemn the US military ...

      You've proven outright that you're dishonest and willing to go to any length to condemn anyone in uniform purely because they wear the uniform. Your credibility is zero.

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    189. Re:Good on him by orient · · Score: 1

      You're taking it out of context: I said US Army did all that to all those listed, not all to the LA rioters. And you also fail to mention what was the reason that started the riot.

      But thank you for making my point: you cannot be reasoned with and you will say anything to justify the abuses of US Army.

      --
      Laudele lor desigur m-ar mahni peste masura.
    190. Re:Good on him by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      US Army did all that - to native americans, to Nicaragua, Bolivia, Honduras, Panama, Iraq, Afghanistan, Chile, black US citizens during LA riots etc.

      Which thing, exactly, did the US Military do to black US citizens during the LA riots? Please provide your evidence. What exactly is out of context? How, exactly, does the cause of the riots relate to the US military in any way, shape or fashion?

      And I can't be reasoned with? I'll say anything to justify abuses by the US army? Here are some quotes just under this subject:

      I will concede that the US has made some really poor policy decisions in the past, some of which have involved the military and have caused serious harm.

      - (#32654836)

      I agree with you completely. We are, largely speaking, alligned with really bad people out of self-interest. China and the Saudi's being the tip of the iceburg.

      - (#32654318)

      As I said, I dont forgive soldiers who (might) have commited cold-blooded murder.

      - (#32654170)

      And you're precisely right about the rest of the world too! There are barbaric tyrants worldwide! But it's convenient for us to by clothes made in china, and toys from here, and oil from there, and blah blah blah. We don't report how brutal they are to their citizens because if we keep our mouths shut and foster a "world economy" we can get their shit cheap.

      I don't mind condemning soldiers who step across the line. But I have a real problem with the hypocricy of forgiving everyone else in the world for their sins and being the first to step up onto the soap box to condemn our own.

      - (#32654170)

      We are on foreign soil today, for better or for worse, rightly or wrongly. We cant realistically just pull out and come home and everyone will forgive and forget our 'intrusions' or 'crimes' or whatever else.

      The point of what I posted was to point out that if you want to condemn the US Military for its brutal activities, be consistent and be fair.

      (#32654026)

      The point is that you're so quick to condemn the military on this situation. And if they were actually knowingly murdering innocent people then they should be condemned.

      (#32653494)

      ============== By contrast, you have not said word one that there are good and honorable people in the US military. You've not suggested for a second that there are good and honorable officers, soldiers, servicemen and women all over the world, not just in our military but others. You've not acknowledged that our military has done some wonderful things for people too.

      You wont go there because you're dishonest, and you have an agenda you wont allow to be inconvenienced by a balanced and fair discussion.

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    191. Re:Good on him by orient · · Score: 1

      I didn't aknowlegde the good, honest and honorable people in the US military for one simple good reason: that's how they are supposed to be. At least, that's what the military regulations required from the service men in the army I served.

      Exposing the criminals does not dishonor the vast majority of good soldiers, quite the opposite. It shows that the Army, as an organisation, strives to a higher level of ethics and morale.

      Covering up the mishaps and making up excuses for the criminals - this only stains the honor of the ENTIRE army and, maybe, the entire US people. As soon as you understand this, you will also understand the strategic,long term benefic role Wikileaks plays.
      Forgiving the US Army abuses just because "others do it, too", does not help t all. It only brings the US Army at the same level as the others.
      If you don't agree with this opiniion, then well both have to live with this disagreement.

      Be well!

      --
      Laudele lor desigur m-ar mahni peste masura.
    192. Re:Good on him by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      You have spent your time here telling us all how evil the US Military is. Not that there are some bad people. Not that there are some who have stepped over the line. Not that there are those we should pursue for crimes. Your every statement has been that the US Military is evil, is engaged where they should not be, and that they commit crimes against civilians. You further suggest that there are no other nation's armies occupying foreign lands or have soldiers among them that have commited crimes against civilians (with the exception of central Africa). I can provide quotes if you like.

      I don't for a second suggest we give a pass to those who actually commit crimes, and that sentiment is reflected in the quotes listed above. But unlike you I do not equate the actions of those criminals to the nature of the US military. I don't assume that if the military is deployed and anyone is injured or killed that it was an act of criminal barbarism on the part of the US military. I actually make a distinction between the criminals and the honorable veterans. What stains the honor of the ENTIRE Army (and Navy, and Air Force, and Marines, and National Guard, and Coast Guard...) is omitting the honorable acts and harping constantly on only the issolated crimes.

      You cannot hold a million people to a higher standard, or show them honor in any way, when your every remark paints them as a whole as evil and criminal. You cannot instill a soldier with a sense of pride, or honor, or duty, or sacrafice, when you make him believe that all he does is criminal and that he shares company with no one but criminals.

      In not a single statement have I suggested that we forgive criminals because there are other criminals. I've stated repeatedly that we should condemn them all. I have said, however, that it's dishonest as hell to berate our military as openly evil, while saying NOTHING of the crimes of others. You cannot be honest and paint the US military with a sweeping stroke as evil, and allow by omission a belief that anyone we fight is an innocent lamb. Just like the terrorists in Afghanistan, just like rioters and murders in LA, use of force against these people does not inherently constitute a crime no matter how much you'd like to portray it as such.

      You actually suggest that those who volunteer and swear to put their own life down for you do not deserve your willingness to seperate their honor and sacrafice from the criminals who find their way into service. You state plainly that they should just be that way, and that you should never have to acknowledge what they do. And you suggest you were in an Army. How would your fellow soldiers react to seeing you talk about all the crimes the military commits, and then stating that you shouldn't have to point out that they aren't all criminals?

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    193. Re:Good on him by orient · · Score: 1

      "How would your fellow soldiers react to seeing you talk about all the crimes the military commits, and then stating that you shouldn't have to point out that they aren't all criminals?

      Well, they would agree with me. Our country's military is not hated. Our country's military deployed in conflict zones has among the smallest number of casualties and best relationships with the civilians. Our soldiers' safety largely depends on the respect and trust they have with the civilians. That's why our soldiers mostly police themselves and no criminal acts are tolerated or covered up. And, no, I'm not talking about the Canadian army.

      --
      Laudele lor desigur m-ar mahni peste masura.
    194. Re:Good on him by slapout · · Score: 1

      So you wanted us to get involved in the politics of another country?

      --
      Coder's Stone: The programming language quick ref for iPad
  3. So... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He's basically a spy, if unwitting?

    1. Re:So... by icebraining · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes, except for the "spying" part.

    2. Re:So... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd say anyone gathering (or being handed) classified cables for another country is a spy by definition, regardless of intent.

  4. Roman Polanski by cgfsd · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    If a child molester can avoid the US Government, he should have no problems.

    Just don't give the US a freebie and step on US soil.

    1. Re:Roman Polanski by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      But, Polanski is a famous director and a darling of European arts and elite.

      This guy isn't.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    2. Re:Roman Polanski by corbettw · · Score: 1

      Not yet, he isn't. But that appears to be his plan: raise his profile sufficiently high that kidnapping him would raise even more questions (and virtually ensure plenty of people willing to step in and take his place).

      --
      God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
    3. Re:Roman Polanski by icebraining · · Score: 1

      But, Polanski is a famous director and a darling of European arts and elite.

      Considering his movies won 6 Oscars since that event, I'm not sure that "European" is appropriate. Western, maybe.

    4. Re:Roman Polanski by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      The U.S. government would not have to kidnap him. All they have to do is indict him and request extradition.

      All the foil-hatters like to talk about kidnapping and the like. But, it is not even remotely necessary.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
  5. Yes, he should. by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Because, he could probably be arrested and tried for espionage.

    --
    There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    1. Re:Yes, he should. by zwei2stein · · Score: 1

      And it won't help him. It is just as easy to abduct & trial him regardless of location.

      Pretty much every country will either ignore that or will even cooperate.

      --
      -- Technology for the sake of technology is as pathetic as eschewing technology because it's technology.
    2. Re:Yes, he should. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FUCK YOU,
      "dave".

      You are an ignorant piece of shit.

  6. High Profile? by Xacid · · Score: 1

    "Can he build a high enough profile to protect himself from danger?"

    Could JFK? Could John Lennon?

    1. Re:High Profile? by nyctopterus · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Unless you buy into conspiracy theories, they were killed by lone nutters. The assassination of someone with a high profile wil draw a lot of unwanted attention on the way the US conducts this sort of business, as well as an public outcry.

    2. Re:High Profile? by Monkeedude1212 · · Score: 1

      I think that would build him a higher profile, actually. I can't even imagine what kind of mad dash would happen to find out who owns Wikileaks...

    3. Re:High Profile? by Xacid · · Score: 1

      What makes lone nutters any less dangerous?

    4. Re:High Profile? by miffo.swe · · Score: 1

      If you have read fairly recent American history, say from 1950 and onwards, you would have no problem believing many conspiracy theories probably have a grain of truth in them. US history is littered with underhand tactics, black-ops and using any security agency for domestic politics.

      --
      HTTP/1.1 400
    5. Re:High Profile? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not that it matters but JFK is sort of a special case. Unlike other conspiracy theories, if you dig into history a little bit you'll find out that in case of JFK there were (a) people with very strong motives for killing him (keyword: Bay of Pigs, lack of air support) that (b) had the means of getting him killed and (c) were a small and powerful enough group to keep it a secret afterwards. (Most other conspiracy theories fail to provide a plausible motive.) If you look at the overall evidence, it seems quite plausible JFK was killed by Lee Oswald, but only after he had met a small group of CIA conspirators who possibly had access to some secret service plans, advised him about the location, and encouraged him a bit. The circumstances of Jack Ruby's death, who claimed at several occasions that he had been framed to kill Oswald, also fit well into this picture. It's not only possible to inject substances that cause severe cancer in a short period of time but the idea is also typical for the Cold War thinking that was common in certain circles at that time.

      Oh well, I guess that makes me a conspiracy nut. Anyway, we'll never know...

    6. Re:High Profile? by ub3r+n3u7r4l1st · · Score: 1

      They were killed by the elites.

  7. One word: RENDITION !! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One word: RENDITION !!

    You ain't never safe from RENDITION !!

    But, the dude be axing for it, I tells ya !!

  8. The US Government would like... by augi01 · · Score: 0, Troll

    to ask him a few questions. At which time he might fall down a flight of stairs, trip and bump his head on the desk, or mysteriously disappear into a classified detention center. These things happen, yanno?

    --
    No yesterday, no tomorrow, and no today.
  9. "quarter million sensitive cables" by El_Muerte_TDS · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Maybe I missed that update, but last time I heard WikiLeaks never confirmed they had any sensitive cables, in fact, so far they have denied it.

    1. Re:"quarter million sensitive cables" by Revotron · · Score: 1

      I dunno, unshielded Ethernet can be pretty sensitive, especially in high-EMI environments.

    2. Re:"quarter million sensitive cables" by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      Like they would tell the truth about such a thing?

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    3. Re:"quarter million sensitive cables" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe I missed that update, but last time I heard WikiLeaks never confirmed they had any sensitive cables, in fact, so far they have denied it.

      Yeah, but that's because we haven't asked them hard^H^H^H^Hpolitely enough. I mean, have they denied it under tort^H^H^Haggressive interrogation techniques? :)

      At least you're asking the right question. The video was embarassing, but the cables, if they exist, are actually important. But as long as everybody's screaming about the video, nobody's talking about the cables.

      "If they can get you asking the wrong questions, they don't have to worry about answers."
      - Pynchon, "Proverbs for Paranoids", from Gravity's Rainbow

    4. Re:"quarter million sensitive cables" by Thansal · · Score: 1

      I give up.

      What exactly IS a cable?

      "State Department cables"
      Are these memos? Orders? Operating procedures? What?

      --
      Do Or Do Not, There Is No Spoon, There Is Only Zuul. Everything in the above post is probably opinion.
    5. Re:"quarter million sensitive cables" by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 2, Informative

      To the best of my knowledge, "cable" is a general term for official communications that are conducted electronically, which dates back to the use of telegraphs.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    6. Re:"quarter million sensitive cables" by AHuxley · · Score: 1

      Depends on the decade and the operations needed in that part of the world to secure US interests.
      Death squad lists with names neatly cross off, cash, assassinations, long term mercenary use, deals, arms, the use of explosives to shape politics, rendition, false flag operations, pro democracy groups, election issues, the use of the internet during elections, instant well funded grassroots groups, shaping of tame US press on issues.
      vs your locked down DIA/CIA networks.

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
    7. Re:"quarter million sensitive cables" by lowrydr310 · · Score: 1

      What exactly IS a cable?

      You HAD to ask... so here's the Slashdot answer:
      Cat5
      HDMI

    8. Re:"quarter million sensitive cables" by BobMcD · · Score: 2, Informative

      Um, isn't this one of them?

    9. Re:"quarter million sensitive cables" by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

      Electronic messages. Goes back to telegrams which were sent over cable.

      Remember the line from "It's a Wonderful Life"?

      "Mr Gower cables you need cash. Stop. My office instructed to advance you up to $25000. Stop. Hee-haw and Merry Christmas! Sam Wainwright"

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    10. Re:"quarter million sensitive cables" by SleazyRidr · · Score: 1

      If you're really fast with a pair of wire cutters, you can snip out a piece of Cat-6 while an email is travelling through it, then attach it to your own computer and retrieve the email. They use special 'sensitive' cables that will inform them when this happens so they can act to close the leak earlier than when the maintenance man looks into why no one can get email.

  10. I was at the meeting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here's what I wrote for our newspaper I also interviewed him and Christian Engstrom, the Pirate MEP and that will be online later.

    1. Re:I was at the meeting by Runaway1956 · · Score: 1

      "He said Manning had been detained without charge for 3 to 5 weeks and lawyers were unable to meet or contact him."

      Mr. Assange does understand that Manning is in the military, subject to the UCMJ, and that most civilian efforts to "defend" him are worthless? Manning faces a court martial, I believe the military has two steps in the appeals process, then an appeal to the United States Supreme Court. The Supremes seldom bother to hear cases from the military.

      Same deal with Nidal Hasan, charged with those killings at Fort Hood. The military doesn't give him unlimited appeals like civilians get.

      Anyway - what I'm getting at, if you want to "defend" someone in the military, you have to get inside the military courtroom. And, you only get a couple of chances to get it right.

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
  11. Good thing he got his passport back... by dragisha · · Score: 1

    At least he's cleared by Australian gov to travel around, finish work on that second video in another safe house, and hide safely, if he thinks he need to - in Iceland or elsewhere outside both Australia and US.

    It's clear from TFA that I was probably right in another post abount Manning being false target. All he said is Wikileaks is helping Manning with his case.

    --
    http://opencm3.net, http://www.nongnu.org/gm2/
  12. Re:Baiting a nation's military is not a good idea by FuckingNickName · · Score: 3, Insightful

    He has balls. Bigger balls than your balls and bigger balls than my balls. I guess the point I'm trying to put across is that he has big balls.

    So, even if he fails, he has shown that one man is able to wander around the world in a particular way credibly announcing he has sensitive government information without being David Kelly'd. Sure, he has to be white and rich, but that's better than nothing. If there's one thing we can learn from Assange, it's that we're mostly a bunch of fucking cowards not to stand up to Goliath, and we are getting the government we deserve. So, that's two things. Two things we can learn.

  13. "Free Assange" t-shirt by AceJohnny · · Score: 1

    I'd like to preemptively buy a "Free Assange" wikileaks t-shirt. It doesn't exist yet, but I figure it's only a matter of time before it's necessary.

    --
    Misleading titles? Inflammatory blurbs? Keep in mind that Slashdot is a tabloid.
  14. Attention whore by Rogerborg · · Score: 4, Insightful

    By teasing over the alleged videos and documents, he's shifting the focus of attention to himself and how he's treated by the US.

    So. Fucking. What?

    His story is utterly, totally trivial next to the things that he's allegedly holding back.

    So publish already, or shut up. Or publish, then shut up. Either way, just shut up, as Wikileaks itself is rapidly becoming a distraction from the real stories that it ostensibly exists to publish.

    --
    If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    1. Re:Attention whore by Scrameustache · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Wikileaks itself is rapidly becoming a distraction from the real stories that it ostensibly exists to publish.

      Wikileaks is becoming one of its own valid stories: They're harassed at the international level by a government that keeps stating publicly that it supports freedom of press.
      The leaks they have are only half the story, what people are willing to do to stop the leaks is the other half.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    2. Re:Attention whore by joeszilagyi · · Score: 1

      The more this happens and the more that Wikileaks (as they have so far) stick by their guns, the more likely it will be that government and business interests will leak to them.

      --
      Dude, where's my packet?
    3. Re:Attention whore by BitZtream · · Score: 1

      I support freedom of the responsible press.

      I do not support this douche bag in the slightest, he's nothing more than an attention whore.

      --
      Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
    4. Re:Attention whore by Rogerborg · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Wikileaks is becoming one of its own valid stories

      Wikileaks is desperately attempting to become a story. By doing so, they're detracting attention from the actual important stories that they run. What are we debating here: the mass murder of innocent civilians, or Wikileaks?

      They're harassed at the international level

      No. No, they are not. You've bought Assange's story. There is no evidence, other than his assertions, that he is being "harassed" at any level, let alone the international. Remember when he claimed his passport had been "seized", and it turned out to be that all that happened was that it had been pointed out to him that it was due to expire?

      He's been threatening to release these videos and documents for months now, in what has become a rather pathetic attempt to get some attention from the Big Bad US. That shows that he's more interested in becoming a cause célèbre than in actually doing what he set out to do: publish and damn their eyes.

      The man has or had good intentions, but now he's pulling a Jimbo Wales, and getting delusions that he's bigger than his creation, when he needs to be as anonymous as his sources.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    5. Re:Attention whore by PPH · · Score: 1

      His story is utterly, totally trivial next to the things that he's allegedly holding back.

      That's what they call "life insurance". Keep enough really embarrassing stuff in reserve and let it be known that if he disappears, the folder permission gets switched to public read.

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
    6. Re:Attention whore by Dhalka226 · · Score: 1

      The leaks they have are only half the story, what people are willing to do to stop the leaks is the other half.

      ...want him to answer questions about how classified or otherwise illegal-to-distribute information ended up in his hands? OH NOES, THE BIG BAD GUBMINT!

      Just reading the summary you can see some of the problems with Wikileaks in general and everything surrounding Manning and now Assange in particular. He released a video about the military doing some Really Bad Shit; that's important, and it should have been done. He may have another video of them doing Equally Bad Shit; that's important too, so he should stop huffing and puffing and just release the damn thing already instead of stoking his ego for a few months first.

      But then there's the rest. A quarter of a million cables? I mean really? Do you think Manning or anybody else sifted through them to ensure that only information related to the military's Bad Shit operations and their cover-ups ended up in this man's hands? We have NO IDEA what information may be in there. We have no idea what the leak and potential public posting of those cables has done to individuals, to the military, to a particular operation. We have no idea how many hundreds of thousands of dollars it might have cost to scrap a plan or alter a timetable because there was a fear it was about to put into the open. Hell, we don't even know if the military knows yet what they might need to scrap or change. We don't know if they know what's gone.

      People should be made accountable for bad and illegal actions. That means the soldiers who perpetrated the atrocities*, the chain of command that failed to act, and anybody who helped cover it up. It also means Manning. Personally I would like to see him arrested, prosecuted and sentenced. If it turns out that all those cables really were related to these incidents or those like them, I would like to see him pardoned -- justice, and yet a recognition of the fact that outing this sort of thing is important. If not, if he just started blindly scooping up sensitive information between military commanders of a war because he didn't support it, shuttling it off to some egomaniac to do with as he pleases, then let him rot.

