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Wikileaks Donations Account Shut Down

Scrameustache writes "The whistleblowing group WikiLeaks claims that it has had its funding blocked and that it is the victim of financial warfare by the US government. Moneybookers, a British-registered internet payment company that collects WikiLeaks donations, emailed the organisation to say it had closed down its account because it had been put on an official US watchlist and on an Australian government blacklist. The apparent blacklisting came a few days after the Pentagon publicly expressed its anger at WikiLeaks and its founder, Australian citizen Julian Assange, for obtaining thousands of classified military documents about the war in Afghanistan."

725 comments

  1. Uh by copponex · · Score: 4, Insightful

    At this point, is US government hatred of freedom and democracy even news?

    1. Re:Uh by vvaduva · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Making enemies faster than they can kill them...

    2. Re:Uh by silanea · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It is, when it involves them meddling in foreigners' affairs. What the USA do within their borders is largely between the government and the electorate. But this stinks a mile high.

      --
      Rudolf Hess edited Mein Kampf. He was the very first grammar nazi.
    3. Re:Uh by Sponge+Bath · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That's a little over the top. There are people in high places who are doing what they think necessary to accomplish their mission. They may be wrong. Their actions may not be lawful. But I don't see the entirety of the US government sitting around thinking of how much they hate freedom and democracy and conspiring ways to end it. If you want to correct a problem it helps to have a reasoned view of what motivates the participants.

    4. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seems odd to me that my government doesn't like the voting citizens to know the truth.

      If voters don't know the truth, how can we vote intelligently? Or do we just take the official PR at its word, and pretend it's truth?

      What model government do we have?

    5. Re:Uh by ffreeloader · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      You're assertions are out of line. Assange put many people at risk of death, including citizens of Afghanistan, by publishing documents without even removing information that personally identifies civilians that terrorists would love to get their hands on. That ought to outrage everyone, including his supporters, as he has no sense of the worth of a human life.

      He's an asshat. He proved he's only out for self-glorification, and doesn't give a damn how many people are hurt by his actions. I sure won't shed any tears of the demise of Wikileaks as long as he's at the head of it. Even many of those working with him on Wikileaks resigned rather put up with him.

      I would do the same thing the US government did to shut him down. He's a egomaniac that puts innocents in harms way just so he can attack his perceived enemies faster. He could have delayed publishing the documents but he wouldn't as he runs off of hatred, not principle. He's no one to follow or support in any way.

      --
      "while democracy seeks equality in liberty, socialism seeks equality in restraint and servitude." de Tocqueville
    6. Re:Uh by DarkofPeace · · Score: 1

      Making enemies faster than they are killing them. Fixed that for you

    7. Re:Uh by chrisj_0 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      voters are stupid and must be told how to vote. At least I think that's what they believe

    8. Re:Uh by GrumblyStuff · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'm guessing you haven't been to the airport since late 2001 or so.

    9. Re:Uh by TFAFalcon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well in some ways those civilians could be though of as collaborators with the invading army.

    10. Re:Uh by socceroos · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      When that motivation is blind power, you've got to ask the questions.

    11. Re:Uh by binarylarry · · Score: 0, Troll

      Well to be fair, Julian Assange is a massive douche mark.

      --
      Mod me down, my New Earth Global Warmingist friends!
    12. Re:Uh by GrumblyStuff · · Score: 2, Interesting

      puts innocents in harms way

      Meanwhile, we still have troops in Iraq and Afghanistan....

    13. Re:Uh by CohibaVancouver · · Score: 0, Troll

      Imagine you're an undercover cop infiltrating organized crime and wikileaks 'released' a confidential doc that included your picture, your name, your wife and children's name and your address. Now how would you feel? There's a reason some stuff is secret - It's because some asshat morons can't be trusted. Are some things secret that shouldn't be? Absolutely. Are some things secret for a reason? Also absolutely.

    14. Re:Uh by flyneye · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Not real sure freedom and democracy can coexist with any success.
      We know the government seeks power through enslavement by program.
      So we can be sure then that they hate freedom. As near as I can tell they are trying to infect other countries with this democracy virus, tho.
      I believe the government has hated freedom since the Wilson administration, certainly since Roosevelt.
      It's O.K. to say we are a Republic not a Demockrasy. Hillary isn't listening.

      --
      *Repent!Quit Your Job!Slack Off!The World Ends Tomorrow and You May Die!
    15. Re:Uh by copponex · · Score: 5, Insightful

      But I don't see the entirety of the US government sitting around thinking of how much they hate freedom and democracy and conspiring ways to end it.

      "I don't see why we need to stand by and watch a country go communist due to the irresponsibility of its own people. The issues are much too important for the Chilean voters to be left to decide for themselves." -Henry Kissinger

      CIA intervention for regime change:

      1953 Iran
      1954 Guatemala
      1959 Cuba
      1960 Democratic Republic of the Congo
      1963 Iraq
      1964 Brazil
      1966 Republic of Ghana
      1968 Iraq
      1973 Afghanistan
      1973 Iraq
      1976 Argentina
      1978 Afghanistan
      1980 Iran
      1980 El Salvador
      1980 Cambodia
      1980 Angola
      1981 Nicaragua
      1986 Phillippines
      1992 Iraq
      1993 Guatemala

      That list will grow larger as more documents are declassified.

    16. Re:Uh by aaandre · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Imagine that you were just imagining that this might happen. Would you act on your imagination?

      Also imagine that your wife sleepwalked to the kitchen drawer, picked up an pair of scissors and stabbed you in the eye while you slept.

      Imagine your dog attacking you and killing you in front of your children.

      I suggest you first take care of the clear and imminent danger presented by your wife and dog and maybe then consider wikileaks.

      Still not convinced?

      SUDO imagine you have a wife and a dog...

    17. Re:Uh by blair1q · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Assange, and the people he convinces to give him the information, are the ones who don't see the danger in what they're doing.

      All they see is a heroic fantasy.

      They certainly don't see that there's a legal avenue to attain their goals and punish people who classify information illegally.

      It won't be as glorious, but then, it won't get you jailed or hounded into a cave in Sweden, either.

    18. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Let's be clear about this. America in all it's forms is an empire. They can dress it up and use the word 'democracy' all they want but in the end their plutocratic and hegemonic tendencies always shine through. America's ultimate goal is to control the world for the benefit of it's rich elite. Any evidence that shows this to the American people frightens the elite and all efforts - legal or illegal - will be used to stop it.

      I realise this statement may be overused and has become abstract but; America is one step away from becoming a fascist state.

    19. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But I don't see the entirety of the US government sitting around thinking of how much they hate freedom and democracy and conspiring ways to end it

      Completely agree with you. The destruction of freedom and democracy is almost certain not intentional, it's just a side effect of so much of the political process being corrupted by unadulterated greed.

      There are people in high places who are doing what they think necessary to accomplish their mission

      See above.

    20. Re:Uh by JustOK · · Score: 1

      currently modded (Score:0, Troll)
      hehehe

      who's side are the mods on?
      who will win in the end?

      --
      rewriting history since 2109
    21. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree with you, but I'd like to see citations please. Preferably ones from sites that aren't listed as Left or Right, please.

    22. Re:Uh by copponex · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yes, let's not reform the unconstitutional secret police who roam the earth assassinating people without trials, or torture people in secret prisons. Let's blame the people who talk about the secret police.

      Assange is not ratting out FBI informants working in America. He's ratting out American atrocities in foreign lands. There is a huge difference.

    23. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I realise this statement may be overused and has become abstract but; America is a fascist state.

      FTFY.

    24. Re:Uh by geoskd · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That's a little over the top. There are people in high places who are doing what they think necessary to accomplish their mission. They may be wrong. Their actions may not be lawful. But I don't see the entirety of the US government sitting around thinking of how much they hate freedom and democracy and conspiring ways to end it. If you want to correct a problem it helps to have a reasoned view of what motivates the participants.

      The greatest danger to democracy and freedom is not the machinations of evil masterminds, but the meddling of well meaning idiots.

      -=Geoskd

      --
      I wish I had a good sig, but all the good ones are copyrighted
    25. Re:Uh by MRe_nl · · Score: 1

      This is in no way a troll. It's a reasonably stated opinion you may or may not agree with.

      --
      "Kill 'em all and let Root sort 'em out"
    26. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So far I've only heard of them killing the innocent people, not any of there actual enemies.

    27. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      then would it not stand to reason that those same organizations should inspire that kind of loyalty to their group and its secrets? Nowadays, it seems like everything comes down to 'asshats'. You know, instead of understanding why it is that these secrets become public or that there is 'sudden' discourse with an employee. Hint: Want your troops/employees to stay loyal? Maybe stop shafting them at every opportunity. Stop doing bad things that the employees feel dirty about backing you on.

    28. Re:Uh by MRe_nl · · Score: 5, Funny

      Well to be fair, everybody is a massive douche, save you and me, and even thou art a bit of a douche.

      --
      "Kill 'em all and let Root sort 'em out"
    29. Re:Uh by geminidomino · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And massive douche marks don't deserve any rights, especially when they have the nerve to not be born into the American Regime.

      Preach it!

    30. Re:Uh by Abcd1234 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Imagine that you were just imagining that this might happen.

      This *did* happen, you ignorant fucktard. This isn't just some made up hypothetical rhetoric, it's reality. Informants in Afghanistan were outed because of Wikileaks' irresponsible behaviour.

    31. Re:Uh by Killall+-9+Bash · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I've never heard a good explanation of WHAT, exactly, is contained in these documents that's going to get people killed.

      --
      "Prediction: within 10 years, Windows will be a Linux distribution." Me, 7-6-2016
    32. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Would the Wikileaks people actually redact personally identifying information if lives were in danger? Absolutely.

    33. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Wasn't there some hoohah about someone in the US government releasing details concerning an active undercover agent? What's good for the goose and all that.

    34. Re:Uh by idealego · · Score: 3, Informative

      That sort of information is redacted by Wikileaks. This is the main reason it takes them so long to release information after it has been given to them.

    35. Re:Uh by meerling · · Score: 1

      That's the problem, they don't think...

    36. Re:Uh by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Imagine you're an undercover cop infiltrating organized crime and wikileaks 'released' a confidential doc that included your picture, your name, your wife and children's name and your address. Now how would you feel?

      Imagine Assange raped the cop, while you're at it.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    37. Re:Uh by techno-vampire · · Score: 4, Informative

      AIUI, those documents contain the names of people in Afghanistan who are giving information to the US. Publishing the documents without redacting the names tells the Taliban exactly who to kill. Does that answer your question?

      --
      Good, inexpensive web hosting
    38. Re:Uh by insufflate10mg · · Score: 0, Troll

      I'm guessing you weren't on AA Flight 11 nine or so years ago.

    39. Re:Uh by TFAFalcon · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Who was the last person to be adequately punished for classifying something inappropriately?

    40. Re:Uh by dynamo · · Score: 1

      Thanks, I was trying to find the right way to word it, yours was precise.

    41. Re:Uh by jaxtherat · · Score: 1

      You know, if you just replace 'Assange' with 'The US government', and the 'publishing documents' bit with 'invade and occupy Afghanistan and Iraq' you whole statement still makes perfect sense and is still true?

      Food for though, certainly.

      --
      http://www.zombieapocalypse.tv/
    42. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your letting imagination get the better of you. That isn't what happened and you know it.

    43. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's the problem, they don't even think about it. They don't even realize how so much of what they do directly opposes the tenants of freedom and democracy. Those in power are always inclined to serve their needs and ego's, with little or no regard to the good of the people. They like to poise their actions under the guise of "for the good of the people", when in reality they are taking away liberty and freedom instead of protecting it.

    44. Re:Uh by insufflate10mg · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Let's be clear about this. America in all it's forms is an empire. They can dress it up and use the word 'democracy' all they want but in the end their plutocratic and hegemonic tendencies always shine through. ... America is one step away from becoming a fascist state.

      ...except for the little-known fact that every single legislator and President (who chooses the Supreme Court) is elected by the citizens -- with no exceptions. If you grabbed every single person who doesn't vote and convinced them to get off their ass and vote for inherently good candidates there would be no problems. Unless you believe that then some secret evil force would rise up, kill everyone who was elected, declare martial law, and end voting, at which point the people would no longer be responsible for the government's problems.

    45. Re:Uh by icebraining · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "Of all tyrannies a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good
      of its victim may be the most oppressive. It may be better to live
      under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies.
      The robber baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may
      at some point be satiated, but those who torment us for our own good
      will torment us without end for they do so with the approval
      of their own conscience."

      - C.S. Lewis

    46. Re:Uh by TFAFalcon · · Score: 1

      Now imagine you're not a cop but an intelligence agent, and your goal is to gather information that will cause the death of as many of your enemies as possible. You also know that your superiors don't have any qualms about 'collateral' damage, such as the families of the targets you identify. Why should the world protect you and your family from retribution? (your side should protect your of course, but don't try to make it a moral imperative for other parties)

    47. Re:Uh by blair1q · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Couldn't tell you. Probably because when confronted they go "oops" and hand the information over to the people who have the authority to review the information for declassification, and it gets declassified.

      All the more reason to believe that the people who stole and released the information didn't even try to do the right thing.

    48. Re:Uh by icebraining · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I actually agree with the first part (and include myself in it), although I strongly disagree with the second.

    49. Re:Uh by TFAFalcon · · Score: 1

      There is a difference between the actions of a government official, trying to embarrass an individual, and a private citizen trying to embarrass a major government, even if they both do it by divulging state secrets.

       

    50. Re:Uh by toastar · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Well Duh, If you kill all your enemies you can't justify continuing the eternal war

    51. Re:Uh by scot4875 · · Score: 1

      Not to make any assumptions about your beliefs here, but my main problem with this whole stink raised by the military over "protecting our operatives" -- and particularly by the conservative backlash against this -- is that nobody seemed to mind one bit when it was a white house leak over the whole Valerie Plame affair.

      Yes, care should be taken to protect people's lives. Some of the leaked information should have been redacted. But all of the people who immediately jump to bashing Wikileaks and, particularly, making personal attacks against Assange, aren't really doing anyone any favors either.

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    52. Re:Uh by TheCarp · · Score: 5, Insightful

      A perfect example of an event so rare that it should never be used as a reason for a policy. Terrorist acts are just not that hard. Highway deaths are the equivalent of a 9/11 every few months. Random chance is better at killing people here than terrorists are. Anyone quaking in their boots over it still is a fucking moron.

      That shouldn't have resulted in a single change of policy. Not the creation of the TSA or DHS. Not the PATRIOT act... nothing. It was a single event with no follow up by a pissant organization that never had any hope of doing us any real damage without us helping them along by spending billions of our own dollars.

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    53. Re:Uh by Ihmhi · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Agreed, but even the shit we know about - Korea, Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan, Iraq AGAIN, Iran Contra, Panama, etc. is more than enough fuckups. The GP's is just a more comprehensive list.

    54. Re:Uh by lennier · · Score: 1

      Are some things secret that shouldn't be? Absolutely. Are some things secret for a reason? Also absolutely.

      Are some of those things the same things? Also also absolutely.

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
    55. Re:Uh by TheCarp · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Actually, I see more danger in not having people like them. Some of the stuff that they have released, like "Collateral Murder" are things that never should have been kept from the public. Its one thing to keep data secret about troop movements to keep troops safe... its another when the idea is just to "protect our reputation". Its entirely right that people see the realities of war... so we can be reminded why we shouldn't EVER have one.

      Personally, I feel bad that I never donated to them when I had the chance. I will gladly send them some cash when they get something set up again. I would rather them have my money than the people running these horrid wars that never should have been started. Its good to see them exposing what a crime war is.

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    56. Re:Uh by TFAFalcon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Or the people who review the information just rubber stamp the classification. The documents then sit in a filing cabinet somewhere, until they are 'lost', just before they were supposed to become public.

    57. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ahem, if wikileaks can get hold of an undercover list of cops do you think organised crime is in the dark on that? I seriously doubt it. The fact that wikileaks CAN get the information is seriously a gross misconduct on those that are keeping "secrets" to begin with...

    58. Re:Uh by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      It doesn't really outrage me...let me tell you why.

      I put myself in the shoes of an Afghani. I imagine that my country had been invaded by foreign troops. Then I imagine that those troops told me they were setting up my new government.

      Then I imagine that someone released the names of the sympathizers and collaborators who were betraying me by working with the foreign invaders, how sad for them would I be?

      They decided to work with the occupation force, they get what they get for that. Its a risky thing to do, as it should be.

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    59. Re:Uh by mSparks43 · · Score: 1

      It's only news because some asshat leaked it.
      These days we don't get much "news" we're stuck mostly with "press releases".

    60. Re:Uh by wierd_w · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Let's think about this..

      US government officals are angry that Wikileaks is revealing their secret abuses of power.

      So, they respond by publicly abusing thier power, where everyone can see, Because "Darn it, We just CANT let people know what we are REALLY doing here!"

      I am at a complete loss for words.

      The absurdity of the whole thing is staggering.

    61. Re:Uh by Thruen · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I think there was an exception, fairly recently...

    62. Re:Uh by lgw · · Score: 1

      Wasn't there some hoohah about someone in the US government releasing details concerning an active undercover agent? What's good for the goose and all that

      Not if you're talking about that Valerie chic - she was never "undercover". She was always on "official cover", which is the exact opposite of a "secret agent". (The way the CIA works, if you've ever set foot in a US Embassy, you can never do undercover work.)

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    63. Re:Uh by wierd_w · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Nevermind the actual purpose of terrorism;

      Terrorism uses "Terror" to "Illicit changes".

      The creation of the patriot act, and associated bundle of dung due to a terrorist act is exactly the kind of thing that terrorists want; to disrupt ordinary life after the fact.

      The best way to combat terrorism, is to not react with terror.

    64. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      At this point, is US government hatred of freedom and democracy even news?

      not really, but when a foreigner becomes deluded enough into thinking that US laws protect his inalienable right to screw around with aforementioned government, he should hope it becomes really big news, in order let's say to prevent him from disappearing into a quantum black hole.?
      Screwing around with the IRS and the FDA is sport, screwing with the state department is quite an undertaking. I wish this valiant well. Unfortunately there are inherent consequences to every decision. He may not have intended to make enemies while smugly choosing to denude confidentiality - He was under no obligation. But he did, and he has discovered a formidable foe.

    65. Re:Uh by Liquidrage · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I thought it said "watchlist" by the US Government, and "blacklisted" by Australia? But of course your post is all about the US.

      Shouldn't the US Government put an organization that strives to disclose classified information on a watchlist? I mean, it makes sense to me. You might agree with making the leaks, but divulging someone's secrets isn't trying to make friends.

    66. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've never heard a good explanation of WHAT, exactly, is contained in these documents that's going to get people killed.

      As the Afghan Independent Human rights Commission (AIHRC) stated in a complaint about the release - the concern is about the names. When someone informs about people placing IED's then Wikileaks lists their name it doesn't bode well for their continued health.

    67. Re:Uh by mangu · · Score: 1, Interesting

      You forgot:

      1962 Uganda
      1964 Bolivia
      1965 Rhodesia
      1967 Greece
      1967 Bolivia
      1971 Uganda
      1971 Bolivia
      1973 Chile
      1974 Portugal
      1975 Angola
      1975 Mozambique
      1979 Uganda
      1980 Bolivia
      1980 Zimbabwe
      1983 Grenada
      1985 Uganda
      1989 Panama
      1989 Poland
      1989 Czechoslovakia
      1989 Bulgaria
      1989 Romania
      1989 Yugoslavia
      1992 Albania
      1992 Peru
      1994 South Africa

      After all, there's no doubt that any regime change anywhere in the world was sponsored by the CIA, right?

    68. Re:Uh by Rakshasa+Taisab · · Score: 4, Informative

      There was no names nor pictures leaked... WikiLeaks actually went through the reports as best they could to censor that kind of information.

      But go ahead, troll harder for the great of America.

      --
      - These characters were randomly selected.
    69. Re:Uh by fyngyrz · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'm guessing you weren't on AA Flight 11 nine or so years ago.

      The correct solution to that was to harden the cockpits. The incorrect solution was to spend a trillion dollars crushing the rights of US citizens, and another trillion dollars attacking two countries that had no nationals involved in the attack. Two trillion. So far. While our economy is in trouble.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    70. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      you claim that there's an unconstitutional secret police. Please cite your sources - who are these mythical people, what section of the constitution are they violating, and what legal precedent supports your argument? Or is the standard /. strawman bullshit?

    71. Re:Uh by Bigjeff5 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      For Christ's sake all the US Govt did was put him on a watch list, which is entirely understandable, given the fact that he facilitated the theft of a large number of confidential military documents.

      It was a private company that decided they no longer wanted to do business with his company, probably because they did not want to be involved if the US Govt ever did decide to go ape-shit on Wikileaks.

      Sorry I forgot, Slashdot only likes individual rights when the individual is an underdog. Fuck the right to choose not to do business with someone you don't approve of, am I right Slashdot?

      --
      Security is mostly a superstition... Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. - Helen Keller
    72. Re:Uh by Liquidrage · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Korea and Vietnam were not fuckups. You think South Korea is unhappy the North was kept out? Vietnam was a shitty war, but it was much like Korea only the South fell. Not everyone was happy with the Soviet's expanding influence. It really was a battle of "ok" vs "pretty freaking bad". It's been 20 years now since the Berlin Wall fell, but I think too many people today are forgetting that the Red Scare was real. Now, there were certainly overreactions by the US. And playing "enemy of my enemy" is not a nice game to play, though in some cases I think it was justified. But in the end Soviet style communism was spreading not through want of the people but through force and false promises of pretty brutal governments.

    73. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Cry me a fucking river.

      We don't belong in Afghanistan.

    74. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How would I feel? Pissed! Absolutely! At the people that left the information vulnerable! And questioning myself and my mission. Afterall, if they are so reckless and incompetent with my security, what can I expect from the decision making process that put me in this position?

    75. Re:Uh by Espressor · · Score: 1

      If only I had mod points to mod you and GP up.

    76. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who they are is enough.

    77. Re:Uh by Liquidrage · · Score: 1

      From wiki:
      "Fascism (pronounced /fæzm/) is a radical and authoritarian nationalist political ideology.[1][2][3][4] Fascists seek to organize a nation according to corporatist perspectives, values, and systems, including the political system and the economy.[5][6] Fascism was originally founded by Italian national syndicalists in World War I who combined left-wing and right-wing political views, but it gravitated to the political right in the early 1920s.[7][8] Scholars generally consider fascism to be on the far right of the conventional left-right political spectrum.[9][10][11][12][13][14] Fascists believe that a nation is an organic community that requires strong leadership, singular collective identity, and the will and ability to commit violence and wage war in order to keep the nation strong.[15] They claim that culture is created by the collective national society and its state, that cultural ideas are what give individuals identity, and thus they reject individualism.[15] Viewing the nation as an integrated collective community, they see pluralism as a dysfunctional aspect of society, and justify a totalitarian state as a means to represent the nation in its entirety.[16][17] They advocate the creation of a single-party state.[18] Fascists reject and resist the autonomy of cultural or ethnic groups who are not considered part of the fascists' nation and who refuse to assimilate or are unable to be assimilated.[19] They consider attempts to create such autonomy as an affront and a threat to the nation.[19] Fascist governments forbid and suppress opposition to the fascist state and the fascist movement.[20] They identify violence and war as actions that create national regeneration, spirit and vitality.[21]

      America isn't even close to fascist. America is like most advanced nations, just with more global influence. People love to kick America right now, it's just the "in" thing to do. You know Italy was fascist for a while, right? Would you like to compare the two? Maybe if the tea-party takes control and the rest of us moved to Canada you'd have a point.

    78. Re:Uh by caerwyn · · Score: 1

      Vietnam was definitely a fuckup. Barbara Tuchman does a great look into how the US government managed to get more and more deeply mired in something that even people at the moment knew was stupid- and yet did anyway; see _The March of Folly_ (Vietnam is the third major section of the book).

      (Barbara Tuchman was a multiple-Pulitzer prize winning author who also wrote such classics as _The Guns of August_; I'm not suggesting any partisan hackery here).

      --
      The ringing of the division bell has begun... -PF
    79. Re:Uh by AHuxley · · Score: 1

      Dont forget 1965 Indonesia and the US 5,000 name embassy list.
      As killed or captured U.S. officials crossed off the names.

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
    80. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also

      1965 Dominican Republic

    81. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think you mean the right to choose not to do business with someone that a third party doesn't approve of. A third party which can have you and your whole family assassinated, not really even bother to hide it (although not actually admitting it publicly) and not only get away with it, but have millions of apologists like you, Bigjeff5, appear to be who will cheer and argue about what a good thing it was and about how any innocent family members, neighbors or bystanders killed in the process were victims of the assassinated rather than the assassins because the assassinated were using them as "human shields". Some of us think that the free exercise of "the right to do business with someone you don't approve of" requires that you actually get to choose who you don't approve of rather than having extremely powerful entities tell you who you shouldn't approve of by use of punitive measures. Also, please, if you can rationally deny that being put on a US government watch list is a punitive measure then I would, by all means, love to hear the logic behind the denial.

    82. Re:Uh by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      For the love of god mod parent up.

    83. Re:Uh by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      Well in some ways those civilians could be though of as collaborators with the invading army.

      Of course. Just like the French Resistance did in WW2. What was your point, exactly?

    84. Re:Uh by biryokumaru · · Score: 3, Informative

      e-lic-it/i`lisit/Verb

      1. Evoke or draw out (a response or fact) from someone by actions or questions: "their moves elicit exclamations of approval".

      2. Draw forth (something that is latent or potential) into existence: "war elicits all that is bad in us".

      il-lic-it/i`lisit/

      Adjective: Forbidden by law, rules, or custom: "illicit drugs"; "illicit sex".

      --
      When you're afraid to download music illegally in your own home, then the terrorists have won!
    85. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yea. If he was ratting out American atrocities within the US, he'd simply be labeled a political commentator.

      All US foreign operations are supposed to be hush hush. International treaties and boundaries are irrelevant at this point. The fact that we still have to go through some sort of check at the borders and airports is just an illusionary annoyance. They actually serve no purpose other than to slow people down.

    86. Re:Uh by Scrameustache · · Score: 5, Informative

      For Christ's sake all the US Govt did was put him on a watch list

      No, the LATEST thing the US did was put them on watchlists, causing them to lose access to their money. It's not the only thing they've done.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    87. Re:Uh by Larryish · · Score: 1

      Their really teaching you good, are'nt they?

      Maybe there teachers.

      They're needs to be a new mod: +1 Educational

    88. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative
    89. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Hardening the cockpits is one part of the correct solution. Possibly also training pilots not to negotiate with terrorists, even ones with hostages, since they apparently got into the cockpit of one of the planes by threatening to slit a flight attendants throat. The most important part of the correct solution though was to stop driving into the publics collective heads that if there's a hijacking that they shouldn't "try to be a hero". That was the security mantra before: "don't be a hero". The correct thing to do in a hijacking was always to sit tight, comply with the hijackers demands and try not to make waves. Anyone who tried to resist was an idiot who would just get themselves and others killed. You had to just sit tight and wait for the trained professionals to take care of the problem. Just look at movies about the topic. _Passenger 57_ springs to mind. There was one guy in it who tried to be a hero and grab one of the hijackers guns and just got bashed in the face for his efforts. What a fool, he should have just waited for the professional counter-terrorist to come and save him. If the 9/11 hijacking had taken place today, rather than 9 years ago, then probably, at the worst, all four planes would have ended up like flight 93. Combine a hardened cockpit with todays passengers and the captain would just have to announce over the intercom that hijackers are trying to break into the cockpit and a human swarm would take them down.

    90. Re:Uh by socceroos · · Score: 0, Redundant

      They certainly don't see that there's a legal avenue to attain their goals and punish people who classify information illegally.

      I think you're being naive.

    91. Re:Uh by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      I've never heard a good explanation of WHAT, exactly, is contained in these documents that's going to get people killed.