      As an aside, I wonder when Americans obtained an expectation that doing illegal things because they're the right thing to do should be without consequence. You didn't see the black civil rights activists screaming "LET ME GO, I'M BEING CIVILLY DISOBEDIENT, YOU CAN'T ARREST ME FOR BREAKING THE LAW!! RRAAAWRWRWR." They did what they did because it was right; they did what they did in hopes of getting bad laws changed or, in this case, people who did bad things punished for them. They didn't expect to get away free for it. I don't mind setting up laws and systems that help these people (ie whistleblower-type laws) to come forward because I understand that not everybody has the stomach for the potential life-altering consequences, but this expectation that people can do anything if they mean well... well, "the ends justify the means" has always been one of the world's most dangerous concepts.

      It reminds me of a discussion we had in a history class at my high school once. I don't remember the specifics, but the teacher basically posited a question such as this: What would you do if something was horribly illegal, but you truly believed that you would rot in hell for all of eternity for not doing it? (Or for doing it, I really don't remember how it was set up.) Random hands would shoot up with some scheme or another, and he'd always be able to shoot them down. People wanted it both ways. Eventually everybody gave up guessing and waited for his answer: "You do it and you go to jail." Sometimes life sucks. Sometimes you have to operate on a higher law, whether that is religion** or your own set of morality. But at the same time, you can't expect the rest of the world to behave the same way or to pardon you (literally or figuratively) for

    7. Re:Attention whore by WillDraven · · Score: 1

      I don't think it helps him any that he looks like a bond villain.

      Don't get me wrong I have great respect for wikileaks, but MAN, that guy is creepy looking.

      --
      This is my sig. There are many like it but this one is mine.
    8. Re:Attention whore by Rogerborg · · Score: 1

      Why would you leak anything to Wikileaks if you think they'll sit on it indefinitely just to troll a government, rather than publishing it?

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    9. Re:Attention whore by Elshifto · · Score: 1

      Who gets to define responsible? You, or someone with the same views as you I presume?

      While I do not regularly read Wikileaks I pay attention to the big releases and I have not seen anything yet that would constituent a threat to our soldiers or citizens.

      I have seen things that were being hidden under the National security blanket that would hurt our government politically but I encourage things that politically hurt governments, its good for the people if the government is politically weak, they cant do as much to us.

    10. Re:Attention whore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >, when he needs to be as anonymous as his sources.

      In his defence, he tried being anonymous, then he got outed. Once he's been outed, his only option is to go the other way and become a public figure, about whose intimidation, people will object.

      I don't envy him. The media/public has an exceedingly short attention span, and any action against him will be accompanied by a short period of screaming from the press, followed by complete disinterest. Zero impact at the polls, which is all the government cares about.

      It would seem that to defend itself against the ambivalence of the press, Wikileaks has to become widely known enough that it supplants the press. A tough job since the public likes to be spoon fed, and has a snowball's chance of sifting though, and understanding, the primary sources that wikileaks is providing. Maybe someone needs to set up a news service, that is dedicated to analysing and reporting on Wikileaks' content?

  15. Learning more about Wikileaks everyday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    While the idea of Wikileaks is still quite popular; with more revelations about Wikileaks, Assange is no longer the media darling with everyone taking a more critical view of the man behind Wikileaks.

    America's oldest whistleblowing website Cryptome which Wikileaks described as a 'venerabe anti secrecy organization' has collated the most details about what happens within Wikileaks. Cryptome has published all of Wikileaks founder Assange's chats over a few years as well as Wikileaks insider details about how they need $55,000 to run servers but as much as $200,000 is used by the men who run Wikileaks for business class travel, hotels etc.

    Read Cryptome to see that despite its idealistic mission, at some level Wikileaks behaves like another secret Government department with a couple of people deciding what is public interest.

    1. Re:Learning more about Wikileaks everyday by strack · · Score: 1

      cool story anonymous coward.

    2. Re:Learning more about Wikileaks everyday by b0bby · · Score: 2, Informative

      The New Yorker had an interesting piece on Assange & the publishing of the video recently. It discussed how he rented a house in Iceland for the process, the number of people helping make it all happen smoothly, etc. The fact is, doing that kind of stuff costs money. I'm sure he's no saint, but I think it's a good thing to have a site like Wikileaks out there as a check on excessive government secrecy. $200k isn't that much in the grand scheme of things.

    3. Re:Learning more about Wikileaks everyday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While the idea of Wikileaks is still quite popular; with more revelations about Wikileaks, Assange is no longer the media darling with everyone taking a more critical view of the man behind Wikileaks.

      America's oldest whistleblowing website Cryptome which Wikileaks described as a 'venerabe anti secrecy organization' has collated the most details about what happens within Wikileaks. Cryptome has published all of Wikileaks founder Assange's chats over a few years as well as Wikileaks insider details about how they need $55,000 to run servers but as much as $200,000 is used by the men who run Wikileaks for business class travel, hotels etc.

      Read Cryptome to see that despite its idealistic mission, at some level Wikileaks behaves like another secret Government department with a couple of people deciding what is public interest.

      Agent Smith, is that you?

    4. Re:Learning more about Wikileaks everyday by interkin3tic · · Score: 3, Insightful

      While the idea of Wikileaks is still quite popular; with more revelations about Wikileaks, Assange is no longer the media darling with everyone taking a more critical view of the man behind Wikileaks.

      Yeah, because when you out corrupt business practices, everyone but the criminals you're exposing can get behind that and you're everyone's pal. When you're outing soldiers for gunning down unarmed children in broad daylight, there are some people who think you're attacking the military.

      they need $55,000 to run servers but as much as $200,000 is used by the men who run Wikileaks for business class travel, hotels etc.

      Goodness me, they have other expenses besides server costs in their efforts to do real journalism? Those evil bastards!!!

      Read Cryptome to see that despite its idealistic mission, at some level Wikileaks behaves like another secret Government department with a couple of people deciding what is public interest.

      Seems like a no-brainer that it takes some effort and restraint to remain credible while publishing these important stories. You can't just publish any unsubstantiated conspiracy theory, then publish a real story and expect anyone to take you seriously.

    5. Re:Learning more about Wikileaks everyday by elucido · · Score: 1

      While the idea of Wikileaks is still quite popular; with more revelations about Wikileaks, Assange is no longer the media darling with everyone taking a more critical view of the man behind Wikileaks.

      America's oldest whistleblowing website Cryptome which Wikileaks described as a 'venerabe anti secrecy organization' has collated the most details about what happens within Wikileaks. Cryptome has published all of Wikileaks founder Assange's chats over a few years as well as Wikileaks insider details about how they need $55,000 to run servers but as much as $200,000 is used by the men who run Wikileaks for business class travel, hotels etc.

      Read Cryptome to see that despite its idealistic mission, at some level Wikileaks behaves like another secret Government department with a couple of people deciding what is public interest.

      In other words $200,000 is used for the secure travel and hotels for individuals like Julian. Your point? It's not like these guys aren't risking their lives. They are risking their lives to bring you a story, I'd say they should be able to stay in any hotel they choose.

    6. Re:Learning more about Wikileaks everyday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      spare me the bullshit. Oh, wow, really it costs money to run an enterprise. You showed us that server costs alone amount for 25% of the costs of the organization thats pretty fucking impressive. And guess what, Assange is not the only person who works for wikileaks, and yes genius, it costs MONEY to travel around the world to speak on behalf of your organization. Amazing. You are going to have to work a lot harder than that to besmirch this organization

    7. Re:Learning more about Wikileaks everyday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually I'm thinking it's Missyy:

      Today: Cryptome has published all of Wikileaks founder Assange's chats over a few years as well as Wikileaks insider details about how they need $55,000 to run servers but as much as $200,000 is used by the men who run Wikileaks for business class travel, hotels etc.

      Posted 3 days ago: Read Cryptome which has all the copies of Assanges chats to see how he is driven by a hatred of the American establishment. Cryptome also has emails from Wikileaks insiders on how Wikileaks is run as a one man dictatorship. Cryptome also has an insiders views on how $50,000 is needed for Wikileaks servers and $200,000 has been spend on Assange's business class travel and lifesyle.

      Today: Read Cryptome to see that despite its idealistic mission, at some level Wikileaks behaves like another secret Government department with a couple of people deciding what is public interest.

      3 days ago: I think when Wikileaks is finally unmasked you may find that it was run on the same principles as the most right wing Governments.

      Hmm.

    8. Re:Learning more about Wikileaks everyday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At least Wikileaks is open to competition, unlike a government department. So if donors dislike them they can just set-up their own or donate somewhere else.

  16. Paranoia by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

    After reading the comments in this post, I think I am going to go buy stock in Reynolds Aluminum. I never knew how many foil-hatters there were in the world and on the internet.

    --
    There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
  17. I am not very sympathetic and here's why... by MikeRT · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I lost all sympathy for him when I found out that he went on Colbert and admitted that Wikileaks went far beyond simply leaking the video and edited for "political impact." Don't believe me? Watch 3:00 to about 3:40.

    Furthermore, I have no sympathy for Reuters' guys because Reuters has a history of being embarrassed in that region by having its "correspondents" not only embed themselves with guerrilla forces, but often hires people who are working both sides (ex: the egg on Reuters' face when it came out that its subcontractors in Lebanon were actually members of Hezbollah).

    1. Re:I am not very sympathetic and here's why... by radtea · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I lost all sympathy for him

      Just as a matter of interest, how much sympathy do you feel for the good samaritans who were going to the aid of the wounded when the Americas shot and killed them?

      --
      Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
    2. Re:I am not very sympathetic and here's why... by Clandestine_Blaze · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Furthermore, I have no sympathy for Reuters' guys because Reuters has a history of being embarrassed in that region by having its "correspondents" not only embed themselves with guerrilla forces, but often hires people who are working both sides (ex: the egg on Reuters' face when it came out that its subcontractors in Lebanon were actually members of Hezbollah).

      Well, how else are we to get both sides of the story? If journalists are only embedded on one side, then we're only getting half of the story, no? Journalism should be neutral, unless you're implying that we shouldn't hear their side unless it came directly from us. At that point, it is no longer journalism. Instead, it is full blown-out propaganda.

    3. Re:I am not very sympathetic and here's why... by slyborg · · Score: 5, Interesting

      And you have the information to back up this "often" claim, besides the one example you claim?

      I know a guy who worked for a number of years for Reuters as a communications tech in war zones all over the world, and he never "worked both sides" whatever that means to you but whose life was endangered on a number of occasions. He was paid for it and he accepted the possible consequences. However, he, along with I would suspect are the majority of Reuters employees, did not work for for Hezbollah, and didn't, as you appear to suggest, deserve a couple of 30mm shells for doing his job.

      Since this is the Internet, though, people who disagree with you of course deserve death, I suppose.

    4. Re:I am not very sympathetic and here's why... by Hatta · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So the government is the only one who gets to edit for political impact? Both sides inevitably play the propaganda game. At least Wikileaks made the entire video(that they had) available. Only the shorter, more YouTube friendly version was edited, and they never once tried to hide the fact. That's a lot more honesty than you can expect from the US military.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    5. Re:I am not very sympathetic and here's why... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Journalism is neutral, bullets aren't. If you embed with combat forces in a war zone, you're likely to get killed. Don't piss and moan when this happens.

    6. Re:I am not very sympathetic and here's why... by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Reuters was caught a few years ago editing photographs of a site that the Israeli Air Force had bombed in order to make it look worse than it was. When Reuters released pictures from the Israeli assault on the "peace flotilla", they edited out the weapons in the hands of the "peaceful" members of the flotilla and the wounded Israeli soldiers. There have been several other incidents of Reuters doing similar things, but I would have to work harder to track those stories down than I feel like at this time.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    7. Re:I am not very sympathetic and here's why... by EllisDees · · Score: 1

      Sometimes a story only has one side.

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
    8. Re:I am not very sympathetic and here's why... by b0bby · · Score: 1

      Well, if you keep watching until about 3:45, you'll see he also says that they released the full material as well. I don't really have a problem with that - they have a position on the meaning of the material, and present it in a way which has the most impact, but they also released the whole tape (well, everything they had).

    9. Re:I am not very sympathetic and here's why... by Clandestine_Blaze · · Score: 1

      Journalism is neutral, bullets aren't. If you embed with combat forces in a war zone, you're likely to get killed. Don't piss and moan when this happens.

      Or, you know, identify your targets before shooting at them? In some cases, that's impossible. In the case of the Apache helicopter attack, the Apache wasn't being shot at, and at their range, they should have been able to make out the camera tripods.

    10. Re:I am not very sympathetic and here's why... by Clandestine_Blaze · · Score: 1

      I know what you're trying to say, but I respectfully disagree. I've always felt that every side has a story or a cause, else they wouldn't risk their lives to do it. In some cases, their cause may be morally reprehensible to us, but there's always something that drives them to do whatever it is that they do. I get frustrated with the media because they like to lump people into "good guy vs. bad guy" categories, and it's usually "terrorists blow up bus, 50 die" or something like that.

      Well, why did they do it? What was their motive? If you're going to give the story air time, then you're already legitimizing their barbaric tactics, so you might as well tell us the whole story so that we understand what the root cause of all this is. We could just blow up everyone who is a threat to us, but that is similar to treating the symptom, but if we don't treat the underlying cause, it will never get better.

      Still, you did make a point. In what cases do you feel that a story would only have one side? I don't want to dismiss your point outright.

    11. Re:I am not very sympathetic and here's why... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Guns and cameras both have point and shoot capability. Nuke em from orbit. Its the only way to be sure. Cameras are worse than guns. Cameras steal your soul while guns can only kill you.

    12. Re:I am not very sympathetic and here's why... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Journalists have no "duty" to cover both sides equally. The USA is our side jackass, journalists need provide enough of the story to understand what is going on, but not so much as to put our soldiers in extra danger. People like you, who don't simply want to know the news, but instead want to actively assist the enemy by giving troop movements and strategies away, are essentially traitors to this nation.

    13. Re:I am not very sympathetic and here's why... by dave420 · · Score: 1

      If you don't even want to cite your sources, why feel the need to vomit over this thread?

    14. Re:I am not very sympathetic and here's why... by CannonballHead · · Score: 1
    15. Re:I am not very sympathetic and here's why... by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      Primarily because it is trivial for anyone who wants to do a simple Google search. Reuters photoshop scandal ( http://www.google.com/#hl=en&source=hp&q=reuters+photoshop+scandal&aq=1&aqi=g2&aql=&oq=reuters+photoshop&gs_rfai=CyzduCeggTLLHBYvkgATD6M3hDQAAAKoEBU_QExI0&fp=bff9aea6fcd663ae ). But since you will assume they are perfectly fine despite what people tell you without doing a search for yourself here's the link. Someone else provided a link to the Reuters editing of the flotilla photos.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    16. Re:I am not very sympathetic and here's why... by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1

      Well, how else are we to get both sides of the story? If journalists are only embedded on one side, then we're only getting half of the story, no? Journalism should be neutral, unless you're implying that we shouldn't hear their side unless it came directly from us. At that point, it is no longer journalism. Instead, it is full blown-out propaganda.

      At the same time, we have to be aware that propaganda exists on all fronts. There is certainly value is seeking out all sides of a given story. But one has to consider the sources involved. What one could be witnessing is simply competing propaganda fed by opposing agendas.

    17. Re:I am not very sympathetic and here's why... by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1

      Or, you know, identify your targets before shooting at them? In some cases, that's impossible. In the case of the Apache helicopter attack, the Apache wasn't being shot at, and at their range, they should have been able to make out the camera tripods.

      The footage in question has communications from several different parties with different views of the situation. The gunships might not have been shot at, but there were ground troops involved and they were certainly in possible danger. The distance for the gunship is misleading.

      Secondly, you'd be amazed at how dangerous a camera can look. I've been playing paintball with photographers on the field and sworn that they were opposing teammates shooting at us. Paintball has little to do with combat. But the effect of confirmation bias is very clear and clearly played a roll in this incident.

    18. Re:I am not very sympathetic and here's why... by Bigjeff5 · · Score: 1

      Indeed, there is nobody on earth who does anything because they believe it is wrong, or bad, or evil. Doing so is a blatant internal contradiction.

      Take serial killers. They are almost always sociopaths, which makes a hell of a lot of sense. Sociopaths cannot distinguish between right and wrong. To them, helping someone fix a flat tire and killing them are like choosing between an apple and an orange. At that point it's just a matter of looking at what gives them the most reward, and if the rush of killing is greater than the satisfaction of helping, they will often kill. We see them as the most evil people on the planet, but they certainly don't see themselves that way. To them it's the right thing to do.

      Take also tyrannical leaders. Pretty much all of them believe their power is a right, and it is their privelege to exercise it regardless of what happens to others. As such, oppressing the people to assure his power is not evil, it's what is right and wholesom because he must remain in power.

      No doubt the soldiers in the video had rationalized away their actions. Perhaps they blamed all Iraqi's for the actions of the terrorists. Perhaps they felt the citizens supported the enemy, and by proxy they were enemies as well. Who knows? Perhaps they just made a bad judgement call, and thought the journalists actually were enemy combatants (they were apparently carrying guns out in the open - not usually something you expect of a journalist or non-combatant), and then thought the people who went to help them actually were going for their guns? In that case, it's nothing malicious, just a very, very bad judgment call on a battlefield - where, by the way, a slow decision can mean your death.

      What you can be certain of, is that the soldiers didn't kill anybody because they believed it was wrong to do so. If they believed it were wrong, they would not have done it. In light of that, you must look into the soldiers side of the story, or story is incomplete.

      The same is true with all stories that appear to only need one viewpoint. That is never the case.

      --
      Security is mostly a superstition... Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. - Helen Keller
    19. Re:I am not very sympathetic and here's why... by Bigjeff5 · · Score: 1

      A half second on Google produced this:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adnan_Hajj_photographs_controversy

      and

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2006_Lebanon_War_photographs_controversies

      From Wikipedia:

      The 2006 Lebanon War photographs controversies refers to instances of photojournalism from the 2006 Lebanon War that misrepresented scenes of death and destruction in Lebanon caused by Israeli air attacks. As a result of the scandal, Reuters fired freelance photographer Adnan Hajj, and the AP disciplined several others.[citation needed] Reuters also fired a photo editor, and implementing stricter controls on its photo-gathering process.

      The controversy began as an investigation of documents by individual bloggers, and spread to print and television media sources.

      I suppose you think bloggers can't dig up news too eh? All hail the "impartial" media, eh?

      --
      Security is mostly a superstition... Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. - Helen Keller
    20. Re:I am not very sympathetic and here's why... by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      If you don't even want to google it, why feel the need to ...

      I mean, I didn't know about that, but it took me about two minutes to find out.

    21. Re:I am not very sympathetic and here's why... by kevinNCSU · · Score: 1

      Maybe he figures anyone who isn't just going to dismiss his argument anyways and is interested in knowing probably also possesses the cognitive ability to type in the first thing they think of like "reuters edits bombing photos" into the google and get this back:

      Reuter Photographer Controversy

      Contributing actual information and taking a position on the topic in question without all the citing for your lazy ass isn't "vomiting all over a thread". Complaining about it while contributing nothing is.

    22. Re:I am not very sympathetic and here's why... by CraftyJack · · Score: 1

      If journalists are only embedded on one side, then we're only getting half of the story, no?

      Read the text you quoted from the GP again. Reuters' subcontractors were actually members of Hezbollah. That would be like finding out that the "embedded journalist" is actually the platoon sergeant.

    23. Re:I am not very sympathetic and here's why... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe those journalists shouldn't complain if some of their friends get killed when they embed with the other side and are accidentally mistaken for the enemy.

    24. Re:I am not very sympathetic and here's why... by internic · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Usually if a person is making an argument the burden is on them to provide proof. That's the way it works. It's also a lot better because it keeps things grounded in fact, rather than ending up with a game of telephone where people go around repeating things they heard. You can see where the latter system leads by reading the many chain emails that go around. Consider that not everything is easy to find on Google. This is, because it was a well publicized Internet-based story that can be summarized in a few search terms that are relatively unusual in combination, but there are plenty of important things that don't fit that mold. Furthermore, there's a big difference between finding a web page mentioning something and finding a good discussion by a reliable source. So, there are a lot of reasons it's worthwhile to go ahead and cite a source if you know about an issue. Slashdot (indeed, the net and the world in general) would be a hell of a lot better if people did it as a matter of course.

      Also consider that it makes a lot more sense practically for the person originally making a claim to cite his sources. What did you and the other replies say? Essentially that it's so easy to Google. Well that would seem to be a good argument that it would be really easy to cite a source. And what makes more sense, the one person making the claim doing this work once or the many people reading the claim replicating the same work?

      Long story short, I think the GP was dead on for commenting that if you care enough to post about something like this (not necessarily common knowledge and possibly controversial), you ought to cite a source.

      --
      "You call it a new way of thinking; I call it regression to ignorance!" -- Operation Ivy
    25. Re:I am not very sympathetic and here's why... by internic · · Score: 1

      Okay that's one. I did a quick search for the other story (about the boarding of that ship trying to break the Gaza blockade). The site I looked at just showed two photos, each with a knife showing at the edge of the original that has been cropped to focus on the primary subject of the picture. It looked like something that could have been the product of intensional bias but also could equally well be explained by an ordinary attempt at framing the central subject matter. Usually I apply Hanlon's Razor to such things.

      Now, if you know more about it, perhaps you could point to site that has some more thorough, convincing, or extensive discussion. Maybe there were a lot more than 2 examples, which would change the interpretation. That would be one big advantage to citing a specific source in the first place. Since you know something about it, you can point people to the best source of information, and you'll be a lot more convincing that way.

      --
      "You call it a new way of thinking; I call it regression to ignorance!" -- Operation Ivy
    26. Re:I am not very sympathetic and here's why... by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Consider that not everything is easy to find on Google. ... Furthermore, there's a big difference between finding a web page mentioning something and finding a good discussion by a reliable source. So, there are a lot of reasons it's worthwhile to go ahead and cite a source if you know about an issue.

      It's all true, except for one thing. In this particular case, it is extremely easy to find on Google, and you immediately get links to sources that most people would consider reliable. There's no need to over-generalize. I don't like JFGI responses either when the implication is to sift through pages of results, but in this case, it's the story that has, apparently, been on the front pages recently. I don't think mentioning that in a discussion should require a reference - it is reasonable to assume that the reader willing to debate on that topic has either heard about it already, or will educate himself and obtain references on his own with minimal effort. I mean, does he also have to provide a reference for the fact that a Turkish ship was boarded by Israeli commandos in the first place?

      In any case, negative reaction to GGP's comment was likely provoked more by its extremely offensive tone than anything else.

    27. Re:I am not very sympathetic and here's why... by internic · · Score: 1

      It's all true, except for one thing. In this particular case, it is extremely easy to find on Google, and you immediately get links to sources that most people would consider reliable.

      The original comment mentioned, "Reuters released pictures from the Israeli assault on the "peace flotilla", they edited out the weapons in the hands of the "peaceful" members of the flotilla and the wounded Israeli soldiers." What you get depends a fair bit on the search terms you choose, and I mostly got blogs I'd never heard of. And as is frequently the case amongst blogs, it seems to be mostly blogs commenting on other blogs. It would be far superior to have the originating piece of journalism, or the best sourced/written one, or one from the most reputable source. Just getting the page rank grab bag of blogs (together with a bunch of pages from highly-ranked news sites that are simply using Reuters photos of the incident, not discussing this controversy) is much worse.

      In the end my impression of this particular controversy is that there are just two photos that had the edges cropped off, and while this could be intentional it looks like a pretty decent place to apply Hanlon's Razor. Now perhaps there's is an article out there that makes a much stronger case, and had that poster included that his point might be a lot more convincing.

      --
      "You call it a new way of thinking; I call it regression to ignorance!" -- Operation Ivy
  18. Dead man walking by Moof123 · · Score: 1, Troll

    Our US thuggery is fairly predictable. I'm sure the CIA or equivalent has already been given hit orders. It will be made to look like an accident (small plane crash, car crash, mystery disease, etc). Such is necessary for plausible deniability.

    Poor bastard, he will be missed.

    1. Re:Dead man walking by salesgeek · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Our US thuggery is fairly predictable. I'm sure the CIA or equivalent has already been given hit orders.

      You've seen a few too many movies.

      More than likely, Assange is having his lawyers try to get some kind of amnesty deal in turn for testimony and/or returning the materials. The only danger to Assange is that he be arrested, held and tried like any other person who breaks the law. He may even get off at trial due to Constitutional protection of freedom of the press.

      Playing up the danger does get Wikileaks more press, so bonus points for good guerrilla PR for Assange.

      --
      -- $G
    2. Re:Dead man walking by AHuxley · · Score: 1

      Depends on the script?
      Karl Koch Cold war spy, suicide by gasoline fire.
      Electron/Phoenix - Australia, theft of the ZARDOZ file/NASA, suspended sentence
      Costas Tsalikidis software engineer for Vodaphone in Greece, exposed massive mobile network backdoor, found hanged
      David Kelly expert in biological warfare, talked about dossier on weapons of mass destruction, suicide.
      Adamo Bove - head of security at Telecom Italia, exposed CIA rendition in Italy - body found under freeway overpass.
      Deborah Jeane Palfrey - D.C. Madam, hanged
      Gary McKinnon - UFO hunt via MS passwords using perl scripts, trial
      Sibel Edmonds former FBI translator exposed nuclear arms/blackmail ring in US gov, faced State Secrets Privilege
      Mark Klein AT&T technician exposed NSA Room 641A, States Secrets Privilege.
      some more at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_convicted_computer_criminals

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
    3. Re:Dead man walking by EllisDees · · Score: 1

      >The only danger to Assange is that he be arrested, held and tried like any other person who breaks the law.

      Except for the fact that he hasn't broken any laws. Freedom of the press in the US is almost complete. As long as you aren't committing libel, there is very little the government can do to stop him from publishing whatever information he has. See the Pentagon Papers for a perfect example.

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
    4. Re:Dead man walking by BobMcD · · Score: 2, Informative

      Our US thuggery is fairly predictable. I'm sure the CIA or equivalent has already been given hit orders.

      You've seen a few too many movies.

      Before attempting to dismiss other's fears as being mere fantasty, do a little research:

      http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/license-kill-intelligence-chief-us-american-terrorist/story?id=9740491

      This article demonstrates that not only do 'hit orders' exist, but they are not prohibited from using such orders against citizens who are constitutionally guaranteed to stand trial.

      So while parent may have seen too many movies, you, dear friend, have seen too few congressional hearings.

    5. Re:Dead man walking by hedwards · · Score: 1

      Not officially, I don't believe that the President has issued an executive order reinstating the ability of the CIA to assassinate foreign nationals. Which means one of a few things, that I missed a sitting President doing so, that the President hasn't done so or that the CIA has gone rogue and is doing so with security clearances above the Presidents clearance level.

    6. Re:Dead man walking by salesgeek · · Score: 1

      So while parent may have seen too many movies, you, dear friend, have seen too few congressional hearings.

      Movies are more entertaining and more likely to be factual than what is presented in a congressional hearing.

      --
      -- $G
    7. Re:Dead man walking by Bigjeff5 · · Score: 1

      I have a feeling that the US CIA operations portrayed in movies is about the same as they way movies portray cars blowing up on impact. In reality, it doesn't happen that way at all. In fact, to reproduce a movie-style car crash, you have to load a car up with a couple dozen gallon jugs full of gas and set it off with explosives. The worst it will do on its own is start a fire.

      I'm guessing movie-style CIA operations are a lot like that - it looks really cool and intense and clandestine in the movies, but the reality is more likely a hell of a lot of paper pushing and careful observation.

      --
      Security is mostly a superstition... Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. - Helen Keller
    8. Re:Dead man walking by Bigjeff5 · · Score: 1

      More than likely, Assange is having his lawyers try to get some kind of amnesty deal in turn for testimony and/or returning the materials.

      That's more than likely, but from what I've read Pentagon officials don't think they have any grounds to demand the leaked information from him. What he has done is no crime in the US, and he is not a US citizen, so they can't pursue any kind of extradition. If he comes to the US the best they can do, as I see it, is haul him in for questioning (without arresting him) and then let him go within 24 hours. That's it. In fact that's all the Pentagon has said they want from him - to question him about his source (who is in US custody).

      They already have the guy who leaked the information, who did commit a crime (depending how the trial goes, a potentially serious one).

      What they really want is to be sure no more info gets out, and if they can't do it with legal pressure, I'm sure they'll beg and plead as well.

      Despite what some dumbasses may think, this is nowhere near worth the risk of an illegal assassination (all forms are illegal in the US), especially for a momentarily high profile, low value target.

      While the CIA is known to have secret assassination programs (one was just shut down about a year ago), they are rare, small and they must pick their targets extremely carefully or everyone involved could all go to jail for a very long time. The CIA does not on anything resembling a regular basis assassinate people. A simple risk vs reward estimate will tell you why. The risks are huge, so the reward must also be huge. What exactly is the reward for killing Assange? A few documents related to killing civilians are released? Yeah, that won't look bad - assassinating a civilian for releasing information about murdered civilians. Hmmm...

      --
      Security is mostly a superstition... Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. - Helen Keller
    9. Re:Dead man walking by Bigjeff5 · · Score: 1

      This article demonstrates that not only do 'hit orders' exist, but they are not prohibited from using such orders against citizens who are constitutionally guaranteed to stand trial.

      God damn, did you even read the link you posted?

      The director of national intelligence affirmed rather bluntly today that the U.S. intelligence community has authority to target American citizens for assassination if they present a direct terrorist threat to the United States. ...
      "Whether that American is involved in a group that is trying to attack us, whether that American has -- is a threat to other Americans. Those are the factors involved." Blair explained. "We don't target people for free speech. We target them for taking action that threatens Americans."

      According to U.S. officials, only a handful of Americans would be eligible for targeting by U.S. intelligence or military operations. The legal guidance is determined by the National Security Council and the Justice Department.

      The emphasis is mine, obviously.

      According to the article, the only people eligible for targeting by the CIA are people who are actively plotting to commit terrorism on US soil. Frankly, I'm all in favor of it. This would allow them to take out guys like Timothy Mcveigh before he could kill hundreds of Americans. Ostensibly they would attempt to bring him in first, and assassinate as a last resort, but the police and courts are not set up to prevent terrorism, only react to it, making this sort of thing necessary in extreme cases.

      It's kind of like the cases where the cops have to shoot a guy to prevent him from killing a hostage. They bring the guy in if they can, but if not, he dies instead of innocent citizens.

      --
      Security is mostly a superstition... Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. - Helen Keller
    10. Re:Dead man walking by Bigjeff5 · · Score: 1

      Movies are more entertaining and more likely to be factual than what is presented in a congressional hearing.

      I don't know, I've seen enough Mythbusters to know that nearly everything that happens is exaggerated to the extreme for dramatic effect. Congressmen tend to preen a lot, but there's usually quite a bit of truth in there.

      --
      Security is mostly a superstition... Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. - Helen Keller
  19. Easy Answer by Timtimes · · Score: 1

    Can he build a high enough profile to protect himself from danger?" Not unless he were a former American President or VP who admittedly introduced torture into the war regime. I'd say he's got the half life of a gnat at this point. If I were him I'd make sure ALL those documents went public PRONTO. That's probably his best option. Enjoy.

    --
    This ain't no upwardly mobile freeway This is the road to hell
  20. Dead Man Walking x 5 by BoRegardless · · Score: 1

    x 5 because Assange may have U.S., British, Canadian, Australian and others looking to do a Mossad action on him as a warning to the others who have anything whatsover to do with Wikileaks.

    Play in the bear cage? Better be the biggest bear.

    1. Re:Dead Man Walking x 5 by joeszilagyi · · Score: 1

      If the system is built out with ruthless anonymity, security, and redundancy, the Internet may be the biggest bear of all, unless the governments take efforts to seize all the host names, which will then just push it all to torrent, or onto Freenet or onto YetToBeUnleashedNet. Can't stop all the signals. People have been trying that for generations.

      --
      Dude, where's my packet?
  21. Re:Complete failure of the Obama administration. by blackchiney · · Score: 1

    So you are perfectly fine with, and encourage the CIA to go after and do harm to his family? If the videos and cables are worth that much that innocent people should be killed over it than I hope he releases all of it, let the people hold judgement about what the gov't is doing in our name.

  22. Why should Iraqis hunt Saudis? by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The majority of the 9/11 attackers were Saudi Arabian; why should Iraqis be attacking the Saudis? This is especially so considering that the last time Iraq even looked like it might invade Saudi Arabia, the United States attacked Iraq and made a successful push for UN-imposed sanctions.

    Had the USA invaded Saudi Arabia, I would be less inclined to disagree with you.

    --
    Palm trees and 8
    1. Re:Why should Iraqis hunt Saudis? by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Iraq should have been attacked back in 1992 when it violated the peace agreements of the First Gulf War. That has nothing to do with 9/11. The Bush administration just used that to get the approval and justify things. The fact is that once Iraq kicked the inspectors out the first time, Iraq became fair game. The only reason the U.N. and Europe wasn't on board with renewing the hostilities was that most of continental Europe had signed oil contracts with Saddam for when the sanctions were lifted.

      You really should go read a history book or something because the reason for the First Gulf War was that Iraq invaded Kuwait and the reason the U.S. got involved was because Kuwait asked us to and we had treaties with Kuwait.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    2. Re:Why should Iraqis hunt Saudis? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      By your logic, how many times should the US already still be invaded as payback for things it did in the past but for which it wasn't punished?

      (captcha: laughed)

    3. Re:Why should Iraqis hunt Saudis? by dave420 · · Score: 1

      You should read some history, too, as Iraq asked the US if it'd mind if it invaded Kuwait to secure the oil fields that were engaging in slant-drilling into Iraqi oilfields, to which the US responded that it doesn't have any opinion on Arab-Arab actions. If they'd said no, there's a very good chance that Iraq never would have invaded. I wonder if the US would sit by if a neighboring country would steal their resources?

    4. Re:Why should Iraqis hunt Saudis? by intheshelter · · Score: 1

      You need to pull your head out of your ass and realize that we wouldn't have cared one bit what Iraq did if there wasn't oil involved. If you take oil out of the equation then Saddam would still be in Iraq. That war was ALL about oil.

    5. Re:Why should Iraqis hunt Saudis? by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1

      You should read some history, too, as Iraq asked the US if it'd mind if it invaded Kuwait to secure the oil fields that were engaging in slant-drilling into Iraqi oilfields, to which the US responded that it doesn't have any opinion on Arab-Arab actions. If they'd said no, there's a very good chance that Iraq never would have invaded. I wonder if the US would sit by if a neighboring country would steal their resources?

      This whole series of history seems to be amazing examples of miscommunication. The US had previously been willing to protect Kuwaiti tankers being attacked by Iranian silkworm platforms. It boggles my mind that they weren't able to use more forceful language. But then, in diplomatic language, sound-bites can be misleading. Iraq had long-standing complaints against Kuwait and a massive war debt to them. The slant-drilling issue (which I don't think has ever been confirmed) was just one of several issues leading to friction between Iraq and Kuwait. Perhaps the US didn't have a clear picture as to what extent Saddam was willing to go to solve Iraq's Kuwaiti problems.

      I also have to wonder about the mental state of Saddam. He always mis-calculated the situation and US intentions. During the Gulf War, the majority of the Iraqi air force (hardened in the Iran-Iraq war) was evacuated to Iran with the idea that this "mother of all battles" would bring them back in to play at a later time. And despite repeated warnings from the US, Saddam was always willing to push the US to carry out its threats. For example, with the whole weapons inspection issue, Saddam claims that he believed he had induced enough of a question as to the existence of chemical weapons to give Iran pause while showing enough to convince the US that those weapons didn't exist. The gambit obviously didn't work.

    6. Re:Why should Iraqis hunt Saudis? by jbengt · · Score: 1

      Learn from history:
      Read up on Noriega and Panama
      Read up on Sadam Hussein and Iraq

      Lesson:
      It's dangerous to befriend the Bushes.

    7. Re:Why should Iraqis hunt Saudis? by shentino · · Score: 1

      We are a superpower. We don't GET invaded.

      War is all about who has the bigger army, who can push harder on the battle field, and generally who is "better" in a strength contest.

      War doesn't decide who is right, only who is stronger. And just like on the playground, you don't just up and pick a fight with the top bully if you're a little pipsqueak.

  23. The American public is so naive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can he build a high enough profile to protect himself from danger?

    How naive could you be to believe that being "high profile" would offer any protection against the US military when they wanted to "neutralize" you? "He is a high profile public figure, let's think twice before shutting him up!" Yeah, right.

    If the US military did anything to him, the only news you would hear about him (if at all) would be that he has gone "missing", and that's the end of it.

    The American public is so naive that it is no longer even funny. The world's most powerful military working for a public with only the maturity level on par with children. God help the world.

    1. Re:The American public is so naive by walshy007 · · Score: 1

      The world's most powerful military working for a public with only the maturity level on par with children. God help the world.

      Well the bullies in the playground always want the biggest stick, is one way of thinking about it.

  24. Assange should be paranoid by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

    Assange is spending his time publishing things that the most powerful people in the world want to keep private. If anyone has a reason to be paranoid, it is him -- this is not a case of tin foil hats, this is a case of a person with some really powerful enemies.

    --
    Palm trees and 8
    1. Re:Assange should be paranoid by elucido · · Score: 1

      Assange is spending his time publishing things that the most powerful people in the world want to keep private. If anyone has a reason to be paranoid, it is him -- this is not a case of tin foil hats, this is a case of a person with some really powerful enemies.

      Anybody who is involved with Wikileaks should be paranoid. It's a dangerous time to be involved with the project. That being said it's also a situation where they want to torture the founder hoping to get a list of names of all those people who might be involved. It's a dangerous scary situation, and if Assange is captured and does decide to name names then those powerful enemies with teams of assassins will have the information they are hoping to get.

      So it's a situation where Julian is right to be paranoid along with anyone else involved with Wikileaks.

  25. Re:Baiting a nation's military is not a good idea by jdgeorge · · Score: 1

    Heh... to refine your point, I'd say we (in the US) are definitely getting the government we've asked for, whether or not we deserve it.

  26. Let us chat awhile. by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ... the US military would like to ask him a few questions ...

    Sadly, there was a time when this simply meant what it says. Now, the guy could end up getting water-boarded at some US secret prison in a third-world country - or New Jersey (shudder). Of course, the US doesn't torture people. Paying other people to do it is another matter.