      Wikileaks held back 15000 pages because they contained details, such as names of collaborators, that could be misused to harm innocent people. The pentagon has been cynically accusing them of not doing that, and their propaganda machine is well-oiled.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    92. Re:Uh by blair1q · · Score: 1

      So you go back a while later and ask if the information you asked to be declassified was, and if not, why not. Since you had a valid cause in the first place, you have a valid cause the second time, and if the information is still classified you then have cause to start proceedings against the people covering it up.

      But really, this isn't going to happen. The apparatus knows about this sort of thing and has watchers watching the watchers. The only time it really gets out of hand is situations like the Bush administration, where the bullshit was flying so fast there was no way to get any of it dealt with. Which is why you had a guy like Colin Powell, of all people, helping a dry-drunk (W) and a cro-magnon (Cheney) and a vampire (Rumsfeld) lie to start an unnecessary war.

    93. Re:Uh by HungryHobo · · Score: 2, Interesting

      If they also put the new york times and the guardian newspapers on that same watchlist, sure.

      And any other half decent newspapers too.

    94. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Can you show us a report about someone getting killed as a result of the released documents?

      If the documents tell the Taliban exactly who to kill, they will have done it by now.

      If such a killing has taken place it will have been reported as it would make a pretty compelling article/news item.

      I'm sure the US military would be pretty motivated to ensure such a killing was reported widely.

    95. Re:Uh by Iamthecheese · · Score: 1

      From the drug war to unconstitutional searches inside our border by border agents to the President's body guards clearing away protesters they don't want on TV to "free speech" zones there are so many, many unconstitutional actions by police that to say it's a straw man is only to expose yourself as ignorant. No they're not "secret police" but with judge signed gag orders, no knock warrants based on anonymous tips, de facto punishment by rapings and beatings, and so forth the oppressometer is getting damned high these days and none of it is blessed by the constitution

      --
      If video games influenced behavior the Pac Man generation would be eating pills and running away from their problems.
    96. Re:Uh by HungryHobo · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Again and again and again I hear this claim.
      The only concrete example I've ever seen was one local warlord who was named and later killed.

      of course lots of people were being executed before that because of rumors of being informants, and people were killed after that over rumors of being informants.
      The taliban don't really care about being accurate.
      They're happy to kill anyone as long as it send the message "don't collaborate with the americans"

    97. Re:Uh by nacturation · · Score: 0

      For Christ's sake all the US Govt did was put him on a watch list

      No, the LATEST thing the US did was put them on watchlists, causing them to lose access to their money. It's not the only thing they've done.

      This is much the same way that spam blacklists work. Someone who runs the list puts an IP address on it for whatever reason. Others choose to subscribe to the lists and use the list to filter connections to their email server. It's not the list operator's fault that your email doesn't go through. They're only publishing information.

      --
      Want to improve your Karma? Instead of "Post Anonymously", try the "Post Humously" option.
    98. Re:Uh by nacturation · · Score: 2, Funny

      e-lic-it/i`lisit/Verb
      il-lic-it/i`lisit/Adjective

      Cool. From now on everyone just use "ilisit" and the ambiguity will be sure to draw out the forbidden grammar Nazis.

      --
      Want to improve your Karma? Instead of "Post Anonymously", try the "Post Humously" option.
    99. Re:Uh by synthesizerpatel · · Score: 5, Informative

      Fact check:

      wikileaks did not facilitate the theft of a large number of confidential military documents.

      wikileaks facilitated the distribution of a large number of confidential military documents that had been stolen.

    100. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I realise this statement may be overused and has become abstract but; America is one step away from becoming a fascist state.

      Oh how I wish it was so. I could have a very satisfying job in the state security apparatus suppressing dissidents and extracting confessions from traitorous malcontents. One of my first projects would be tracking down and purging the vile denizens of Slashdot who have continually thumbed their noses at authority and grievously slandered the most glorious and righteous state.

    101. Re:Uh by nacturation · · Score: 1

      Don't forgot Poland.

      --
      Want to improve your Karma? Instead of "Post Anonymously", try the "Post Humously" option.
    102. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      company != individual.
      => company has no individual rights.

      It's a common fallacy, practised by many company owners, to confuse their own identity with their company's. The owner has the right not to deal with someone, in which case he should divest himself of ownership, or his company should divest itself of company status. Company status is a perk, delivered by society, which also comes with responsibilities.

    103. Re:Uh by satori+singularity · · Score: 1

      When you shift the blame from the American government to the private corporation that chose to lock his account...you are passing beyond naive into out right misleading. It akin to the following: If Fred threatens to beat Bob to a pulp if Bob ever makes spaghetti on a Tuesday...then someone comes along and says: "Bob of his own free will, chooses not to make spaghetti on Tuesdays." Economic intimidation is THE primary tool of power and control. How do you think the US is putting pressure on Iran? By threatening not to process any transacation of any banks to do business with Iran. Understand that the US is a complex machine and it produces a lot of bad. The American spirit as maintained by most sane Americans is one of humanities crowning achievements. Just read the declaration of independence. However, actions like these, are just what the American freed themselves from with independence. So we now have massive contradictions, that are weighing heavily on the American spirit. America believes in freedom of speech and the press. Even when that press paints you in a shitty light, you've got to keep that ideal as high as possible. America by taking extremely violent means (war) is creating more terror and terrorists in the world. Citizens need to know what their country is doing in their names. All Americans bear the responsibility of their governments actions...especially since it is a democracy. However, when the government suppresses and hides its actions from being known...you are just breaking what the American spirit is hoping for...a better world, peace, justice, etc... Thank god, there are people who read slashdot and learn and understand what is happening...so possibly we can start to create the world we all want to live in.

    104. Re:Uh by mysidia · · Score: 1

      The USG put them on their watchlist. Moneybookers, not the US gov't, closed the account. This is all on Moneybookers.

      Australia blacklists about anything that moves

    105. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, what an incredibly douchey thing to say!

    106. Re:Uh by mysidia · · Score: 2, Insightful

      In this case however, it's as if all the big ISPs and mail providers implement the RBLS.

      And the RBLs don't have any firm listing policies that are agreed upon by everyone, that warrant blackholing.

      The RBLs list entities suspected of a crime like semding span, the accepted use.

      However, later on, after everyone's using it, they start listing some people that didn't send spam, but actually, it's in the interests of the RBL operator that they be listed. For example, perhaps they were found sending an opt-in newsletter that contained articles critical of the RBL, or revealed information leaked by an insider.

      Big ISPs implement the blocks indicated by RBL. Big ISPs shrug their shoulders, don't admit any responsibility due to what RBL listed.

      RBL when questioned shrugs their shoulders... "it's just a watch list" "we don't force anyone to block what we list"

    107. Re:Uh by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      That's going a little far. Yes, there was an overreaction to the terrorism, but certain acts of terrorism are avoidable in certain cases. They really should make sure that they tighten up security in some areas and get some education in place. The problem is not that they made laws or took action, its that they overreacted and decided to come out with regulations for nothing more than security theater purposes.

    108. Re:Uh by Maestro4k · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      il-lic-it/i`lisit/

      Adjective: Forbidden by law, rules, or custom: "illicit drugs"; "illicit sex".

      Many of us consider the changes made by the PATRIOT act and others to be pretty damn illicit. We've almost to the point where you have to show papers to travel by air inside the country for example, and how many times have we heard that audits show the FBI has abused the national security letters powers the PATRIOT act gave them? Since 9/11 it's become very common practice by law enforcement at all levels to use "combating terrorism" as an excuse to restrain civil liberties. Check out Carlos Miller's Photography is not a Crime blog for lots and lots of examples of that. These are things that are most definitely forbidden by custom, some of them by the law. So yeah, typo on the poster's fault, but sadly, it still works. Al Queda used terror to get the US government to introduce lots of illicit changes to the country.

    109. Re:Uh by gizmonic · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Yeah, but the Patriot Act *was* an illicit change, so his spelling was correct, it was his grammar that was off. :)

      --
      WWJD?
      JWRTFM!
    110. Re:Uh by PRMan · · Score: 0, Troll

      I think Brazil turned out well...

      --
      Peter predicted that you would "deliberately forget" creation 2000 years ago...
    111. Re:Uh by acnicklas · · Score: 1

      Regardless of the reactions and if they're justified or not, good luck being the prez who says "Well, we've got a smoking hole in lower Manhattan, but we're not going to change a single thing. Nope, just going to keep it the way it is...."

    112. Re:Uh by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      Did C.S. Lewis really mean to describe the God he followed like that? It's the perfect fit for the God of the bible...

    113. Re:Uh by wmac · · Score: 1

      Is even this one new? US government is always meddling with foreign countries and foreigners. Just look how many wars are started or participated by the US. And calculate how many people have died in those wars.

      Then if you were interested, add up the wars being supported directly or by selling U.S. military equipment.

      uuuuuggg, I cannot continue.

    114. Re:Uh by Maestro4k · · Score: 1

      The taliban don't really care about being accurate. They're happy to kill anyone as long as it send the message "don't collaborate with the americans"

      I think it's more that they just want to kill people and don't give a damn what excuse they use. If it wasn't the US they'd find another reason to kill people.

    115. Re:Uh by wmac · · Score: 2

      ... that people possibly had the right to see and be aware of.

    116. Re:Uh by Totenglocke · · Score: 1

      But I don't see the entirety of the US government sitting around thinking of how much they hate freedom and democracy and conspiring ways to end it.

      I'm going to go out on a limb and guess that you're not a US citizen...

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    117. Re:Uh by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Knowingly receiving stolen property makes you accessory after the fact.

      I don't care what you think about the US or Wikileaks on this one, both are douche bags. Wikileaks is doubly so for whining about what is happening to it when it should have expected it all.

      Quit your bitchin' and find another source, I'm sure someone (Iran perhaps) would be willing to broker the payments for wikileaks, or even finance the whole thing.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    118. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe I'm wrong here, but how can you tell the difference between one smoking hole in Lower Manhattan and all the others? :D Last I heard they had lots of smoking holes cropping up with fireballs shooting out of them. This one just happened to be bigger. They should've just told everybody the planes were CG'd in, and it was really a ruptured gas main that took the building down. Then use it as an excuse to raise taxes to cover infrastructure upgrades, but instead earmark it for political meetings in Hawaii or somewhere :)

      Your government at work!

    119. Re:Uh by tsa · · Score: 1

      America, the land of the... Hm, of the... I just can't find the word.

      --

      -- Cheers!

    120. Re:Uh by aekafan · · Score: 1

      I keep hearing this claim. And I always say: Gives me names then. point me to where exactly in the documents he released these names are, then I will believe such a claim. Nobody has taken me up on that challenge yet

    121. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now, the million dollar question: Were there any informants actually named in the documents as published by Wikileaks?

    122. Re:Uh by Machtyn · · Score: 2, Informative

      True. However, these were documents that put a large number of other American and Australian (and probably British and other nationalities) peoples in danger. Whether you agree that Americans defending themselves against Muslim radicals is right or not, what wikileaks did was an act against the United States of America. The worst the USA did was put him on a watch list. Annoying, yes, but hardly the Russian tactic of poisoning you with radiation (Alexander Litvinenko) or throwing him and his wife (if he had one) into a forgotten political prison (Liu Xiaobo) (if he could be extradited).

    123. Re:Uh by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      nah, everyone thinks of themselves as the good guys so you can be sure they think it's for the greater good or the glory of god or some such.

    124. Re:Uh by lorenlal · · Score: 5, Insightful

      No. They put Moneybookers on the watch list. That's entirely understandable when you want to target their clientele for doing something that you don't like. Assange (I'm sure) has been on the watch list for a long time.

      The problem with being on that watch list is that it severely limits who you can do business with. No US government entity, contractor, or anyone wanting a govt contract will do business with you.

      That's why this is a severe douche maneuver by the US federal government. I understand trying to freeze the accounts of the people who are supporting terrorists and terror activities... But to use this as a tool to silence someone who is helping point out abuses and incompetence is abuse.

      BTW... I'm an American... and I'm ashamed. I'll continue to do what I can in the ballot and among those that will listen... But it's a nasty uphill battle against people who just don't give a damn.

    125. Re:Uh by lorenlal · · Score: 1

      Actually... Cockpit doors are now better reinforced because of how easy it was to access the cockpit. That wasn't a bad idea.

      Everything else? Crap, and theater.

    126. Re:Uh by copponex · · Score: 1

      You should probably read the Constitution.

      No Money shall be drawn from the Treasury, but in Consequence of Appropriations made by Law; and a regular Statement and Account of the Receipts and Expenditures of all public Money shall be published from time to time.

      Find me the receipts for all of the activity of the CIA, or you lose.

    127. Re:Uh by ushering05401 · · Score: 1

      Chile should be the only thing you need and he left it off the time-line after quoting about it. Check it out.

      You will learn all about the ending of several formerly influential companies and the founding of several new ones that are still around and apparently offering a Bing toolbar when you upgrade Java on Win now.

      The entire situation is well documented and it is no secret that the private sector companies in the U.S. tech industry facilitated the overthrow of a legitimately elected leader that was attempting to revolutionize the Chilean tech industry.

      Allende achieved something even the U.S. didn't have back then with his real time industrial reporting systems and we hated him for daring to move his country forward with communist assistance.

      Depending on how hot you get about these things you may just start hating a couple of contemporary industry figures and wondering how the U.S. populace hasn't burned Washington to the ground several times over since WWII ended.

    128. Re:Uh by nacturation · · Score: 1

      All very true, and the usual line from responsible admins is "Why are you doing that? You should only use it as one factor (eg: assign points in SpamAssassin) rather than blindly accepting/rejecting connections from email servers based only on the RBL." To use only a single list without any oversight, review, or means of appeal is being irresponsible.

      Of course, this is all moot if a payment processor must and without question blacklist anybody on the watchlist in order to do business with companies in the United States, for example. However, if the watchlist is only for advisory purposes only, then turn the heat up on the payment processor.

      --
      Want to improve your Karma? Instead of "Post Anonymously", try the "Post Humously" option.
    129. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OTOH Vietnamese today are better off (by a large margin) than North Koreans.

      Why? Because there's no perpetual NorthSouth conflict to build a perpetual dictatorship around. Vietnam was much more open to the west as a result.

      It is still an open question who are better off: Vietnamese or North+South Korea together.

    130. Re:Uh by formfeed · · Score: 1

      Sorry I forgot, Slashdot only likes individual rights when the individual is an underdog. Fuck the right to choose not to do business with someone you don't approve of, am I right Slashdot?

      Corporations aren't people. No matter what your supreme court tells you.

    131. Re:Uh by Grapplebeam · · Score: 1

      Obviously we need to get him to step down. Not because he's done anything wrong, but because too many people are going ad hominem and applying him to the rest of Wikileaks, which isn't too much of a stretch as he IS basically the face of Wikileaks. Whether or not he's actually done something bad as a person is irrelevant, as this issue is more important than he is.

      --
      There is no -1 Disagree.
    132. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The US's reaction to 3000 deaths in a single day.
      The US's reaction to Haiti.
      The US's reaction to over 300,000 deaths in a tsunami soon after 9/11.

      really? obviously one was facilitated by overzealous idiots, but if you think
      of the entirety of the world as one organism, so was the tsunami. How can
      you react any differently? It is still death and it is still bad, yet natural.
      The uproar over the terrorist attacks only helps fuel the cause and spread
      the fear and unease that goes with it.

      Treat all death the same, and you will experience a completely different world.
      Treat death as an insect you squash with your fist, and such matters become trivial things.

    133. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A perfect example of an event so rare that it should never be used as a reason for a policy. Terrorist acts are just not that hard. Highway deaths are the equivalent of a 9/11 every few months. [...]

      No. Highway deaths are the equivalent of a 9/11 every month:

      US motor vehicle deaths per year

      There were 33,808 highway motor vehicle deaths last year alone. In 2001 alone 42196 people died in road accidents. The 9/11 death toll was 2985.

      Since 9/11 more than 30 thousand americans died in highway motor vehicle accidents - the death toll of more than one hundred 9/11s.

      Money spent on the post-9/11 'war on terror': 3 trillion dollars and counting.

      Money spent on the post-9/11 'war on highway terror': less than 3 billion dollars and counting.

      So the US is spending 1000 times less on a mortal danger that has killed a hundred times more americans since 9/11 than it has spent on 9/11 itself. A 100,000x factor of spending disconnect.

      In light of these numbers who is still of the opinion that the 'war on terror' is about our safety?

    134. Re:Uh by mallydobb · · Score: 2, Informative

      I live and volunteer overseas (Middle East) with an American missionary program. My bank, a CU, has denied me access to my own money because I live in a country that has connections to terrorism. When pushed about it they first replied that it was due to the US laws making it illegal to do business there...yet larger banks and financial companies (Visa, HSBC, AmEx, Wachovia/Suntrust, Bank of America, etc) were not being blocked, I know this because I know other Americans that hold accounts with those companies. So I pushed this and they said it was illegal and they were prohibited and couldn't speak for larger banks. I researched the "law" they claimed and it did mention something about financial transactions in said country, but it didn't block it. There was a specific watch list of people and organizations that were blocked but the entire country wasn't. My host country also has a reputation as a hotbed for fraud so that was also mentioned.

      In the long run I figured out that the CU just didn't want to take the risk and used some law related to terrorism to block all transactions (legal and legit) to, from, and within this country. I moved all but the min. money from my accounts and opened a new account at an American Mega Bank that does allow business here. If the CU is going to prevent me from having access to my money AND LIE about the reasons they deserve to not have my business. I'd close the account down completely but I've had it for too long.

      The financial institution in the story here likely wants to get rid of as much risk as it can and distance itself from companies or individuals the US and other places are upset with.

      --
      --- b2b.mallaidh.org | www.mallaidh.org | www.kidsalive.org/article/kahlil-pfaff/
    135. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      I'm guessing you weren't on AA Flight 11 nine or so years ago.

      The correct solution to that was to harden the cockpits. The incorrect solution was to spend a trillion dollars crushing the rights of US citizens, and another trillion dollars attacking two countries that had no nationals involved in the attack. Two trillion. So far. While our economy is in trouble.

      Two things. Firstly, the war on terror has cost 3 trillion dollars. Secondly, the correct analysis of Bush and republican economic policies is: "spending 3 trillion dollars on the war against error during boom years instead of reducing the federal deficit and spending 2.3 trillion dollars on tax cuts for the rich (Ruppert Murdoch really needed that cash) instead of reducing the federal deficit".

      So here we are now with close to 20% effective unemployment and with every month are getting nearer to the 1930s death trap of deflation and depression, while having a federal debt 5.3 trillion dollars higher than it could have been.

      5.3 trillion dollars is the cost of eight TARP bailouts or ten stimulus programs ...

      5.3 trillion dollars is also three times the cost of sending Bush and Cheney to Pluto. (or ten times the cost of sending them there with no return ticket, as an inventive form of 'enhanced interrogation'.)

    136. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well done and right on the mark. If the U.S. does not want to deal with known quantities then let them deal with ghosts in the service of true enemies.

      Unfortunately, everything that has happened over the last few months suggests Wikileaks is more interested in causing change than surviving, so we won't get a credible enemy until someone with a fear of death gets into the leaks game.

      Ego does not account for the way JA is handling this, and I felt the internal 'rift' that resulted in the departure of some key members of the organization was a beautiful sign the JA is ready to stay the course alone for a greater good while shedding those that may be useful in the future...

      JA is setting the example for pacifists everywhere, and we must forgive him for being so delicately manicured that ego is the first thing that pops into the mind upon viewing.

    137. Re:Uh by cusco · · Score: 5, Informative

      Dream on. Did you realize that there is still stuff from the frelling Spanish-American war that is classified? If I had ten grand in spare change lying around I might spend it on a lawyer for a FOIA query to see what's there, but let's face it, I don't so it's just going to stay that way.

      Have you seen the process for a FOIA request? You need to know the exact title and location of the document that you want. You can't just ask for documents relating to the cover-up of the bombing of a wedding party, you need to ask for US Army Action Report 172047a, CIA Predator Flight 2491 Operator Transcripts, and NATO After Action Report 1772-Q42. If the information that you actually need is in Flight 2490 Operator Transcript instead you need to start the process all over again (if you ever find out where it really is). Making things worse, generally the indexes themselves are classified, and if you manage to get access to one it will be so highly redacted as to be useless.

      --
      "Think about how stupid the average person is. Now, realise that half of them are dumber than that." - George Carlin
    138. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So why did the US Government refuse to help redact out those names, when WikiLeaks asked for help?

      Since WikiLeaks was set to release the information even without US help, the US Government could have protected innocent lives by redacting out names/references.

    139. Re:Uh by Rakshasa+Taisab · · Score: 3, Informative

      Seems to me the US military has been whining on an epic level compared to WikiLeaks... Except you probably don't see it as whining.

      --
      - These characters were randomly selected.
    140. Re:Uh by Rakshasa+Taisab · · Score: 1

      So Vietnam wasn't a fuckup cause a minority in the south were against a change in the political system?

      --
      - These characters were randomly selected.
    141. Re:Uh by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yes, thank god the US isn't quite at the level of Russia or China yet. Is this supposed to make me feel better? Exactly when will criticism of methods employed by the US government to stop dangerous activities be legitimate? Only when they involve assassinations through radioactive poisons or random incarcerations? Do you want the US to be the country it aspires to be, or merely something marginally better than the bottom of the autocratic barrel?

      I would also argue that the activities described in the documents are acts against the the United States. They are counter-productive, create more enemies and tarnish the reputation of the United States by association. Why should they stay secret? They are already known to the local population, because they happened there. The only people who don't know about it are Americans. Again, why should the American people be kept in the dark about activities that create dangerous situtations for America?

      Finally, how do you know that they actually did put Americans, Australians, British and others in danger? Because some politician told you so? Or because you read the documents yourself? If you didn't read them yourself, why do you trust the people who are indicted by the documents to tell you the truth about what is in the documents?

      If the US is what it aspires to be, rather than just another country striving for survival by any means, there is no place for secrets that exist solely to prevent embarrassment.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    142. Re:Uh by JackieBrown · · Score: 1

      A perfect example of an event so rare that it should never be used as a reason for a policy. Terrorist acts are just not that hard. Highway deaths are the equivalent of a 9/11 every few months. Random chance is better at killing people here than terrorists are.

      Maybe the reason your statement is true, is because they are preventing more killings on US soil.

    143. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot CIA's biggest success: 1981: Poland. Solidarnosc was backed by CIA and it led to the fall of the whole communist bloc in Europe.

    144. Re:Uh by psymastr · · Score: 1

      You forgot the US-backed coup in Greece, in 1967. The 7-year dictatorship which followed also attempted to stage a coup in Cyprus by assassinating the elected leader, in 1974. The effort was botched, Turkey intervened and illegally occupies a part of Cyprus since then.

      Bill Clinton publicly apologised after roughly 30 years.

      --
      Improve at backgammon rapidly through addictive quickfire position quizzes: www.bgtrain.com
    145. Re:Uh by witherstaff · · Score: 1

      Back in WW2 an idiot senator blabbed that the japanese were setting depth charges too shallow. It made the press and got 10 boats sunk. I somehow doubt that senator was put on any watchlist.

    146. Re:Uh by Unipuma · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There's a reason they didn't want to have that footage released. Apart from the fact that it hurts their reputation, it also suddenly paints war in a completely different way. If you remember around the first Gulf war, all the people got to see were these 'neat' camera shots made from the nose of a missile.
      No dying people, no bodies lying strewn around.
      All we saw was a cross-hair on a building that got bigger and bigger, followed by a breakup in communication, and a 'hilarious' comment about not wanting to be the guy in that bunker.

      War was changed from a dirty business into something neat, without (at least to the perception of the CNN viewers) the hurt and suffering.
      And that's exactly the same way they have been painting the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan as well. When was the last time you saw a firefight with someone getting shot on TV? They have created an image of war that they are desperate to keep.
      Because if people start thinking about 'the enemy' as actual human beings, it suddenly becomes a lot more difficult to swear blind obedience to a government that goes overseas to kill people.

    147. Re:Uh by Peeteriz · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Case in point - Pentagon Papers about Vietnam, classified, leaked, published by major newspapers despite serious government objections. Back then, courts approved the journalist right to publish such documents. Has it been forgotten already?

      We don't have laws to prevent distribution such secrets - instead, we have specific laws to protect the anonymous journalist sources, especially designed for cases such as this - because the society right to know information and freely talk about it stands above the government desire to 'protect' anything.

      Copies of information is not stolen property in any way. No U.S. government documents are in possession of wikileaks, and as far as we know, none of this has been obtained by breaking&entering secure premises. If some individual leaks a secret (government classified data or cocacola secret recipe) that was available to him, then he may be liable for breaching whatever was binding him and requiring not to disclose it; but there is nothing prohibiting free citizens from distributing it further, it falls under first amendment, as per court cases regarding the same Pentagon Papers for example.

      The problem with wikileaks is that they are having to do the job that "real" journalists in major news agencies would be supposed to do, but as they are failing the society, then amateurs such as Assange have to do it, and they sometimes do it in a half-assed way.
      Why are the leak sources not going to the reporters to NY Times or BBC? It's just a symptom that they are failing in their eagerness to dig the truth, talk to possible informants, and take brave steps to guarantee that their sources would be protected. *That* would be journalism, instead of republishing bigcorp or government press releases.

    148. Re:Uh by Seraphim_72 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      My God you are dumb. I mean heart-breaking-to-your-mother dumb. Your post shows that you know *nothing* about CS Lewis and potentially even less about Christianity. Go back to Digg, or Fark or wherever you came from. You tried for snark, you tripped and fell flat on the stupid-as-fuck line. Believe it or not, there are things that don't revolve around religion and the parent post was one. And even more mind blowing - there are things that are from Christianity that are good.

      *W*O*W* - - - I know how weird is that?

      When you retort, by all means, include the list of all atheist soup kitchens. I am sure it will not tax your keyboard skills.



      And for ref's sake - I used to evolve germs for a living. I understand evolution and science well enough, so you can stuff your Luddite comments from the start, I have more degrees in the sciences than you do.

      --
      Slashdot, where armchair scientists get shouted down and armchair theologians get modded up.
    149. Re:Uh by BenJCarter · · Score: 1

      And the SECRET military after action reports Julian Assange posted online contained nothing "we the people" didn't know already.

      Besides the names of the locals trying to get rid of the terrorists on their side of the mountain that is. The bad guys are stoked. Unfortunately for the locals, Julian's actions put them in grave danger.

      Julian gets famous, the folks he really outed get dead.

      And he's bitching because the US gov't is choking off his MONEY?

      Sorry to shut off the flow pal, but you're KILLING PEOPLE.

      --
      For in politics, as in religion, it is equally absurd to aim at making proselytes by fire and sword. - Publius
    150. Re:Uh by x3n0x · · Score: 1

      Well,

      It used to be that in America you could express yourself and your views. It is a sad day now that those citizens who dont believe or follow the supposed mainstream are labled as 'insurgents' by their fellow countrymen! Do the words 'Tea Party Insurgents' ring any bells? Why not just cut to the quick and call them domestic terrorists because they dont agree with the way the government is doing things right now! What ever happened to the oh so holy principle of Free speech?

        Wikileaks is just the beginning people!

      And before you Knee-Jerk mod me as flamebate or a troll, please try to be objective and try to read the rest of my post...

      While I rejoice in the fact that an individual of African descent has been able to be elected to the highest office of my country, I also rue the day that somebody who believes in the politcial tenets of Socialism or even downright fascism is now the one who sits at the desk between the floor of debate in congress/house and American Law and way of life. The two are nearly complete opposites! This is the 'New' America. This is the 'CHANGE' everybody wanted to embrace so whole heartedly...This is Obama's America, where the voices of discord are labled as insurgents!