    Excuse me, there's a knock on the door ...

    --
    It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    1. Re:Let us chat awhile. by evilviper · · Score: 1

      Sadly, there was a time when this simply meant what it says.

      Why would that be sad?

      Now, the guy could end up getting water-boarded at some US secret prison in a third-world country

      The US has used water-boarding on perhaps a handful of senior Al Qaeda officials. And rendition only occurs when a fugitive in US custody is also wanted in a (friendly) foreign country.

      The assertion that a journalist who is believed to be in possession of classified material needs to worry about even being jailed, let alone tortured, is completely baseless, and completely irrationally paranoid.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    2. Re:Let us chat awhile. by Hawke666 · · Score: 1

      It is sad because that time is in the past rather than the present.

  27. 9/11? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Were you in a cave on 9/11 or the weeks following? We've seen the damage inflicted upon our country, and we just whitewash the destruction and collateral damage being caused in Afghanistan because it WOULD erode homegrown support if people knew what was happening to innocents over there, as well as in Pakistan.

    Convenient information control. The media is just an extension of the American propaganda machine which is alive and thriving.

  28. Hey, Julian. Plan for the future. by joeszilagyi · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Even a future without you, one way or the other. Is Wikileaks structured--really, be honest--so that if you are forced to 'retire' that operationally it will be a blip on the radar? Is the project and it's resources designed to survive you?

    --
    Dude, where's my packet?
    1. Re:Hey, Julian. Plan for the future. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think heinlein wrote a book on this in the modern age someone just needs to give birth to Mycroft and we're set.

  29. Wait a minute by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Julian doesn't claim to have the diplomatic cables, other people claim he does. This is very different.

  30. It didn't work for Kennedy... by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 0, Troll

    these folks, random U.S. citizens, etc. why would they give pause for this guy?

    --
    Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
  31. Sound and fury, signifying nothing. by russotto · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Despite all the noise, the most sinister claims made about the US government are that

    1) The self-confessed whistleblower, Manning, is being held "incommunicado" in Kuwait and
    2) The military would like to question Assange.

    Manning hasn't been disappeared, vaporized, liquidated, or what have you; there's not even an allegation that the UCMJ has been violated in his case. And there's nothing at all strange or nefarious about the military wanting to question someone who received classified material; they'd hardly be doing their job if they didn't. If I was Assange I'd certainly avoid the US, but ascribing evil intentions or actions to the US military or the government in general is at least premature.

    1. Re:Sound and fury, signifying nothing. by darjen · · Score: 2, Insightful

      From what I've seen over the past few years, ascribing evil intentions to the military and US government should be our default position by now. We still haven't learned much from history yet.

    2. Re:Sound and fury, signifying nothing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, the biggest issue here is - why was that video classified in the first place, who classified it, and what else is out there that's classified and oughtn't be?

    3. Re:Sound and fury, signifying nothing. by GrumblyStuff · · Score: 1

      How interesting it is the attention moderators are giving replies to your comment....

      Considering the actions taken by the government thus far and the utter indifference to the suffering caused, evil is the correct term.

  32. Re:Baiting a nation's military is not a good idea by Hatta · · Score: 1

    He hasn't gotten David Kelly'd *yet*.

    --
    Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
  33. leaking state secrets is treason by dingDaShan · · Score: 0

    There is a reason for classification. Releasing classified documents knowingly is treason against the United States. It is written very clearly in laws. His lawyers know that he is breaking the law and are simply advising him as a lawyer should. This is not the US government being awful. This is a matter of this 'media darling' possibly performing treason against the United States of America. What do you think ANY country would do if he released their state secrets? What happens when he crosses a line and gets people killed because of this information that SHOULD? be available?

    1. Re:leaking state secrets is treason by EllisDees · · Score: 1

      You should read up on The Pentagon Papers. We do have a free press in the US.

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
    2. Re:leaking state secrets is treason by niftydude · · Score: 1

      Except that he is an Australian citizen, and so treason doesn't apply - he owes no allegiance whatsoever to the USA.

      --
      You can never know everything, and part of what you do know will always be wrong. Perhaps even the most important part.
    3. Re:leaking state secrets is treason by secretcurse · · Score: 1

      How can an Australian commit treason against a country he's not a citizen of?

      --
      I'm using all of my mod points to mod ancient memes down. Please join me.
    4. Re:leaking state secrets is treason by dingDaShan · · Score: 1

      Aiding treason by helping out the Bradley Mannings of the world? What happens when Australian classified documents are posted? I realize that wikileaks has good intentions. However, the sensitive nature of the things that are posted could get people killed...

    5. Re:leaking state secrets is treason by dingDaShan · · Score: 1

      I realize that a leak can be for a noble cause. However, the main purpose of classification is to protect items that could be harmful to national security. Their are safeguards to make sure that classification does this. If someone deliberately posts classified material, how can they know what harm it will cause?--Or do they just not care? Is this responsible journalism?

    6. Re:leaking state secrets is treason by Bigjeff5 · · Score: 1

      There is a reason for classification. Releasing classified documents knowingly is treason against the United States. It is written very clearly in laws.

      Only if doing so puts American citizens at risk - either soldiers or civilians. Since in this case it's hard to argue it does either, it isn't treason for anybody involved. A breach of protocol and a career ending move for the soldier, absolutely, but it may not even be a crime according to the UCMJ.

      In any case, Assange is not a US citizen, he cannot, by definition, commit treason against the US. The whistle-blower himself has not been charged with treason, so I'm not sure how you can come to such conclusions.

      What this is is Assange trying to make this a much bigger deal than it actually is. It's like when someone gets arrested for someone, and the police bring people who were with him at the time in for questioning. It's really no different.

      The truth is, there is very little, if any, value in killing him. The leaker would have just gone to one of a dozen different websites instead if not for Wikileaks. Also, if they were planning on killing him you wouldn't hear a word about the Pentagon trying to get in touch with him for questioning. They would be completely ignoring the issue. They'd be all over the officer and wouldn't even mention Wikileaks except to say that's where the info was sent. One day Assange would go on another of his multi-month disappearances, but this time he'd simply never come back. Poof, gone, crackpot conspiracy theories would abound (and they'd be right) but they'd never be taken seriously.

      No, what they want is to get information from him about the intelligence officer who turned in the information, and they want to see if they can convince him - by threat or bribery - to not release whatever else he may have that this guy leaked.

      --
      Security is mostly a superstition... Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. - Helen Keller
  34. No, he's as good as dead... by 2obvious4u · · Score: 0, Troll

    Can he build a high enough profile to protect himself from danger?

    The guy has already been put into hiding. He'll either have an accident or be labeled a terrorist.

    1. Re:No, he's as good as dead... by Bigjeff5 · · Score: 1

      The guy has already been put into hiding. He'll either have an accident or be labeled a terrorist.

      What are you talking about? Assange is known for disappearing for months on end, so much so that it's well known that it pisses off his Wikileaks staff every time he does it.

      He isn't in hiding, he just likes to pretend like he is important enough to need it.

      Trust me, if the government wanted to kill him, the story wouldn't be "Pentagon looking for Wikileaks founder for questioning". What you would have is an astute journalist asking a Pentagon official "What about Wikileaks founder Julianne Assange? Are you going to attempt to bring him in for questioning?" to which the official would respond "Who? We're only interested in the intelligence officer who leaked classified information."

      It would be a complete non-story if they were actually trying to kill the guy, and the way it would go down is Assange would go on yet another extended disappearance, except this time he'd never come back. Poof, gone, nice and quiet, with little - if any media attention.

      Seriously you people watch way, way too much TV.

      --
      Security is mostly a superstition... Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. - Helen Keller
  35. Very probably by Weezul · · Score: 1

    Other wikileaks staff bitch about how they cannot find him for weeks or months on end, and that's before he angered the U.S.

    Assange isn't the best programmer or mathematicians aiding wikileaks, but he's definitely the one who'll expose himself. Assange very likely knows absolutely nothing about the individual leaks until another member involves him, like with Collateral Murder.

    --
    The Christian religion has been and still is the principal enemy of moral progress in the world. -- Bertrand Russell
  36. The torture possibility. by elucido · · Score: 1

    It's not assassination that Julian has to worry about. It's the possibility of being kidnapped, taken into a secret location(black site), and questioned(tortured) by the government.It does not take a team of lawyers or a rocket scientist to figure out that Julian should not step foot in the USA. In fact he probably shouldn't leave Iceland if he's even safe Iceland.

  37. He's not in danger; we're in danger of not caring by Fryth · · Score: 1

    He's fine; only conspiracy types would assume otherwise. The real question is, will Wikileaks get its message out and reach average people (not just geeks) and start changing minds and waking people up to things they haven't read about in the mainstream media or seen on Fixed News.. and if not, why not? What is it about our society that just continues to not be surprised by what Wikileaks reports, and not think about doing anything about it or trying to change the system?

  38. Then he should post on Twitter and Youtube. by elucido · · Score: 1

    The best thing he can do is get as much press as possible, make as many speeches as possible, engage in as much public activity as possible, and stay in a group at all times (no late night strolls alone). If the general public and press don't know who he is, the U.S. government can just grab him and quietly throw him in a secret jail cell somewhere (or even render him to a country willing to get their hands dirty torturing him with more than a little waterboarding).

    It would be nice to live in a world where whistleblowers were rewarded and praised for their efforts. But the truth is that whistleblowers almost always suffer for their sacrifice. At best, they lose their jobs and/or are harassed. At worst, they end up in a filthy jail cell with electrodes on their balls.

    Everything you say is correct. He should seek as much attention in the media as he can. Youtube and twitter are the easiest way to do it. About torture, the US government has the capability with psychologists and the covert agents to torture an individual without taking them to a jail or black site. Julian will have to worry about psychological as well as physical torture.To be harassed by random individuals is a form of torture.

    1. Re:Then he should post on Twitter and Youtube. by Beyond_GoodandEvil · · Score: 1

      To be harassed by random individuals is a form of torture.

      Apparently, you've never driven on America's highways

      --
      I laughed at the weak who considered themselves good because they lacked claws.
  39. Protection by DaMattster · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I believe Julian already has a high enough profile to protect him from danger. Whoa cometh to the US Government should anything happen to him. The international pressure would be enormous and intense at a time when the US is at an all time international relations low. As a US Citizen, I appreciate his valor in enforcing my government's transparency initiatives. If President Obama is going to promise greater transparency, then by golly, he should deliver on it and if it takes Julian to embarrass him by pointing out his political non-speak, so be it. Wikileaks is holding President Obama's feet to the fire over transparency initiatives and I am the happier for it!

  40. Why does America hate freedom? by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1

    Wouldn't it be great if they just finished building their own Iron Curtain and stopped bothering the rest of the world?

    1. Re:Why does America hate freedom? by ps2os2 · · Score: 0

      Sometimes it does seem that way doesn't it?

      However, IMO, you really have to expose a "dirty" secret to get that type of treatment. The problem is that "dirty secrets" are all over the place and you could accidentally expose one and you are toast. Of course there are at least two types of "dirty secrets" the first is "embarrassment" and the second is "you told a secret you weren't supposed to". There may be a third but is obtuse and it its only happens when you expose a secret agent. But that is for another discussion.

  41. You fucking moron by copponex · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I will feel sorry for the people on the other side of the planet just as soon as they start hunting down and killing the people on their side of the planet that are sending people to this side, to this country, to kill us.

    The US and Britain have had a constant military presence in the middle east since the end of WWI. That's about 90 years. How many middle eastern nations have a military presence in the United States or UK?

    I will feel sorry for them when they stop supporting people who say I should die because I don't believe in their religion of murder and conversion at the point of a sword, or barrel of a gun if you prefer.

    And they will feel sorry for you when you stop sending armies over to kill them and take control of their oil resources. Especially when you stop supporting murderous local dictators and monarchs who conspire with Western powers to suppress democratic movements in exchange for piles of money.

    The association of America and Democracy causes hatred and laughter across the region for a very good reason: we've been doing our best to destroy a nation's right to self determination for decades. Look at the Kurds for chrissake. One one side of the Iraq border, we give them monetary and military support in exchange for their political support inside Iraq. On the other side of the same border we supply the Turkish army with the weapons to kill Kurds and suppress Kurdish popular movements.

    The reason you don't know any of this is because none of it is reported, but you just swallow the same bullshit lines over and over again. Yeah, a bunch of people halfway across the world just woke up one day and decided they hated freedom, so instead of attacking democracies on that side of the earth, they spent millions of dollars to attack the United States because they are "evil." But that's okay, we're "good" so in response to the murder of 3,000 of our citizens, let's start two wars and kill and maim a few hundred thousand Muslims on their home territory. Let's send the cradle of civilization back to the stone ages, since it's the only place in the region where women have something resembling equal rights. That should alleviate the tension between our two cultures!

    You fucking moron.

    1. Re:You fucking moron by peragrin · · Score: 1

      You are doing good right up to the point where you said it is the only area were women have equal rights. In Arab nations women are at best second class citizens and in most cases property of their fathers until their fathers sell them to some man. Women are treated with disdain, and looked upon as unclean whose only purpose is to carry a man's children.

      The fact that "honor killings" of women are as common as drunk driving is in the USA is even worse. Because only islam says that if a man rapes a women it is the womens fault. Then again such things as stoning a person to death are also encouraged.

      Just remember that if you take the moral high ground that you actually deserve it.

      --
      i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
    2. Re:You fucking moron by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The US and Britain have had a constant military presence in the middle east since the end of WWI. That's about 90 years. How many middle eastern nations have a military presence in the United States or UK?

      The Middle East has had a military presence in Europe since 1204.

    3. Re:You fucking moron by Anonymous+Cowpat · · Score: 1

      How many middle eastern nations have a military presence in the United States or UK?

      Does Mossad count?

      --
      FGD 135
    4. Re:You fucking moron by qc_dk · · Score: 1

      Read GPs post again.

      He said that Iraq was the only area in the middle east where women had anything resembling equal rights.

  42. Exactly. by elucido · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Torture is usually worse than death for the victims family because it involves loss of honor even if the individual is left alive. Framing the individual for a bunch of crimes, or framing the individuals family members for all sorts of crimes is an example.

    Besides they wont want to kill Julian anyway. They want to know what he knows and find out who his sources are not kill him. They need him alive and chances are they'd put him in a super max prison or a secret prison which has 23 hour lockdown and basically put him in a dark room for 23 hours a day until he goes crazy and talks. If you put someone into a room with no light, no sound, no sensory information at all, it's only a matter of time before they start talking to themselves and literally go crazy.

    The soviets used to torture political dissidents by putting them into insane asylums. In these special political hospitals doctors and psychiatrists would scientifically torture them until they literally went insane or broke and spilled their secrets. This type of torture is worse than waterboarding, worse than physical pain, because it's psychological and on some level everyone is psychologically weak.

    1. Re:Exactly. by lwsimon · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Citation please. If mere darkness causes insanity, then what about the blind? If quietness does it, what about the deaf? There are deaf/blind as well, they don't go insane from lack of stimulation. While I have no doubt that psychological torture is real, the idea that you can just thrown someone in a dark room adn they'll go crazy is pretty silly.

      --
      Learn about Photography Basics.
    2. Re:Exactly. by Shakrai · · Score: 1

      It's called sensory deprivation, though to the best of my knowledge it isn't particularly effective unless you deprive the subject of multiple senses (i.e: sight and sound)

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
  43. Good point. by elucido · · Score: 0, Troll

    The main thing here is Julian has to worry about being tortured, not merely being killed. The government will find some punishment worse than death specially designed for Julian. And we know this government tortures people.

    Those guys you list may or may not have been tortured. But when the government wants information out of you that is exactly the ticking time bomb type situation where you'd expect torture to be employed.

  44. Please. by LWATCDR · · Score: 1, Insightful

    He is wanted for questioning. He has received classified information and has published some of it.
    How he published it was shameful and one of the worst examples of Yellow Journalism I have seen in a very long time. It was as unbiased and as even handed as the worst that FOX News has delivered.
    The title the was created for the video and the additions to the video where pure emotional manipulation all for purpose of fund raising.

    This guy isn't going to vanish into a dark hole he would at worst be questioned. Unpleasant but also totally to be expected.
    What I think is at best amusing is this is considered news.
    It would be right up with there with water is wet.
    Yea this guy if he comes to the US will be questioned. If he goes to any nations that are close allies to the US he may be questioned. To whom is this exactly news?

    --
    See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    1. Re:Please. by debatem1 · · Score: 1

      It amazes me that people can watch that video and then bitch about the title. Who gives a shit? You just heard a member of the US military begging for the opportunity to light up someone whose greatest crime was trying to drag their torn and shattered body into an alley to die. If the gunner had been any more excited about the prospect he would have blown a load. "Pick up a weapon. C'mon, just pick up a weapon..."- that people can, in the name of patriotism, try to condone this behavior disgusts me.

    2. Re:Please. by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      What disgust me is how people like you feel that end justifies the means.
      I do not have all the data from that video. It wasn't just the title but they added material that was designed to inflame. Yous sure couldn't enter that video as is as evidence in a court of law and to show it before any kind of trial is unfair to the accused.

      They way the video was released and what the video showed are too entire different things. They can both be wrong. The difference is that video is incomplete data. What wikileaks did was to slant the video to get donations.
      Had they just released it with the title of "Leaked Video from the Apache Attack that Killed to Journalists" and without any additional commentary or inflammatory additions I would have been fine with that.

      But Wikileaks doesn't do that. More than once I have found they they tend to slant and mislead to get more publicity. Maybe they think that they are doing a service bringing not just information but the "truth" as they see it but that makes them no better than FOX News or any of the other talking heads out there.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    3. Re:Please. by debatem1 · · Score: 1

      The end justifies the means? What is that even supposed to mean in this context? If I felt that the end justified the means I would be supporting the US military, since I have friends over there who have bled- and one who lost an eye- for their unwillingness to wantonly ice the innocent. But as a matter of principle, allowing those who want to kill for the sake of killing to do so cannot be allowed, whether here or abroad- and that video shows everything I need to know to tell me that the gunner wanted nothing more than to blow away a dying man.

      As for the presentation of the video, I just don't care. If he had called it "Lollipops and sunshine in Iraq" it would not have altered the terror and agony those involved felt in their last moments, or reduced the burden of loss felt by their loved ones. Yet people like you- who, let's not pretend, don't care at all about either of those things- seek to diminish the events of that day by killing the messenger. In this case, literally.

      That's terrifying to me.

    4. Re:Please. by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      No I do care. But caring has NOTHING to do with journalistic integrity. You are so blind that will excuse anything because you feel this is more important that being unbiased.
      The difference is I really have very little issue with wikileaks publishing this. I personally think that it should have been handed over to a senator that would be willing to call for an investigation first and if no investigation was forth coming then release it to the public. To me that would have been the proper way and the way that would most likely bring about justice.
      However your little righteous indignation is just sicking. I could see you saying that about me if I had said they shouldn't have published it! But my criticize was the way the manipulated people for money using this video. If you are so closed minded that you can see how just ignoring this and all the other times wikileaks has slanted the story just to get more attention. So yea you are an evil mindless drone. You can not see that I am critizing the way the information was presented but I am not justify the actions of the helicopter crew. Right now I will say that unlike you I do not have the all the data needed to judge the actions of the crew. You on the other hand seem all to willing to be judge and jury in this case with just one side of the story. You have the right to feel that way but you do not have the right to say that I don't care about other suffering.
      The way the video was presented was terrible and shows that Wikileaks is nothing but a web tabloid. Should the video have been released. I would say yes one way or another. Was it released in a responsible unbiased way? Not at all.
      So to answer your silly statment that you do not even know what I meant when I said you are accepting that the end justifies the means.
      The end is getting the video.
      The means in this case was extremely slanted and manipulative for the purpose of getting money!
      You don't care what the title is or how manipulative it is. So for you the ends justify the means.
      I am also glad the video is out. I just wish that it had come from someone with more integrity than Wikileaks. Or that Wikileaks had acted with integrity which I have honestly yet to see happen.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    5. Re:Please. by Sir_Lewk · · Score: 1

      Should the video have been released. I would say yes one way or another.

      By your own retarded-ass justification of why he is guilty of asserting "the ends justify the means", so are you.

      Nobody is unbiased, and expecting people to be so is unreasonable.

      I am also glad the video is out.

      Somehow, I actually doubt that. You are upset this video came out but the only way to criticise its release and not be immediately tagged as a troll that you can puzzle out is to pretend that you appreciate that the video was released but disapprove of the manner in which it was done.

      --
      "linux is just DOS with a UNIX like syntax" -- Galactic Dominator (944134)
    6. Re:Please. by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      When I said one way or another was refureing to the two ways that I suggest. Being sent to a senator that could have called for a public investigation or if that had failed to release it unmodified to the public.
      Those where the two ways it should have been released.
      "Somehow, I actually doubt that. You are upset this video came out but the only way to criticise its release and not be immediately tagged as a troll that you can puzzle out is to pretend that you appreciate that the video was released but disapprove of the manner in which it was done."

      You may think that but it is false. What I think is that you don't care about if it done in an unbiased way. In fact I think you wanted it to be published in the most biased possible way that you happen to agree with. Since you can claim that any of my statements about wikileaks are false you invent a motivation out of our own mind to attack me personally. Of course you have no proof of or statements except that I dare to point out just how biased and manipulative wikileaks really is. Since I dare to criticize the wonderful souls at wikileaks I must has some dark evil motive.
      Please you have so lost any objectivity that you must defend anybody on your side by making personal attacks.
      Even to the point of making a claim that you KNOW my motivations without ever meeting me.

      You say nobody is unbiased. You are right to an extent. The thing is that one must work very hard to not let their bias control their actions. Wikileaks did just fail at that. They crafted that video to exploit peoples emotions for monetary gain! You have allowed your own bias to cloud any criticism of Wikileaks at all. You see anybody that doesn't think they are God's gift to freedom as evil.
      Wake up. Good people can have differing view points.
      What it comes down to is simply this.
      Did wikileaks add emotionally manipulative content to the video? Did the present it in a way to maximize their fund raising efforts?
      If you honestly disagree then well I simply feel you are wrong and misguided at best.
      But if you do agree that happened but are willing to totally ignore it then I would say that you do not care for justice or good free journalism at all. All you care about is supporting your own beliefs.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  45. A high profile won't help by Nimey · · Score: 0

    We've went in and grabbed at least one head of state, Manuel Noriega. There's realistically no way that a "high profile" is going to protect him if he's dumb enough to come visit the US, or make a layover at one of our airports.

    --
    Hail Eris, full of mischief...

    E pluribus sanguinem
  46. low? by jDeepbeep · · Score: 1

    at a time when the US is at an all time international relations low.

    Funny. I thought that was when Bush II. was in office.

    --
    Reply to That ||
    1. Re:low? by Bigjeff5 · · Score: 1

      Nah, Obama is turning out to be a huge screwup. His international relations leave people with no confidence whatsoever in the US, which hurts us a lot internationally.

      Domestically has already hit approval ratings lower than Bush's first term - granted, Bush had 9/11 and his decline from 90% to 50% was rapid, and it was punctuate by several highs that propped it up. Obama's decline is steady and quick, with no real swings back upward, and he's right now within about 15-20 points of Bush's all-time low (which took 8 years to reach). If he doesn't do something to stem the tide he'll have the lowest approval ratings in history before his first term is up - below even President Truman, and far below President Bush.

      --
      Security is mostly a superstition... Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. - Helen Keller
  47. Speaking as a donator... by twoallbeefpatties · · Score: 3, Informative

    Speaking as someone who donates to Wikileaks, if they have to use some of that money for travel and hotels in order to maintain the privacy of whistleblowers and to keep the organization's head moving so that he isn't thrown into a holding cell somewhere, then I am perfectly fine with my money going to those functions.

    --
    Libertarians somehow believe that private businesses should be stronger than governments but weaker than individuals.
  48. u r stupid mofo brainwashed by cia by cheekyboy · · Score: 1

    Seriously, if anyone believe in lone nutters, you are a NUTTER

    Why only good people get assasintated, and not evil fuckers like Bilderburge and friends and evil friends of the Rep Party.

    When have you seen a plane load of 50 Rothchilds or secret mofos get killed in a 'plane crash accident' , never.

    The world is run by evil people, accept it.

    --
    Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
  49. What about "secret prisons" and "torture" by elucido · · Score: 1

    What about secret prisons and torture? If you understand what is at stake and how the government operates you'd understand the paranoia. The government appears to be declaring war on Wikileaks. Julian is the founder of Wikileaks. The government wants to "talk" to Julian and is desperately trying to locate his whereabouts.

    Why would a government just want to "talk"?

    1. Re:What about "secret prisons" and "torture" by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      Well, you know, it is a free country. If you fear and hate the American government so much, why don't you go somewhere more suited to you, like North Korea.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    2. Re:What about "secret prisons" and "torture" by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      Why would a government not want to just talk? Do you believe that everyone the government has ever wanted to talk to was kidnapped, tortured, and then shot?

      Do you think this is Soviet Russia, Nazi Germany, Khmer Rouge Vietnam, Iraq during Saddam's reign, or Iran?

      Your tin-foil hat must be loose.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    3. Re:What about "secret prisons" and "torture" by elucido · · Score: 1

      I never said I hated the US Gov. I said I fear the US Gov and rightfully so. We have torture, secret prisons, and more prisoners than any other country. We also have some of the worst laws.

      I have a right to fear my US Gov. I fear the North Korean Gov as well.

    4. Re:What about "secret prisons" and "torture" by elucido · · Score: 1

      It's not wise to talk to the police or federal agents. Anything you say will be used against you in a court of law. You have the right to remain silent. I'd plead the 5th.

      I don't/won't talk to the police or federal agents directly. If they want to talk thats what lawyers are for. They can talk to me through my lawyer who will communicate in legalese. It's very credulous of you to place your faith and trust in complete strangers who don't care if you live or die. Those strangers might work for the government, and people they talk to often end up dead or missing.

  50. They wont kill him, guaranteed. by elucido · · Score: 1

    The reason they wont kill him is they want information out of him. A dead body can't talk. They want to talk to him which probably means they want to get him alone in a room and torture the names out of him.

  51. Re:treason by Phrogman · · Score: 1

    Is it worth pointing out that Assange is an Australian citizen, and thus cannot be guilty of treason against the US? Issues of Freedom of the Press aside that is of course.
    Now I know that won't do any good as an argument in a US court. If they can kidnap him and bring him to a court they would likely try him anyways under some pretext. The problem is they don't want to have a court case because that would enable him to bring up all sorts of details concerning the same classified information that they are trying to keep out of the media in the first place.
    My bet is he gets hit by a car, or commits "suicide" due to the pressure, or just disappears entirely and we never learn what happened to him.

    --
    "The first time I got drunk, I got married. The second time I bought a chimpanzee, after that I stayed sober" Arian Seid
  52. If Assange does this what about Wikileaks? by elucido · · Score: 1

    Our US thuggery is fairly predictable. I'm sure the CIA or equivalent has already been given hit orders.

    You've seen a few too many movies.

    More than likely, Assange is having his lawyers try to get some kind of amnesty deal in turn for testimony and/or returning the materials. The only danger to Assange is that he be arrested, held and tried like any other person who breaks the law. He may even get off at trial due to Constitutional protection of freedom of the press.

    Playing up the danger does get Wikileaks more press, so bonus points for good guerrilla PR for Assange.

    If Assange basically turns into an informant for the government against his own source, Wikileaks will lose ALL credibility. That might be what the government wants him to do but that would ultimately kill Wikileaks as a project. How can it recover from that?

    And returning materials? You mean refusing to publish it?

  53. Star Strangled Banner by masmullin · · Score: 0, Troll

    O say, does that star-strangled banner yet wave
    O'er the land of the slaves, and the home of the cowards?

  54. avoid US government? by AnAdventurer · · Score: 1

    Dang good advise if you ask me. My dad, a 'nam vet-turned-mt-recluse told me over and over as I grew up and visited him in his NORCAL mountain cabin. I wish I had listened. It took me well into my 30's to fully understand.....Avoid interaction with the government, (they fuck you at the drive though). You are either all in or all out.

    --
    6.8SPC TR of 550, l xwind at 6, drift rt at 26" drops 77". AT has 503 ft-lbs at 1403 fps. FT 0.86
  55. Good question, is he breaking the law? by elucido · · Score: 1

    Since he never leaked it. He may have received it and may be in position to publish it but the individual who leaked it already has been arrested. So what law is he breaking if he is in possession of the material but did not leak it?

    1. Re:Good question, is he breaking the law? by joeszilagyi · · Score: 1

      If he were American, I suspect it's illegal for us to publish such material, as well. For example, a spy bumps into me downtown while running from his NSA handlers, and drops some classified crap in my shopping bag. If I find it before the NSA or CIA or FBI retrieve it from me, scan it, and blog it, guess who goes to jail too?

      --
      Dude, where's my packet?
    2. Re:Good question, is he breaking the law? by elucido · · Score: 1

      So how did the Pentagon Papers and other media reports like Valerie Plame Affair leak out without any consequences or treason?

    3. Re:Good question, is he breaking the law? by joeszilagyi · · Score: 1

      Like I said, "Lawyers". Can you personally afford to hire a guy to work 4,000 hours at $300 an hour?

      --
      Dude, where's my packet?
  56. If they do that Wikileaks will become big. by elucido · · Score: 1

    Can he build a high enough profile to protect himself from danger?

    The guy has already been put into hiding. He'll either have an accident or be labeled a terrorist.

    I would think those two options would be the worst possible options they could choose. If Wikileaks founder were to be labeled a terrorist or were ot be killed Wikileaks would grow immensely and there probably would be a lot more leaks than before. It would probably only make the situation that much more out of control.

  57. Re:treason by joeszilagyi · · Score: 1

    "The problem is they don't want to have a court case because that would enable him to bring up all sorts of details concerning the same classified information that they are trying to keep out of the media in the first place."

    Alternately, Wikileaks could simply sit on the REALLY bad leaks as insurance. "Arrest us, and THIS gets out. Kill us, and ALL of these will get out."

    --
    Dude, where's my packet?
  58. you dont like self-interest as a motivating factor by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    ok, so which would you prefer:

    1. the usa goes all out all over the world where there are atrocities, even when there's nothing there in our self-interest, thereby increasing american military presence in foreign lands a hundredfold

    2. the usa doesn't aid anyone militarily, no matter what the reason, even if our self-interest might be served. some asshole starts massacring ethnic minorities? oh well, sucks to be them. so what's on tv?

    the usa gets involved in brutal places where it overlaps with self-interest. true

    but that's ok by me, since choice #1 is impossible to afford and choice #2 is a level of callousness i'm not ready to accept

    so what would you choose?

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  59. because of oil by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    so someone like you will therefore say that the usa doesn't really care about the oppressed, just filling up our gas tanks

    ok. so we need to change policy then. which direction should we go in:

    1. help more of the oppressed, regardless of self interest. so the usa goes all out all over the world where there are atrocities, even when there's nothing there in our self-interest, thereby increasing american military presence in foreign lands a hundredfold

    2. the usa doesn't aid anyone militarily, no matter what the reason, even if our self interest might be served. so some asshole starts massacring ethnic minorities? oh well, sucks to be them... hey, wanna play a videogame?

    so you choose. which direction do we go in: massive involvement worldwide, atrocities being the only criteria? or no involvement period, even if horrible atrocities are being committed. you tell me what the superior policy is

    as for me, the usa gets involved in brutal places where it overlaps with self-interest. and that's ok by me. we're not responsible for atrocities elsewhere, but if we're going to help clear up those atrocities, might as well get some benefit out of the expense in lives and money, no?

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:because of oil by Pojut · · Score: 1

      I'm all for helping remove the thumb of oppression from people...which means moving beyond the middle east.

      I realize we can't destroy all of the hornets nests, but we shouldn't focus exclusively on the big ones while ignoring the little ones.

  60. Show me it's illegal for the press to publish it by elucido · · Score: 1

    I was under the impression that the press had the freedom to publish anything.

    So what law says they cant?

  61. the us military is voluntary, no draft by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    therefore, it seems to be a concept that is selling well

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  62. Re:Show me it's illegal for the press to publish i by joeszilagyi · · Score: 1

    The Pentagon Papers precedent legally says the press CAN publish anything from the government. If someone leaked files that Elvis ordered the hit on JFK under pay from Queen Elizabeth and the hit was carried out by Frank Sinatra, because JFK was covering up a secret government project of a stargate under a Colorado mountain, the NY Times could publish it freely. Short of Obama ordering missiles into the NY Times building in Manhattan, he couldn't stop them. The "press" also has lots of lawyers that "bloggers" don't.

    --
    Dude, where's my packet?
  63. "Can he build a high enough profile..." by Hasai · · Score: 1

    "Can he build a high enough profile to protect himself from danger?"

    No.

    --

    Regards;

    Hasai

  64. No sir by DesScorp · · Score: 2, Interesting

    "The military might of the US lies in its industrial output, not its secrets. Secrets only protect the US regime from its own population."

    The military might of the US is primarily about two things: the quality and training of its troops, and its lead in military technology over adversaries. Industrial output means nothing, as our focus is on small numbers of advanced weaponry. We have 20 B-2 bombers. That's it. We'll have 187 F-22 fighters. That's it. Whether it's wise or not, the US is counting on technological superiority, not the sheer numbers of industrial output. Industrial output was WWII, when a war with a peer enemy would last for years and you had time to make more weapons. A war with China would be very short, one way or the other. So blithely allowing our most advanced technology to be leaked to China, or anyone for that matter, is stupidity on a grand scale.

    Should the US rely on a few hyper-expensive, highly secretive weapons for its defense? That's another debate, and an important one. But as long as we have our current strategy, allowing those secrets to be given away would be self-defeating, no? "We're relying on our technology, but sure, here are the secrets to our latest weapons. Enjoy!".

    --
    Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    1. Re:No sir by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      We have 20 B-2 bombers. That's it. We'll have 187 F-22 fighters. That's it.

      While a lot about what you say about the US reliance on technology to fight war is true, the above is extremely misleading. Why don't you list all of the other planes in the air force? I suspect because the numbers wouldn't suit your argument. Fighting china with only what you cited above would not make for a short war in favor of the US. It's not just secret technologies that define the US military might, but also the size of the military, and the fact that if the need was there, the US could build a shit load of military hardware. The US is getting ready to build a couple thousand F-35 warplanes over the next decade. Not the rate of WWII, but there isn't a world war going on. The aircraft you cited have a niche role in the military, and every military has high-tech equipment that maintains a niche role and therefore small numbers.

    2. Re:No sir by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 4, Informative

      Industrial output means nothing, as our focus is on small numbers of advanced weaponry. We have 20 B-2 bombers. That's it. We'll have 187 F-22 fighters. That's it. Whether it's wise or not, the US is counting on technological superiority, not the sheer numbers of industrial output.

      I find it interesting that you bring up planes here, because the numbers directly contradict your claims. Take fighters, for example:

      USAF/Navy:
      F-16 - 1250
      F/A-18 - 750
      F-15 - 600
      F-22 - 175 (your 187 figure is the planned count)
      Total: ~2800

      Russian AF/Navy:
      Su-27 - 410
      Su-24 - 320
      MiG-29 - 200
      MiG-31 - ~200
      Su-33 - 23
      Su-30 - 12
      Su-35 - 12
      Total: ~1200

      PLAAF/Navy:
      J-7 - 470
      J-8 - 180
      J-11 - 100
      J-10 - 80
      Su-30 - 90
      Su-27 - 70
      Total: ~920

      The above three countries top the list of those with biggest air forces. As you can see, not only US is #1 in that list, but it actually has more fighter planes than China and Russia combined.

      Furthermore, if you split by technical specs, US leads even more, because e.g. it is the only country to field a 5th gen fighter at all, much less 180 of those (neither Russia nor China could afford this even long-term).

      If you look at other things, you'll see similar numbers. Pretty much all other military plane categories - check. Warships - check. When it comes to main battle tanks, China has two times less than US, and Russia has about twice as much, but if you only consider those which are readily operational (maintenance is a huge problem for Russian armed forces), US still has more - and note that practically all of those are various variations of Abrams, while the majority of Russian acounts is ancient stuff like T-64 and T-72.

      It's true that US army has fewer men enlisted in it, but that's about the only major number on which it is smaller. In terms of equipment - which is what correlates with industrial output - it is the biggest in the world. And if you look at how US did in wars since WW2, it shows - for the most part, American strategy is to steamroll over the enemy by throwing large numbers of superior tech at him, from tanks to cruise missiles.

    3. Re:No sir by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Industrial output means nothing,

      This is complete bullshit. The US does not rely on 20 B-2 bombers and 187 F-22 fighters to fight war. And one of these has never been used in combat. Why don't you list all the other aircraft in the US inventory, that have actually been used to fight war? No, that would be counter-productive to your argument. What about naval ships? Army ground and air combat units? Do they not play into the US military might? Were these things not built in the US? The US is getting ready to build a couple thousand F-35 fighters (and the list can go on and on concerning what the US builds). You say that industrial output means nothing? I don't think blueprints of hardware should be shared with everybody, but without industry, the US would have a pretty hard time sustaining a war effort. Is seems that you are arguing that the F-22 and B2 represents all of US military might. Complete bullshit.

    4. Re:No sir by Chowderbags · · Score: 1

      The US Air Force has over 2000 total fighters (F-15C, F-15E, F-16, F-22) and 162 total bombers (B-52H, B-1B, B-2). All told it has over 5500 aircraft. The US Navy has another 3700 aircraft. China has 1500 aircraft(give or take). This isn't even getting into the rest of NATO probably lending the US a hand if the Chinese ever do openly declare war (unlikely any time in the near future, but as a hypothetical).

    5. Re:No sir by JustABlitheringIdiot · · Score: 1

      And if you look at how US did in wars since WW2, it shows - for the most part, American strategy is to steamroll over the enemy by throwing large numbers of superior tech at him, from tanks to cruise missiles.

      Yeah that has really worked out well for us hasn't it. Lets see

      • Vietnam - Nope
      • Iraq/Afghanistan - Nope
      • Korea - Nope

      The only example I can think of where this actually worked to any extent would be the first gulf war. So yeah 1 of 4, well that's passing in America.

    6. Re:No sir by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      I think what we all are waiting for is US taking on Russia or China or both at once just for laughs to see what's left after it's all over.

    7. Re:No sir by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I think what we all are waiting for is US taking on Russia or China or both at once just for laughs to see what's left after it's all over.

      I think New Zealand is a pretty safe bet (for something that's left after it's all over). ~

    8. Re:No sir by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And if you look at how US did in wars since WW2, it shows - for the most part, American strategy is to steamroll over the enemy by throwing large numbers of superior tech at him...