      Sure America has problems. Sure there are things that should change, and there really ARE evil corporations run by evil people! There are also good ones who try and improve Humanity, and keep the economy rolling forward, giving you and me a place to work! Lets not destroy what so many great Men fought so very hard to build, to the losing of their very lives, just to slap a few assholes on the wrist! Karma has a way of dealing with those who revel in evil, and they will eventually get their just reward!

      Assange may be a douche, and an egotistical, smug little snot, but that still does not justify a govenrment in a country founded on the priciples ours is, trying everything in their power to silence a dissident voice! Sounds a bit like censorship to me! This should be a warning sign to all of us that things can't continue on their present course, or soon we could say 'in soviet America...'

        Whether or not the American government is responsible for this, I dont care at this point. What I do care about is the battle that should be fought around the world, to preserve the rights of those who wish to express their feelings and beliefs without having to fear of their government or fellow countrymen. A despot, no matter what they believe, is going to try and shut down those who are dissident, and keep his feet to the fire. That is the only way he can stay in power!

    151. Re:Uh by melikamp · · Score: 1

      Knowingly receiving stolen property

      But you are talking about physical property. Publishing information that is already in the wild is neither "stealing" nor "receiving stolen property", no matter how much you want to bend the words.

    152. Re:Uh by melikamp · · Score: 1

      C.S. Lewis was a lunatic: this quote applies directly to the mainstream Christian god.

    153. Re:Uh by RAMMS+EIN · · Score: 2, Funny

      Infinite XP exploit!

      --
      Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
    154. Re:Uh by stewymcstewstew · · Score: 2, Funny

      Knowingly receiving stolen property makes you accessory after the fact.

      I don't care what you think about Nixon or Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein on this one, both are douche bags. Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein is doubly so for whining about what is happening to it when it should have expected it all.

      Quit your bitchin' and find another source, I'm sure someone (The Soviet Union perhaps) would be willing to broker the payments for The Washington Post, or even finance the whole thing.

    155. Re:Uh by melikamp · · Score: 1

      Wikileaks only releases stuff that is already in the wild. It's already out. They just put it on a website. Is this really hard to grasp?

    156. Re:Uh by MartinSchou · · Score: 2, Insightful

      these were documents that put a large number of other American and Australian (and probably British and other nationalities) peoples in dangerNot quite. The actions described in those documents, are what put the people you mention in danger.

      The only people the documents themselves may have put in danger, were names of civilian locals, who's names etc. weren't redacted from them.

      If the documents showed that the occupying forces were nothing but do-gooders and had done absolutely nothing wrong, the documents would still put the non-redacted civilian locals in danger, as some of the people reading the documents are world class ass holes and thugs, who barely need an excuse to maim and/or kill others.

      Complaining that the documents put soldiers at risk is stupid. They are already in a warzone. If the contents of the documents puts them at even more risk, it's because it's detailing extremely horrible behaviour (like, say, the killing of an entire family just so they could rape a young girl, kill her afterwards and then claim it was done by rebels).

      Granted, some of the documents probably detail tactics when dealing with certain situations, but if you don't change your tactics during a now 7 year long war, then YOU are the one responsible for the added danger - not some documents describing your tactics to the enemy.

    157. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh SHIT! He's got NERD RAGE!!

    158. Re:Uh by RAMMS+EIN · · Score: 1

      ``Well to be fair, Julian Assange is a massive douche mark.''

      Be that as it may, I don't think it affects the issues at hand much. Is WikiLeaks doing good? Is the US government doing good? Is shutting down the donation channel to WikiLeaks a Good Thing?

      --
      Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
    159. Re:Uh by Lazareth · · Score: 1

      Correction, he didn't facilitate the theft of a large number of confidential military documents, he facilitated the distribution of them. Huge difference. Also, they weren't stolen, they were copied, even greater difference.

    160. Re:Uh by RAMMS+EIN · · Score: 1

      ``For Christ's sake all the US Govt did was put him on a watch list, which is entirely understandable, given the fact that he facilitated the theft of a large number of confidential military documents.''

      Some minor corrections:

      1. The story mentions WikiLeaks having been put on the watch list, not Julian Assange

      2. This is not "all the US Govt did", but rather all that this story tells you the US gov't did

      I agree with you that it doesn't seem so strange that the government would put an organization on a watch list when that organization is known to be in the business of obtaining and publishing information that the government would rather keep secret.

      It also doesn't seem too strange to me that a company would rather not do business with an organization that has been put on a watch list by the United States of America.

      However, the net effect of this is that it gets harder for WikiLeaks to get funding, and that is what this story is really about.

      --
      Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
    161. Re:Uh by Magada · · Score: 1

      They're the FBI which set up offices in East Europe and other places - ostensibly to "deal with carders". Since when the FUCK does the FBI have a mandate to go outside the borders of the USA and pursue criminals, possibly rendering them to OTHER NATIONS' JUSTICE SYSTEMS when found?

      They're the CIA which runs a global network of secret prisons set up in third-world countries where it's easy to get local "talent" for torture and rape. Where the FUCK does it say in the Constitution or the laws of the USofA that they have a right or a duty to do that?

      They're the NSA that eavesdrops on everyone's communications - including so-called US allies, including US citizens on US soil, talking to other US citizens. Where the FUCK does it say they have a right to do that?

      They're your border guards, empowered by unconstitutional laws to arrest anyone and seize any property, foreign or domestic. Your borders are supposed to extend inwards 100 miles from the actual border line, too!

      They're your police, empowered by a bundle of unconstitutional laws to perform arbitrary stops, warrantless searches and seizures based on suspicion alone and who feel so threatened by the average citizen that tasering diabetic senior citizens in wheelchairs is standard MO. Papieren, bitte!

      They're your President elect, who has the authority and ability, through all of these tools and many others, to disappear anyone off the face of the Earth. Oh, he can delegate this authority to anyone he pleases, too.

      --
      Something bad is coming when people are suddenly anxious to tell the truth.
    162. Re:Uh by jimicus · · Score: 1

      In any event, it is unrealistic to expect to be able to embarrass major governments on such a large scale - even if you didn't do anything illegal yourself in order to cause the embarrassment - without any repercussions.

      The main difference between the Western world and, say, the USSR, is that doing so is unlikely to see you thrown in a gulag and left there to rot.

      The obvious thought that occurs to me is: with Wikileaks having so many varied ways to get information to them while ensuring it's untraceable, why don't they have similar facilities in place for dealing with money?

    163. Re:Uh by jimicus · · Score: 1

      I'm guessing you weren't on AA Flight 11 nine or so years ago.

      No, and neither were you.

    164. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can also add Venezuela(2003). Because you know Chavez, while still a dick, totally hates us for our freedoms and not the fact that we supported the military coup that attempted to overthrow the government.

    165. Re:Uh by Sepodati · · Score: 2, Informative

      It akin to the following: If Fred threatens to beat Bob to a pulp if Bob ever makes spaghetti on a Tuesday...then someone comes along and says: "Bob of his own free will, chooses not to make spaghetti on Tuesdays."

      Bullshit, RTFA. Wikileaks was put on a blacklist, so Moneybookers decided to stop doing business with them. The US never contacted Moneybookers and did not put them on a watchlist. They are free to do business with anyone they want, but chose not to do business with a blacklisted Wikileaks. It's akin to Bob getting detention and Fred deciding not to hang out with him anymore.

      TFA: "We have never had any request, inquiry or correspondence from any authority regarding this former customer."

      They could be lying, but then we're just playing conspiracy games and anything could be correct.

      -John

    166. Re:Uh by Sepodati · · Score: 1

      No. They put Moneybookers on the watch list.

      No, the US put Wikileaks on a watchlist and Moneybookers decided to stop doing business with them.

      TFA: "However, following recent publicity and the subsequently addition of the WikiLeaks entity to blacklists in Australia and watchlists in the USA, we [Moneybookers] have terminated the business relationship."

      -John

    167. Re:Uh by stephanruby · · Score: 1

      Possibly also training pilots not to negotiate with terrorists, even ones with hostages...

      Why would the pilots even need training? If you're smart enough to reach this conclusion after 9/11, why aren't they smart enough to reach the same conclusion. Otherwise, I agree with everything else you've said.

    168. Re:Uh by oreaq · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Annoying, yes, but hardly the Russian tactic of poisoning you with radiation (Alexander Litvinenko) [...]

      Of course they don't poison them! Instead they use unmaned drones for murdering hundreds of people every year.

      [...] or throwing him and his wife (if he had one) into a forgotten political prison (Liu Xiaobo) (if he could be extradited).

      Kidnapping people from all over the world, throwing them in secret prisons, and torturing them is an important part in the war on terror.

    169. Re:Uh by Noah69 · · Score: 1

      I'm afraid this information is classified.

    170. Re:Uh by tudsworth · · Score: 1

      Well, of course. Dehumanising your enemy is but one tactic to sway public opinion on an unpopular conflict. Another one I've seen happen is the implication that those who oppose conflict are "hippies" or "un-American". All it does is further add to an atmosphere of fear and uncertainty, which is exactly what a government fighting (and wasting money) in an unpopular conflict wants. Of course, the whole "war on terrorism" is a flawed concept from the start; but that's a story for another time, when I'm considerably less lazy.

    171. Re:Uh by JasterBobaMereel · · Score: 1

      It's simple hardened cockpit and instructions to not open the door, ever...and any hijacker is powerless

      Not a United 93 ... the plane would land safely ...

      --
      Puteulanus fenestra mortis
    172. Re:Uh by Lazareth · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Correction: He didn't facilitate stealing confidential military documents. He facilitated their distribution. Huge difference. Also, they weren't stolen, they were copied. Even greater difference.

    173. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought the US was already randomly incarcerating people

    174. Re:Uh by Sepodati · · Score: 1

      If the CU is going to prevent me from having access to my money AND LIE about the reasons they deserve to not have my business.

      Yeah, you showed them!!

      I'd close the account down completely but I've had it for too long.

      oh... nevermind.

    175. Re:Uh by L4t3r4lu5 · · Score: 1

      And the world lost interest, and turned over to the X Factor.

      Face it; We're pretty comfortable here. Nobody wants to ask questions, nobody wants culpability. Everybody wants an SUV, a 3 bed semi, and holidays to Disney World every year.

      It's your dream, after all.

      --
      Finally had enough. Come see us over at https://soylentnews.org/
    176. Re:Uh by Max+Littlemore · · Score: 1

      Whitlam '75

      US Gov't has meddled in other people's shit for as long as I can remember

      Only positive Is I know the US Gov't has fingers that stink of other peoples shit.

      Why can't this secretive new world order just come out in the open and tell us what they want... y'know, like run an ad campaign or something? Try to make me happy to be an ant.

      The NWO, We make slavery fun!!!

      --
      I don't therefore I'm not.
    177. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the US and their cronies hadn't invaded Afghanistan and Iraq under false pretences then those people would be in far less danger. Why is Wikileaks at fault here for releasing some documents on an illegal war, yet the US government are somehow blameless? Has Moneybookers refused to do business with the US, the UK and Australia and its citizens?

    178. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot the 25th November 1975 Counter-Revolution in Portugal: the involvement of Frank Carlucci in this event is notorious.

      captcha: disobey

    179. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "elicit", thanks.

      Pet peeve.

      AC

    180. Re:Uh by SharpFang · · Score: 1

      Maybe not all of them are ill-meaning to freedom. But it seems these well-meaning are a minority.

      --
      45 5F E1 04 22 CA 29 C4 93 3F 95 05 2B 79 2A B2
    181. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What if China did something like this? Would you be as strong of a supporter of the Chinese governments "individual rights", as you are of the US governments?

      Slashdot only likes individual rights when the individual is an underdog.

      Maybe Slashdot only likes individual rights, when they are applied to individuals? Or maybe Slashdot isn't an individual (like a company or a government), and the people that post there can have differing opinions.

    182. Re:Uh by silanea · · Score: 1

      For Christ's sake all the US Govt did was put him on a watch list [...]

      ...and voilà: Wikileaks' account was promptly closed. If a single one of those 203 (or 193, depending on your view of the world) sovereign countries on this planet has the power to coerce a private company halfway around the world to boot a customer by simply putting their name on a list, how sovereign are those 202 (or 192) other countries really? To the best of my knowledge the UK government and its institutions have taken no official legal step whatsoever against Wikileaks. Unless they do, the company should not, either.

      This method of economic 'warfare' is beyond democratic control. Anyone can be cut off their livelihood without legal process, simply by having their name put on some watch list. The state did not freeze the account itself, it can happily direct all blame at the company which - of course - acted out of its own free will, and the company can point to the state's list to justify their decision in choosing whom to do business with and whom not to.

      --
      Rudolf Hess edited Mein Kampf. He was the very first grammar nazi.
    183. Re:Uh by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      When you find out your PayPal account has been deleted and your bank accounts and credit cards have all been frozen, you'll have less time to complain on the 'net.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    184. Re:Uh by TFAFalcon · · Score: 1

      Well the French resistance shot any collaborators they could during the war, and the world didn't exactly condemn the person who exposed them.

    185. Re:Uh by TFAFalcon · · Score: 1

      By the time the information is supposed to be declassified, you'll be a drooling vegetable in diapers or dead.

    186. Re:Uh by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      wikileaks facilitated the distribution of a large number of confidential military documents that had been stolen.

      I thought that (according to slashdot) you couldn't commit theft of data?

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    187. Re:Uh by biryokumaru · · Score: 1

      No, it doesn't work. It's an adjective, not a verb.

      --
      When you're afraid to download music illegally in your own home, then the terrorists have won!
    188. Re:Uh by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Cool. From now on everyone just use "ilisit" and the ambiguity will be sure to draw out the forbidden grammar Nazis.

      Fuck it, why doesn't everyone just grunt, we all know what we mean already, right?

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    189. Re:Uh by tehcyder · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The point is that if the people of Vietnam or Korea wanted a "communist" government, that was up to them, not the fucking USA.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    190. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everything on any whistle-blower site is stolen per definition. The whole concept is that the breaking of the law is outweighed by the greater good of revealing something the public needs to know.

      All the documents on US and Afghanistan are more than relevant here. They contain lots of information that has been kept from everyone under the pretense that it can hurt the war effort to release it. From what I've read and what other have discussed, this secrecy is not to protect the war effort to any greater extent but rather to protect some people that made a number of bad, stupid, illegal or incompetent decisions.

      Any time so-called 'national security' is abused to hide things like this, it is the moral duty of anyone with morals to break the law and steal the documents in order to make them generally available and thus the subject of public debate, followed by whatever action the information warrants against those trying to hide.

      What's more, nothing in the documents needs to be secret from a military standpoint. It is ancient information of no strategic value. It contains nothing that cannot be 'discovered' by simple observation on site, something we must expect the enemy to do anyway. If it contains real names it is unnecessary and stupid; that's what code names are for.

    191. Re:Uh by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      Yeah - if the Afghan people went around shooting Taliban, I doubt we'd complain much. Still not seeing your point.

    192. Re:Uh by TFAFalcon · · Score: 1

      The Taliban aren't the only invaders in the area.

    193. Re:Uh by mean+pun · · Score: 1

      Perhaps he was a lunatic, but the fact that his quote applies to mainstream Christianity or their god is not proof of that.

    194. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well to be fair, everybody is a massive douche, save you and me, and even thou art a bit of a douche.

      Nt sr I gt ur mnin. Cld u wrt it in txt or l33t?

    195. Re:Uh by golden+age+villain · · Score: 1

      Before 911 hijacked planes were most likely to be used to fly safely out of the country or to ask the liberation of some guy related to the hijackers. Not to blow up a skyscraper. It made sense then.

    196. Re:Uh by Ironhandx · · Score: 0

      He already has a point, even by your own definition the US is getting dangerously close to becoming a fascist state. Far far right? Check. Even their liberals are right, leaning towards center-right but not by much.

      "Fascists reject and resist the autonomy of cultural or ethnic groups who are not considered part of the fascists' nation and who refuse to assimilate or are unable to be assimilated."

      A lot of US Americans can't even point out Canada on a map, and don't care to be able to, largely because they think that anything outside the US isn't worth thinking much about. I'd say that behavior is leaning towards the definition.

      Given that this is happening now and Obama is trying to combine a lot of right and left views(albeit in the US its more like the right and far-right views)

      "Fascists believe that a nation is an organic community that requires strong leadership, singular collective identity, and the will and ability to commit violence and wage war in order to keep the nation strong."

      Go read a history book covering the last 30-40 years, they've had this one covered for awhile.

      "They claim that culture is created by the collective national society and its state, that cultural ideas are what give individuals identity, and thus they reject individualism."

      Christian religion by default does this and its so embedded in your politics that its not even funny. Its also becoming more and more bold and seen as a way to relate to the people. Sure there are parts of the US that don't feel that way but there were parts of Germany that didn't as well.

      "They advocate the creation of a single-party state.[18] "

      This is covered by the far right, so its still a bit of a minority opinion, but its there nonetheless.

      How does any of this scream to you "We shouldn't be worried at all!"

    197. Re:Uh by yt8znu35 · · Score: 1

      Wikileaks did not "facilitate the theft of a large number of confidential military documents." The documents were stolen by a member of the gov't. Wikileaks made them public. Funny how the ultra-right blames Wikileaks for the Pentagon's inability to secure its own data. The exposure of the Pentagon's document's was the Pentagon's mistake, not anyone else's. The Pentagon needs to join the 21st century with regard to securing its data. Looks like the ultra-right has found a new demon to fear in Wikileaks, though. The interesting thing is the addition of Wikileaks to "an Australian government blacklist," which will probably translate to it being blocked from Australia at some point.
      No doubt the next step will be to declare Wikileaks a terrorist organization. Then any would be donors would be funding terrorism.

    198. Re:Uh by vegiVamp · · Score: 1

      And *have* they published those documents without redacting the names ?

      No ?

      Then stop whining about it.

      --
      What a depressingly stupid machine.
    199. Re:Uh by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      True. However, these were documents that put a large number of other American and Australian (and probably British and other nationalities) peoples in danger.

      [citation needed]

      It has been asserted that the release of these documents has endangered lives because of information about past troop movements et cetera, because of disclosure of assets, blah blah blah. The problem with this idea is that the US Government isn't exactly being sneaky over there. Revealing the details of future engagements requires the change of some plans, but many of them can simply proceed because knowing exactly what is coming isn't going to change the response one whit. In most cases they know where and what our assets are (in broad terms if not in specifics) and they don't have the resources to oppose them because they are arrayed intelligently. We have been doing this war making thing for a long time, and accounting for minimum chaos when people are dying, we are very very good at it. Indeed, every nation which is a going concern today can make this claim.

      If you can clearly show just one life lost as a result of the release of these documents then I will be impressed beyond all account.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    200. Re:Uh by Dwonis · · Score: 1

      Corporations aren't people. No matter what your supreme court tells you.

      They're groups of people. Are you suggesting that people lose their rights when they get into groups? The supreme court said they don't.

    201. Re:Uh by Internetuser1248 · · Score: 2

      Knowingly receiving stolen property makes you accessory after the fact.

      On the other hand receiving evidence of a crime and publicising it does not. What wikileaks did was the international equivalent of finding a blood covered knife in their mailbox and handing it over to the police. In the debate about these documents people seem to forget that they are about international war crimes. In fact they are actually a blow by blow account of a major instance of what the Nuremberg court called the worst war crime: unwarranted aggression. Not to mention a host of smaller ones like targeting civilians, torture, illegal detention...

    202. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yeah the news should now be how on earth the usa citizens just don't get it, o wait they never leave the country so can't see that "freedom" means not having to live the suv mcdonalds life style !

    203. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dictatorships aren't democracies.

    204. Re:Uh by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      You know what.... you are absolutely right. I take it back... there is 1 policy change... the cheapest of all of them, that was good and right!

      That was such a good move actually.

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    205. Re:Uh by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      However, these were documents that put a large number of other American and Australian (and probably British and other nationalities) peoples in danger.

      Perhaps; but to no greater degree than the civilian casulatilites which are factored into most of the Pentagon's daily operations. If NATO can't take the heat of a few leaks, they should get out of the kitchen.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    206. Re:Uh by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 0

      The best way to combat terrorism, is to not react with terror.

      Terror? The United States threw a petulant fit in response to the attacks on Septermber 11th 2001 and even ten years later continues to become piqued at even the slightest suggestion that maybe, just maybe, the entire country completely overreacted to a single event.

      Terrorism has nothing to do with it. The 9/11 hijackers were mass psychologists and they quite literally changed the entire world in a single day. What terrifies me is not what modern terrorists can actually do physically, but rather what kind sociological and cultural aftershocks their actions will cause in the age of 24-hour, digital hysteria.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    207. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fantastic idea! There's no way both pilot and co-pilot could fall asleep, succumb to illness or food poisoning, or forget to turn on the oxygen supply to the cockpit.

      So there's no way people could die, because nobody alive and capable can get to the controls.

    208. Re:Uh by Machtyn · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I don't know if you are trolling or not, but I'll give a response anyway.

      Afghanistan was not invaded under false pretenses. Al Qaeda was running the government of Afghanistan. Al Qaeda actually attacked the United States of America at least three times that was reported. The first two times (attempted bombing of the trade center using a car bomb in a parking garage and running a boat into a battleship and killing 30+ soldiers). President Clinton didn't do anything - even when he had a sniper with his gun trained on Osama's head. The third time brought down two Trade Center towers and several smaller buildings and you know the story. We were justified in going in and whipping a few butts in Afghanistan.

      Iraq is a little murkier. To be sure, GW Bush wanted to finish what his father couldn't. Also hindsight is 20-20 and we now know that Saddam was less worried about the US and more worried about Iran. But due to that last statement, he was telling the Western world "I have no WMDs!" But he was sending signals that Iran could pick up... and thus the rest of the world's security personnel were reporting to their leaders that "Yes, Iraq does have WMDs." It didn't help that some French companies were breaking embargo by sending suspicious materials to Iraq. So, when Russia, Britain, the US, and several other countries' are saying Iraq presents a present danger, it was difficult not to invade. And remember, Democrats and Republicans agreed. Unfortunately, the war in Iraq got mired by politics, similar to Vietnam.

      Saddam was a bad man. Toppling Iraq was a good thing, but may have empowered Iran. Certainly, our current President's world wide apology tour and inability to voice outrage at Iran's human rights violations has empowered Iran's leadership more. But our citizenry is very war weary. The problem is that Iran really wants to wipe Israel out. But, if anyone hasn't gotten the memo yet, under our current administration, Israel is no longer an ally.

    209. Re:Uh by joke_dst · · Score: 1

      But they are succeeding, aren't they? Wikileaks is in the news all the time, but what's in those documents are rarely discussed.

    210. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They released documents that are great propaganda for our enemies, that endanger methods and sources of intelligence gathering and abetted a criminal (it is against the law to disclose classified documents). I am shocked, shocked that the government would react negatively towards this. In warfare, there are the Geneva conventions and then there are the real rules of warfare. Don't surrender when demanded? We won't accept your surrender later. That was the whole basis of sacking towns in the middle ages, a deterrent from insisting on a costly siege. Today's version is won't ID the taliban in your village? Don't cry to me when you suffer collateral damage next time we go looking for them.

    211. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I realise this statement may be overused and has become abstract but; America is one step away from becoming a fascist state.

      Amerika IS a fascist state.

      There fixed that for ya!

      Nothing abstract about it really just plain simple truth the masses don't want to look at. Head in the sand....

    212. Re:Uh by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      The only concrete example I've ever seen was one local warlord who was named and later killed.

      Oh, well, if you've only heard of one person being murdered because of the actions of Wikileaks, it mustn't be an issue... ::rollseyes::

    213. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      You've avoided the entire point Bigjeff5 was making: they published documents that they did not own. They obtained those documents illegally. They broke the law. Do you understand what this means? You can justify their actions as much as you want but it was illegal no matter how you look at it. To do something illegal means you have a high likelihood of receiving punishment especially when you do something of this magnitude.

      You piss of the military and government of the USA and bad things will happen. Sure some good came of these leaks, but to deny that there is some gray area just makes you sound fanatical. Speaking of fanatical; implying the US Government will assassinate peoples' families because of some leaked war documents is just FUD.

    214. Re:Uh by Scragglykat · · Score: 1

      Well, the problem with presidents is that by the time they get to the stage where they can be president, they are corrupt, and really, do we have the power to vote a good president in, or are we basically stuck voting whichever president promises us candy, and which will then take it away once they are in office? The very lowest levels of politics are where most of our power is, to vote in good people, before they have become corrupted by the power of politics, but sadly, by the time they are in a position to do anything of any significant good, they will be swayed not to, or they will let their idealism of not necessarily what's right to do, but what can be done first, or what might shake up things, get in the way. And yes, I believe everyone can agree that the US is a Republic... We have a Senate, we have a high Chancellor... and there ARE "Sith lords" influencing things in Washington. I guess in the end though, we are starting to see some "transparency" in government. We are really getting to see how they like to play ball lately.

    215. Re:Uh by davev2.0 · · Score: 1

      Funny, my rights haven't been crushed. Please tell me which rights of yours have been crushed.

    216. Re:Uh by davev2.0 · · Score: 1

      You think that because you are an fucking idiot who thinks that if your candidate loses an election, it must be because of fraud and not because more people voted for the other guy.

    217. Re:Uh by jgtg32a · · Score: 1

      He was still elected by the citizens, it's just the system doesn't necessarily require a majority of the citizens to be elected.

    218. Re:Uh by davev2.0 · · Score: 1

      This is obviously flamebait, so how did it get modded insightful? Oh, wait, I forgot how the moderation system works on slashdot. Never mind.

    219. Re:Uh by Liquidrage · · Score: 1

      92% of Americans aged 18-24 were able to fill out Canada on a blank map of the world. So your facts are wrong. And your reasoning is ignorant conjecture.

      Very few nations on Earth haven't been engaged in some kinda of war in the last 40 years. The Americans don't believe to engage war to keep the nation strong. Yes, I know you'll give some silly conjecture about Iraq or whatnot. Afghanistan and Iraq were to many Americans not acceptable, and to many other were about security. I'll await your rebuttle (that will never come) before expanding on the "security".

      America is about 75% Christian. A good many of which are not strong followers but identify with one of the Christian groups. The second largest group, and fastest growing, is "no religion" at around 15%.

      The far right is the far right and not the "single-party" state for a reason. All groups want everyone to be like them. You think the Tea-Party is about to take over America or something?

      I'm not worried at all because your post was from Fantasy Land.

    220. Re:Uh by jgtg32a · · Score: 1

      That quote is from the book "God in the Dock" or basically God on trial, I haven't read it and I so don't know the full context.

    221. Re:Uh by Cronock · · Score: 1

      If these documents are available to Wikileaks, they have probably been available to the people we really don't want to have them for a while. Just because Wikileaks makes them public, doesn't mean they're in any way actually responsible for the failed security.
      The US is scared though. What happens when Wikileaks gets their hands on information that will really be damaging to the government as a whole. Classified documents of pertaining to the great conspiracy theories of the 20th century, anyone?

    222. Re:Uh by BobMcD · · Score: 1

      Why are the leak sources not going to the reporters to NY Times or BBC? It's just a symptom that they are failing in their eagerness to dig the truth, talk to possible informants, and take brave steps to guarantee that their sources would be protected. *That* would be journalism, instead of republishing bigcorp or government press releases.

      You're close, but you've overlooked a crucial detail. Informants ARE going to the press, and the press is checking with the Whitehouse before they print anything. The free press has been completely supplanted with a new fealty-style system. Either you play ball with the government, or you can no longer make money as a news organization.

      Remember Valerie Plame? Or how the New York Times sat on the wiretapping scandal for a YEAR? Obama has done his part, too, with selective media blackouts and blatant threats to the press( e.g. Gibbs's guffaw).

      A truly free press would operate without getting the government's permission first. Wikileaks did that, and now you see the result.

    223. Re:Uh by gorzek · · Score: 1

      There is no "right to see confidential military documents" in the US Constitution, otherwise you would have a point.

    224. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      since the documents are publicly available I am sure you can provide citations.

    225. Re:Uh by gox · · Score: 2, Funny

      Douché!

    226. Re:Uh by Peeteriz · · Score: 1

      It doesn't matter if the press is "free" - it's the journalists duty to do it even if the government forbids it and fights it.

      Like journalists in Russia were reporting on police brutality despite very real death threats, like Thailand journalists reporting on issues which may offend the king, and in many other places. Even in the Pentagon papers there were injunctions filed by the gov't to forbid publication and arrests made, but still the journalists did it - if they don't do it now, they are just copywriters, not journalists.

    227. Re:Uh by BobMcD · · Score: 1

      True. However, these were documents that put a large number of other American and Australian (and probably British and other nationalities) peoples in danger. Whether you agree that Americans defending themselves against Muslim radicals is right or not, what wikileaks did was an act against the United States of America

      You might want to research what's actually in the data. For example:

      To begin with, the data demonstrate an alarming rise in enemy activity. In 2004, the Taliban were averaging four attacks a day. By 2009, that figure had risen more than 15 times to 56 attacks per day. By comparison, U.S. actions over that time period rose only 9 times, from an average of 1.5 per day to 13.8.

      ...and...

      Beginning in 2008, however, this deterrent effect had transformed into an escalatory effect. In 2009, this escalatory effect had reached a point where for every 2.5 actions the U.S. engaged in the Taliban committed one additional attack the next. U.S. actions are now making the Taliban more violent, not less.

      This analysis demonstrates that disclosing the war diary information could potentially stop the escalation, failed policies, etc, and in effect SAVE THE LIVES of those same people you're claiming to care about. The 'support the troops' angle works both ways here. You want to safeguard their lives, and this should logically included not asking them to die for no reason whatsoever. The data shows we're making it worse, and had it not ever been released, we'd still think we were winning...

    228. Re:Uh by otopico · · Score: 1

      There is also no 'right to lie and cover up war crimes and get away with it' in the US Constitution.

      As Americans we have the fucking right to know that our oh so glorious leaders are covering up the wholesale slaughter of civilians. We have a right to hold our leaders and our military to a higher standard. If we had any damn idea of the atrocities being committed, in our name, so we could prosecute them; we would gain the high ground and be seen as a force of good, rather than a bunch of white guys stealing from the brown guys. As it stand now, we are not allowed to know what evils are carried out in our name, and that should make all Americans sick.

      Unlike a lot of chicken hawks, some of us in the US want to know that we are trying to do things as properly as possible. If that means knowing when our soldiers or government murder innocents, then so be it.

      If Americans are willing to allow our government and soldiers to hide behind some bullshit 'security' fence, then we deserve to suffer when those we have wronged retaliate.

      America should be the good guy, but when we lie and hide truth, we just prove to the world that we cannot be trusted and that we are no better than the other impotent empires that have fallen before us.

      Sadly a lot of people seem ok with that.

    229. Re:Uh by petteyg359 · · Score: 1

      Their really teaching you good, are'nt they?

      Your punctuation aren't in the right place.

    230. Re:Uh by petteyg359 · · Score: 1

      ...except for the little-known fact that every single legislator and President (who chooses the Supreme Court) is elected by the citizens -- with no exceptions.

      Except for the little known fact that every single presidential election is really done by the electoral college, of which members are free to choose to vote entirely differently than the general public that elected them.

    231. Re:Uh by mldi · · Score: 1

      Case in point: electronic strip searches... errr, I mean "full body scanners".

      --
      If you aren't suspicious of your government's actions, you aren't doing your job as a responsible citizen.
    232. Re:Uh by catchblue22 · · Score: 1

      What about South America? What about Argentina, or Chile, or Venezuela, or Peru? It seems likely the US has at least done some "nudging" with regards to South American governments in the past few decades. After all, in Cold War parlance, South America was and is in America's "sphere of influence".

      --
      This and no other is the root from which a tyrant springs; when first he appears as a protector - Plato (423 to 327 BC)
    233. Re:Uh by Ironhandx · · Score: 1

      Citation needed for that entire post. Heres some stats with citation.

      About 11 percent of young citizens of the U.S. couldn't even locate the U.S. on a map. The Pacific Ocean's location was a mystery to 29 percent; Japan, to 58 percent; France, to 65 percent; and the United Kingdom, to 69 percent.

      http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2002/11/1120_021120_GeoRoperSurvey.html

      It also states that several other countries are just as bad, but the US is very very far from leading the pack, which is where it would claim to be. Many young people also place the US as being the largest country in the world based on both population and land mass which is very wrong. Not being able to find the Pacific Ocean??

      Who is living in Fantasy Land again?

    234. Re:Uh by melikamp · · Score: 1

      But he was ardently Christian. IMHO, that was at least very ironic.

    235. Re:Uh by mdielmann · · Score: 1

      That shouldn't have resulted in a single change of policy.

      I disagree. I think it should have been a requirement for the cockpit to have serious security (which they did), and for there to be a well-known procedure for what happens after someone tries to hijack an airplane (which I don't know if they did). Everything else has been just another obstacle that will barely inconvenience terrorists.

      --
      Sure I'm paranoid, but am I paranoid enough?
    236. Re:Uh by dcw3 · · Score: 1

      Still waiting for someone to point to the evidence of a war crime.

      Snippets of videos, and quotes taken out of context are not fair game. So, until someone shows us some real evidence, this was nothing more than the illegal leak of classified information.

      Let me admit here that I haven't followed the entire story, so if you can point to something I missed, I may just STFU.

      --
      Just another day in Paradise
    237. Re:Uh by dcw3 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Seems to me that a lot of folks are whining about the US military taking action to protect itself from a similar future occurrence. Blacklisting != whining.

      --
      Just another day in Paradise
    238. Re:Uh by gknoy · · Score: 1

      How often does whistleblowing involve leaking documents obtained legally? I thought it was part of the definition that someone is breaking the law in order to expose unethical (or other illegal) behavior.

    239. Re:Uh by mdielmann · · Score: 1

      This would first require an inherently good candidate, and second that he wouldn't have his hands completely tied by the inertia of the opposing (or possibly his own) party in the two houses, and third, if you actually got past those two, that he wouldn't be assassinated before he did anything truly revolutionary.
      Simple, isn't it?

      --
      Sure I'm paranoid, but am I paranoid enough?
    240. Re:Uh by blizz017 · · Score: 1

      Dream on. Did you realize that there is still stuff from the frelling Spanish-American war that is classified? If I had ten grand in spare change lying around I might spend it on a lawyer for a FOIA query to see what's there, but let's face it, I don't so it's just going to stay that way. Have you seen the process for a FOIA request? You need to know the exact title and location of the document that you want. You can't just ask for documents relating to the cover-up of the bombing of a wedding party, you need to ask for US Army Action Report 172047a, CIA Predator Flight 2491 Operator Transcripts, and NATO After Action Report 1772-Q42. If the information that you actually need is in Flight 2490 Operator Transcript instead you need to start the process all over again (if you ever find out where it really is). Making things worse, generally the indexes themselves are classified, and if you manage to get access to one it will be so highly redacted as to be useless.

      That's absolutely not true at all; FOIA requests can be/have been/generally are in the form of 'generalized' requests; is it better if you are specific about your request? absolutely, it will save you money seeing how they generally charge by time used in the search and by page. You can literally request : "This is a request under the Freedom of Information Act. I request that a copy of the following documents concerning the following subject matter be provided to me: Any and all reports concerning the actions at Abu Ghraib Prison from 1 JAN 2004 - 30 APR 2004."

    241. Re:Uh by Sique · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Toppling Saddam Hussein was a completely idiotic thing to do. It was done so unter falsificated facts for the false reasons given. The main reasons given were Iraq's WMDs, which the weapon's inspectors told again and again wouldn't exist, and which failed to materialize afterwards, and for an allegedly collaboration with al-Qaida, which didn't materialize either, and which everyone (except in the U.S. apparently) was knowing was a figment of imagination. Saddam Hussein was during most of his reign an outspoken non-religious dictator, affiliated with the Ba'ath party which grew out of a christian founded, nationalistic-arab, socialist movement (ba'ath is arab and means "people") -- everything but a muslim fundamentalist. After 1991 he tried to steer away from Socialism to a more traditionalist arab ideology including embracing Islam, but no one was taking it serious, and he still hat christian people in his inner circle, like Tariq Aziz (christian name: Mikhail Yuhanna).

      So the arab and the islamic world, knowing the WMDs were nonexistant and the link to al-Qaida fabricated, came to the conclusion, that only two reasons were valid: control of Iraqi Oil, and battling Islam at all cost -- not the way you make friends in the region. The U.S. and its allies were seen as the aggressors, taking on everything arab and islamic -- arab property, arab traditions, arab nationality, arab pride.

      But -- you say, toppling a murderous dictator is right? Wrong. Helping the Iraqi people to get rid of Saddam Hussein on their own would have been right. Supporting the insurgencies in the southern part of Iraq would have been right. With the kurdish North it worked, Northern Iraq was no longer ruled by Saddam Hussein by 2003. But the South was neglected, and arab people saw themselves abandoned -- so it was natural for them to see the U.S. as primarily anti-arab.

      If the U.S. would have waited another few years, Saddam Hussein would have been toppled anyway -- by the Iraqis themselves. Saddam Hussein was powerless already. He had nothing anymore to bribe his own ruling junta. He had to play games to reserve some street cred with his neighbours, but had to cave in whenever the Security Council of the U.N. was getting serious. The next big insurgence would have brought him down, either by the insurgents or by his own inner circle trying to hold on power on their own and sacrifying him as a scapegoat.

      What are the lessons for the dictators around him? Caving in to UN sanctions and giving up on your weapons will make you weak and prone to the next invasion. Caving in to demands to stop the development of WMDs will make you weak and prone to the next invasion. If you want to stay in power, it is important to get WMDs as soon as possible, at all cost. North Korea and Iran have learned their lessons. North Korea is nuclear power since 2005, and the Iran is apparently doing everything to become one. Saudi-Arabia has an option to buy atomic bombs from Pakistan. The other Gulf states signed a contract in 2006 to develop civilian atomic facilities. Great job, United States!

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    242. Re:Uh by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      When it's a warlord?
      ya, I don't value those guys lives much.

      And condisering that people were being killed weekly for conspiring with the US anyway(accuratly or not) I doubt it made much real difference to the number of people being killed.

    243. Re:Uh by Psmylie · · Score: 1

      Sorry about this. You've just triggered a rant.

      I'm so goddamned sick of that argument... "There is no right to ____ in the Constitution". The Constitution is not a complete and exhaustive list of the rights of an individual. Never has been, never will be, and never was intended to be. Rights exist separately from the Constitution, which is a list of the specific ways in which the government can infringe upon the rights you already possess.
      For example, you already have the right to keep your property, not have it searched without your permission, and not be locked up. Per the Constitution, the Government can take your property, but only if they compensate you fairly. The Government can search your property without your permission, but only by following due process. The Government can take away your freedom, but only if you've been convicted of a crime.

      The deduction that you SHOULD be making is that anything not listed in the Constitution is an inherent right that the Government has no legal recourse to infringe upon, not that the right doesn't exist!

      Ok, rant off. Thanks for listening, I feel better.

      --

      psmylie's dictionary: Godzillion (noun) Any number large enough to destroy Tokyo

    244. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cynically speaking, war tends to grow an economy. TSA, DHS, etc (while I don't think they should have been federalized) were all paid for by a mixture of local/state/federal resources, and now it's feds only; this is because Bush put into effect the findings of the 9/11 commission. Thanks, Bush. We were fine before, but at least that didn't cost us much. The wars were expensive, sure, but the truth is that we haven't had any terror attacks on our soil while Bush was in office.

      Our economy was in moderate trouble at the end of the Bush term, thanks chiefly to Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac and many requirements such as Community Lending Act that banks hand out loans to people who really couldn't repay them.

      Rather than use the system we have in place -- bankruptcy court -- to ensure that other companies are dealt with quickly and efficiently, the President of the United States took over and fired the CEO of GM and told the CEO of other private companies such as Bank of America to purchase very troubled assets such as Merrill Lynch or they'd see the same thing happen. Bailouts.

      We weren't in deep trouble until the bailouts and multiple stimulus packages for "shovel ready" projects. (Obama this week: "now I know that there's no such thing as shovel-ready projects".) The 9 year war in Iraq (according to the Congressional Budget Office) cost less than $800 billion. The $787 billion TARP, $700 billion stimulus, $940 billion health care, etc will contribute an totally unnecessary $10 TRILLION dollars to our national debt this decade alone, not counting interest.

      When the "Bush era" tax cuts expire, they'll hit seniors worst of all, because seniors have almost their entire income from dividends and capital gains. That's money OUT of the economy to repay these asinine policies.

      Thanks, Obama. Get the f** out of our finances.

    245. Re:Uh by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      And condisering that people were being killed weekly for conspiring with the US anyway(accuratly or not) I doubt it made much real difference to the number of people being killed.

      Wow, you really are an asshole, aren't you?

      One life is too many.

      It saddens me that your bloodlust makes this impossible for you to understand.

    246. Re:Uh by Liquidrage · · Score: 1

      Citation needed for your original post. When you make claims that are unsubstantiated it's OK, but since I bothered to have a rebuttle and googled it, now you want substantiation. Sure.

      The 2006 study from the same group you link to from 2002. http://www.nationalgeographic.com/roper2006/pdf/FINALReport2006GeogLitsurvey.pdf
      Page 26 shows 92% correct about Canada.

      It also shows 79% find the Pacific Ocean just fine. You know, I'm all for increasing Geography in school, just as I'm all for increasing critical thinking and less memorization, even if those wants can be seen as somewhat conflicting. But let's not make up crap just because you have a bias. One of the biggest factors in Americans scoring lower on these types of tests is the size of America itself and the time it takes to teach students about America. 50 states and all that ya know. And it's a lot easier being an "international" living in Switzerland then it is in Iowa. They should quiz the Swiss on finding Nebraska then compare it to Americans so we get a free "win", right?

      Non-relgious stats: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demographics_of_atheism#North_America

      What else do you want? Now go show me how Christians and the Tea-Party (of which I belong to neither) are turning America into a fascist state.

    247. Re:Uh by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 1

      How about Bush and Cheney getting on camera and admitting to ordering prisoners to be tortured? They already did that. Next question?

      --
      Dyolf Knip
    248. Re:Uh by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      I have heard this argument before and find it to be... highly unlikely. There are just too many ways to pull it off. If they were serious, then attacks 2, 3, 4, 5 would all have been planned and ready to go the day 9/11 happened.

      instead #2 wasn't even by them, it was by some whacko bioengineer, with no islamist ties, at one of the governments own labs.

      #3, the sniper shootings were ok, and a good example of how to do it well, but... seem like they were entirely independant and, in the end, were ended with no real followup.

      Its been more than 2500 days since 9/11 and all we have seen was a handful of poorly executed plots that didn't even work out. Each one demonstrated how it could have been done, and yet, if they ALL worked, it still would be a piss poor showing for over 2500 days.

      If they pulled off a 9/11 every year or two, it still wouldn't be enough to be a serious threat. SO far, they havn't even managed to match what a couple of lone crazies did for a followup.

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    249. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The US is not the only one doing this and I would bet not even the one that is the most abusive.

      However, I feel the US should hold itself to a higher standard. It should not be participating IN ANY WAY in any action that it is not willing to have shown to the world. People fear not what the know but what they do not know yet suspect. You can stand up against something that is in the light. Anything hidden you stand up against makes you a conspiracy nut. Well I have new for you there really are people out to get other people. I want to stand up for them in hopes that if it ever happens to me you will stand up for me.

    250. Re:Uh by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      have you considered that perhaps it could have saved lives?
      Someone accused of being an informant in the time that these docs cover might point to the lack of anything even mentioning their provence?
      It's essentially impossible to prove but then so is the opposite.
      A murderous warlord dies, he may have been an informant as it was vaguely hinted at in the diaries.

      And what about the people who the warlord would have killed since?

      It saddens me how little you care about those people and your blind opposition to news organisations like the guardian and new york times who published the war diaries makes it impossible for you to understand.

    251. Re:Uh by BJ_Covert_Action · · Score: 1

      The absurdity of the whole thing is staggering.

      Which is precisely what makes me wonder if there is some subtler game afoot that we are not aware of. The sheer fact that all this Wikileaks stuff keeps getting brought up, and keeps successfully whipping the electorate into a finely divided idealistic mob makes me somewhat wary. I mean, honestly, with all the money, tech, and power at the hands of the U.S. government (with everything from the CIA to the DHS) do we really believe that it is not capable of silently and capably suppressing or putting down whatever threat Wikileaks poses to it?

    252. Re:Uh by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      And the Germans weren't the only invaders in WW2. So, for the last time, did you have a point to make?

    253. Re:Uh by JustSomeProgrammer · · Score: 1

      Ford was never elected was he? The original vice president was replaced and he was appointed the new vice president and when Nixon stepped down after watergate he took over as president without ever having been elected. http://www.nndb.com/people/400/000022334/

    254. Re:Uh by animaal · · Score: 1

      They obtained those documents illegally

      Illegal where? You know Wikileaks isn't an illegal organisation, right?\

      Or am I wrong to be sitting here drinking a bottle of beer, because it's illegal in some other country?

    255. Re:Uh by animaal · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I meant "Wikileaks isn't an **American** organisation"...

      I should ease off on the beer.

    256. Re:Uh by TFAFalcon · · Score: 1

      The US/NATO forces in Afghanistan are invaders, so anyone that cooperates with them could be though of as a collaborator. So why should the world care if information about the identity of these 'collaborators' becomes public? Yes they might get killed, but with so many truly innocent people being killed, what makes them special? Both they and their handlers must have know that what they did/do is risky and they still chose to do it.

    257. Re:Uh by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

      It's worth mentioning that the earlier doctrine for dealing with hijackings was based on experience. In most cases, the situation would end up that the plane would get redirected to, say, Cuba, and the passengers would be let off, and while it would seriously suck the passengers had a generally good chance of survival.

      Does the policy seem kinda stupid in hindsight? Possibly. But it wasn't a case of wanting people to be passive sheep so much as wanting as many passengers as possible to come out of a hijacking alive.

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    258. Re:Uh by Ihmhi · · Score: 1

      Thank you for being the only person here who gets what the hell I meant.

    259. Re:Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Terrorist acts are just not that hard"

      Of course, one who mentions something like this should probably inform all facebook friends to check their cars for GPS tracking devices. ;-)

    260. Re:Uh by sjames · · Score: 1

      Imagine how you would feel about it if you were the innocent victim of that undercover cop's illegal activities.

    261. Re:Uh by Jaazaniah · · Score: 1

      Technical solution? Smalll merge documents, small table of possible storage locations, small table of important keyword combinations, table-valued function that returns a huge list of alpha-numeric "document number, one cartesian product, three million dollars in postage. The department handling these documents would be in quite some trouble if they try to implement a spam filter.

    262. Re:Uh by Liquidrage · · Score: 1

      Wow two idiots. You, and the person that modded you up. No, neither the people of Vietnam nor Korea wanted a communist government. In both cases what lead to the two sides was Russia/China trying to create one side and the US/others trying to stop it. It's not like the Koreans just wanted to go communist and the US went "woah woah. Calm down. Lets fight". Both countries were pawns in a larger battle, one the US and allies responded too, not "create".

    263. Re:Uh by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

      The problem is that Iran really wants to wipe Israel out.

      Iran wants to wipe Israel out the way the Baptists want to make abortion illegal. Specifically, not at all. Why would the fundamentalists want to give up their respective multimillion-vote rallying points like that? If they actually got what they wanted, it would be the end of their world.

    264. Re:Uh by wmac · · Score: 1

      Do you watch TV? or read newspaper?

      You talk as if there has been no war crimes. I suggest you take a look at this link for example:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abu_Ghraib_torture_and_prisoner_abuse

    265. Re:Uh by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      The US/NATO forces in Afghanistan are invaders, so anyone that cooperates with them could be though of as a collaborator. So why should the world care if information about the identity of these 'collaborators' becomes public?

      So let me get this straight .... you think anyone who cooperates with a multinational force fighting under the banner of the United Nations is a collaborator, and deserves to die?

      Sorry, run that by me one more time?

      Yes they might get killed, but with so many truly innocent people being killed, what makes them special?

      If I have to explain to you why fighting to bring your nation out of the stone age is a good thing, worthy of praise and respect rather than torture and death .... well, I'd be wasting my breath, wouldn't I? In order to fail to understand the concept, you'd have to be either an amoral sociopath, or an immoral savage. I can try to explain it, if you like, but if you truly do not understand the issue already, I think you'd be better off talking to a psychiatrist.

    266. Re:Uh by Thinboy00 · · Score: 1

      Well Duh, If you kill all your enemies you can't justify continuing the eternal war

      We have always been at war with Eastasia.

      --
      $ make available
    267. Re:Uh by TFAFalcon · · Score: 1

      Anyone that cooperates with an invading force is a collaborator,that's the definition. They don't deserve to die any more than anyone else in a war, but the people they are collaborating against certainly have the right to want them dead.

      So why should the world be forced to only sympathize with one party in the conflict?

      Now about bringing the nation out of stone age. Which side do you think is trying to do that? Neither one cares about what happens to the people, they just want control. After one gains complete control they might start to work to improve the lives of the people, but at the moment all they care about is wiping out their opponents.

      Also how does trying to save your country compare to trying to raise your children? The US didn't stop bombing the country after they made several mistakes that resulted in civilian deaths. So why is releasing some documents so much worse then dropping bombs?

    268. Re:Uh by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      So why should the world be forced to only sympathize with one party in the conflict?

      I was right - you are a sociopath. We're done.

    269. Re:Uh by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      So is God not omnipotent? Or does he not care about the moral behaviour of people?

      Given it's CS Lewis I wouldn't be surprised, since it wasn't exactly uncommon for his arguments to set God up for what appeared to be a loss and then spin the argument around brilliantly. I just haven't read that particular item of his.

      CS Lewis writing something about morality that doesn't involce Chistianity seems pretty unlikely to me.

      That's a very christian response of you too. All I did was ask a simple question and point out that God is omnipotent and cares about the morals of others - neither of those two claims seems particulatly controversial from a Christian perspective.

      But I guess you must be in some school of Chrisitianity in which God isn't omnipotent and calling brothers fools is acceptable behaviour as well as being proud of your educational prowess. I have three degrees in the sciences - the standard bachelors, a masters, and a PhD. I'm sure you beat that, it's not exactly a big ask.

    270. Re:Uh by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      voters are stupid and must be told how to vote. At least I think that's what they believe

      The conscious and intelligent manipulation of the organized habits and opinions of the masses is an important element in democratic society. Those who manipulate this unseen mechanism of society constitute an invisible government which is the true ruling power of our country. We are governed, our minds are molded, our tastes formed, our ideas suggested, largely by men we have never heard of. This is a logical result of the way in which our democratic society is organized. Vast numbers of human beings must cooperate in this manner if they are to live together as a smoothly functioning society.

      Edward Bernays
      Propaganda (1928), p. 37

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    271. Re:Uh by alexo · · Score: 1

      except for the little-known fact that every single legislator and President (who chooses the Supreme Court) is elected by the citizens

      Does it really matter when your only option is whether to vote for Kang or for Kodos?

    272. Re:Uh by Tommy+Jefferson · · Score: 1

      Corporations are a legal fiction created by governments.

    273. Re:Uh by ps2os2 · · Score: 0

      Of course you are correct. But US law says you are just as guilty if you facilitate any lawbraking. a n example you were not physically present when a group killed a person but you help them (either before or afterwards), like getting them passports or paying for their tickets etc etc. In the eyes of the law you are just as guilty as the people who broke the law.

      I can agree that there are some erors in that law but its difficult (or impossible) for law enforcement to get people to admit that they helped people break the law. SO there has to be a case for going after the people who do help escape or pull off a bank job or whatever. Where it gets into grey areas is when religion is involved and it just gets plain messy.

    274. Re:Uh by ps2os2 · · Score: 0

      Ahh... but the Bush administration out a former CIA operative. That is illegal but they sure did not get punished for it.

  2. How should people help wikileaks? by h00manist · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Wikileaks is a great project, but its not too clear how people can help them.

    --
    Build your own energy sources from scratch. http://otherpower.com/
    1. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by BadAnalogyGuy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The best way is to set up a nonpartisan, unbiased website that releases such documents without the ridiculous commentary and shifty editing.

      Assange has done a severe disservice to WL with his emphasis on injecting over the top editorial into the stories on the site.

    2. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by Presto+Vivace · · Score: 5, Informative

      The US military whistle blowers would have been MUCH better off going to the Project on Government Oversight, an organization which has a history of helping whistle blowers get out their stories and keep them out of jail. Other than continuing to link to Wikileaks and give them publicity, I have no clue as to how to help them.

    3. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by GrumblyStuff · · Score: 3, Informative

      It still would be shut down. That and they would flat out lie if such documents revealed trumped up evidence (WMDs?), coverups (Pat Tillman, Jessica Lynch), outright lawbreaking (Ilario Pantano shooting two detained Iraqis, Abu Ghraib torture), and suspicious circumstances (billions of dollars in cash sent to Iraq and can't be accounted for).

    4. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by Amouth · · Score: 5, Informative

      a problem with pogo.org is they are in inside the US.. so they are subject to National Security letters and gag orders.. if they had gone there - none of this stuff would have made the light of day except as a rumor before it was shut down.

      --
      '...if only "Jumping to a Conclusion" was an event in the Olympics.'
    5. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Assange has done a severe disservice to WL with his emphasis on injecting over the top editorial into the stories on the site.

      Like calling murder "murder", that kind of over the top editorializing? Or do you have a better example?

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    6. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      The US military whistle blowers would have been MUCH better off going to the Project on Government Oversight, an organization which has a history of helping whistle blowers get out their stories and keep them out of jail.

      Do they have solid tips like: don't use your first name + 'ass' + your date of birth as your email name when leaking sensitive documents?

      Because bradass87 could have used such wisdom.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    7. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by blair1q · · Score: 1

      The part about releasing information that can get people killed should probably be avoided, as well. Sort of throws a hypocritical blanket over the effort.

    8. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Simple. Leak some secret that makes Obama look bad. Then all these bleeding-hearts that are whining about putting people at risk (with a total lack of any evidence) will suddenly become the most pro-Wikileaks characters you've ever seen...

    9. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by Abcd1234 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No, by editing video before releasing it. If wikileaks is about leaking information so the truth can be heard, it behooves them to release the *whole* truth, not just the parts they think are the most titillating.

    10. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by _KiTA_ · · Score: 0

      Assange has done a severe disservice to WL with his emphasis on injecting over the top editorial into the stories on the site.

      Like calling murder "murder", that kind of over the top editorializing? Or do you have a better example?

      It's not Murder, it's Collateral Damage. Hey, cheap oil ain't free, ya know -- to keep up our proud American culture of excess and waste... well. Be it some poor civilians in the sand, some Chinese sweatshop workers making tube socks, or some poor schmucks who had the unfortunate luck to try and vote out our current puppet dictators selling us oil at rock bottom prices, it all has to come from somewhere. And it's not like anyone in the US cares, they're just brown people.

      Er, crap, now you have me doing it. I mean, it's not like anyone in the US cares, they're just mooslim terr'ists.

    11. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by Scrameustache · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No, by editing video before releasing it. If wikileaks is about leaking information so the truth can be heard, it behooves them to release the *whole* truth, not just the parts they think are the most titillating.

      They did release the whole video, they also released an edited version that cuts out the long boring bit where nothing happen.
      Now, since you say editing is bad, tell me of one news item you've seen where you were showed video that was not edited, go ahead, name the news item where they showed the whole video, not just the interesting bit. I'd like to know of that mythical time that happened that it seems you have witnessed. Or a newspaper you know that doesn't have an editor, maybe?

      You see, editing video is not only normal, it's required. What you need to look for is misleading editing. BIG difference.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    12. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by Abcd1234 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      They did release the whole video

      Yes, after they were caught editing the video. You may think that's fine. I don't.