      And if you look at how the US fought in WW2 itself, it shows that, for the most part, American strategy was to steamroll over the enemy by throwing large amounts of roughly equivalent tech at him. In either case, it's the superior industrial production that makes it work, like you said.

    9. Re:No sir by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe Assange will release the secret list of aircraft each country really has.

      Point is don't believe all the crap fed to you... Where ever you you got this information from. Take the purple pill and think outside the box.

  65. More like sticking your head in the sand by Uberbah · · Score: 0, Troll

    The U.S. has established a nice record of kidnapping people far from any battlefield, and shipping them off to Gitmo or Bagram Prison for 8 years, with a possible flyover in Syria for a few months of torture. The U.S. government has used sensory deprivation torture on and authorized assassinations for U.S. citizens.

    If you're on the shit list of the U.S. military/intelligence establishment, you'd be a fool not to say far, far, far, far away as possible.

  66. no the problem is by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    when you articulate something moderate, the far left sees that what you are saying is to the right of them, they project their fears onto what you are saying, and therefore lash out at you for being far right

    and when you articulate something moderate, the far right sees that what you are saying is to the left of them, they project their fears onto what you saying, and therefore lash out at you for being far left

    the truth is, when you are a true moderate, you get called a communist idiot by the far right, and a tea party asshole by the far left, all at the same time. it says more about them than it does anything about yourself. and while it may be mentally debilitating to be attacked on both sides, at the same time, it lets you know that you ARE a true moderate, which is a real consolation in this world of partisan nitwits around every corner. if you are getting attacked by both ends of the wackjob spectrum at the same time: pat yourself on the back, for you are ideologically well-adjusted

    it's happened to me. i've been called a neocon apologist for gw bush, and then, in the next post, a socialist self-loathing bleeding heart. it gets kind of funny after awhile, to see people leading with their irrational fears and screaming out their hysterical inability to think of any opinion except in only the most the simplistic binary stereotyping of ways that their closed imperceptive minds proscribe

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:no the problem is by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      when you articulate something moderate, the far left sees that what you are saying is to the right of them, they project their fears onto what you are saying, and therefore lash out at you for being far right

      What "far left" are you speaking of? You know Barack Obama makes Nixon look like a hippie, right?

    2. Re:no the problem is by evilviper · · Score: 1

      it gets kind of funny after awhile, to see people leading with their irrational fears and screaming out their hysterical inability to think of any opinion except in only the most the simplistic binary stereotyping of ways that their closed imperceptive minds proscribe

      I have to say I find this particularly amusing to hear from you, since you just got done (what, a week ago?) berating me for pointing out that switching power plants from coal to nuclear wouldn't have a notable effect on our petroleum (note: not coal) consumption...

      YMMV.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  67. Re:Show me it's illegal for the press to publish i by elucido · · Score: 1

    So Julian Assange is not a criminal. Case closed.

  68. Mod UP! by superdave80 · · Score: 1, Troll

    Wish I had some points to give you.

    darjen lives in some fantasy world where being pacifist will always get the result you want. Not true. See ArcherB's list.

    1. Re:Mod UP! by daem0n1x · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And you live in a fantasy world where the external policy of the USA is done for the good of ANYONE except for the American big-ass corporations and their friends.

    2. Re:Mod UP! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      As a citizen of Poland, thank you America for 40 years of communism and getting my grandparents sent to Sibera. Sure was fun there for them. That is after the US, to help it's good friend Stalin, renegaded on it's promise to help the Warsaw Uprising with supplies. Having the city razed to the ground and nearly dying in the tunnels sure was fun for my granddad as well. The UK, by the way, did help but it wasn't enough. The Soviets, of course, simply stood by since the Germans were doing them a favor, all those patriots weren't going to be good for their future regime.

    3. Re:Mod UP! by daem0n1x · · Score: 1

      I'm Spain's closest neighbour. What do the peoples of Spain have to thank you Americans? Being all hugs and kisses with the dictator Franco that, among many other atrocities, asked his friend Hitler to bomb the rebel city of Guernica? And executed hundreds of thousands of his own people because they didn't agree with him? This is the kind of scum the USA likes to partner with.

      My computer and cell phone were both made in China. I use the GSM cell network, invented in Europe. And you didn't give me any freedom, dude. The USA were all friends with the Portuguese dictatorship. Portugal was accepted in NATO while the secret police was torturing and killing opposition members . Some of my family members were being sent to Africa, together with thousands of young men, to rape and slaughter people in the colonies that simply wanted to be independent. If it wasn't for the left-wing military overthrowing the dictatorship, we'd all still be waiting for the American Liberators (haha). Get out of your mama's basement, maybe you'll learn something.

    4. Re:Mod UP! by Grim+Beefer · · Score: 2, Insightful

      First off, your original list doesn't quite make sense. Force didn't/hasn't removed several people on your list, many historically famous butchers are conveniently missing (Americans?, Royalty?, the Church?), and in the case of Castro and the U.S.S.R., the threat of force nearly ended the world.

      Despite all that, I do agree that force is sometimes necessary to stop more suffering. However, it's rarely the case that war couldn't have been prevented beforehand through a bit of moral thinking. Obviously, that means no military aid to nations with a bad track record, such as Israel or Colombia. This also means you don't exploit the rest of the world, creating a perfect vacuum for a warlord to rise to power. The Vietnam war was mainly caused by the grueling poverty imposed by French imperialism, for example. And you certainly don't shake hands with those warlords once they gain command. We could make a similar list here, rivaling yours, the difference being of course that we are partially responsible for the suffering caused by these monsters through our aid and military support. Often these support mechanisms directly cause the exact type of dictator you are using as justification of war, taking the Taliban, Hussein, Indonesia, and Batista, for example. Perhaps some of these dictatorial regimes could be avoided by more carefully choosing our relationships with the rest of the world. Simply boiling down foreign policy to "useless talking" and "invasion" is a gross oversimplification that makes you sound like a warmongering idiot.

      The best way to avoid war is to not help cause it in the first place. For example, let's take the war in Iraq. Had we not supported Saddam militarily throughout the eighties, he wouldn't have had the capacity to to invade another country. We could have prevented all of this by simply not selling arms to a dictator. The U.S. not only sold Saddam weapons, but they also helped Saddam develop his chemical and biological weapons programs in their crusade against Iran. I would assume that to someone who expresses so much reverence for freedom, you would understand the concept of not aiding those who legally despise it, i.e. dictators. Explain to me then, why Saddam was a former ally? The U.S. was pretty quiet when Saddam was using chemical weapons on his own people and the Iranians, despite the fact that it is explicitly forbidden internationally as a war crime. We certainly knew about it, so where was the outrage then? After the first war Bush I suggested that the Iraqi people overthrow Saddam, but in an ironic twist of fate we gave absolutely no aid to the Iraqi people to achieve such a task, after heavily funding the mess in the first place through Saddam. Instead of helping the Iraqi people to overthrow Saddam, we punished them with brutal sanctions we knew would do nothing to the Iraqi elite, but would have horrible consequences for the rest of Iraq. When half a million Iraqi children died due to sanctions, the fact that most of Iraq's water treatment facilities were intentionally destroyed, and there was a dramatic increase in infectious disease, people like you turn around and blame Saddam! Before you go off about the Oil for Food program, keep in mind that is wasn't initiated until 1996 - by which time the damage was done. The Pentagon admitted that one of their goals in the first Gulf war was to disable Iraqi society at large, rather than concentrate solely on military targets. They have also admitted that one of their goals was to make living conditions so unbearable to the Iraqis that they would overthrow Saddam out of desperation. In addition to destroying Iraq's underlying infrastructure, the U.S. fought to keep humanitarian goods, which had no military use, out of Iraq. Sounds pretty fucking sick and sadistic to me. If this is how you bring "democracy" to the rest of the world, you can definitely count me out. Explain to me again how this use of force was supposed to prevent human suffering and uphold freedom?

    5. Re:Mod UP! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a Romanian, I have to thank America for 50-odd years of Communist dictatorship. My fate was in part dictated by a meeting three assholes, one of them an American, had in Yalta during WWII. I have family who have been in labor camps, you twit. As a child I spent long nights in the cold (how's 4 degrees Celsius sound for a nice bedroom to sleep in?) and dark (electricity blackouts out at 6pm, in the winter, how's that for help with your homework?), I was hungry at times, I had poor healthcare and I still have bad teeth because you fuckers didn't nuke Moscow immediately after Nagasaki - and I come from a relatively privileged family.

    6. Re:Mod UP! by superdave80 · · Score: 1

      When did I mention the 'external policy' of the USA? Never. I was simply agreeing with the fact that some things (removal of evil dictators) can only be accomplished through war. If you want to bring up things not related at all to my post, please start another thread elsewhere.

    7. Re:Mod UP! by daem0n1x · · Score: 1

      Since when do the USA have the right of removing evil dictators outside their national territory? And who gave the USA the right of deciding who is "evil" or not?

  69. agreed by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    i have often thought about the usa taking over haiti

    haitian nationalists would be screaming bloody murder, but puerto rico has continually voted not to leave us commonwealth status (in spite of puerto rican nationalist terrorism in the 60s and the 70s), simply because they know they get benefits, despite the wounded nationalist pride (which is assuaged by not choosing statehood)

    of course, we shouldn't INVADE haiti. we should simply approach the haitians and the un and say "maybe two three decades of outside stewardship by a world power with lots of resources might do haiti some good?"

    i think something like this would cost 1/1000th of iraqi occupation, cost a handful of lives rather than hundreds, and do 10,000x the amount of good, for decades, if not permanently

    expat haitians in the usa are extremely influential back home, haiti is well within the american economic, cultural, and regional influence. it really makes a lot of sense, if haitians can put aside their nationalist pride for a bit, maybe the usa can help by taking over

    i know, i know, impossible. not so much because of the haitians, but because of the american assholes who would wind about this "waste" of resources, the same american assholes who probably ecstatic about invading iraq. to them, its more about punishing "dem ayrabs" than really trying to help people in this world

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:agreed by RabidMonkey · · Score: 1

      the problem becomes when "heping" turns into "large corporations pillaging the natural resources of the country, returning no value to the people", like the US did to most of South America (directly, or through friendly dictators/the IMF/etc).

      In this case, I'm not sure that Haiti has much to pillage, but I assure you, some large corporation(s) would find a way to make a fast buck, leaving the people worse off for it, but making 2 or 3 Americans rich in the process.

      I am not against a "big brother" helping a "little brother" learn the ropes and get stronger and better managed, but I am not sure that the US is the "big brother" that Haiti, or many places in the world, need. Too much greed and drive for the dollar over everything else.

      --
      We emerge from our mother's womb an unformatted diskette; our culture formats us. - Douglas Coupland
    2. Re:agreed by daem0n1x · · Score: 1

      of course, we shouldn't INVADE haiti. we should simply approach the haitians and the un and say "maybe two three decades of outside stewardship by a world power with lots of resources might do haiti some good?"

      Yeah, because that worked so well for all the other countries in Lating America that now they all absolutely love the USA.

  70. Dumbass Hatorade Drinker by Uberbah · · Score: 1

    By teasing over the alleged videos and documents, he's shifting the focus of attention to himself and how he's treated by the US.

    So. Fucking. What?

    I'm amazed you have sufficient brainpower to keep your lungs functioning. How is this relevant? Only that:

    1. He runs the site and is being harassed by the Australian and U.S. governments
    2. The U.S. has kidnapped people far from any actual battlefield
    3. ...and kept those people in prison years after the government knew they were innocent
    4. You don't see the relevance in a whistleblowing site facing animosity from the subjects of it's whistleblowing?

    You. Fucking. Dumbass.

    1. Re:Dumbass Hatorade Drinker by Rogerborg · · Score: 0

      1. He runs the site and is being harassed by the Australian and U.S. governments

      No. No, he is not. Even by his own inflated hyperbolic claims, he is not. The "harassment" by the Australian government was a low level peon pointing out that his passport was about to expire. The "harassment" from the U.S. government is entirely in his imagination. Paying a lawyer to tell him that he may be harassed does not mean that he is being harassed. Wanting to be harassed is not being harassed. Snopes needs to do a Wikileaks special.

      By the way, if you're ever offered a Free Personality Test on the street, I'd strongly recommend that you run, run as fast as you can.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
  71. Quick answer: by Syberz · · Score: 1

    Can he build a high enough profile to protect himself from danger?"

    No.

    Accidents happen...

    --
    ~Syberz
  72. as Samuel Clemmens would say: by Thud457 · · Score: 1

    Wikileaks Founder Advised To Avoid American Gov't

    good advice for anybody

    --

    the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

  73. you've never heard of a false dichotomy, have you? by Uberbah · · Score: 1

    It's perfectly possible for the U.S. to intervene in situations like the civil war in Yugoslavia, the Rwandan genocide, or Sudan while also staying the hell out of Iraq.

    Shocking, I know.

  74. barack obama makes nixon look like a hippie? by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    hmmm

    could you substantiate that claim please?

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:barack obama makes nixon look like a hippie? by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      Started the EPA.
      Went to China (equivalent would be if Obama went to Iran)
      Proposed a national income.
      Had a 70% top marginal tax rate.

      That was easy.

  75. Enough of this crap. by sycodon · · Score: 2, Interesting

    All you people out there who think Wikileaks is just fine and dandy need to ask yourself a question.

    Do you believe that government should have NO secrets at all?

    Think before you answer.

    This means troop movements, battle plans, agents of any kind, anywhere.

    It means no more sealed federal records of any kind. If you did your sister in 7th grade, we will know about it.

    IRS records (they are government records) are open for all to see, communications between you and your Congressional representative, communications between anyone in government about anything.

    Want to know the location, passwords, procedures to gain access to nuclear, biological or conventional weapons? No problem. There should be no secrets...right?

    We could know where Obama is, where he's going, when he'll get there, where the secret service is, how many there are and what their various plans are to protect the president.

    Delicate negotiations with a company to make available some revolutionary technology to solve "global warming"? FTS! It's all public subject to the whims of anyone with the information.

    Diplomats working behind the scenes to free civilians from captivity in some Islamic hell hole? Hell, we all should be in on that. Publish it!

    ANYTHING and EVERYTHING would be open and available.

    On the other hand, if you think that some of this stuff should be kept under wraps (your sister does I bet), then Wikileaks should make you sick. That's because Wikileaks thinks that anyone and everyone who thinks classified material of any kind should be public for whatever twisted reason, can publish it without repercussion.

    There is no firewall. No protection. Nothing. If someone has access and thinks it should be public...there ya go. The best you can do is to rely on some unknown people who are accountable to nobody to decide not to publish something....for now anyway.

    Is that really what you want?

    --
    When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    1. Re:Enough of this crap. by erikvcl · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Your post is excellent. The fact that you were modded troll speaks to the ignorance and narrow-mindedness that runs rampant within the Slashdot community. There is a reason why I assign +3 to troll and flamebait posts. Often, these are the most interesting and intelligent!

    2. Re:Enough of this crap. by TheCarp · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      I thought about it and... yes.

      Actually, I don't want this government to exist. I consider centralization of power to be far more scary than any alternatives. Frankly, I don't care if people are being murdered here by eachother, or in foriegn countries by our paid volunteer murder squads. Killing is killing as far as I am concerned, and I would as soon spit in the face of a returning US soldier as a so called terrorist, as far as I am concerned, very little difference to me.

      I heard the statements of the Times Square failed bomber as to why he did it, and frankly, he sounded to me like any other soldier of any other army. Just as wrong as all of them. Every single soldier that has ever fought in a war where he isn't on the side of ending and occupation is, a war criminal in my eyes.

      None of them has ever done a thing that I appreciate or condone, and every single one of them owes the rest of the world an apology for picking up arms for no good reason.

      I see no reason to trust the organization that runs this killers with any respect or to give them any privacy. They deserve to have every secret that they try to keep disseminated far and wide.

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    3. Re:Enough of this crap. by sycodon · · Score: 1

      Thanks.

      Of course the Trolls modded you off topic.

      Maybe there should be a Reality section for Slashdot.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    4. Re:Enough of this crap. by WNight · · Score: 1

      Do you believe that government should have NO secrets at all?

      No, it's "do you believe government should have no special powers to compel the keeping of secrets beyond simply encouraging those holding them to do so".

      This means troop movements, battle plans, agents of any kind, anywhere.

      Yup. If they leak they're leaked. Instead of trying to put the genie back in the bottle try moving the troops.

      And I'm not saying an agent's identity should be revealed, just that if it is it should not be censored.

      Want to know the location, passwords, procedures to gain access to nuclear, biological or conventional weapons?

      I'd hope there was something other than secrets keeping me from launching nukes. Like, maybe, people at the controls.

      No problem. There should be no secrets...right?

      Of course not. Otherwise how would I be able to audit the system to make sure it's really safe and it's not just that the media is forbidden to tell us about the problems.

      That's because Wikileaks thinks that anyone and everyone who thinks classified material of any kind should be public for whatever twisted reason, can publish it without repercussion.

      No, they know people cannot publish without unjust repercussion, that's why all the security.

      There is no firewall.

      That's not how firewalls work.

      No protection. Nothing. If someone has access and thinks it should be public...there ya go.

      Yeah, there ya go. Data out in the open where the greatest minds of our day can analyze it. What a crime.

    5. Re:Enough of this crap. by sycodon · · Score: 1

      Yeah, you pretty much sound like one of those guys who like to burn cars and smash windows at the G7 summits.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    6. Re:Enough of this crap. by khellendros1984 · · Score: 1

      An epic troll, sir. "Good job".

      --
      It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
    7. Re:Enough of this crap. by WNight · · Score: 1

      Wow yeah, I want information out where the voters can see it. Give me that flaming garbage can!

      I never realized what awesome punctuation it is for a long political post.

      You sound pretty much like one of those guys who like to decry and denounce everything simply because change scares him.

    8. Re:Enough of this crap. by sycodon · · Score: 1

      Don't fool yourself with you imaginary altruistic desires.

      We all know that people like you thrive on chaos and disorder, hence the predilection for smashing and burning things.

      Keeping the contents of diplomatic cables secret is a reasonable and smart thing to do. Yet such a simple thing as this eludes clowns like you.

      You sound like one of those guys who see something that works, says, "We can't have that", and screws it up at the first opportunity.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    9. Re:Enough of this crap. by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      Call it what you want. Its how I feel on the matter. I have no love or respect for a soldier.

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    10. Re:Enough of this crap. by erikvcl · · Score: 1

      Classified information saves lives and keeps our country safe. Is our government right all the time? No, but I trust it a hell of a lot more than I trust ignorant fools like yourself. If you had your way, we would cease to exist as the United States -- we'd be overrun by our enemies. Get a clue and read up on your history!

    11. Re:Enough of this crap. by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      I always figure the people smashing and burning are either kids who just want to cause damage or agent provocateurs working for the police or organization being protested against who are inciting violence to discredit the protesters

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    12. Re:Enough of this crap. by Magada · · Score: 1

      "The government" is just a government, failible and oft-failing like every other construct. The people it is supposed to serve would do better if more of "the government"'s actions and inevitable mistakes are brought to light, for if not, what chance do we the people stand to correct them?

      Get over your myopia.

      Troop movements? Operational secrecy is enough. There is no reason to hide the historical record of wars, aye, even to the last cartridge spent - other than to hide the incompetence, malice aforethought and corruption of some military and political leaders.

      Tax records are already open, in progressive countries, and boy do they help weed out the corrupt.

      To keep Obama safe, given that he's already pissed off a lot of people, you just need operational secrecy, again - one only needs make sure that no adversary is keeping tabs NOW, location and direction info will be worthless in minutes or hours at most. Not to mention, if America were more of a democracy it could do away with the office of president - dispersal is the best defense, having high-value targets at all is a strategic weakness.

      Delicate negotiations with a company to make available some revolutionary technology to solve "global warming"? Why not go public, in the most damaging way possible? "Look, Company X has a fix for global warming, but they've refused to sell at a fair price -in fact, at any price." Should encourage other corps to not try and keep revolutionary tech under wraps ever again.

      Diplomats working behind the scenes to free civilians from captivity in some Islamic hell hole? Well, yes, the world DOES need to know, in detail, exactly how the white-garbed mullahs with their long beards and avuncular manners are actually hardened mobsters and drug dealers, who haggle for hostages exclusively in terms of dollars/head and/or political clout - that should put paid to any notions that radical Islam is a religion like any other or that those people are clerics in any true sense.

      To keep NBC weapons safe, you ... ahem... waitaminit... why ARE there NBC weapons at all? Hardly targetable at all, definitely unacceptable in limited warfare. If you are not actively trying to bring about the end of the world you'd want your government to dispose of such weapons as quickly and as publicly as possible, replacing them, of course, with other things that can keep you safer, such as, I dunno, better diplomacy (best done on public stage, btw, just ask Woodrow Wilson) or more ways to make your society and culture resilient, such as producing better, smarter, nicer, healthier, more dangerous citizens.

      These kinds of weapons can and should be wielded publicly and their existence, location and capabilities widely advertised. Who can defend against a million potential assassins/soldiers? Against ten million hackers or intelligence collection/analysis agents? Who can stop the flow of the best and the brightest to the countries, cultures and corporations where they are truly appreciated and can live to their fullest?

      --
      Something bad is coming when people are suddenly anxious to tell the truth.
    13. Re:Enough of this crap. by sycodon · · Score: 1

      You didn't answer my question.

      Is there ANYTHING at all you think should be kept secret, including "operational secrecy"?

      If so, then it can be leaked by Wikileaks.

      If you believe in and support Wikileaks, then you believe in and support the notion that there should be absolutely no secrets or confidential information of any kind any where in Government.

      Do you?

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    14. Re:Enough of this crap. by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      > If you had your way, we would cease to exist as the United States -- we'd be overrun by our enemies. Get a clue and read up on your history!

      Yes on the first part.

      On the second... overrun by our enemies? Oooh, is Canada going to come take revenge on us? Maybe the mexican army is going to come on the march.

      Sorry if I don't piss my pants at the thought of the bogeyman coming to "get us". I will work on that.

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    15. Re:Enough of this crap. by uninformedLuddite · · Score: 1

      If you did your sister in 7th grade, we will know about it.

      If there are any lawyers present can you tell me if there is a statute of limitations on this? Unfortunately, I don't live in one of those states with exemptions for this.

      --
      The new right fascists are bilingual. They speak English and Bullshit.
    16. Re:Enough of this crap. by Magada · · Score: 1

      I do.

      Anything and everything about the Government and its workings should be a matter of public record.

      Secrets breed lies, corruption and shadow hierarchies, while granting few and dubious benefits.

      --
      Something bad is coming when people are suddenly anxious to tell the truth.
    17. Re:Enough of this crap. by sycodon · · Score: 1

      I'll keep an eye out for you on the evening news during the next G7 summit.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    18. Re:Enough of this crap. by Magada · · Score: 1

      An evening in a "free speech zone" or whatever they call them these days does not fit with my idea of a good time, so no.

      --
      Something bad is coming when people are suddenly anxious to tell the truth.
    19. Re:Enough of this crap. by erikvcl · · Score: 1

      Even our friends are trying to steal our secrets. Israel and other allies routinely try to reverse-engineer defense systems we sell to them.

      China, North Korea, terrorists, etc. would very much like to benefit at our expense.

      The boogeyman you refer to is real. You can choose to live in your idealistic world if it makes you feel better. The reality is that the threats are real and journalists should not have the right to reveal classified information.

    20. Re:Enough of this crap. by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      > Even our friends are trying to steal our secrets. Israel and other allies routinely try to reverse-engineer defense systems we sell to them.

      Good for them. I wouldn't have much respect for them if they didn't. I firmly believe there is nothing wrong with reverse engineering in other areas, why should I demonize Isreal for it? (especially given how many other things, for which I can demonize Isreal, and many of "our" other allies)

      > China, North Korea, terrorists, etc. would very much like to benefit at our expense.

      Would they? North Korea is an international pariah with no real allies. I mean seriously, how much do you think the Chinese really will support the DPRK if it comes down to it? Kim Jong Il is a jester who pokes his finger in our eye, and the Chinese may enjoy the existence of his third world shit hole for that reason, but if he stepped over the line, I have little doubt that he would get dropped like a hot potato if it became politically expedient.

      China? I don't see them looking to add some new round eye provinces. They have plenty on their plate trying to modernize and deal with the problems associated with trying to be totalitarian in the days of the Internet.

      Terrorists? Please. Terrorism is just a tactic, and one employed by weak organizations. They are nothing more than predators on collective fear. The only defense against them is for people to refuse to be terrorized. No amount of massive government expansion is going to stop them.

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    21. Re:Enough of this crap. by WNight · · Score: 1

      What predilection for smashing and burning? I want us to shut down the detainee camp, quit arresting and deporting people for torture, and to stop the useless wars.

      I want us to STOP smashing things.

      Don't fool yourself with you imaginary altruistic desires.

      They aren't just altruistic desires, I live here too. I don't trust the US government and want its secrets exposed to force it to stop its war crimes.

      You sound like one of those guys who see something that works, says, "We can't have that", and screws it up at the first opportunity.

      I see a group bent on unjustified war as something not working.

      Keeping the contents of diplomatic cables secret is a reasonable and smart thing to do.

      Except when you have strong reason to believe those secrets are about harming others. Then eves-dropping and and leaking them is the smart answer.

      Yet such a simple thing as this eludes clowns like you.

      No, I don't think so. What do you think I'm missing here? That this will expose a ton of dirty dealing and hurt the dirty-dealers? I just care about the victims more than the perpetrators.

      It sounds like you know which category you're in...

    22. Re:Enough of this crap. by sycodon · · Score: 1

      WHO has strong reason to believe those secrets are about harming others?

      You? Some low level government employee? Someone in Government with a political agenda?

      Who do you want to make that decision?

      Seems that with your line of reasoning, it's just anyone at all.

      I happen to think that it should be someone who is accountable to me, via the political process. It is slow and tedious to affect change, but it's the process we have.

      The alternate is literally anarchy with respect to the control of information, some of which can get people killed or prevent them from being saved.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    23. Re:Enough of this crap. by WNight · · Score: 1

      WHO has strong reason to believe those secrets are about harming others?

      Anyone who's followed any American politics since the 1960s. Anyone with a realistic view of international relations. (Mainly gained from previous leaks.)

      Who do you want to make that decision? Seems that with your line of reasoning, it's just anyone at all.

      Exactly. Even you. I want anyone who sees something immoral to flag it and bring it to the attention of everyone.

      The alternate is literally anarchy with respect to the control of information

      Yeah a literal anarchy ... with respect to censorship. That's almost totally not a literal anarchy.

      some of which can get people killed or prevent them from being saved.

      Anything we really want secure we treat like the enemy knows about anyways. If a secret matters we change it frequently.

      Even if what you said is true in a few contrived cases it's a far safer bet that secrets, especially long-lasting ones, are being kept for harmful reasons. Even if the whistle-blower overreacted it's far better than risking letting crimes against humanity continue.

  76. Wkileak's statement on the cables by tobiah · · Score: 1

    Wikileaks has neither confirmed nor denied that Manning leaked information to the site, but on Sunday it tweeted that "Allegations in Wired that we have been sent 260,000 classified US embassy cables are, as far as we can tell, incorrect."
    (originally via twitter)

    Read More http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2010/06/wikileaks-to-lamo/comment-page-1/#ixzz0rbLRc14C

    --
    "The ability to delude yourself may be an important survival tool" - Jane Wagner -
  77. Re:Good on him===WTF? by Macocalypse · · Score: 1

    What good Samaritans are you talking about? I watched the entire unedited video. They were combats, they had weapons. The vehicle had no markings indicating it was Red Cross/Crescent. They were trying to evacuate the wounded but they were still combatants, Insurgents don't wear uniforms. The video was edited to make it look like a massacre and not a battle. I have been against these wars from the start, but it does not help the Anti-war cause to have anti-war groups posting inaccurate or manipulated info. Keep in mind this was the same group that released the emails from scientists that created "climate-gate-" which the American Right used and continue to use to stall climate change. And now it appears they are basically threatening to release a quarter million state department communiqués. This could be disastrous to our relations with any number of nations. Some of them may say unflattering things about other nations that diplomatically could be disastrous if they got out. Assage is nothing more than a media whore who is giving real whistleblowers a bad name.

  78. let's assume you are correct by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    that american corporations make a buck off haiti. if haiti is better off than before american involvement, who cares?

    what i'm saying is, because you are uncomfortable with the idea of greed, you're basically willing to let haiti fester. well, i'd rather improve haiti and let a little capitalist chicanery get involved, as it inevitably will, if it improves haiti

    and yes, the usa raped the caribbean, central america, and south america in the past. and japan invaded its neighbors. and france colonized part so the world. etc

    every country in the world has shameful abuses from its past. that's supposed to mean a country can never be motivated for other reasons? a study of history should enlighten us as to the conditions of the world, not trap our minds into thinking about countries in only historical modes of behavior

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:let's assume you are correct by RabidMonkey · · Score: 1

      I am not arguing that Haiti should fester, only that the US may not be the best guide. Haiti, and many other nations, can use all the help they can get, and there is certainly enough wealth in the world to do so.

      To your argument that "that american corporations make a buck off haiti. if haiti is better off than before american involvement, who cares?". The problem is that American corporations make $1,000,000 while Haiti makes $25, and is left with the mess when that corporation leaves (environmental, political, economic, etc).

      As for "a study of history should enlighten us as to the conditions of the world, not trap our minds into thinking about countries in only historical modes of behavior", I'll counter that a large part of the US history (and, yes, I'll readily admit, most of the G8 countries) involves using their size (geographic, military, economic, social) to abuse other nations. I suppose that is how it goes in International politics, but that doesn't excuse it. Since we cannot trust the words of the leaders of nations, nor can we trust the motives of corporations, we can really only look to their past dealings for an indication of the tone any future dealings.

      Given that the US is still involved in 2 wars on "terror" (aka: oil acquisition), again I say that the US is probably not the best country to help Haiti, or anyone else for that matter. Maybe given a couple decades of noble actions and not doing what is simply best for themselves, they could be trusted to be "motivated for other reasons".

      Greed helps no one except the greedy.

      --
      We emerge from our mother's womb an unformatted diskette; our culture formats us. - Douglas Coupland
  79. My 2 yen by PinkyGigglebrain · · Score: 1

    If he has any additional video or email/electronic records he needs to release them ASAP. By saying he has something but not releasing it he raises the probability that he will meet with an "accident" of a permanent nature that will prevent him from publishing anything else.

    He should also worry about his family and friends, if he is unavailable they will be the next targets in attempts to "convince" him to not release anything.

    While I would prefer to think that the US would not go so low as to threaten/hold third parties I know that they would not hesitate to act like the Russian Mafia if it suited their interests.

  80. Wikileaks has no cables by chriscappuccio · · Score: 2, Interesting

    According to wikileaks, they don't have any embarrasing "international cables" but they do have other documents that expose war time/rights violations by the US Government/Army. http://cryptome.org/0001/wikileaks-maybe.htm

    But there is dissention in the wikileaks contributor community, someone keeps sending documents to cryptome that exposes the real goals of wikileaks - to get julian flying international in style and to get money from major news outlets for major leaks. Supposedly Manning even expected to share in the cash for his videos.

    The motives make the site less noble, but the leaks are still great stuff. Especially the ones which deal with countries taking out "loans" to pay off the interest on the "loans" that they can't pay back anymore. This protects the banks that gave out the loans (usually part of the Federal Reserve banking cartel) because they can show the original loan and the new loan as "assets" (because they are still getting interest payments.) That means that the bank can actually loan out more money because they have more "asset" value on the books! When the pyramid finally falls down, the banks find some other way to clean up, usually with assistance from the Fed and the US Congress to get more imaginary (inflationary) money to be released from the "Federal Reserve."

    The way this inflation scam works is well explained in "The Creature from Jekyll Island." It explains the current economic boom/bust cycle like no economist ever would dream of - because the author doesn't believe that any monetary system with no back-end discipline can survive in the long term (which is a big part of economics - "managing" the economy) The basic idea it promotes is that of a disciplinary standard that prevents inflationary spending - such as the gold standard. But even if you could care less about the gold standard, it still well explains the issues inherent in our current system, how it is used by governments and how it's hard to accept the political realities of not going into continuous inflation, which is why inflationary systems keep popping up. Rome is his first example of an inflationary system corrupted, and Greece and the Byzantine Empire. The bezant was accepted from China to Brittany, from the Baltic Sea to Ethiopia, and kept a stable price for 800 years, with a strict, disciplinary banking system. We don't have that today, just a bunch of pomp and fluff designed to look respectable and disciplinary. Deserving of respect or an exemplar of discipline our current monetary system is not.

  81. YOU please. by Uberbah · · Score: 1

    The U.S. has established a nice little track record of abducting people far away from any battlefields and "holding them for questioning for 8 years and counting". And on what planet would it make sense to risk the comparatively lesser ordeal of being arrested, prosecuted, and spending the next few years in jail while the case works it's way through the courts?

    1. Re:YOU please. by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      He volunteered. As I said is this news that he wanted for questioning? He isn't part of some paramilitary group so he would be dealt with in a legal manner.
      As I said though. The hero worship needs to stop. Wikileaks is the National Enquirer of the internet.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    2. Re:YOU please. by Sir_Lewk · · Score: 1

      He isn't part of some paramilitary group so he would be dealt with in a legal manner.

      That the government deals with membes of "some paramilitary group" in an illegal manner, suggests that being dealt with in a "legal manner" means about jack shit.

      --
      "linux is just DOS with a UNIX like syntax" -- Galactic Dominator (944134)
  82. and by ThatsNotPudding · · Score: 1

    The military might of the US lies in its industrial output

    ...and foreign-sourced microprocessors.
    /whatcouldpossiblygowrong?

  83. this is a failed way of looking at the world by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    self-interest will never be removed from anyone's motivation, ever. therefore, no nation, ever, will meet your ridiculously perfecting standards of behavior in the world. therefore, you are indeed perfectly happy to let haiti fester for the sake of ridiculously impossible standards

    "I'll counter that a large part of the US history (and, yes, I'll readily admit, most of the G8 countries) involves using their size (geographic, military, economic, social) to abuse other nations. I suppose that is how it goes in International politics, but that doesn't excuse it. Since we cannot trust the words of the leaders of nations, nor can we trust the motives of corporations, we can really only look to their past dealings for an indication of the tone any future dealings."

    so therefore, japan should never be trusted to ever to play a role in china, because japan will always only be an imperialist there. germany should not be in the eu, because germans are only military expansionists. and other such nonsense

    you use history as an excuse to be intellectually and morally lazy. your cynicism trumps your intelligence in your current view of the world and its players. currently you say "these are my standards, and no one meets them, so no problems will ever be solved"

    currently you do not have any validity or coherence in your opinions of the world. if you have a genuine human conscience, you need to pit that conscience against your current lazy, self-serving ridiculously high standards, and find a more pragmatic way to look a the world and its problems. the world is never, ever going to work the way you think it should, as long as human beings are human beings. try to leave your ivory castle, and see how things actually work down in the mud, however ugly you feel this exercise to be. you aren't engaged in the good fight anymore. you've merely given yourself a lame excuse to retire from and excuse yourself from the good fight to make this world a better place, because no one is acting according to your impossible specifications

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:this is a failed way of looking at the world by RabidMonkey · · Score: 1

      I will choose to overlook your personal attacks - you don't know from a hole in the ground, and certainly not well enough to chastise me as you have.

      Just because I said that the US isn't the right nation to guide Haiti doesn't mean that there aren't others, as I have said. I think that both Germany and Japan have spent decades improving their image, and could rightfully be called upon to be better leaders than the US. Thank you for 2 great examples of my point.

      I also happen to think that my nation (Canada), while flawed, could also provide support for Haiti, especially given the large number of Haitians that live in Quebec.

      You discount history so easily. When history shows us over and over that a nation acts in a certain way, why do you think it's "lazy" for me to use that as evidence for my point of view? Do you reset your point of view on a day to day basis so that you can remain unbiased? How much time do you think has to pass before a nation redeems itself for its past actions? While I am (contrary to your comments) quite open minded and willing to give second, third and forth chances, I still don't see that the US has managed to "polish" its reputation sufficiently as yet.

      The world is inhabited by people, who all have a self interest. However, some people, and nations, manage to find a balance between self interest and taking an interest in the well being of the world in general.

      --
      We emerge from our mother's womb an unformatted diskette; our culture formats us. - Douglas Coupland
  84. I was talking about Iraq by copponex · · Score: 1

    You should perhaps read before you write.

    http://www.hrw.org/backgrounder/wrd/iraq-women.htm

    Historically, Iraqi women and girls have enjoyed relatively more rights than many of their counterparts in the Middle East. The Iraqi Provisional Constitution (drafted in 1970) formally guaranteed equal rights to women and other laws specifically ensured their right to vote, attend school, run for political office, and own property. Yet, since the 1991 Gulf War, the position of women within Iraqi society has deteriorated rapidly. Women and girls were disproportionately affected by the economic consequences of the U.N. sanctions, and lacked access to food, health care, and education. These effects were compounded by changes in the law that restricted women's mobility and access to the formal sector in an effort to ensure jobs to men and appease conservative religious and tribal groups...

    The primary legal underpinning of women's equality is contained in the Iraqi Provisional Constitution, which was drafted by the Ba'ath party in 1970. Article 19 declares all citizens equal before the law regardless of sex, blood, language, social origin, or religion. In January 1971, Iraq also ratified the International Covenants on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR), which provide equal protection under international law to all...

  85. I don't have a problem with it either way by yyxx · · Score: 1

    I'm glad WikiLeaks exists and publishes this kind of information. On the other hand, I also don't have a problem with the US government arresting and prosecuting people who do. Ultimately, a court does need to look at these kinds of leaks and make a determination whether there was a compelling public interest or not.

    What we should be asking is whether our laws protect whistleblowers enough in these cases, and whether our courts are making the right decisions. And I think we also need strong laws against people classifying information for which there is no strong security interest in keeping it classified.

  86. Islam not alone in bad gender politics. by zooblethorpe · · Score: 1

    Because only islam says that if a man rapes a women it is the womens fault. Then again such things as stoning a person to death are also encouraged.

    I can't agree with you here. Islam is not alone in perpetrating this myth. For that matter, my historical reading makes it sound like this was a common defense trotted out by rapists here in the US until not so long ago.

    Looking only at religion, user Creedo said it much better than I could just recently over in the story about the Utah governor. A choice quote:

    "If a man happens to meet in a town a virgin pledged to be married and he sleeps with her, you shall take both of them to the gate of that town and stone them to death—the girl because she was in a town and did not scream for help, and the man because he violated another man's wife. You must purge the evil from among you." - Deut 22:23-24

    Mind you, I'm not trying to say that Islam is somehow excused because the Old Testament says much the same things. However, I am trying to say that looking only at "holy" books will show you no end of horrid hypocrisy. Judge people not on their religions, but instead on how they behave.