      Now, since you say editing is bad, tell me of one news item you've seen where you were showed video that was not edited

      Woah woah... so you're saying Wikileaks is under no obligation to rise above the likes of FOX News and MSNBC? Really??

      And that's ignoring the fact that Wikileaks *isn't a news organization*. They've said so themselves *multiple* times. Furthermore, editing releases like that flies right in the face of their very mission, and is *deeply* hypocritical.

      Frankly, I'm shocked you're even trying to justify this behaviour.

    13. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by TFAFalcon · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Well the US army knows what information was released, so they can go and protect the people whose names were revealed (and their families). Or is spending some money only justified when it results in a high bodycount of 'terrorists'.

    14. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by Ihmhi · · Score: 4, Interesting

      To be fair to Wikileaks, they actually let you see all of the source documents if you don't like their shitty editing.

      There's nothing preventing people from going all "answers.com" and using Wikileaks' material as sources for their reports.

      If they didn't summarize things at all and were just a clearinghouse of information, would as many people read it? Would you read Slashdot if there was no summary, just a title and a link? (You may now proceed to make fun of Slashdot's editorial quality.)

    15. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by Scrameustache · · Score: 4, Interesting

      They did release the whole video

      Yes, after they were caught editing the video. You may think that's fine. I don't.

      Why do you think it is not fine to edit video? What did they edit out of the video that was wrong to take out?

      And what link do you have that proves that they provided the unedited video only after being 'caught' doing what every other news video have had done in the whole entire history of news video? Because I call bullshit on that too.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    16. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Indeed, the National Security letters which are secret and you can't even disclose you received one (let alone what for) could suggest that pogo.org is much like pogo.com: fun and games and no damage. Circumstantial evidence is that this is the first time I heard of pogo.org and that I haven't seen government officials with foam on their mouths screaming that pogo.org is 'irresponsible' (after being caught with their pants down).

      After all the hullabaloo around Iraq/Afghanistan, I hope wikileaks can go back to the roots and get documents out about the big ole megacorps in banking, energy, communications, chemistry/pharmaceuticals, etc. (which, assuming from the name, pogo.org does not cover).

    17. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by lgw · · Score: 1, Interesting

      The guy in the military wasn't a "whistle blower", he was a traitor, and will spend the rest of his life in jail. The morality of sites like Wikileaks is interesting to debate, but a serving member of the military who helps the enemy doesn't have a leg to stand on, period.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    18. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by blair1q · · Score: 1

      Assange didn't save anyone, and endangered many. In the very least-deleterious case, he made it more expensive to get the same job done. More likely, he extended the war by a year, had no effect on how combat operations would be evaluated on the ground, got a dumb kid jailed for life, got several informants tortured or killed, and put a target on his own back.

    19. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Misleading editing? You mean like how wikileaks edited out they guys carrying RPGS?

    20. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      It would be much easier to just eliminate Assange and his buddies. Not that I would advocate it, mind you, but if you're really so concerned about getting the best value for the money spent ....

    21. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by Caffinated · · Score: 1

      Wow, we're the enemy now? I thought that one of the more important functions of being a citizen was making sure that the government was accountable to us for it's actions. The guy in question, presuming that he actually was responsible, did certainly violate military regs, but he's hardly a traitor.

    22. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by lgw · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Your intuitions about good citizenship don't map well to appropriate behavior for serving military. He helped the enemy fight us (attacking the will to fight a war is just as useful as killing soldiers or sabotaging material). The only way his action could be justified was if he had solid evidence that his entire chain of command was acting illegally to cover up illegal orders. He knew nothing of the sort. He should have gone to his boss, and if he though his boss was corrupt to the approriate channels for that case, and only then if he saw evidence of clearly illegal activity being coevered up (and no such thing has come to light from what he leaked, so by now we can reasonably conclude there was no such thing).

      A film of a helicopter crew who clearly followed the rules of engagement when shooting a civilian, and were already investigated by their chain of command for an incident? That's not being a whistleblower, that's being an enemy propaganda agent, and a traitor.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    23. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by HungryHobo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I watched the full version first and that was shortly after the story broke, if they released it later it was by a matter of hours or at most days.

      stop bullshitting and outright lying.

      "Woah woah... so you're saying Wikileaks is under no obligation to rise above the likes of FOX News and MSNBC? Really??"

      you're obviously too dense to understand this but he was pointing out that editing is normal. normal because people don't watch an hour long video where 90% of it is nothing but the droning of an engine and shaky footage of nothing in particular.

      they released both the full video and a shorter version with the most important bits.
      deal with it.

    24. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't you think that editing out the long boring portions of the video had a misleading effect of making it seem like the gunners were trigger-happy? And why weren't the edits clearly marked with a black screen and a text "45 minutes trimmed" notice? It wouldn't be hard to edit the video in a less misleading way...

    25. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      You're going to blame whatever the casualties the last year of the war causes(in a few decades at the rate it's going) on wikileaks?

      Bullshit.

      The "dumb kid" made his own choices.
      Why aren't you throwing any of the blame towards the New York Times or the guardian?
      They both mirrored portions of the archive and publicised it(and of course the newspapers who weren't given priority bitched and moaned about it).

      you're like the sad pathetic old codgers who blame the anti-war protesters for the US fucking up in viatnam.

    26. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      If they provide no editorial they get shit on by the right wing nutjobs for being nothing more than a data dump.
      if they give a brief editorial, no matter how accurate and factual, they get shit on by the right wing nutjobs since reality tends to be biased against the right wing nutjobs.

      Provide an hour long video showing everything?

      "I'm not going to watch that, they're too lazy to edit it!"

      Provide an hour long video plus an edited short version?

      "BIAS!!!!! THEY EDITED IT!!!! EVIL!!!!!"

    27. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by nacturation · · Score: 1

      Now, since you say editing is bad, tell me of one news item you've seen where you were showed video that was not edited, go ahead, name the news item where they showed the whole video, not just the interesting bit. I'd like to know of that mythical time that happened that it seems you have witnessed. Or a newspaper you know that doesn't have an editor, maybe?

      How about Slashdot? No editing seems to happen as far as I can tell.

      --
      Want to improve your Karma? Instead of "Post Anonymously", try the "Post Humously" option.
    28. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Assange has no ethic, the others who turned manning over have no ethic. Manning had no ethic
      All of these people wanted spotlight, and they got it.
      As far as I know, all hackers who sought spotlight were really shitty hackers. See 2600, Phack, Black Hat etc as evidence

    29. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by DrugCheese · · Score: 1

      It's his sworn duty to protect the constitution from all enemies foreign AND DOMESTIC. He perceived a domestic threat against the constitution, it's up to the court to decide if it was valid or not.

      --
      *DrugCheese rants*
    30. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seems like WikiLeaks needs to setup a method for them to receive donations anonymously that does not require WikiLeaks to have any bank accounts.

    31. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by Maestro4k · · Score: 1

      Woah woah... so you're saying Wikileaks is under no obligation to rise above the likes of FOX News and MSNBC? Really??

      I certainly think Wikileaks should have released the whole video from the start along with the edited one, but you're not being realistic. In today's world, for better or worse, you just aren't going to get many people to sit through a video with long boring parts to see the parts you want them to see. You have to release an edited version highlighting what you want them to see that's short enough that people's attention spans won't make them give up before they see the important part(s). Wikileaks should definitely strive to do better than Fox News and MSNBC and make the full unedited version available for all who want it to see as well however.

      From what I understand their mission is to expose corruption and abuses by pretty much anyone that does them. While I don't really like some of the sensationalism they've used, I don't believe the whole world would know who and what they were without them. Just publishing leaked documents/videos alone won't cut it, you have to get people's attentions, and attention spans are mighty short nowadays with 24x7 news coming at you from numerous sources.

    32. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by MrSteveSD · · Score: 1

      Assange has done a severe disservice to WL with his emphasis on injecting over the top editorial into the stories on the site.

      I disagree. His whole "media performance" and anger over some of these incidents has been vital in actually getting the message out. Just releasing a photocopy of some document won't get any coverage at all. Just look at all the damning things that have been released via the Freedom of Information act over the years with no media interest whatsoever.

      In case you don't know...

      If you say "COINTELPRO" (not an FOI release) to most people, they have absolutely no idea what you are talking about. Stories like COINTELPRO are exactly the kind that the media has no interest in covering. Someone has to push the issue and drum up that interest. Assange is not just analysing the leaked data, he is also acting as a PR man for that data and it's vitally important that he performs that extra role.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/COINTELPRO

    33. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 5, Interesting

      right. for information to be safe and free, it has to be outside (jurisdictionally) of US borders.

      my god. who would have thought we would be saying or thinking this. 10, 20, 30 years ago I never would have imagined.

      from this generation onward, kids will grow up totally assuming they are being tapped, bugged and wire-sniffed. we really didn't have that feeling decades ago (I'm old enough to know). there was phone tapping and bugging, but not blatantly and not widespread. now its totally in-your-face. gag orders: how much more in-your-face can you be? the very concept of a 'you cant even talk to your lawyer' is so unamerican it just would not be believed 20 yrs ago. no one would take you seriously; they'd say that the 50's and mccarthyism is long behind us.

      sigh.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    34. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by quacking+duck · · Score: 1

      Not that I'm disagreeing with your premise, but...

      Compromise: release full video, with time indices of video they want to highlight, and viewers can jump to the times in question.

      It's not like we're watching this on VHS tapes.

    35. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by PRMan · · Score: 1

      What about all the "news" stations that showed what Pallywood serves up?

      Pallywood

      --
      Peter predicted that you would "deliberately forget" creation 2000 years ago...
    36. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Attention dumbshit, first of all, they released a larger video at the same time, BUT IT WAS STILL EDITED. Again, it still had many minutes cut out. It was reduced in quality from the original source file from the helicopter system. It had subtitles and commentary added.

      Who gives a fuck if it was "too long" to air or some other technical excuse? You think the media needs Assange to do their editing for them? Or boo hoo, the file was too darn big? It was smaller than a DVD rip. It was released on bittorrent, the file could have been a fucking terabyte.

      It would have been nice to have had the original video, you know so it would be possible to see if the file was fucking tampered with, like you talked about? Or, for instance so that the timestamps were even readable? Or so that someone could just KNOW FOR THEMSELVES that important facts weren't edited out. There was NO TECHNICAL REASON not to release the whole video as originally acquired, and a ton of reasons to release the entire thing.

      But there was one great big fat reason to not release the entire video, and that was because it would have been more relevant than their edited, "commentary added" version.

    37. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are just wrong. They released the unedited full version at the same time as the edited version.

      The edited version was shortened and put together for a press conference. The full version was always available.

      What is a news organization? They get leaked data and do light investigations. They write up articles about what they discovered (separate from the leaks.) You probably didn't know that though.

    38. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everybody knows the REAL l33t hackers hang out on freenode to write code, for the benefit of all, with liberty and beer for one and all! :)

    39. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This post is a reminder to us all that people can be really, really stupid. You would think that such blind adherence to a debunked claim would be properly ignored. But no, it gets modded +5, insightful. Really, I am speechless.

      Slashdot: news for nerds, comments by retards.

    40. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by c-reus · · Score: 1

      The guy in the military wasn't a "whistle blower", he was a traitor, and will spend the rest of his life in jail. The morality of sites like Wikileaks is interesting to debate, but a serving member of the military who helps the enemy doesn't have a leg to stand on, period.

      Who's the enemy here, US citizens?

    41. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      He helped the enemy fight us (attacking the will to fight a war is just as useful as killing soldiers or sabotaging material)

      Oh hell fucking no. You didn't just go there. I won't argue whether the action of the soldier was justified or not, because that's a story for a different thread. But to argue that merely providing information that tarnishes the image of the country as being the same as actively sabotaging installations and killing people is exactly what lead to the Kent State shootings, and enabled Hitler to rise to power in Germany.

      That argument is bullshit of the highest degree, because it not only makes it impossible to have a rational discussion about a war, but it also is a pretext to qualify anybody who questions the war as being a legitimate target for killing. I have seen the effects of that kind of logic, and it directly leads to killing anybody who is deemed objectionable by the one in power.

      Get the fuck out my country. You are the enemy.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    42. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by ushering05401 · · Score: 1

      2600 maintains physical distribution. It wouldn't matter if they were pushing Hannah Montana Linux on the masses - as long as the name hacker is in the title and limelight whoring politicians remain reactionary there is a value there.

      Phrack not only opened heads on a few things, but provided me with scrap paper I could feel good about for years after the fact.

      Spot on on BH/Dcon from what I can see. Back in the day DT meant death trap, now it means Dark Tangent, possibly the same thing.

      Your list could have had a lot bigger names on it, though. How about Obama's wunderkid from Virginia, Lamo & his 'journalist' boy toy, those Vigilant fuckers, etc...

    43. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by Seraphim_72 · · Score: 0

      No, I won't deal with it.

      You don't get to claim the high ground by releasing edited video.

      An hour of boring drone? That too is part of the capital "T" Truth. I am sorry your blood lust needs a fast forward button, but the machine in normal patrol for an hour before hand does influence what happens later.

      Sera

      --
      Slashdot, where armchair scientists get shouted down and armchair theologians get modded up.
    44. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by Seraphim_72 · · Score: 1

      Yes, because the "sad pathetic old codgers who blame the anti-war protesters for the US fucking up in viatnam" sic had an issue with naming sympathizers in a public area where our enemies could track them down. Look at the docs, they know who our friends are in country. How does this help anyone save for the Taliban and Al'Quida?

      --
      Slashdot, where armchair scientists get shouted down and armchair theologians get modded up.
    45. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by jimicus · · Score: 1

      Depends if they consider themselves journalists or simply a sort of online leak facility which journalists may wish to dig into.

      If the latter, then yes they probably ought to be publishing with minimal editing.

      If the former, the WHOLE FREAKIN' POINT of journalism is that there's an awful lot of unimportant guff to wade through to get to the story, you need to edit this out or you won't have a story.

    46. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't vote republicrat.

    47. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by Kidbro · · Score: 1

      You'd do great in concentration camps.

    48. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They did release the whole video

      Yes, after they were caught editing the video. You may think that's fine. I don't.

      They were not 'caught' editing the video. They put out the edited and unedited version at the same time and clearly marked them as to what they were.

      Now, since you say editing is bad, tell me of one news item you've seen where you were showed video that was not edited

      Woah woah... so you're saying Wikileaks is under no obligation to rise above the likes of FOX News and MSNBC? Really??

      And that's ignoring the fact that Wikileaks *isn't a news organization*. They've said so themselves *multiple* times. Furthermore, editing releases like that flies right in the face of their very mission, and is *deeply* hypocritical.

      How is it hypocritical to publish an edited version that is clearly marked as edited alongside a non-edited version?

      Frankly, I'm shocked you're even trying to justify this behaviour.

      Maybe you should get your facts straight.

    49. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Frankly I'm shocked you can BREATHE.

    50. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      I have looked at the docs quite a lot and I have yet to see any names of informants.

    51. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      Or... I don't know. Release the full version for anyone interested and a shorter version for people who jsut want the important bits.

      I guess every news service anywhere ever also attracts your ire since when showing footage like a clip from a security camera at a robbery they don't show the other 23.9 hours of totaly uninteresting shit that happened that day.

    52. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by lgw · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Again, there's a difference in expected behavior for a civilian and a serving member of the military. Nobody shot Jane Fonda, despite her best efforts at enemy propaganda.

      If you're a soldier with a complaint, you take it up internally, and for good reason: you almost certianly don't know the whole story. That's part of the deal - the army doesn't tell you the whole story, because it occasionally needs to keep a secret during war, but it provides you (in modern times) with an aveneue of complaint if you have solid evidence of misconduct by your boss (and otherwise, talk to your boss).

      If you're a senior officer with a complaint about the culture itself (and at a certain level of senority, the culture itself is part of your job), you're supposed to exit the military before complaining to the outside world. Many good (and silly) complaints about how the military works have surfaced from retiring colonels and generals who have do this the right way.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    53. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by lgw · · Score: 1

      "Perciving a threat" is the start of the process, not the end. He saw some stuff that looked fishy, fine. He doesn't know enough to evaluate that, and knows he doesn't know. The military keeps secrets from it's own people, and that's part of the deal, and why there is an internal system for reporting something that looks fishy.

      The bar to justify what he did is very high indeed, and you don't get to skip to whole part of working withing an established system for reporting misconduct internally before doing somehting like this. Really, there's no excuse for somehting like this. If he had reported it to his boss, and had solid evidence that his boss was illegally conspiring to cover illegal activity, that would merely justify going through the established internall channels that exist for that purpose. And that's just the beginning of a long process he ignored.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    54. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by lgw · · Score: 1

      There were Afghani civilians who risk there lives to tell the US military things that relaly helped them in their fight. He released the names of those Afghanis, allowing the Taliban to kill many of these men who were working directly to help our soldiers. He gave direct, material aid to the enemy in an ongoing conflict.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    55. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by Synonymous+Homonym · · Score: 1

      from this generation onward, kids will grow up totally assuming they are being tapped, bugged and wire-sniffed.

      Not assuming. Knowing.

      we really didn't have that feeling decades ago (I'm old enough to know).

      Ignorance is bliss.
      Most people prefer to continue to not believe it.

    56. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by oreaq · · Score: 1

      What did they edit out of the video that was wrong to take out?

      The unedited video shows that at least one man in the group that got murdered was armed with an assualt rifle. No guns are visible in the edited version.

      And what link do you have that proves that they provided the unedited video only after being 'caught' doing what every other news video have had done in the whole entire history of news video?

      AFAIK both videos were released at the same time.

    57. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

      my god. who would have thought we would be saying or thinking this. 10, 20, 30 years ago I never would have imagined.

      Here's the thing: the US federal government has had a rather authoritarian streak for quite a long time. In both the 19th and 20th centuries, there have been federal agents who wanted to and in some cases did read people's mail without a warrant to do so. Once the telegraph came into being, security agents tapped that. When telephones became commonplace, J Edgar was there to tap those illegally. And now that the Internet is a common means of communication, these same sorts of folks are doing their best to tap that whenever possible, legally or not.

      It's thoroughly part of the culture of the FBI that the rights of American citizens should be trampled on whenever the FBI think it's convenient. Foreign citizens might as well forget having any rights when they relate to the CIA. And it's worth mentioning that these agencies will do this sort of thing with or without legal sanction, and with or without the sanction of the political officials that theoretically control them, the President included.

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    58. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      What did they edit out of the video that was wrong to take out?

      The unedited video shows that at least one man in the group that got murdered was armed with an assualt rifle. No guns are visible in the edited version.

      Ah, now THAT is interesting; do you know when in the video I can go look for that?

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    59. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by BobMcD · · Score: 1

      you're obviously too dense to understand this but he was pointing out that editing is normal.

      You're giving them too much credit, Hobo. These people are simply repeating the talking points that have been planted as a part of a counter-intelligence operation. They're not backed up by any fact, primarily because this has been found to REINFORCE belief in them. When the ignorant is outed for being so, particularly in a negative light, they cling even harder to their belief. There are at least two of these, and I'd not be the least bit surprised to discover that they were planted by the government's internet goons:

      A) Wikileaks edited the video.

      Debunked by the simple fact that absolutely none of the content of the video got changed by their editing. Nobody in the Pentagon is denying any of it. This is the 'catch' designed to make people cling to this idea and spread the word that Wikileaks cannot be trusted.

      B) People were named, and are now dead

      Debunked by the lack of even a single example of this being true. The 'catch' here is the logical loop that it COULD be true, so therefore it is only a matter of time before it IS true. Except no one has even verified that any of these named people were even still alive at the time the documents were published. Further, I have yet to see an actual list of any actual names. It seems that everyone agrees that they're in there, but if they are, everyone is suspiciously quiet about it. Were this true, would it not make a lot more sense to put these people on a plane to America, put them on TV, and really demonize Assange?

      There are more, but these stink, stink, stink of counter-intelligence.

    60. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Again, there's a difference in expected behavior for a civilian and a serving member of the military.

      That argument didn't work during the Nuremberg trials, and for good reason. For one, it's because the only difference in the expected behavior of a civilian member and that of a serving member of the military is that they are supposed to contact different organizations in case of issues. Being part of a hierarchical organization doesn't absolve people from crimes they committed, helped commit, or helped bury.

      Many good (and silly) complaints about how the military works have surfaced from retiring colonels and generals who have do this the right way.

      Do you know why a lot military types wait until retirement before complaining, especially if they're higher ranked? You can't get your pension cut if you embarrass your superiors. Or beaten to a pulp. Or hung out to dry during a firefight. It's a basic economic calculation.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    61. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by gknoy · · Score: 1

      there was phone tapping and bugging, but not blatantly and not widespread.

      There was in the days of J. Edgar Hoover... or, at least, the popular view of his organization was of doing that. There's a reason some people would say "fuck Hoover" on the phone. (Of course there was no way it was as widespread as it is now. Technology marches on.)

    62. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by higuita · · Score: 1

      Naturally the common people don't want war... but after all it is the
      leaders of a country who determine the policy, and it is always a
      simple matter to drag the people along, whether it is a democracy, or
      a fascist dictatorship, or a parliament, or a communist dictatorship.
      Voice or no voice, the people can always be brought to the bidding of
      the leaders. That is easy. All you have to do is tell them they are
      being attacked, and denounce the pacifists for lack of patriotism and
      exposing the country to danger. It works the same in every country.

                            -- Hermann Goering, Nazi and war criminal, 1883-1946

      --
      Higuita
    63. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by DrugCheese · · Score: 1

      So somewhere after reporting it to his superiors there would have been a press conference where the Pentagon spokesman said something along the lines of 'Up through the chain of command we've received reports that we in fact DO keep a body count for collateral damage'. It is because this government is so secretive that these things need to be brought out another way. The people accepts the fact that secrecy is vital when it comes to wartime maneuvers. But when the people ask questions like 'how many civilians are dying in this collateral damage?' and the government replies 'We don't keep a body count' when in fact they clearly do - this secrecy is suspect and should be broken.

      --
      *DrugCheese rants*
    64. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by oreaq · · Score: 1

      No, sorry. I saw it in a short clip of the unedited version on TV a couple of months ago.

    65. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by Dayofswords · · Score: 1

      They released it at the same time, people didn't want to watch the 45minute version that included unrelated events and moments of them just waiting for the ground forces to come.

      the shorted one was focused on but the news people didn't notice the download link for the giant uncut one

      days after the release the news had "did they edit the video?" and i'm like 'duh! why not get the uncut version i have had since the first day'

      --
      Someday we'll hit the human carrying capacity. And the band will just play on.
    66. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They released the complete unedited footage at the same time, what's your point?

    67. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      What about all the "news" stations that showed what Pallywood serves up?

      Pallywood

      I skipped ahead to see what they were on about, they act like taking the kid from the sidewalk to the ambulance on the other side of the street divider is "taking him closer to the Israeli post" and that means they aren't afraid of getting shot... because the bullet wouldn't get all the way across the street??? The fuck kind of logic is that? I watched a bit more of the same kind of reasoning and gave up.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    68. Re:How should people help wikileaks? by makomk · · Score: 1

      Yes, after they were caught editing the video. You may think that's fine. I don't.

      No, they released the unedited version at exactly the same time as the edited one. Probably even to the second, actually.

  3. Messengers by cosm · · Score: 3, Insightful

    They continue to shoot the messenger. It wouldn't surprise me if the intelligence community turned that phrase literal.

    --
    'We are trying to prove ourselves wrong as quickly as possible, because only in that way can we find progress.' RPF
    1. Re:Messengers by Scrameustache · · Score: 5, Insightful

      They continue to shoot the messenger. It wouldn't surprise me if the intelligence community turned that phrase literal.

      I would be surprised: The US has long become more sophisticated than that. They understand that if you create a martyr, you could still be hearing about it two thousand years later. It's better to discredit them, make people think they're a narcissist, that they're reckless, that they're a rapist. Cut their funding, turn their friends against them, that's the kind of things I expect from the US; Straight up assassination I expect from Russians, their idea of subtlety is "exotic poisons".

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    2. Re:Messengers by ifiwereasculptor · · Score: 1

      Next thing you know Obama will be saying they have evidence that UPS has WMDs.

    3. Re:Messengers by martas · · Score: 1

      the funny thing is, it used to be the opposite - not so long ago, it was the soviets who's intricate schemes and manipulations made the CIA look like a bunch of jocks that couldn't do anything without a sniper rifle... or at least that's my impression from 30-th hand accounts of things that happened long before i was born.

    4. Re:Messengers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The U.S. -used- to be more sophisticated than that. Funny what budget cuts, layoffs, and legitimate excuses can accomplish in under a generation. The only reason they wouldn't kill off the messenger more directly now comes down to a matter of causing loss of face to certain parties with an interest in maintaining a profit margin. If it's cheaper and easier to just kill 'em off in a car wreck or an industrial accident, better believe that's what they'll do.

    5. Re:Messengers by Sepodati · · Score: 1

      The US has long become more sophisticated than that. They understand that if you create a martyr, you could still be hearing about it two thousand years later.

      Wait a fucking minute... are we getting blamed for that now, too??

    6. Re:Messengers by Jeek+Elemental · · Score: 1

      If you want to shut down a somewhat controversial organization, the best way is actually to help it.
      Nudge it slowly in the controversial direction, in a while it crashes into the limit of public understanding and is gone.

      Might be hard with wikileaks tho, Assange is smart and wary.

    7. Re:Messengers by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      The US has long become more sophisticated than that. They understand that if you create a martyr, you could still be hearing about it two thousand years later.

      Wait a fucking minute... are we getting blamed for that now, too??

      You take that description as "blame"? The bias and prejudice is all yours.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    8. Re:Messengers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Calm down, it was a fucking joke.

    9. Re:Messengers by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      the funny thing is, it used to be the opposite - not so long ago, it was the soviets who's intricate schemes and manipulations made the CIA look like a bunch of jocks that couldn't do anything without a sniper rifle... or at least that's my impression from 30-th hand accounts of things that happened long before i was born.

      Well, it all depends on the quality of the agents and leaders in place at any given time; it's not a permanent quality, it's more like seasons, changing in cycles. There's a rise to sophistication, then a decadence, a dark time, a renaissance...

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

  4. "Official US Watchlist" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Plenty of stories repeat this "official US watchlist" phrase, but without providing details. What watchlist? What's it called? How does it work?

    1. Re:"Official US Watchlist" by BadAnalogyGuy · · Score: 2, Informative
    2. Re:"Official US Watchlist" by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 3, Informative

      One possibility is the SDN list: http://www.ustreas.gov/offices/enforcement/ofac/sdn/

    3. Re:"Official US Watchlist" by JustOK · · Score: 1

      and watching the watch list is enough to get you watched by those who watch who watch the watchlist

      --
      rewriting history since 2109
    4. Re:"Official US Watchlist" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      govt-rolled.

      it's like rick-rolled, but you end up being watched because of a link you follow.

    5. Re:"Official US Watchlist" by Killall+-9+Bash · · Score: 1

      not if the list gets slash-dotted.... they can't watch us all (yet).

      --
      "Prediction: within 10 years, Windows will be a Linux distribution." Me, 7-6-2016
    6. Re:"Official US Watchlist" by ushering05401 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      They don't have to watch us all. We can all be intelligent and capable thinkers expressing ourselves well and not be saying one original thing between us.

      They watch using theories of organization.

    7. Re:"Official US Watchlist" by Magada · · Score: 1

      Parent post needs much upmodding.

      --
      Something bad is coming when people are suddenly anxious to tell the truth.
  5. I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by huzur79 · · Score: 0, Troll

    Im not totally on Wikileaks side because they didn't take enough care to protect peoples names in the content they released. Its one thing to release content for the world to see but its another thing to get people killed by releasing it with out at least removing names. That totally turned me off from Wikileaks.

    1. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by rueger · · Score: 5, Insightful

      get people killed by releasing it with out at least removing names

      Who? Has anyone documented a case where this happened? from what I read WL were pretty careful in vetting the material.

      Without names and places this is FUD.

    2. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I dunno. I think it got much more interest that way. Its one thing to have [5 non-combatants were killed by some Americans who thought they were carrying an RPG] and instead have "A,B,C,D,E were killed by X,Y, Z at [date] [time] during operation [whatever]"

      It increases the amount of accountability at least, and makes sure that people responsable (or their superiors) are put into the limelight.

      That said, certain operative information and intelligence sources - I would agree with you. But I think that naming people who did something bad is far better than blanking it out. No accountability there.

    3. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Im not totally on Wikileaks side because they didn't take enough care to protect peoples names in the content they released. Its one thing to release content for the world to see but its another thing to get people killed by releasing it with out at least removing names. That totally turned me off from Wikileaks.

      How about the government taking care to protect innocent people by getting the fuck out of Afghanistan?
      It is one thing to go after the 9/11 perps, but it another thing to try and win a ground war without any plan for victory and idiotic rules of engagement like 'patrol only where you aren't likely to encounter the enemy' and 'don't shoot back at someone if they're firing from a mosque.'

    4. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by techno-vampire · · Score: 4, Insightful

      My feeling exactly. Wikileaks has conflated the public "right to know" with an imaginary "need to know," and decided that this right is more important than the lives of the people named in the documents. IMAO, they've consistently shown a complete lack of common sense and a reckless disregard for the danger they're exposing people to. The fact that something is classified as Secret or Top Secret isn't enough of a reason to leak it; it should only be leaked (Again, IMAO.) if it's been classified for all the wrong reasons. Yes, we all know of times when things have been classified because that's the easiest way to cover up mistakes, and things like that deserve leaking, but leaking the names and locations of people who are helping the US to fight terrorists is Simply Wrong.

      --
      Good, inexpensive web hosting
    5. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by Scrameustache · · Score: 5, Informative

      Im not totally on Wikileaks side because they didn't take enough care to protect peoples names in the content they released.

      They held back 15 thousand pages to protect people's names while they tried to sort through them. Google it.
      They asked the pentagon to tell them which name to remove, the pentagon told them to go to hell.

      Its one thing to release content for the world to see but its another thing to get people killed by releasing it with out at least removing names.

      They did remove names, and they got no one killed. Try to find someone they got killed: You can't. The people who said they were gonna get people killed are the people who actively do indeed actually kill real people, have been for years, plan on doing it for years still. They fed you FUD, and you ate it all up.

      That totally turned me off from Wikileaks.

      Mission accomplished.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    6. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I believe the Iraqi people can release over 100,000 names of people killed by US troops. Oh, that's not the issue here is it.

    7. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by Xelios · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm totally on Wikileaks side. I know it's PC to damn Wikileaks for accidentally releasing some names in the 75,000 reports that were leaked recently, but I find it's always good to keep some perspective. The wars in the middle east have cost tens of thousands of lives, and part of the reason they're still going is the tight lipped attitude of the government with regards to any kind of transparency. If the administration weren't in the habit of releasing reports that are entirely blacked out, or flat out refusing FOIP requests altogether, then the task of providing a clear picture of how the war is progressing wouldn't befall a volunteer organization like Wikileaks. And when Wikileaks requested the help of the Pentagon in redacting the names, that request was of course ignored.

      Perhaps some people suffered as a result of that leak, but I find that no more tragic than the dozens of people who die to IED's and suicide bombings every other day in those same countries.

      --
      Murphey's fighting Occam, and we're in the stands.
    8. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      get people killed by releasing it with out at least removing names

      Who? Has anyone documented a case where this happened? from what I read WL were pretty careful in vetting the material.

      Without names and places this is FUD.

      And more important, STUPID FUD. The same military asskissers that are worried about informants couldn't give two shits about the "collateral damage" that actually happens out there. Apparently it's bad to get a Taliban informant killed, but "accidentally" bombing a house full of children is OK as long as there were "reports" of "insurgent activity".

    9. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by Cylix · · Score: 2

      Hey,

      Would you help us redact some names from these stolen classified documents?

      I'm not exactly sure how they were in a position to agree and assist. Assisting, would really be acknowledging that wikileaks had a right to the information and the release of said data was approved. It's complete rubbish to assume that anyone inside the government would agree to anything like that. It's such a horse shit move to continue to cite that reasoning as why its ok to release classified data.

      The documents are what they are and if you want more transparent government we have a clear system for changing things. Just because we might not agree with something does not make it ok to not comply with the current laws.

      With that said... if you had an organization which possess tons of leaked classified documents you would immediately treat them as hostile and react as such. You would do anything that is within your power to condemn such an organization. It's the plain and simple truth of what is going on here.

      --
      "You should always go to other people's funerals; otherwise, they won't come to yours." -- Yogi Berra
    10. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      To a point I agree with you, but let's be blunt here. Part of the fault lies with NATO. Perhaps if they had been more forthright there would be less of a desire by so many in the public to try to get a more complete and truthful of the Afghan mission. The whole thing is becoming increasingly controversial throughout the NATO nations involved, and this didn't start with Wikileaks releasing these documents. So the ultimate blame for the whole thing lies with the politicians who are too cowardly or too deep in the bullshit themselves to openly admit serious issues.

      Maybe politicians should think that ultimately they are servants of the public, and not masters, and the public has a right to know as full a picture as can safely be revealed. What the Iraq and Afghan leaks have shown us is that the politicians and the military have been actively pursuing a policy of hiding nasty truths, not for national security or any high-minded rationale, but because they're trying to cover their own butts. If Wikileaks and Assange are supposed to go down for their part, then there are a bunch of politicians and generals who every bit as deserving of the same treatment, and it's the height of hypocrisy to condemn Wikileaks and not to condemn those bastards on the other side of the fence.

      A pox on all their houses, me'thinks.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    11. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by Scrameustache · · Score: 5, Informative

      My feeling exactly. Wikileaks has conflated the public "right to know" with an imaginary "need to know," and decided that this right is more important than the lives of the people named in the documents. IMAO, they've consistently shown a complete lack of common sense and a reckless disregard for the danger they're exposing people to.

      You obviously don't know that they held back fifteen thousand pages because they contained names that ma or may not be innocent people. You hate them for something they're not guilty of. You've been successfully manipulated by well crafted propaganda, but don't feel bad, it happens to millions of people every day.

      Yes, we all know of times when things have been classified because that's the easiest way to cover up mistakes, and things like that deserve leaking, but leaking the names and locations of people who are helping the US to fight terrorists is Simply Wrong.

      And that is why wikileaks did not do that, but the pentagon says they did. So you'll hate them and refuse to listen. And it works sooooo well.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    12. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I won't even go that far. Whether they are terrorists and if the U.S. military deserves the repercussions is a matter of perspective. So I won't call it Simply Wrong(tm). I will however say, that to release those documents on the behalf of a select group of unknown, unaccredited individuals, without appealing to the authority of any recognized government, or a representative group of citizens, or the private council of influential thinkers, or a similar effort at stability-ensuring care, is Simply Wrong(tm).

    13. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by m509272 · · Score: 1

      If I'm not mistaken, I believe his former "partners" recently bailed on ASSange and one of the reasons cited was poor vetting. Again not sure about this and don't have time to look it up at the moment.

    14. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The wars in the middle east have cost tens of thousands of lives...

      But they're not American lives. Foreigners aren't important, they're not actually Americans.

    15. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by techno-vampire · · Score: 0, Troll
      You hate them for something they're not guilty of.

      No, I don't hate them for that, or for anything else. I think that some of what they're doing is wrong, but, unlike you, I'm adult enough to separate my dislike of some of their actions from what I think of them as people.

      --
      Good, inexpensive web hosting
    16. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by Starcom8826 · · Score: 0, Troll

      They held back 15 thousand pages to protect people's names while they tried to sort through them. Google it. They asked the pentagon to tell them which name to remove, the pentagon told them to go to hell.

      See this kind of statement doesn't make sense to me. Why is it reasonable to steal documents from the Pentagon and then go back to them and say "Hey, we stole so much that we care to look through ourselves so go redact this for us"? If Wikileaks wanted to take the high road it would withhold all the documents and then at the end do a final check. Not whine about how the Pentagon isn't doing their work for them. That just seems like a lame attempt at taking a jab at the Pentagon that has nothing to do with moralities of disclosing secret documents.

    17. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Assisting, would really be acknowledging that wikileaks had a right to the information

      According to their claims, assisting would have protected the lives of thousands of Afghan civilians and US troops.
      Not assisting lets them say that the guys who asked for help in protecting lives are recklessly endangering lives.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    18. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by icebraining · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Just because we might not agree with something does not make it ok to not comply with the current laws.

      What laws has Wikileaks failed to comply with?

    19. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by Scrameustache · · Score: 4, Insightful

      unlike you, I'm adult enough

      Calling me "not an adult" is not the action of an adult. You now say you dislike "their actions" but those actions are fictions. Grow up and learn to admit your mistake; when you believed and repeated a lie you were told, once you've learned that it was a lie, stop defending it.
      And stop being the kind of petty little shit that moves the goalposts to "what my bile was directed at", you know damn well that's irrelevant, what's important is "was wikileaks reckless or diligent". The truth is they redacted documents for review in order to avoid causing harm to innocents, the lie is that they didn't. You believed and repeated and are now defending the lie, you should be ashamed of yourself.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    20. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by Scrameustache · · Score: 3, Insightful

      They held back 15 thousand pages to protect people's names while they tried to sort through them. Google it.
      They asked the pentagon to tell them which name to remove, the pentagon told them to go to hell.

      See this kind of statement doesn't make sense to me. Why is it reasonable to steal documents from the Pentagon and then go back to them and say "Hey, we stole so much that we care to look through ourselves so go redact this for us"?

      That does indeed make no sense. What actually happened makes sense, though: They were given documents, they reviewed them, identified thousands and thousands of pages that they were uneasy about releasing because they contained information that could be used to harm innocent people, and they asked the one source that knows who's who in these papers to tell them who to protect.

      The pentagon decided that instead of helping protect innocent people, they would lie and say that wikileaks didn't even try to protect innocent people, and that wikileaks is putting people in danger. Because the pentagon is very good at propaganda, and doesn't mind one bit if innocent people get killed, so long as they get away with killing them scott free.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    21. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The organization of WL doesn't follow the dogma: "Information wants to be free" But Assange has been living that religion since he was a kid.

      That sort of mindset is what terrifies the ingrained Machiavellian leadership of the modern day. They don't want the world to see what they are really doing, what backdoor deals are being made, what "internal confidential" policy changes occur immediately following CFR gatherings etc. We are not in the ruling class, we don't have million dollar budgets to get elected to positions of power.

      Those who do, want to keep their power, so they work very hard to make sure the engine of politics isn't threatened. The "image" of a nation is more important than the actions it performs.

      And for those of you who believe in the american dream, you probably work for google and made the (statistically) rare transition from not-upper-class to upper-class. Even the wealthy don't believe in the dream, they use your mistaken belief in it to get wealthy.

    22. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course there will be worry. Killing civilians is perfectly ok so long as one can limit the media backlash. But informants? They're worth their weight in gold... many times over. Ask a cop how important insiders are to their operations, Taliban informants are worth even more.

    23. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      Part of the fault lies with NATO. Perhaps if they had been more forthright there would be less of a desire by so many in the public to try to get a more complete and truthful of the Afghan mission.

      That is complete and utter bullshit. The Afghan / Iraq wars have been amongst the most (if not THE most) open conflicts in history. We've never had access to so much up-to-the-minute information about a war as we have in the last decade. The problem isn't that "NATO" hasn't been "open enough" - the problem is that the paranoid morons who are always demanding more information have already made up their minds about what's going on. They're convinced that there must be 700 million dead civilians in Afghanistan, all of whom have been raped, tortured, BBQ'd, and eaten by US soldiers, and they won't stop "demanding information" until they find evidence that proves they're right. And since the fringe morons are only "asking for information", even the average, rational person, is likely to nod along in agreement as long as the demands are worded correctly.

      To use another example - it's like the goddamn conspiracy theorists. 9/11 was the most investigated, most documented attack in history, yet the 9/11 lunatics will continue asking for "a new investigation" for centuries to come. Why? Exactly the same damn reason - they're already convinced they know "The Truth", and will continue "asking for information" or "asking for a new investigation" as long as the data we have continues to contradict what they believe.

    24. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by c6gunner · · Score: 0, Troll

      "Hey Mr. Police officer, if you don't hold down this girl for me while I rape her, I'll just kill her right now and have it done with."

      Yah, you're right, real simple decision. Good to know exactly the kind of person you are.

    25. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mission accomplished.

      You should not underestimate your own role in this. If all I had available to form an opinion from was your comments then I would think even worse of Wikileaks.

      Because some people have been around long enough to recognize the styles and tricks you use and which kinds of individuals and groups it is that makes use of those (and we don't care whether you hide behind a hammer and sickle or stolen runes or calligraphy or anything else: you're still the same anyways).

    26. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      I really am curious, I've only heard about one warlord who got killed because possibly he might have been indirectly implicated in the documents.
      people keep talking about all the names but from reading a lot of random samples I have yet to see any informants named.

      So my question:

      What informants are named and where?

    27. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by morkk · · Score: 1

      Well done mate for fighting the good fight throughout the comments on this story.

      As humans we tend to think of those who we voluntarily associate with to be pretty much like us; it's only when you read the comments on stories like this that you realise that some of the otherwise very intelligent folks populating this site are in fact completely fucking bat-shit insane.

      Two sigs seen on slashdot are apposite here (paraphrasing):

      Light travels faster than sound: that's why some people appear bright until they speak.

      and:

      A patriot is someone who defends his country from its government.

    28. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      If it's so damned open why is everyone running for cover and condemning Wikileaks over footage of murdering soldiers in Iraq or hiding the number of civilian deaths in Afghanistan?

      I call bullshit on you. If there was nothing to hide, nobody would be freaking out. At any rate, the public overrule the politicians. The politicians are servants, nothing more and nothing less.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    29. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by DrugCheese · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Exactly FUD. I love the argument though, very looney toons. It's ok to kill innocent people left and right when you were aiming at 'the bad guys' ... but if you hypothetically threaten their lives with information then that's crossing the line!

      Maybe their just greedy, and don't want to share the civilian deaths with the enemy.

      --
      *DrugCheese rants*
    30. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by Totenglocke · · Score: 1

      Its one thing to release content for the world to see but its another thing to get people killed by releasing it with out at least removing names.

      My general rule is, if you're doing something secretive that might cause people to want to kill you if they knew, chances are you probably shouldn't be doing it.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    31. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by Totenglocke · · Score: 1

      Wikileaks has conflated the public "right to know" with an imaginary "need to know,"

      Considering that democratic government's are supposed to be run "by the people", the people deserve to know every last detail of what the government does. The government works for us - we do NOT work for them.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    32. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by MadMaverick9 · · Score: 1

      I would like to point out that the people who originally created these documents are pretty clueless.

      Who in his right mind puts real names and real locations into classified wartime documents!?!? I guess they forgot how things were done in World War II - Code names.

      It's not Wikileaks who should've protect people's names in these documents. It's the people who originally wrote these documents who have been careless.

      Instead of wasting your time on facebook and other stupid sites, start reading some real books. For example about this man - "Little Bill"

      You may learn a thing or two from history.

      Signed, GLYPTIC

    33. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by Dhalka226 · · Score: 1

      hey held back 15 thousand pages to protect people's names while they tried to sort through them. Google it.

      I believe it. But "trying not to leak names" and "not leaking names" are not the same, and there is a real risk of death to the people trying to help save the lives not only of US troops but their own countrymen. For what? Daily incident reports that largely tell us nothing we don't know? That drone attacks are less successful than the spokesman says? That an Afghan policeman was shot by the Afghan army when he was smoking hash in the shower, got spooked and started firing at them? Does anybody in the world not know that the government of Afghanistan is weak yet? Is this "insight" really worth even the potential of getting people killed?

      They asked the pentagon to tell them which name to remove, the pentagon told them to go to hell.

      You make this sound like a bad thing. The Pentagon was supposed to help Assange with his goal of disseminating classified information to unauthorized sources? You think anybody involved wants to touch that with a 10 foot pole, which would be illegal for them to do in the first place? Especially anybody with the clearance to actually read the damn things without committing another crime? It was a false request, designed to paint them as uncaring when he did what he was going to do all along.

      They did remove names, and they got no one killed.

      You might be right; two minutes of Google searching did not turn up any information about people who actually got killed.

      As far as names? Simon Hermes, Mohammed Moubin, Gul Said. "On and on it goes, name after name of "collaborators" with the U.S. military, name after name of people whose lives are now in direct danger." -- http://www.cjr.org/campaign_desk/the_assange_leaks.php

      The people who said they were gonna get people killed are the people who actively do indeed actually kill real people, have been for years, plan on doing it for years still

      Assigning some sort of moral equivalence to assassinating an informant and bombing the wrong building or shooting the wrong target makes you look like a moron. I hope you know that.

      War sucks. Maybe this war should never have been started; maybe it should end tomorrow. But these are not, not nearly, the same thing.

      In one of your approximately eight billion posts in this thread saying basically the exact same things over and over again you asked for reasons that Assange is an egotistical, self-centered prick. How about from human rights groups?

      Mr. Assange asked what the groups were doing to analyze the documents already published, and asked whether Amnesty in particular would provide staff to help redact the names of Afghan civilians, according to people familiar with the letter.

      An Amnesty official replied to say that while the group has limited resources, it wouldn't rule out the idea of helping, according to people familiar with the reply. The official suggested that Mr. Assange and the human-rights groups hold a conference call to discuss the matter.

      Mr. Assange then replied: "I'm very busy and have no time to deal with people who prefer to do nothing but cover their asses. If Amnesty does nothing I shall issue a press release highlighting its refusal," according to people familiar with the exchange.

      Later, WikiLeaks posted on its Twitter account: "Pentagon wants to bankrupt us by refusing to assist review. Media won't take responsibility. Amnesty won't. What to do?"

      -- http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703428604575419580947722558.html?mod=WSJ_hps_MIDDLESecondNews

      These are reall

    34. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by Namarrgon · · Score: 1

      Obviously not that simple, but if I was the girl, and those were the only two choices, I'd vote for the rape. Lesser of two evils and all that.

      IRL, there's usually a lot of other choices involved; delaying tactics, trust building, overall harm minimisation by limited co-operation, etc. The Pentagon may or may not have considered any, but I'm guessing they refused to negotiate in any way, on policy. From Wikileaks' point of view, there's no harm in asking for help pointing out anything they may have missed, despite the expected answer - it's a life & death matter, after all.

      In any case, Wikileaks clearly did make a bona fide attempt to protect the innocent. And they're not the ones actually out there killing people, either. If you're assigning blame, you could spread it a lot wider.

      --
      Why would anyone engrave "Elbereth"?
    35. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, because previous current laws made it:
        - illegal to drink alcohol
        - illegal to have sex before marriage
        - illegal to have an abortion,
        - illegal to have a relationship with someone of a different race.
        - illegal to vote without paying a tax
        - illegal to be a free man without your "freedom papers"

      Because the only logical thing to do is to comply with current laws. We could protest to get them changed, but if you have more than 10 people, that's illegal too.

    36. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "need to know,"

      When the US military started hiding murder of civilians by US soldiers and trying to downplay the number of innocent deaths, it became "need to know". If your government does illegal acts that violate basic human rights, it loses any moral ground on keeping anything related to that secret.

      It wasn't Wikileaks who did the things that went public. It was the US government and US military. The government is the culprit here, NOT the messenger.

      Not to mention that what you say is PLAIN WRONG. Wikileaks has screened and withheld parts they thought damaging to individuals. Basically you are either just lying or mindlessly repeating "official" talking points.

    37. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by Sepodati · · Score: 1

      I think we were just lucky that there wasn't any/much identifying information in the leak. Maybe that's what the rest of the documents are. You have to admit that it'd be a concern when a trove of raw data is just dumped to the public, though. Was every single line looked at? If so, why not just release the ones that clearly showed a coverup, war crime, etc. Where are those documents? Where are the leaks and the whisteblowing? All I see is a copy and paste of an operations database.

    38. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They asked the pentagon to tell them which name to remove, the pentagon told them to go to hell.

      Hi! I'm about to release all your bank statements from the last 10 years onto the internet. You have a week to tell me which account numbers to remove.

      I have your 3 children hostage. You have 1 hour to choose which one of them I kill. Fail, and they all die. And you wouldn't want that to happen, because that would be entirely your fault.

    39. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      They did remove names, and they got no one killed.

      You might be right; two minutes of Google searching did not turn up any information about people who actually got killed.

      Your dedication to the facts is awe-inspiring. Pray tell why you thought it did get people killed previously. Probably you were believing as your talking head of choice demanded.

      As far as names? Simon Hermes, Mohammed Moubin, Gul Said. "On and on it goes, name after name of "collaborators" with the U.S. military, name after name of people whose lives are now in direct danger." -- http://www.cjr.org/campaign_desk/the_assange_leaks.php

      It's clear that there will be names included. Some names are necessary to tell the story, especially where complicity is involved.

      The people who said they were gonna get people killed are the people who actively do indeed actually kill real people, have been for years, plan on doing it for years still

      Assigning some sort of moral equivalence to assassinating an informant and bombing the wrong building or shooting the wrong target makes you look like a moron. I hope you know that.

      Wait, how many times did we try to kill Castro? Also, the government wants us to believe that they can reliably drop smart bombs down chimneys, and they also want us to believe that bombs just fall on the entirely wrong building because of equipment failure, when they spend umpteen hojillion dollars to make sure each one goes where they want it. We all know that dropping the bomb down the chimney was a one in a million shot. What we don't know is that our troops shoot up civilians all the damned time. When you win, you end up operating the government that receives the reports of wrongdoing, so you can make lots of them just vanish. You crucify a couple of assholes and you walk away whistling while scrubbing the blood of innocents from beneath your fingernails, and you get to keep your position.

      How about when he plead guilty to 25 counts of hacking computer networks in the 1990s, including a Canadian telecommunications firm and NASA, while he and his cronies monitored the police who were trying to find them and left messages for the detectives? I'm sure it was just the "pursuit of truth" at work, no egotism at all.

      This is precisely what I would do were I in his position; I would mislead and antagonize my enemy while monitoring their activity to determine the effectiveness of my efforts. You are suggesting that he be less effective. Have you thought any of these arguments through or are you typing the entire comment with your knee?

      Or how about when the rape charges came about and he claimed it was a CIA conspiracy. Bad enough to make those claims without any evidence, of course, but then when one of his own Wikileaks members called him on it, he tried to claim he never said it, only that he "had been warned it might happen." Now we have a repeat. With no reason to believe this is anything but a business deciding they don't want to be associated with a group on a US watchlist and an Australian blacklist, it's declared it is the victim of "financial warfare by the US government."

      When you are attacked it's reasonable to assume that the attack comes from those who have the most to gain from it.

      And on the possibility that it's a business protecting it's business interests? "This is likely to cause a huge backlash against Moneybookers. Craven behaviour in relation to the US government is unlikely to be seen sympathetically." Apparently they're cowards for not standing up for Wikileaks.

      That is correct. Nobody including Assange said it was an irrational decision, but it is an irresponsible one if you love freedom. However, it's not called Freedombookers.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    40. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by BobMcD · · Score: 1

      Actually, the total dead (on all sides) is far more interesting. Estimates are putting the results of our intervention at over one million dead, and counting. We've caused someone or something to poison them for generations to come, as well. More war will come from our efforts even if we pulled out today, and those should be counted as well...

    41. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      Obviously not that simple, but if I was the girl, and those were the only two choices, I'd vote for the rape.

      Given the analogy at hand, you're essentially saying "if I were the information, I'd prefer to be redacted". The question is, what if you were the cop?

      In any case, Wikileaks clearly did make a bona fide attempt to protect the innocent. And they're not the ones actually out there killing people, either. If you're assigning blame, you could spread it a lot wider.

      It's a cost/benefit analysis. If you have the opportunity to give everyone a free lollipop, but kill 10,000 people in the process, even an "attempt to protect the innocent" which reduces the casualty rate by 90% wouldn't justify your decision to go ahead with the plan. On the ground, this translates to three groups with the following costs / goals:

      1. Intentionally killing tens of thousands of civilians while attempting to impose an oppressive dictatorship.

      2. Accidentally killing thousands of civilians while attempting to establish a relatively liberal theocratically-leaning democracy.

      3. Accidentally killing an unknown number of civilians and military personnel while attempting to cause the failure of group 2.

      So yeah, you're right, blame can be spread a lot wider if you're simply looking at the casualty figures. However, only an idiot or an ideologue (one and the same, really) would take such an approach. For all intents and purposes, you can group 1 and 3 together; their approaches might be completely different, and their impact might differ by orders of magnitude, but their goals tie them together.

    42. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by BJ_Covert_Action · · Score: 1

      Thank you for that post. It's always nice to see two sides of an argument even if one side is consistently modded up while another side is consistently modded down. You know slashdot mods, when this site claims to have the best moderation system on the internet, that's not a challenge to see if you can prove it false. Scrameustache has been asking for evidence, facts, and specific accounts of why someone might be disgruntled with Assange throughout this entire thread and Dhalka here has done his best to give him exactly that. It's an informative post with some interesting links and reads in it. It may not get everything 100% right (I don't know, I haven't read through all of the links yet), but it certainly does bring a bit of rational balance back to this thread.

      In short, posts like this need to be modded up, not neglected because they don't align with a very common sentiment held on slashdot.

      Thanks Dhalka.

    43. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They asked the pentagon to tell them which name to remove, the pentagon told them to go to hell.

      Hi! I'm about to release all your bank statements from the last 10 years onto the internet. You have a week to tell me which account numbers to remove.

      I have your 3 children hostage. You have 1 hour to choose which one of them I kill. Fail, and they all die. And you wouldn't want that to happen, because that would be entirely your fault.

      I don't get it. You would choose to let all your children die?

      If that indeed is your point, I'm with you. I don't like children either.

    44. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by Namarrgon · · Score: 1

      That's a pretty black-and-white, for-us-or-against-us point of view. I would have said,

      3. Accidentally killing an unknown number of civilians and military personnel while attempting to embarrass group 2 into reining in military excesses and reducing civilian deaths

      where "unknown number" is likely significantly smaller than "thousands", especially after redaction.

      I don't believe Wikileaks has any stated goals of the "failure" of any group, only the release of potentially embarrassing information, and the leaked records are highly unlikely to directly hinder the war effort, only to place political pressure on how it is conducted (in other words, accountability).

      In any case, the DoD report released today confirms Wikileaks "did not disclose any sensitive intelligence sources or methods" and "there has not been a single case of Afghans needing protection or to be moved because of the leak", so it seems the number of civilians or military affected is pretty minimal.

      --
      Why would anyone engrave "Elbereth"?
    45. Re:I dont feel sorry for Wikileaks by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Assigning some sort of moral equivalence to assassinating an informant and bombing the wrong building or shooting the wrong target makes you look like a moron. I hope you know that.

      Defending tens of thousands of real casualties by ranting about the mere possibility that someone might die, can't really rule it out, at some point it could happen, maybe; that proves beyond a doubt that you are a soulless moron. Don't talk about morality: you have none.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

  6. Breaking the Stalemate? by Haedrian · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Why doesn't this guy just yell "Banzai", leak out the rest of the documents, and survive for 5 minutes while hundreds of copies are made on the internet?

    At this point its just pointless bickering, if this guy releases the rest of what he's got, the US will have no real interest in him anymore I would think - because even if he 'mysteriously dies when his server mysteriously explodes', the copies of the document would have still been spread around like wildfire.