    Sadly, much of the world, Muslim or otherwise, isn't doing too well when it comes to fairness and justice.

    Cheers,

    --
    "What in the name of Fats Waller is that?"
    "A four-foot prune."
  87. don't be naive by yyxx · · Score: 1

    The U.S. has established a nice little track record of abducting people far away from any battlefields

    European and Asian nations have been complicit in this: they've participated in moving people around and questioning them, and they sometimes refuse to take back even their own residents, let alone other people picked up in the battlefield.

    And what alternative do you actually propose? US soldiers pick up a dozen people on the battlefield. What are they supposed to do with them? Let them go? Create internment camps in Afghanistan and Iraq? Ship them to Switzerland? I'm not saying it's right, but I think people simply don't know what to do.

    1. Re:don't be naive by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

      US soldiers pick up a dozen people on the battlefield. What are they supposed to do with them?

      Please re-read the GP post, which mentions "abducting people far away from any battlefields". The U.S. has developed a habit of bashing in doors and kidnapping people who are nowhere near battlefields, often on the basis of tips made by informants who collect a bounty or otherwise stand to benefit from the kidnappee's removal from the scene.

      People actually captured on a battlefield are either legitimate combatants, entitled to POW status; or else they stand accused of being illegal combatants, and are entitled to a fair and honest trial. The fact that they might be found not guilty in such a trial is not an excuse to not grant them the due process of law; in fact, the possibility that they might not be guilty is exactly why a trial is necessary.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
  88. like i wrote the other guy by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    every country in the world has shameful abuses from its past. that's supposed to mean a country can never be motivated for other reasons? a study of history should enlighten us as to the conditions of the world, not trap our minds into thinking about countries in only historical modes of behavior

    can china only forever more think of japan as an imperial aggressor?

    can france only and forever more think of germany only as an imminent blitzkrieg?

    no, of course this laughable. likewise, if you can only see the usa as the usa acted a century ago, this means only that your opinions about world relations are invalid and you have nothing useful to say about reality

    don't be trapped by history. let history inform you as to the state of the world. but the state of the world and the motivations of its players is not static and unchanging. you're being intellectually lazy

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:like i wrote the other guy by daem0n1x · · Score: 1

      USA is not different from any other country. Given enough power, it will become a bully. It's as simple as that.

      The USA are particularly harmful because of the theory of Manifest Destiny, that states the Americans have some divine mandate to be the baby sitters of the world. Claiming to belong to some God-chosen people is extremely dangerous, as can be seen in other places in the world, like, ahem... your best-ever friends, that suffer from the same disease.

      When the Haiti earthquake struck, many countries sent doctors and medical equipment (including 3rd World country Cuba), the USA sent 20.000 soldiers loaded with weapons, and militarily invaded the country. This wasn't 100 years ago.

      Imagine you're not USAian. Would you trust a country like this to give you any "help"? I wouldn't, and you neither.

  89. Alternative approach by rainmouse · · Score: 1

    Perhaps if the US military was instead to spend some resources addressing their world famous gung-ho trigger happy culture they wouldn't need to spend so much time covering up civilian kill streaks and team killing of allied soldiers. I for one am very glad of the existence of wikileaks. At least they are getting a lot of free publicity.

  90. We did it wrong to begin with by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    See, had we just nuked em to begin with, we wouldn't be having this discussion. Fly planes into our skyscrapers? We turn your little desert abode into a nice sheet of glass - which, by the way, is easy to drill through.

  91. Inaccurate information here by Meditato · · Score: 1

    Actually, Wikileaks has explicitly denied possession of the quarter-million US embassy cables from the State Department.

  92. On the numbers of aircraft by DesScorp · · Score: 1

    "I find it interesting that you bring up planes here, because the numbers directly contradict your claims."

    No, not really. You mention at at present, the US has more fighters in total than Russia and China. But that wasn't true until about 15 years ago, in the aftermath of the death of the Soviet Union, which had far greater numbers of aircraft alone than the US did, not even counting the air forces of its former Warsaw Pact satellite states.

    Our current "lower numbers, higher tech" philosophy is a direct holdover from the Cold War, when we couldn't match the industrial production of military items the Soviet Union was churning out. The whole idea of the Air/Land Battle concept of the late 70's and 80's was to use small number of technically superior weapons (with superior trained people) to cut off the supply lines of advancing Warsaw Pact forces, and to isolate their front lines from their reserves and supply lines. This was adapted precisely because there was no way a combined US/Nato force was ever going to match the Soviets on a plane to plane, tank to tank basis. They had the numbers game won, flat.

    So while we presently have more fighters, take a look at that inventory again. How many of them are actually in production? Just a couple of them now. The rest are old, and are in the process of being phased out, and long ago lost their technical edge (the F-15 was designed in the 60's remember). The last F-16 that USAF purchased was bought in the mid-90's, 15 years ago. While the fleet is large compared to Russia and China now, it's mostly old, and going away. Again, what is actually in production now?

    Just the F/A-18 Super Hornet, and the F-22. And the Raptor is about to end production, as you noted. That leaves The F-35, which is still in testing. Now look at projected force numbers. As noted, the USAF gets no more than 187 Raptors, total. They're planning on getting around 2200 F-35's, and plans call for the Navy to get a little over 400. But the reality is, they'll never get anywhere near those numbers. Why? Budget realities. The drawback of hyper-high-tech aircraft is a hyper-high-price. Both SecDef Gates, and Congress is calling for defense cuts, especially in expensive big ticket items. If the F-35 survives at all, there's a good chance the Navy cancels it's version in favor of the much-cheaper Super Hornet. I'm seeing projections that in a best case scenario, at current costs, USAF gets no more than 1200 F-35's. And again, one of the Frank Commission's recommendation was to cancel the F-35.

    No matter what happens, the US is looking at a radically shrinking USAF and reduced Naval air arm, and fairly soon, within this decade. There simply isn't the money to buy everything the services want. The "cheap" F-35 now costs as much as the much more capable F-22 itself.

    Just FYI, I've become a critic of the "low numbers, hyper tech" approach. I'd like a level of tech somewhat better than our adversaires, but I'd also like high numbers of aircraft and ships too. That means making some compromises in level of technology. I don't want to go back to utter simplicity and stamped steel, but at the same time, I think we've gotten something horribly wrong when the richest nation on Earth can't even afford the weapons on their drawing boards. I for one am an advocate of "evolutionary > revoltionary" in defense acquisitions now. I think we shoudl simply build updated versions of current designs (the Navy is doing this to some extent with the Super Hornet, which comes in at under $50 million apiece, compared to the F-35 which is projected to be around $122 million apiece on average).

    Yes, get as much tech as you can afford, but afford it. Because quantity really does have a quality all it's own.

    --
    Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    1. Re:On the numbers of aircraft by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      No, not really. You mention at at present, the US has more fighters in total than Russia and China. But that wasn't true until about 15 years ago, in the aftermath of the death of the Soviet Union, which had far greater numbers of aircraft alone than the US did, not even counting the air forces of its former Warsaw Pact satellite states.

      I doubt that USSR had significantly higher numbers. Most of planes Russia has today are leftovers from the Union.

      And if you count Warsaw Pact, then you should also count NATO alongside US.

      This was adapted precisely because there was no way a combined US/Nato force was ever going to match the Soviets on a plane to plane, tank to tank basis.

      Thing is, Western analysts of the time thought that the USSR could outmatch NATO there, but now that we have access to real information on the other side of the curtain, we know that the fears were largely unfounded. The USSR/Eastern Bloc was never a true match to US/NATO militarily, at least in conventional warfare; what's more, Soviet leaders always knew that, and that is why the Union policy was mostly defensive, with covert support for various "liberation movements" to tie up Western resources.

      So while we presently have more fighters, take a look at that inventory again. How many of them are actually in production? Just a couple of them now. The rest are old, and are in the process of being phased out, and long ago lost their technical edge (the F-15 was designed in the 60's remember).

      This is even more true of Russia (especially) and China fleets, however. In fact, in terms of the ratio of new-to-old stuff, US beats both.

  93. Indeed! by denzacar · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Also, several of them weren't removed through war, despite actual wars being fought against their regimes.

    A rather pointless list that.

    --
    Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
  94. Why the US does nothing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They aren't going to do anything while this guy holds 250k+ text chats and a video of mass civilian killings.
    I assume he has some copies ready to go out should he be arrested.
    I think this is one of the reasons that the supposed additional information has not been released yet. Because once that is public there will be no more leverage left for him to threaten with.
    I'd do the same thing.

  95. There is... by bagsta · · Score: 1

    ...an interesting article here regarding this story about the arrest of Manning after the information that were given by Adrian Lamo.

    --
    Until the skies turn blue...
    Until the air of freedom strikes us...
  96. The First Post by OneAhead · · Score: 1

    The last link points to this article.
    "THE FIRST POST - news and views that matter"
    Is this site trying to parody /. or what?

  97. Assassination? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is it so hard to do if you have the might of the country or large enough group? I just don't see it often enough to bad people, most of the good one are assassinated though...

  98. Bradley Manning's War Crimes by WNight · · Score: 1

    The info comes from an excerpt from the Manning/Lamo chat logs.

    One of Mannings jobs was investigating Iraqi dissidents. One document they thought was a lead turned out to be a scholarly critique of the government's finances, not a call to arms. Manning went to the officer in charge to explain the mistake. Manning was ordered to ignore the innocence of the message and continue using it to round up people.

    (02:35:46 PM) Manning: was watching 15 detainees taken by the Iraqi Federal Police... for printing "anti-Iraqi literature"... the iraqi federal police wouldn't cooperate with US forces, so i was instructed to investigate the matter, find out who the "bad guys" were, and how significant this was for the FPs... it turned out, they had printed a scholarly critique against PM Maliki... i had an interpreter read it for me... and when i found out that it was a benign political critique titled "Where did the money go?" and following the corruption trail within the PM's cabinet... i immediately took that information and *ran* to the officer to explain what was going on... he didn't want to hear any of it... he told me to shut up and explain how we could assist the FPs in finding *MORE* detainees...

    (02:36:27 PM) Manning: everything started slipping after that... i saw things differently

    Knowing that being falsely arrested in a war zone for dissident activities, especially where the USA already had a proven history (Abu Ghraib) of war crimes and torture it's a pretty safe bet that would have happened to some of the people who'd have been falsely arrested.

    Thus is was pretty obvious that the order was illegal.

    After that Manning started looking more into the issue and found the video and other documents.

  99. Have the majority voted at all? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Have the majority voted at all? Never mind voted for this government, have the majority voted at all?

    DO NOT use "the majority voted" unless they really have.

  100. I for one by das3cr · · Score: 1

    Hope that the US Mill gets their hands on the guy.

    Send in an A team .. .and grab this dirt bag. Set him up a nice cozy spot in some far away place and sweat him for a bit.

    --
    Hurricane Island Outward Bound
    OB
  101. dude by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    i just said don't be trapped in history

    and you can accuse the usa of invading haiti because of manifest destiny after the earthquake

    LOL

    seriously, what the fuck is wrong with you?

    it's 2010. your brain is stuck in 1910. there just MIGHT be other motivations in the world today when nations act. try to imagine that possibility, and stop being stuck in the past

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:dude by daem0n1x · · Score: 1

      If you think anything changed, you're just plain naive.

  102. canada can't support haiti by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    canada is an imperialistic bully:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Riel

    what i just said about canada, of course, is retarded

    but its a demonstration of the way you look at nations: you arbitrarily pick the worst aspects of the nation's behavior from the distant past, implant your deepest fears upon that distant worst behavior, then uniformly use that as the standard for that nation's behavior forever more

    "When history shows us over and over that a nation acts in a certain way, why do you think it's "lazy" for me to use that as evidence for my point of view?"

    yes, 100%: you're intellectually lazy, and cynical (always a moronic useless replacement for real thought). your worldview is flat out logically incoherent and completely useless

    say i shoplifted when i was 13 years old. when i am 50 years old, will you still think of me as a shoplifter, and nothing more? i think you can clearly understand how wrong and unjust this way of thinking about people is. now understand its also a wrong way to think about nations

    but then again, as demonstrated by your treatment of the metis, you're a typical canadian imperialistic aggressor (that's sarcasm, if you haven't noticed)

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:canada can't support haiti by RabidMonkey · · Score: 1

      "you arbitrarily pick the worst aspects of the nation's behavior from the distant past"

      The US is currently involved in 2 questionable wars. That isn't distant, unless you have a different frame of reference for time.

      There are many other examples I could give of the US being a miserable leader, right now. However, I think it's safe to say, our opinions differ, and neither of us are likely to change. You have valid points, that countries can redeem themselves, but I think the scales of time we use for redemption are perhaps different.

      As well, you deride me for having high standards for nations. I think that no standards can be high enough, but of course they aren't ever going to be met - I am not stupid. That doesn't mean that we shouldn't hope and want them to be met. Simply accepting the status quo, and throwing up your hands to say "well, no one will be perfect, so why try?" is, as you're fond of saying, "intellectually lazy"

      And if you want a better example of Canadians ugly side, there is a much more relevant, ugly and more current one in the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_Indian_residential_school_system residential school fuckery that our government put our own citizens through. It's horrible, and horrifying, and almost beyond redemption, but the world has changed, and the people who did that are gone, and the current government is working to atone for its past stupidity. That is the kind of action I want to see for past misdeeds, not denials and coverup and related silliness, and certainly not continuing the misdeeds, perhaps under cover of corporations instead of direct government action. /naive imperialistic aggressor

      --
      We emerge from our mother's womb an unformatted diskette; our culture formats us. - Douglas Coupland
  103. Just another information holder... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If he really believe in freedom of information he would be "holding yet more video". That makes him just another information power monger. I doubt there's really anything to fear from the US. If he has violated laws and is "in the land", then he has a problem. Other than that, he's free to do whatever he wants.

  104. yes, things change by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    progress is real

    slavery has been banished in the west, women's suffrage is the standard, etc

    meanwhile, if you believe progress is not real, then by your cynical ignorance you are part of the problem in this world: the acceptance of a vile status quo. that is the real value of your emtpy cynicism: you enable the people you hate, by abandoning the possibility that we cna overcome them. if, for example, gw bush is someone you hate, your attitude is "yeah but people like him in power is the way it's always been and always will be". therefore, YOU enable the next gw bush with your empty cynicism. you've abandoned your own conscience, you are a cowardly asshole

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:yes, things change by daem0n1x · · Score: 1

      Last time I checked, we were discussing the US' foreign policy, not slavery or women suffrage. You need to get your focus straight.

      You should be running for the Strawman Award, because you're shooting arguments in all directions, replying to them yourself like I did it, and then attacking me for it.

      I didn't support GWB, I think he's a retard and I hate his guts. It's you the Americans that elected that twat twice (!?!?!). And now are failing to support your current president to make the changes you elected him for, because the bullshit right-wing propaganda appeals better to your basic, selfish instincts.

      And don't go using childish insults on me, it only shows how week your argumentation is.

  105. you're changing what you said by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    either progress is real or it is not

    if you believe progress is real in this world, then we have no argument. however, you are no aid to progress in the world if you simply retire to your ivory tower and declare everyone beneath your high holy standards. furthermore, i never implied any acceptance of a status quo: somewhere between believing in no progress and believing in impossible progress is REALISM, which is the point i am criticizing you from

    REALISTIC standards of progress are the only thing that matters. any fool can declare a list of golden standards. a kindergartener can say "war is stupid, no one should fight." yeah, ok. and? fucking pointless

    any one who wants to make a difference in this world involves themselves with genuine deliverables, actual reduction in the kind of suffering and menace we see today according to an intelligent understanding of how to do those modest goals. and thus, progress actually occurs

    not some retarded declaration that the state of the world and the countries in it is bad, and therefore i'm retiring from it all because it's all so difficult and beneath me and it gives me a headache. pffffffft. sorry your high holiness, that the world is ugly. you're such a great help, really (not)

    get out of your ivory tower, and get in the mud, and struggle with the rest of us. or shut up, as your pronouncements from on yonder high about how we haven't met lofty idealistic goals is of no use to anyone

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:you're changing what you said by RabidMonkey · · Score: 1

      Again with the personal attacks. While I enjoy a spirited discussion, there is no need for that.

      You know nothing about me to judge me, and we will leave it at that.

      Cheers

      --
      We emerge from our mother's womb an unformatted diskette; our culture formats us. - Douglas Coupland
  106. I thought... by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1

    ... that the current way of thinking is that if you've nothing to hide, you've nothing to worry about. What are they so worried about, that they're trying to keep hidden?

    Also see Eric Schmidt, and "If you have something that you don't want anyone to know, maybe you shouldn't be doing it in the first place" - I think this applies nicely here.

  107. He'll end up dead by dpastern · · Score: 1

    The US will do the same that Israel did several months ago...an illegal execution...

    Dave

    --
    Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter. --Martin Luther King Jr.
  108. if there is no judgment by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    there is no jeopardy

    if there is no jeopardy, there is no passion

    if there is no passion, what's the fucking point?

    lock yourself in your ivory tower, look down your nose at us struggling in the mud, and shut up

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  109. Hmmm, the /. crew completely misses a major point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This happened on Obama's watch, well after he was in control and had had two meetings with his military leaders...If this had occurred under Bush's watch that'd be the first, and only, story that would be getting coverage. Europe's giving Obama the finger on his short-sided, unsupported, economic requests and this just adds to the already present evidence that the military not only doesn't trust him but is willing to speak out about his incompetence...

  110. And that is the problem. by elucido · · Score: 1

    And there is a good reason why it is impossible to find strong leaders. The moment anybody has leadership potential arises, a team of very experienced investigators begin to investigate this individual to find something on them. Given enough time (years), it's highly probable that the individual being investigated will say or do something stupid and thats it, they are permanently compromised. They might go on to become a congressman, a senator, a President, and when they do somebody will have something from their past from which to blackmail them with.

    Everybody eventually makes a mistake and even if you don't make a mistake, they can frame you up and make it look like you did. The media has so much control over how situations are perceived that you don't have to do anything wrong or be guilty of anything, you just have to look bad or look like you did something wrong. This is the problem with politics.

    The problem isn't so much that we can't find people with the right nature to do the job, it's that the people with the right nature to not be corrupted by power will also have the nature to be corrupted in other ways. If you have the wrong kind of sex, if you have the wrong kind of thoughts or opinions, if you used the wrong kind of drugs, if you LOOK like a criminal (anybody can be made to look like one), if you aren't normal in every sense of the word you probably wont make it as a politician and that is the problem.

    We expect the best politicians to look, think, act normal. We expect them all to come from perfect backrounds. We have this media image of politicians as being boycout leaders who live the perfect life and go to the best schools before running for office. Maybe the best politicians don't all come from the same backround?

    If the goal were simply to find the individuals least likely to be corrupted, they could find that. They are looking for people from a specific backround, with a clean image, (like Barack Obama). But in order to make it or survive in some of these backrounds sometimes compromising is the best way to get things done. At this point politicians are basically like artists, actors, actresses, they have a little bit of actual power but the special interest groups and individuals operating in the shadows have so much on them that their power is very limited.

    The politician can be influenced in so many ways that we've never had a politician free from the influence of different special interest groups. If you are a career politician the key to getting re-elected is compromise.