    1. Re:Breaking the Stalemate? by yincrash · · Score: 3, Interesting

      because it could put lives in danger? that would only serve to fuel the opponents who give that as the reasoning that they should be shut down (which may or may not be their real motive)

    2. Re:Breaking the Stalemate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How many lives are put in danger by the continuation of these wars? What puts those lives below the lives that releasing the information might endanger? People who join the (US) military are volunteers and are (or should be) informed of the danger they are putting their lives in when they choose to serve. When the government abuses that trust and puts them in harms way for reasons that are utterly unjust and fraudulent we should do everything in our power to stop it and bring those people back safe and sound. At this point we have to choose between two evils, endanger the people who gave the government, and by proxy the people, that trust, or the people they are fighting who did not volunteer to be invaded.

      I think the government doesn't want them to be released because the conduct of the war is an embarrassment, just like the reasons and those who voted to send them there in the first place. The government as an entity doesn't care if people are endangered, only if the status quo is threatened.

      The problem is, by and large, the American public doesn't really care. Thus the current order is maintained.

      Captcha: Protests

    3. Re:Breaking the Stalemate? by jellomizer · · Score: 2, Interesting

      These leaks don't do anything to stop the war. Most of the stuff that it had wasn't anything of use. That anyone with with an IQ more then 20 would knows that that stuff went on. The problem is releasing names, that puts people in danger.

      Here is an example say platoon x was involved in a fight that had high civilian casulities, it happens the wrong people get killed. So now this unit goes to a new area that knows about it. What happens, the civilians will be extra scared of this platoon and probably do something to preemptively protect themselfs and cause a conflict that may not have happened causing military and civilian casulaties.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    4. Re:Breaking the Stalemate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Theoretically the info being leaked should be read by the American people and seen to be something abhorrent to a moral person and thus cause them to vote their leaders out if they don't stop the war.

      Knowing it went on and having proof that it went on and holding people accountable are different things.

      They went through and tried to scrub the names. They asked for help from the Army in scrubbing the name (no surprise the Army turned them down).

      You say releasing names puts people in danger, I argue people (more people than just those in the documents) are in far greater danger because the war continues.

      You seem to have a problem with the documents being released. I have a problem that the horrific killings that are detailed in the documents happened in the first place and seek to stop further tragedies done in the name of the American people (Who will rightly bear some level of responsibility for these wars) from happening again.

    5. Re:Breaking the Stalemate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here is an example say platoon x was involved in a fight that had high civilian casulities, it happens the wrong people get killed. So now this unit goes to a new area that knows about it. What happens, the civilians will be extra scared of this platoon and probably do something to preemptively protect themselfs and cause a conflict that may not have happened causing military and civilian casulaties.

      When military forces commit war crimes, the appropriate thing to do is deal with the repercussions. If a platoon accidentally kills civilians during an action, the soldiers should be charged and the incident investigated via the proper channels. Ignoring the mistakes being made doesn't solve anything. Hiding behind a veneer of silence fuels the speculation and provides a platform to anti-establishment groups.

      It's the wall of silence which is endangering the lives of these soldiers, not the people breaking down that wall of silence to try to rebuild the accountability which the soldiers on the ground are apparently able to ignore at will.

    6. Re:Breaking the Stalemate? by Killall+-9+Bash · · Score: 1

      They have internet access in Afghanistan? And they use it to check to see who killed who in the village on the other side of the mountain they don't like? And then they use that info to target specific soldiers?

      The afghans know that US soldiers accidentally (or otherwise) kill civilians on a regular basis. That cat is already out of the bag. The names don't matter TO ANYONE.

      --
      "Prediction: within 10 years, Windows will be a Linux distribution." Me, 7-6-2016
    7. Re:Breaking the Stalemate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hundreds of thousands of people have an encrypted envelope (that's almost 2 gigs) that's waiting for 2 things: an algo and a key. One would think the US government would act with more discretion when it appears that WL has a deadman's switch waiting to go.

    8. Re:Breaking the Stalemate? by Unending · · Score: 1

      If you think the Taliban does not have an internet presence you are sorely mistaken.
      While I doubt the coalition troops are in any danger from these documents, I do think there are a good number of villages that are in danger of reprisal attacks by the Taliban if they were to see the full documents.
      What better way to find the right targets than to read the nicely formatted official reports of your enemy?

      These military actions have been mishandled from the start and at this point every time we make a friend and try to help someone out we are just painting a target on their back.
      The situation is complex, I'm not sure a good outcome is possible at this point, just pulling all the troops out will result in thousands of deaths due to our inaction and staying there is just prolonging the inevitable.

    9. Re:Breaking the Stalemate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      These leaks don't do anything to stop the war. Most of the stuff that it had wasn't anything of use. That anyone with with an IQ more then 20 would knows that that stuff went on. The problem is releasing names, that puts people in danger.

      Here is an example say platoon x was involved in a fight that had high civilian casulities, it happens the wrong people get killed. So now this unit goes to a new area that knows about it. What happens, the civilians will be extra scared of this platoon and probably do something to preemptively protect themselfs and cause a conflict that may not have happened causing military and civilian casulaties.

      Indeed! Why should some damn afghan civillian have access to information about which american military units tend to be particularly indiscriminate about who they shoot?
      I mean, if they happen to get killed it's alright anyways since they should be used to being considered 'collateral damage' by now shouldn't they?
      Ungrateful savages...
      And, It's not like they're really human anyways right..?

    10. Re:Breaking the Stalemate? by zoloto · · Score: 1

      we shouldn't be over there anyways.

    11. Re:Breaking the Stalemate? by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Here is an example say platoon x was involved in a fight that had high civilian casulities, it happens the wrong people get killed. So now this unit goes to a new area that knows about it. What happens, the civilians will be extra scared of this platoon

      Wikileaks or no wikileaks, the children of Aghanistan will hear for generations that if they don't behave and go to bed when they're told, the Americans will come and get them. And the children will be scared.

      Because the poor, uneducated afghans scratching barely enough to survive don't surf the web, and they can't tell one platoon from another, but they all lost at least a cousin to a bomb that had "made in the U.S.A. stamped all over its shrapnel. They all heard tales of people killed just for looking at American troops the wrong way, or walking too close to their base, or just for driving by. The people of America don't hear about these things, though, they think their country is "the good guys", and wikileaks can help them understand why they shouldn't approve of war by showing the the truth of it. That is the crime for which the pentagon hates them: If people knew the truth they wouldn't let them invade countries willy-nilly anymore.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    12. Re:Breaking the Stalemate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, keep your head in the sand. I bet you're one of those fucks who think the al-Quada couldn't have possibly put together the 9/11 attacks because they're not intelligent enough either, huh? They're just all sheep herders living in the distant mountains and have never even seen a TV. Right?

    13. Re:Breaking the Stalemate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      +1 use of the word willy-nilly.

    14. Re:Breaking the Stalemate? by Kidbro · · Score: 1

      anyone with with an IQ more then 20 would knows that that stuff went on

      This group does not happen to overlap much with the one that support starting wars though. They all seem to buy the "hey, we've got these high precision weapons these days, so we can guarantee that only bad guys will be hurt" bullshit.
      The fact that there was such an outrage when Collateral Murder was released is proof of that. People were obviously chocked.

    15. Re:Breaking the Stalemate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because its not just the information the government is afraid of; WikiLeaks can release whatever incriminating documents it has and the government will weather that.

      It's the *idea* that there is a source of information that it doesn't control that scares it shitless. It doesn't just want those particular documents gone; it wants the website gone and the very idea that there is an easy way for people to release stuff like this to the public squashed, destroyed, never to see the light of day again. Public accountability frightens the government to no end.

    16. Re:Breaking the Stalemate? by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      because it could put lives in danger?

      That is the point that is missed by so many. Look, I'm all for openness, making love instead of war, legalizing everything and term limits. But jesus christ, there are people over there who are brothers and sons, sisters and daughters. A little discretion is more than warranted until we get them home. THEN release whatever the fuck you want. No reason to punish the soldiers with a death sentence just to prove a point.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    17. Re:Breaking the Stalemate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You underestimate the vindictiveness of the CIA. They're more worried about what Assante will do in the future than what he has on him now. They won't rest until he's under 6 feet of dirt. I'm honestly surprised that he hasn't had an 'accident' yet.

    18. Re:Breaking the Stalemate? by BobMcD · · Score: 1
    19. Re:Breaking the Stalemate? by sjames · · Score: 1

      So you're saying it's much better to keep it secret so when the platoon plots another massacre it will just be civilian casualties?

    20. Re:Breaking the Stalemate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At least the government knows who the enemy is while wikileaks exists. Because I don't think the desire is to get rid of wikileaks alone, but rather to close the channel and make sure they set an example of what will become of others who may be committed (crazy) enough to do the same. They don't want wikileaks or their icons to die... but rather live out a difficult life in constant threat/fear of poverty/imprisonment/death/etc. If they stomped out wikileaks now... they know that countless others would spring up in global defiance to continue the information sharing. Something which would be much harder to monitor and identify the individuals to oppress. I mean there was a time when no one knew who was really running the wikileaks show (although I'm sure it was known inside US offices prior to the rest of us)

      If you want to know where this is heading... see the history of Phil Zimmerman (PGP fame). It'll pretty much be the same with border agent troubles and short jail times. They will not really jail or kill this guy because the last think the gov needs here is a martyr.

      BTW: how do I apply to get my donation back? Because I'm not about to see my funds go to the government on this witch hunt. "I will not pay this tax"

  7. Julian Assange here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    *message redacted*

    1. Re:Julian Assange here... by cosm · · Score: 1

      *message redacted*

      Julian, you insensitive clod! Mr. M Redacted will now be in danger of tuurist retaliation. [sic]

      --
      'We are trying to prove ourselves wrong as quickly as possible, because only in that way can we find progress.' RPF
  8. Oh Julian!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    You've got such beautiful hair! You look like such a daring revolutionary. I hope they don't muss it up when you are in prison.

  9. Direct mailing address by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For now you can send donations by snail mail to:

    Julian Assange
    c/o Julian Assange, Sr.
    The Pearl
    Secret Wikileaks Island
    Post Box #3
    Decoder Ring Engraving A
    Australia
    No wait, Norway
    Er, maybe Iceland
    The World

  10. Wikileaks is the victim? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When you take on a government or collection of governments to expose secrets and threaten their national security they will get angry.

    I don't agree or disagree with Wikileaks or America or Australia. Governments are just like any other organization: they will preserve themselves at the cost of others.

    I'm sure Wikileaks will be fine, secure funding and find other ways to continue receiving donations.

  11. Re:Good riddance to wikilinks! by yossie · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I hear that said, but I hear politicians say these kinds of things all the time - PROVE to me that someone(s) got hurt/killed due to this release and I may feel otherwise, but for now, I believe they are being targeted for "pissing off" the powers that be.

  12. They need a better spokesperson by schnikies79 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I can get behind Wikileaks, but not Assange. He is egotistical tool.

    --
    Gone!
    1. Re:They need a better spokesperson by Blue+Stone · · Score: 1

      >I can get behind Wikileaks, but not Assange. He is egotistical tool.

      Citation needed.

      --
      Corporation, n. An ingenious device for obtaining individual profit without individual responsibility. - Ambrose Bierce
    2. Re:They need a better spokesperson by Scrameustache · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I can get behind Wikileaks, but not Assange. He is egotistical tool.

      Character assassination: Done and done!
      Now instead of focusing on the issue, you will parrot out the "the spokesperson is bad, we must not listen" line every time wikileaks is mentioned. You don't even say why you believe what you say, you probably don't even know yourself that you only believe it because of a campaign of repetition in the media made you absorb this baseless meme.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    3. Re:They need a better spokesperson by blair1q · · Score: 1

      >>I can get behind Wikileaks, but not Assange. He is egotistical tool.[1]

      >Citation needed.

      1. I said it before.

    4. Re:They need a better spokesperson by schnikies79 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      No, I never said "not listen". I read and have read wikileaks and, for the most part, it does a great service. I have read editorials by Assange. I've seen interviews. I can form my own opinions without the help of CNN.

      Piss off.

      --
      Gone!
    5. Re:They need a better spokesperson by Scrameustache · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I have read editorials by Assange. I've seen interviews. I can form my own opinions without the help of CNN.

      Piss off.

      You say "Assange. He is egotistical tool", you say you believe that opinion to be your own. Can you say why you believe what you believe, aside from claiming that you can?

      You made two claims, prove t me you know what you believe:

      1- What has Julian Assange done that proves he is egotistical? How is he demonstrably selfish and self-centered?

      2- To whom is he a tool? Who holds that tool and to what purpose?

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    6. Re:They need a better spokesperson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Haha. You little puppet.

    7. Re:They need a better spokesperson by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Lindbergh was an egotistical tool and a fascist in his politics, but what matters is he flew across the Atlantic.
      What people do generally matters more than if you'd like to personally sit down next to them and talk face to face.

    8. Re:They need a better spokesperson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is he? Why? Because major news outlets and the US government say so? If it gets repeated so often, it must be right! Right?

      Honestly, I think it's you who is the tool here.

    9. Re:They need a better spokesperson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Same can be said about all politicians. It takes a special someone to smile in the face of adversity, scandal, and public embarrassment. I'd like to imagine that I could be a good politician. Protecting the right's of people, standing up for whats's right, fiscal and environmental conservation are things I can get behind. But I realize that I and my family wouldn't be able to stand the constant scrutiny, the muckracking, the papparazzi and private investigators looking into every aspect of my life.

      To take a job like this mean you don't give a fuck about any of that stuff. Which means only narcissist will apply.

      So I can get behind Wikileaks inspite of Assange, because I don't see anyone else stepping up for that job.

  13. Wikileaks by geekoid · · Score: 1

    Probably should\n't have been baiting them. If you are going to release documents, the release them. Don't wave them around going nyner nyner, looky what I got.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    1. Re:Wikileaks by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Probably should\n't have been baiting them. If you are going to release documents, the release them. Don't wave them around going nyner nyner, looky what I got.

      So if they review their documents before releasing them: they're taunting the authorities; if they release the documents quickly, they are recklessly endangering lives.

      Is that how it works?

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    2. Re:Wikileaks by ElKry · · Score: 1

      There is a third way: don't say you have them until you review them.

    3. Re:Wikileaks by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      There is a third way: don't say you have them until you review them.

      I don't think you understand the concept of "exposing" things. You see, the point is to take something that was secret, and to remove the secrecy. Not to keep the secrecy going.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    4. Re:Wikileaks by ElKry · · Score: 1

      I don't think you understand the concept of "options". I am not arguing for or against wikileaks, the US government, the editing or not editing, or anything like that. I'm commenting on the fact that the parent post was based on a false dichotomy: Either review before releasing - which he/she labels as "taunting", so it means that the authorities already know about it before it's released - or release unedited. I'm pointing out that there is a third option: getting those documents, keeping your mouth shut while you do any editing you want to do, then announcing them to the world.

    5. Re:Wikileaks by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      there is a third option: getting those documents, keeping your mouth shut while you do any editing you want to do, then announcing them to the world.

      If you do that they get to say you did secret things to the documents and are untrustworthy. They get to know by their spying that you have them and move with their countermeasures without the world knowing there is something that could motivate them to do so, etc.

      Look, once you decide to expose the emperor's nakedness, you're gonna get flack no matter what you do; so maximum openness is their choice for optimal behavior, and I agree. You're allowed to feel differently, of course.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

  14. Too much secrecy kills a government by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The US government is keeping so many facts and events classified, it simply can not function as a democratic government anymore.
    When people don't have access to important information, they can't vote correctly. And when they can't vote correctly, the government can't make the right decisions. I understand sometimes secrecy is necessary for safety, but too much simply kills a democracy. Wikileaks is the expression of that idea, as they fight the excessive secrecy of governments and try to provide citizens with information that citizens should have.

    1. Re:Too much secrecy kills a government by Gofyerself · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Secrets do not kill a government, governments are required to keep secrets for the protection of the populace. A cover-up on the other hand is a great way to alienate the populace.

    2. Re:Too much secrecy kills a government by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

      When people don't have access to important information, they can't vote correctly.

      oh please.

      vote correctly?

      we get a choice between kang and kodos. which did YOU vote for?

      "voting correctly" - don't make me puke! there is no such thing anymore. we are given a non-choice between bad and bad. between corporate sponsorship and corporate sponsorship.

      voting is not effective since you have no real choice and the candidates, by the time they have reached the point of being considered for office, are whole unsuited for it (they are sociopaths, all of them. ALL of them, the office simply attracts that kind of personality).

      its so 'cute' you think voting still matters in the US.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    3. Re:Too much secrecy kills a government by BJ_Covert_Action · · Score: 1

      The fact that the U.S. Government keeps the public ignorant about so many things is not nearly as sad or as troubling or even as dangerous as the fact that the majority of the U.S. public wants to remain ignorant.

  15. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by loufoque · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Arguably though, the best way to avoid putting Afghan civilians and US troops out of harm is to have US troops go back to the US.

  16. The sweet irony by siddesu · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It is funny (and, in a way sad) that the same country that sponsored all those radio stations I used to listen to as a young girl for (freedom-)free information during the Cold war years from behind the Iron curtain is now trying to stomp out a website that does exactly the same.

    Ah, dreams of my youth, when did you wither away?

    1. Re:The sweet irony by physicsphairy · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      The radio stations of which you speak were a propaganda tool meant to weaken the communism regimes and recruit internal supporters. I wouldn't really call them good indicators of America's true motives (although I would submit that Americans did then and continue now to value and promote freedom). How many were set up in the backyard of non-communist oppressors?

      I'm also pretty sure if anything you would have found the U.S. more reactive to those releasing confidential military documents during the Cold War. As regards Wikileaks the difference between then and now is mostly the existence of the internet.

    2. Re:The sweet irony by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      your youth withered away the moment you posted on slashdot.

    3. Re:The sweet irony by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Music and more, in ninety-four. On V. O. A - Europe (...Europe-Europe)"

    4. Re:The sweet irony by siddesu · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The radio stations of which you speak were a propaganda tool

      Well, to those who listened to them, they were mostly a very valuable alternative source of information, and a strong message that it can be free ;)

      It is the loss of this message that makes me sad, because it is a worthy ideal to have.

      meant to weaken the communism regimes and recruit internal supporters.

      Haha. I like this phrasing, it is straight out of the newspapers on the other side. It wasn't true then, and it isn't true now. The "recruit internal supporters" part is not even interesting to comment.

      As for "weaken the regime", well, any regime that does things, which it wants to hide, deserves all the exposure and "weakening" it can handle.

      US government was smart enough to realize that exposing "bad" information is a powerful weapon.

      They ought to be smart enough to realize that trying to stomp bad news out will work as well for them, as it worked for the evil communists.

    5. Re:The sweet irony by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't be silly those dreams were always a lie. What happened is that you realized who you were dealing with.

    6. Re:The sweet irony by lennier · · Score: 3, Informative

      Ah, dreams of my youth, when did you wither away?

      For me, about the same time I found out that Margaret Thatcher didn't want the Berlin Wall to come down.

      "Even 20 years later, her remarks are likely to cause uproar. They are all the more explosive as she admitted that what she said was quite different from the West’s public pronouncements and official Nato communiqués. She told Mr Gorbachev that he should pay no attention to these.

      “We do not want a united Germany,” she said. “This would lead to a change to postwar borders, and we cannot allow that because such a development would undermine the stability of the whole international situation and could endanger our security.” "

      Mrs Thatcher - TEAR DOWN THIS WALL!

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
    7. Re:The sweet irony by siddesu · · Score: 2, Insightful

      To me, that wasn't a surprise at all. Divide et impera was not invented by the British, but they certainly perfected it.

      Hell, most of the current Middle East mess is, if not directly caused, then largely precipitated by the British policies in the region prior to them losing their status as a world power to the US after WWII.

      Still, by Thatcher time, Britain didn't have the clout to influence international politics that much, and the Germans wouldn't have cared anyway.

      Maybe the reception of Deutche Welle was better in Berlin than the BBC :D

    8. Re:The sweet irony by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      The radio stations of which you speak were a propaganda tool

      Well, to those who listened to them, they were mostly a very valuable alternative source of information, and a strong message that it can be free ;)

      It is the loss of this message that makes me sad, because it is a worthy ideal to have.

      meant to weaken the communism regimes and recruit internal supporters.

      Haha. I like this phrasing, it is straight out of the newspapers on the other side. It wasn't true then, and it isn't true now. The "recruit internal supporters" part is not even interesting to comment.

      As for "weaken the regime", well, any regime that does things, which it wants to hide, deserves all the exposure and "weakening" it can handle.

      US government was smart enough to realize that exposing "bad" information is a powerful weapon.

      They ought to be smart enough to realize that trying to stomp bad news out will work as well for them, as it worked for the evil communists.

      You should know that it is illegal to retransmit the contents of Radio Free in the united states because it is explicitly state-funded propaganda and that is illegal within the US. I've beenlooking for my source on that but I can't find it, unfortunately.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    9. Re:The sweet irony by siddesu · · Score: 1

      I think you're referring to the Smith-Mundt Act:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smith–Mundt_Act

      The motive isn't "state-funded propaganda", it is a bit more subtle than that.

    10. Re:The sweet irony by physicsphairy · · Score: 1

      . It wasn't true then, and it isn't true now.

      Of course it's true; you seem to have quite ignored the point that this was not done for non-communist oppressive regimes.

      US government was smart enough to realize that exposing "bad" information is a powerful weapon.

      Wait, so you admit the U.S. used these stations as a weapon at the same time you claim my observation about it being used as propaganda isn't true? I think you're being a bit dissonant.

      In any case I was never intending to criticize the radio towers, so there is really no need to defend them. For my part I'm glad they existed. But it's simply incorrect to think they were not put there for strategic reasons, and the relevance of that to this discussion is that they are not a useful barometer of American views on "free information," and certainly not something you can rationally compare to the Pentagon reacting to Wikileaks.

      They ought to be smart enough to realize that trying to stomp bad news out will work as well for them, as it worked for the evil communists.

      The U.S. isn't trying to stamp out "bad news" they are trying to protect classified details of ongoing military involvement, the leaking of which has and will continue to result in the death of informants, soldiers, and general damage to operations.

      More to the point the U.S. has *always* safeguarded strategic information for its whole existence, certainly during the Cold War and no differently now.

      It may be that the U.S. is more or less open (I would argue more) but your anecdote isn't really serving the purpose of illustrating this one way or the other.

    11. Re:The sweet irony by siddesu · · Score: 1

      The U.S. isn't trying to stamp out "bad news" they are trying to protect classified details of ongoing military involvement,

      BS. You don't secure information by going after the banks of foreign news organizations.

      The attack on Wikileaks is driven by two motives - trying to shift the blame away from the real culprits - that is, the architects and managers of the information system of the army, and revenge.

    12. Re:The sweet irony by physicsphairy · · Score: 1

      First of all, absolutely none of that is relevant to the preceding discussion, as I still was not making any comments at all about whether the government reaction was moral or justified, merely observing that the distinction you drew between their Cold War and present behavior was not correct.

      But if you read the article summary you will see that the U.S. was not going after the banks of Wikileaks (which it is pretty generous to call a 'foreign news organization'; I suppose The Pirate Bay is one as well?). The account was put on a watchlist and the internet payment company responsible for collecting their donations decided on their own initiative to close the related account due to the blackisting and publicity after it had been suspended for other reasons. Basically they just did not want to be associated with him.

      I think it's pretty reasonable that the American government would want to watch an account associated with someone disclosing American secrets, if not for legal reasons (catching Americans committing treason) then certainly for intelligence reasons (identifying the sources). This would happen regardless of how they felt about him personally, so there's really no need to invoke conspiracy theories to explain this.

    13. Re:The sweet irony by siddesu · · Score: 1

      Yep, so I was wondering why did you bring it up at all.

      It is only tangential to the main point, which is how sad I am that the US has moved from an open defender of the rights of people to expose state dirty secrets to an open extrajudicial executioner of an international news organization that helps people who do exactly that.

      This is very sad, because it devalues everything US proclaims to stand for - freedom, human rights, justice, and it is bad for those of your compatriots who, however cynical your government may be, believe in these values.

      decided on their own initiative to close the related account

      Come on now, that's a trollin, even you don't believe this.

      A financial institution that is servicing people put on the blacklist is risking to lose its business in the US.

      This is a 100% pure, sterling blackmail of Moneybookers to get at Wikileaks, and the reasons are shifting the blame, and desire to revenge and frighten. It isn't brave, just or proper.

    14. Re:The sweet irony by vegiVamp · · Score: 1

      > Americans did then and continue now to value and promote freedom

      Americans, agreed. America, not so much.

      --
      What a depressingly stupid machine.
    15. Re:The sweet irony by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Modded troll for some reason but he's right. See "Red Scare" and "Nuclear Apocalypse" to see how nervous people were in those times.

    16. Re:The sweet irony by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      I think you're referring to the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smith-Mundt_Act

      The motive isn't "state-funded propaganda", it is a bit more subtle than that.

      Yes, that's the one!

      The Act never defines nor uses the word "propaganda". The result of the amendments to the Act means that the US taxpayer is not permitted to know how the Voice Of America (and its successor agencies) operate or what their programming content was, as was noted in 1967 by the Stanton Commission report noted above. The act insulates the American public from government-sponsored information and broadcasting directed at audiences beyond America's borders, the only industrialized democracy to do this

      You're right, "government-sponsored information and broadcasting" is more subtle than "propaganda".

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

  17. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I have served as an intelligence analyst for 9 years and I know with 100% certainty that the parent post is correct.

    99.9% of the time, information is classified in order to protect a source (human, etc). I am amazed by the ignorance of people's analysis of the data that wikileaked poured out -- they are completely missing the point.

    Wikileaks actions WILL get innocent people killed.

  18. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How can it be treason if Assange is not an Afghani nor a US citizen?

  19. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by Haedrian · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Its not really treason since the owner isn't from the US. He's Australian.

    If you put it that way, leaking ANY information about ANYONE should be illegal? Why should he be in prison? As far as I know, no law was broken.

    The US soldier who leaked the information in the firstplace - yes, you could call that treason. And yes that's illegal.

  20. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by Chelmet · · Score: 1

    Treason? Isn't treason an act against your own government, as apposed to someone else'? It winds me up no end that foreign governments have the power to effectively close the bank accounts of foreign companies, I think it is ridiculous, in fact, and that the big bad old U S of A should fuck off and deal with the problem at home, such as not letting this Asange fellow enter. Either the country in which he is hosted should shut him down, because they agree with America, or there shouldn't be anything done, because they don't, and are their own country and do what the fuck they want.

    Puts democracy at risk, what nonsense you write

  21. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The real criminals are the ones classifying evidence of war crimes to bury the information from ever seeing the light of day.

    You are just shooting the messenger.

  22. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They released documents that put Afghan civilians and US troops at risk.

    Just shows that the government hates competition

  23. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Dude, where the hell have you been? Rich mutha fuckers and corporations, which is more rich mother fuckers and Zionists have stolen our democracy from us I'm not sure what you could possibly mean with "protecting democracy." Unless you count voting for a guy from one of two-corporation sponsored parties democracy. Many of our leaders should be in prison instead. GWB for crimes against humanity for one. Where's YOUR outrage?

  24. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by watermark · · Score: 1

    The founder isn't a citizen of the US. I don't think he can commit treason against the US.

    Treason: A crime that undermines the offenders government.

    Espionage: The systematic use of spies to get military or political secrets.

  25. The even sweeter irony by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I have noticed that the US government is really taking the wrong approach to this, personally, whenever I hear about wikileaks in the news I always go and browse there for a while (and if I had the cash I'm donate), but otherwise I honestly don't even remember its there.

    1. Re:The even sweeter irony by Americano · · Score: 1

      Yeah, whenever I see mention of it, I go there too... to read, "We are sorry, WikiLeaks is currently underoing scheduled maintenance. We will be back online as soon as possible. For status updates you can follow our twitter feed."

      Been that way since Sept. 29 or 30. Maybe they'll just migrate to twitter entirely. 140-character leaks.

    2. Re:The even sweeter irony by icebraining · · Score: 2, Informative
    3. Re:The even sweeter irony by nilbog · · Score: 1

      I think you mean wikileaks is taking the right approach, at least from a marketing perspective. The government sneezes and wikileaks screams bloody murder.

      --
      or else!
  26. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by h00manist · · Score: 1

    What did they think would happen? They released documents that put Afghan civilians and US troops at risk. This isn't protecting democracy, it's treason. Wikileaks is giving aid to the enemy. The founder should be in prison, and slashdot is whining about the donation page getting shut down?

    Wikileaks is not American. US soldiers volunteered for army and war, and the US voluntarily invaded Afghanistan, therefore, both placed in conflict and danger out of their own choices. There wouldn't even be any war data to leak otherwise.

    --
    Build your own energy sources from scratch. http://otherpower.com/
  27. Re:Good riddance to wikilinks! by Americano · · Score: 1

    I hear that there's previously-unknown evidence of war crimes in the Afghan War Diaries, and that's why there was such a rush to publicize them without proper redaction and editing. PROVE to me that there is by citing the data with appropriate links, and I may feel otherwise, but for now, I believe they are just trying to drum up publicity to inflate Mr. Assange's ego.

    Hey! That was fun! Now, you go again!

  28. Citation Needed by Haedrian · · Score: 4, Insightful

    99.9% of the time, information is classified in order to protect a source (human, etc)..



    [Citation Needed]

    Information is also classified when you want to perform atrocities or "its not good for morale", or its dissemination will cause the main plan not to work.

    The My Lai Massacre was 'classified' for a year or so before it became public knowledge.

    The names in the leaked documents aren't half as important as the actions they committed.
    1. Re:Citation Needed by blair1q · · Score: 1, Informative

      Information is also classified when you want to perform atrocities or "its not good for morale", or its dissemination will cause the main plan not to work.

      It is specifically against the law to classify something for such a reason.

      There are legal procedures to have such things declassified.

      Assange didn't want to go through those procedures, because it wouldn't make him famous. He's finding out that he made a mistake in choosing fame over doing the right thing.

    2. Re:Citation Needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are legal procedures to have such things declassified.

      Assange didn't want to go through those procedures, because it wouldn't make him famous. He's finding out that he made a mistake in choosing fame over doing the right thing.

      No, he didn't go through those procedures because asking someone nicely to reveal evidence of their wrongdoing is not likely to succeed.

    3. Re:Citation Needed by blair1q · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That's why you don't ask them. You ask someone else who has the power to put them in jail.

      This is what the source of the information should have done. Instead of burning a CD and sneaking it out, he should have gone to the Inspector General at the level above the unit that had the illegally classified information and reported its existence. And kept walking up the chain until he was sending letters to the President, who is the direct source of the rules for classifying information.

      He did none of that. Assange did nothing even remotely like that. Both of them conspired to do the stupidest possible thing, because neither of them could stand existing without the glory of doing the stupidest possible thing. Both of them decided instead to do exactly the thing the enemy wanted most: release a pile of legally classified information because mixed into it were small segments of illegally classified information.

    4. Re:Citation Needed by xous · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Assange is not an American citizen. He has absolutely no obligation to follow American laws or processes. Just because it's the law does not make it the "right thing".

    5. Re:Citation Needed by blair1q · · Score: 4, Insightful

      1. In this case it's the right thing.

      2. It's against Australian law to reveal the secrets of Australia's allies.

      3. He has an absolute obligation as a human being not to put other human beings in danger when there are other avenues to address the problem. This is especially pertinent, since his argument for releasing the information was that it shows his adversaries doing exactly that as well.

    6. Re:Citation Needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's attitude like yours that have led to many wars in history. Responsibility is a human trait, not one born of national belonging -- and it demands the attempt to solve issues in recognized manner, no matter the size or legitimacy or fairness of the opposing government. I wouldn't feel differently if we were talking about the Democratic People's Republic of North Korea (a laugh-worthy name). To do otherwise justifies retaliative actions like those taken in response by the United States government.

    7. Re:Citation Needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's why you don't ask them. You ask someone else who has the power to put them in jail.

      This is what the source of the information should have done. Instead of burning a CD and sneaking it out, he should have gone to the Inspector General at the level above the unit that had the illegally classified information and reported its existence. And kept walking up the chain until he was sending letters to the President, who is the direct source of the rules for classifying information.

      He did none of that. Assange did nothing even remotely like that. Both of them conspired to do the stupidest possible thing, because neither of them could stand existing without the glory of doing the stupidest possible thing. Both of them decided instead to do exactly the thing the enemy wanted most: release a pile of legally classified information because mixed into it were small segments of illegally classified information.

      OK. Please do that. Find some leaked document on wikileaks and then *you* try to get it declassified via official channels. And please post it when you actually get it declassified!! okthnxby

    8. Re:Citation Needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, that statement is a load of shit. See the Bell-Lapadula confidentiality model developed for the DoD. If that gives you any idea of the how classification levels are structured it's easy to understand that classified documents are often classified higher than they should be because the source can only provide information at that classification level...

    9. Re:Citation Needed by Scrameustache · · Score: 5, Informative

      This is what the source of the information should have done. Instead of burning a CD and sneaking it out, he should have gone to the Inspector General at the level above the unit that had the illegally classified information and reported its existence.

      You are so, so very naive: After word leaked that one soldier (presumably Winfield) had spoken to military police, several platoon members retaliated. They confronted the informant and beat him severely - punching, kicking and choking him, then dragging him across the ground. As a last warning, Gibbs menacingly waved finger bones he had collected from Afghan corpses.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    10. Re:Citation Needed by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      He has an absolute obligation as a human being not to put other human beings in danger when there are other avenues to address the problem.

      That is why wikileaks retained 15 000 pages: So as not to put people in danger. Remaining silent and allowing people to believe in the lies of the Clean War and Smart Bombs would be extremely reckless.

      You were told that they did nothing to to prevent people getting killed. This was a lie to get you to distrust wikileaks. A very effective lie.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    11. Re:Citation Needed by xous · · Score: 1

      1. This would depend on the circumstances involved and the article does not provide enough information to decide either way. If the US government was contacted and the didn't do anything regarding it my ethics would compel men to release the document regardless of the law. Given the treatment Assange from the US government I really wouldn't hold it against him if he didn't follow the proper channels.

      2. I'm not familiar with the law regarding this but again if my ethics would compel me to disregard it if I felt it was in the best interests of the public.

      3. Even if I agreed with this, and I don't, nothing in the article shows that Assanges' actions put anyone in danger.

      In my mind my personal ethics always come first and the law last.

    12. Re:Citation Needed by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      3. He has an absolute obligation as a human being not to put other human beings in danger

      bullshit, they put themselves at risk by collaborating with foreign invaders.

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    13. Re:Citation Needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If dissidents in China sent classified information on humanitarian abuses within China to wikileaks and Assange were to 'illegally' release this information would you support it?

      Assange is not bound by China's laws any more than he is by the USA's laws so it is in no way "stupid" for him to do so.

      Patriotism gets in the way of many peoples rational thinking... are you sure it isn't getting in the way of yours? Everyone should welcome their countries dirty laundry being aired in public, because these actions are being done in our name.

      Wikileaks did their best to redact any information that would hurt innocent civilians and I have yet to see any evidence that they were not careful enough. Releasing this information may also (at least temporarily) scare the military into attempting to reduce the number of 'incidents' to avoid being embarrassed further in the international community, thus saving lives of innocent civilians.

    14. Re:Citation Needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "He has an absolute obligation as a human being not to put other human beings in danger when there are other avenues to address the problem"

      I'm curious as to how you justify the war if you really believe this. It's so so so absurd to argue that leaking these documents put other human beings in danger when you don't have any issue with the war. And if you are against the war for your stated reason, then you have no enemy in Julian Assange.

    15. Re:Citation Needed by slack_prad · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      The problem with your post is that by 'other human beings' you mean Americans

      --
      Sent from my desktop computer
    16. Re:Citation Needed by Haedrian · · Score: 1

      Information is also classified when you want to perform atrocities or "its not good for morale", or its dissemination will cause the main plan not to work.

      It is specifically against the law to classify something for such a reason.



      Well, when the Americans were performing torture.. whoops "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques" - its not like they told everyone. Far as I know some documents haven't been properly declassified either. And I'm pretty sure that the EIT counts as one of the above.
    17. Re:Citation Needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Er, what does his citizenship have to do with anything? Unless you're citizen of some country that fantasizes itself a universal power.

      It's what jurisdiction you happen to be in when doing whatever that counts. If you're from the mythical land of Malvania, and Malvania says you have to salute whenever someone says the word 'dentistry', that's irrelevant in Australia or America. The police in those places aren't going to (and shouldn't) arrest you and extradite you if you fail to salute when someone says 'dentistry' in Times Square or under the Harbour Bridge.

      Likewise, saying Assange has an obligation to follow whichever Australian law while resident in Sweden or wherever, seems pretty damn silly to me. When in Sweden, he should make sure he doesn't break Swedish law.

    18. Re:Citation Needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      3. He has an absolute obligation as a human being not to put other human beings in danger when there are other avenues to address the problem.

      Well in that case, you can put Assange up for international trial the same day as Bush, Blair and the bureaucrats/generals that were complicit in invading Iraq over false pretenses, while diplomacy was still a viable avenue, get put up for international trials.

      Since that's never going to happen - there really is little moral or legal authority to back up this 'absolute obligation' as you put it.

    19. Re:Citation Needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      your right he has absolutely no obligation to follow American law. that said then you cant say the US Government has any obligation to him or his websight alone. in fact the US Government has no obligation to anyone outside the US that is not a citizen. so when the US Government used it connections to get him shutdown(pure speculation). no one should complain because the US Government owes him the same thing that he owes them which is nothing. It is amazing how the international community comes out of the wood work to attach the US about issues on freedom here on slashdot when they most likely live in a more oppressive country.

    20. Re:Citation Needed by chrb · · Score: 1

      He has an absolute obligation as a human being not to put other human beings in danger when there are other avenues to address the problem. This is especially pertinent, since his argument for releasing the information was that it shows his adversaries doing exactly that as well.

      If publishing documents results in the deaths of a handful of people*, but helps to end a war, thus saving the lives of thousands of people a year, then the moral obligation would be to release the documents. The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few.

      * (I'm always amazed at the inconsistencies of the Wikileaks haters - U.S. planes bomb a village, killing innocent people, and the deaths are the fault of "the enemy". Man in Europe releases documents, hypothetical man in Afghanistan is hypothetically killed by "the enemy", but the fault lies with the man in Europe? Drop a bomb on a village, killing innocent people = you are not to blame for killing, publish a name of an informer = you take the blame for killing. What a cognitive dissonance.)

    21. Re:Citation Needed by BobMcD · · Score: 1

      Information is also classified when you want to perform atrocities or "its not good for morale", or its dissemination will cause the main plan not to work.

      Let's be fair here. As far as anyone has gathered, there do not appear to be any atrocities in the "Afghan War Diaries" - or if there are any, I have yet to hear about them. What is in there, however, are clear examples of our government deliberately deceiving us into thinking that continuing this endeavor is a good idea.

      The latter alone, the deceit, is enough to warrant a rebuttal in the form of the actual data. There's no human alive who can honestly oppose this use of the information. They lied, we can now prove it, so we should prove it. The end.

    22. Re:Citation Needed by BobMcD · · Score: 1

      3. He has an absolute obligation as a human being not to put other human beings in danger when there are other avenues to address the problem. This is especially pertinent, since his argument for releasing the information was that it shows his adversaries doing exactly that as well.

      But again, he is actually going to wind up saving lives. Have you looked into what the documents actually SAY?

      Start here, then come back to this post... I'll wait...

      We have gone past the tipping point in Afghanistan, and any further actions on our part are more likely to lead to loss of life than to prevent it. Every time we act, we make our enemies stronger. We really ought to stop acting, but our government has been telling us the exact opposite thing. They say we're winning, that Afghanistan is safer, that the Taliban is on the run, etc. They're deliberately deceiving us, and WE HAVE EVERY RIGHT TO CALL THEM OUT ON IT. Just because of the label 'classified', are we to no longer be able to use logic to make our decisions? On what planet??

      So tell me which obligation is greater:

      1) Keep the secrets of your government's allies
      or
      2) Allow the military to deliberately deceive their democratic populace into supporting a failed war

      Some secrets, once known, are far to evil to keep.

    23. Re:Citation Needed by BJ_Covert_Action · · Score: 1

      How is that a problem? Or are you just flambaiting due to self-imposed prejudices against Americans?

    24. Re:Citation Needed by sjames · · Score: 1

      There are legal procedures to have such things declassified.

      Yes, and I'm so very SURE we can trust the organization that illegally classified it in the first place to obey the law!

    25. Re:Citation Needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      2. It's against Australian law to reveal the secrets of Australia's allies.

      Can you point me in the direction of relevant law? I won't hold my breath.

  29. it must be Wikileaks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    said the company in a statement,
    it has nothing to do with we could be abused as a gateway for quietly laundering illicit gains from various criminal activities (financial scams need a payment processor right?) from around the globe, keeping under the noses of the tax collectors and serious crime investigators audits all while skimming off parts of these transactions (almost like free money) under the banner of "its not us officer, it was one of our customers so we are in the clear right ?"

    no it must be Wikileaks that got us on the blacklist ..

  30. Bitcoin by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 1

    This would be the perfect opportunity to show the world what Bitcoin can do (or what it can't).

    1. Re:Bitcoin by sgtstein · · Score: 1

      It absolutely would be. This is exactly what the system is designed for in both senses. So, Wonko, how do we go about doing this? Any threads on the forums at http://www.bitcoin.org/smf/

    2. Re:Bitcoin by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 1

      Pretty much all that needs to happen is for Wikileaks to publish a donation address.

      Then anyone who wants to donate could install the program, find someone who will sell bitcoins in exchange for currency and send them to that address.

    3. Re:Bitcoin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It isn't as if creating a donation address is all that hard. About two mouse clicks does it. The tough part is simply trying to post a link for donations on the Wikileaks website, preferably to obtain the Bitcoins software & a few of the URLs for buying the bitcoins if you don't want to take the time to generate the coins.

      It would be a good way to get the Bitcoin exchanges humming along with yet another wave of buyers, and likely cause another spike in traffic with yet another huge increase in difficulty.

    4. Re:Bitcoin by rally2xs · · Score: 1

      How much you gonna pay people to open those letters with "cash" in 'em? Probably, a high percentage of those letters will have so really nasty poisonous white powder in 'em.

    5. Re:Bitcoin by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 1

      I don't think you understand how Bitcoin works...

  31. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by Monkeedude1212 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    That's only if you believe the troops NEED to be in Afghanistan to begin with.

    As far as I'm concerned - the amount of danger Wikileaks put on soldiers pales in comparison to the amount of danger Bush has put on them. They'd be far safer on US Soil protecting the actual US Borders instead of it's foreign interests;

    It's like me breaking into your house and complaining that your dog pointed me out.

  32. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by bersl2 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    They released documents that put Afghan civilians and US troops at risk.

    War puts lives at risk. If anything negative actually happened as a result of the release, well, [citation needed]. And if it's not a primary source, [citation needed] all the way down until it goes no farther, and then we can evaluate the legitimacy of the information.

    This isn't protecting democracy, it's treason.

    Do you even understand the definition of treason in the United States Constitution? Or the dictionary definition, for that matter?

    Wikileaks is giving aid to the enemy.

    Again, [citation needed].

    The founder should be in prison, and slashdot is whining about the donation page getting shut down?

    Put up hard information, or shut your authoritarian piehole.

  33. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Watchin 24 doesn't make you an "Intelligence Analyst", sonny boy.

  34. Should Have Used by sexconker · · Score: 0

    Western Union.
    10 out of 10 Nigerian Scammers agree.

  35. Can't have civil rights without economic rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When your property rights and access to financial transactions exist at the whim of government you don't really have other rights.

  36. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

    What we are doing in afghanistan has nothing to do with democracy.

    The U.S. is a representative republic within our boarders and an undemocratic thug outside our borders.

    It's been shown over and over.

    I don't know how we got here so quickly from Eisenhower. He warned us... but it did no good.

    --
    She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
  37. Of course. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mais We, welcome to the Brave New World of 1984!

  38. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by luther349 · · Score: 1

    well i say this to all my friends as well. as long as the dumb assed people keep voting for 1 of the 2 sponserd shitbags are problems will never get fixed. when people wise up and toss both the fuckers and vote a new party then and only then will are leaders do there jobs. why because they will fear losing there jobs when they fuckup.

  39. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by Dunbal · · Score: 1

    This isn't protecting democracy, it's treason.

          Er, no it isn't. Assange is not a US or Afghan citizen. You can only betray your own country, you know.

    --
    Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
  40. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Treason would only apply if Wikileaks and Assange were American.

    Transparency and the freedom of information are essential to democracy. Wikileaks/Assange didn't decide to take America to war with Afghanistan, so they should not be held solely responsible for the release of information related to America's actions in that operation.

    It's astonishing that Wikileaks gets more press than the war crimes committed by the US government.

    Wikileaks only aids the enemy if the enemy is knowledge. I don't know about you, but knowledge is my friend.

  41. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    lol.... its the US troops that are putting the Afgan civilians at risk... as for helping the enemy, the afgan fighters kicked the soviets arse long ago with the same AK47's and no access to the internet. Fact is the US does not have a good history against entrenched guerilla fighters, if they want to save lives pull out already. Which reminds me of the CIA operations in Vietnam where US agents dressed up as viet cong and destoryed villages and killed civillians to turn them against supporting viet cong... so much for hearts and minds... more like if we can't f*ck you one way we'll f*ck you another. At least there is no point dropping agent orange in Afganistan.

  42. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by Scrameustache · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They released documents that put Afghan civilians and US troops at risk.

    No, they released documents that showed that US policy routinely massacres Afghan civilians and puts US troops at risk.
    The pentagon said "releasing these documents puts the lives of the people we bomb at risk", it's transparent bullshit, but the sheeple say "baaaa". Do you remember that lil' Vietnamese girl that got napalmed and then spectacularly photographed, and the pentagon spent over a decade saying she got burned in a kitchen mishap? Did you believe their kitchen mishap cover story as much as you believe their "the truth is the enemy" cover story?
    Remember how they told you Pat Tillman was shot by Taliban, and it turns out there were no Taliban there that day? Did you believe them when they told you a soldier in Afghanistan was shot by Taliban? Was it a believable lie?
    How about the cute little blonde soldier that got knocked out in an attack on her convoy and the pentagon said she had fought valiantly to the last bullet of her sidearm, they attacked a hospital that had been trying to hand her over to "rescue" her, made up stories about the Iraqis treating her badly... did you believe that too?
    Don't you think you should be less gullible and more informed?

    This isn't protecting democracy, it's treason.

    Yeah! Those Swedes are committing treason in the united states by letting that Aussie publish those documents! TREASON! And you don't sound like an idiot at all when you say that. Not at all.

    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

  43. Re:Good riddance to wikilinks! by Xelios · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry, that information is classified.

    But it's there, trust us.

    --
    Murphey's fighting Occam, and we're in the stands.
  44. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I also know with 100% certainty that released bullets WILL get innocent people killed and that the ratio of released bullets to released documents is quite high.

  45. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by luther349 · · Score: 1

    if nobody volunteered they would just start a draft. and being in the army isn't all bad. the things you get for sighing the paper are much higher then some kid just out of highschool looking for a job. and after your stay in the army if you don't blow your money your gonna walk out 80k richer.not bad for someone whos only 20. im talking sighing bounes and 2 years of pay.

  46. Bill of Attainder by RecycledElectrons · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Creating a list of companies & people, and then grabbing their assets is called a "Bill of Attainder"

    This is illegal under Article 1, Section 9 of the US Constitution.

    I can not say more or I would be subject to such a bill.

    1. Re:Bill of Attainder by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

      Legislatures pass bills of attainder. This is simply lawlessness.

  47. it's developments like this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that make the strong case for hundreds or thousands of sites like wikileaks. centralization (and their egotistical leader) may be their downfall.

  48. Re:Good riddance to wikilinks! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Irrelevant. No one in position of authority is going to care whether someone WAS killed, but if they could have BEEN killed -- to behave otherwise is irresponsible and inhumane. If GP can prove that important names were leaked, then he can have his shitstorm, if not, then he can politely STFU.

  49. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    oddly, no one is dead as a reason behind the leak

    but not oddly alot of innocent have died from the army

  50. Ya by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I don't like him at all. I believe he is doing things for the wrong reason. He isn't releasing all this classified information because it is for the public good, he is doing it because it is an ego trip and makes him important, and because it hurts the US and he doesn't like the US. Now that doesn't mean that his actions are ultimately bad, you can very well feel that indeed this release DOES serve the public interest. I just don't think HIS reasons are the good ones he claims.

    They really need a more moral spokesman, and they need to get some rules that they follow for what they do and don't release. If the rule is "Any and everything," ok fine but make that up front and known. Say "We release anything, without regard for what harm that it may cause or if the information is of value to the public." However if that's not what you want to do, if you want to decide if things are important enough to release and to try to not cause any harm, then that's fine too, but you need to have a policy to that effect and stick to it. In the case of the classified cables that would mean only releasing those that showed something of public interest, and redacting names and so on. Ya that's a lot of work but that is what it takes to be responsible about it.

    As it stands Assange seems to want to play at being the good guy, but he's just a jackass that likes to pump his ego and get egg on teh face of those he doesn't like. That degrades Wikileaks as a whole.

    Unfortunately it is his baby, so I don't really think anyone can kick him out and he's way too egotistical to realize that it would be much better off if he stepped down.

    I do think the world needs things like Wikileaks, however it needs them run by people who actually care about the public good. Who release secrets only because they need to be released, not just because they happen to have gotten their hands on them.

    1. Re:Ya by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the US Government has a problem with him, he must be doing something right.

    2. Re:Ya by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe Assange is a good guy, and he does things for mostly the right reasons. Unfortunately he is also, as you say, a jackass. He is basically still the hacker, and we all know how socially (and in consequence, politically) inept hackers can be. Plus he thinks he doesn't need to be nice because he's a hero and heroes get away with not being nice, or they wouldn't be heroes. He really seems to think that.

      Assange shouldn't step down, but he should listen to his friends as long as he has any left. He still hasn't realized what friends are for, and that a very important function of your friends is to criticize you. There's some part of socialization missing in his biography, which on the one hand gave him the inner freedom to challenge what most people accept, but could also be his doom.

    3. Re:Ya by PietjeJantje · · Score: 1

      Well, at least he is a guy with his own opinion, unlike some folks here who seem to be parroting a certain source with all kinds of information and opinion about Assange produced after the leak, a certain source which incidentally is the US government and which is of course complete objective and independent. Or was it you, who researched Mr. Assange? If not, you are a parrot.

    4. Re:Ya by Scrameustache · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I don't like him at all.

      Shoot the messenger! SHOOT THE MESSENGER!

      I believe he is doing things for the wrong reason. He isn't releasing all this classified information because it is for the public good, he is doing it because it is an ego trip and makes him important, and because it hurts the US and he doesn't like the US.

      Why, specifically, do you believe that?

      I just don't think HIS reasons are the good ones he claims.

      I don't think you know why you think that.

      They really need a more moral spokesman

      One that hasn't been accused of rape, only to have the accusation taken away in less than 24 hours bu not before it made the news?

      and they need to get some rules that they follow for what they do and don't release. If the rule is "Any and everything," ok fine but make that up front and known. Say "We release anything, without regard for what harm that it may cause or if the information is of value to the public." However if that's not what you want to do, if you want to decide if things are important enough to release and to try to not cause any harm, then that's fine too, but you need to have a policy to that effect and stick to it. In the case of the classified cables that would mean only releasing those that showed something of public interest, and redacting names and so on. Ya that's a lot of work but that is what it takes to be responsible about it.

      That is exactly what Wikileaks has been doing. The pentagon claims they haven't, but that's just a lie. You believed that lie, unfortunately.

      As it stands Assange seems to want to play at being the good guy, but he's just a jackass that likes to pump his ego and get egg on teh face of those he doesn't like.

      What do you base that on?

      he's way too egotistical to realize that it would be much better off if he stepped down.

      I do think the world needs things like Wikileaks, however it needs them run by people who actually care about the public good.

      Yeah, look at some of the non-public-good, egotistical things he's done: Starting around 1997 he co-invented "Rubberhose deniable encryption," a cryptographic concept made into a software package for Linux designed to provide plausible deniability against rubber-hose cryptanalysis,[13] which he originally intended "as a tool for human rights workers who needed to protect sensitive data in the field."[14] Other free software that he has authored or co-authored includes the Usenet caching software NNTPCache

      Open source software to protect human rights worker? What a narcissistic jerk!

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    5. Re:Ya by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You do realize he's been doing this for years, for example the leaks about the Kenyan government coverup, and his leak of US documents is only relatively recent? He hasn't been spending all these years just building up credibility so he can fulfill an ulterior motive to hurt the US.

    6. Re:Ya by rhizome · · Score: 1

      I don't like him at all. I believe he is doing things for the wrong reason.

      Why do you care to fantasize about why he's doing it? Facts are facts, and he achieves the same result whether you dig his schtick or not. Dick Cheney is also a jerk, and sometimes the only thing a bully understands is violence. Political bullies moreso.

      If anything, he could shut up a bit, but he appears to be an expert troll and the mass media is helpless in going to work for him. It's a pretty rare skill and I'm not even sure someone who is purely altruistic (i.e. to your preferences) could get it done. Degradation is for snobs.

      --
      When I was a kid, we only had one Darth.
    7. Re:Ya by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Aside from the fact that this "Oi, he's so bad!" is more repetition of media-presented talking points than anything, I disagree with your conclusions.

      Wikileaks needs somebody with a strong personality. Do you think the average do-goody geek would be able to stand up to all those governments? 99,99999% of all those complaining here, would cave at the very first sign of opposition. We'd all go running to mommy when an FBI agent shows up and says "Stop it or I'll go Patriot Act on your backside!".

      They need a person with A LOT of guts, who doesn't cave under pressure (which considering the US government made him a target is immense).

      Part of his job is to be as public and as often in the news as possible. Some hardly known - by the general public - guy who handles stuff, hidden behind boxes in some office, is much easier to dispose than somebody who is in the news often. Such a person HAS to do what he does, in order to protect himself.

      Being the exposed spokesperson, he also protects Wikileaks. Most public attempts to attack them are focused on him, instead of the organisation.

      Assange is the right guy for the job. In my opinion, those "bad" things that get regurgitated are wholly irrelevant character assassination attempts that have nothing to do with his job at Wikileaks.

    8. Re:Ya by Sepodati · · Score: 1

      Why, specifically, do you believe that?

      Believe it or not, but some people read all of the articles, watch the videos and make their own judgments on people. It may not line up with yours, but that doesn't mean they're a sheep.

      Take this for example from Assange: "This is likely to cause a huge backlash against Moneybookers. Craven behaviour in relation to the US government is unlikely to be seen sympathetically." Textbook egotistical. A company decided to stop doing business with WikiLeaks because of the actions the organization took. Assange believes he's so important that everyone else will jump away from Moneybookers because they won't deal with WikiLeaks.

      And also from Assange: "I'm very busy and have no time to deal with people who prefer to do nothing but cover their asses. If Amnesty does nothing I shall issue a press release highlighting its refusal." Amnesty said they wanted to help, but were stretched thin. Assange didn't get what he wanted, so he'll just discredit them and also accuse them of being "US lead".

      Not directly quoted to Assange, but: "Thousands of leaked US military papers from Afghanistan contain evidence of possible war crimes that must be urgently investigated, Wikileaks founder Julian Assange says at press conference in London." Really? Which ones? Why aren't these thousands of situation reports showing war crimes being emphasized and reported on? Typical egotistical performance, inflating the importance of what he's done.

      -John

    9. Re:Ya by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      watch the videos and make their own judgments on people. It may not line up with yours, but that doesn't mean they're a sheep.

      Take this for example from Assange: "This is likely to cause a huge backlash against Moneybookers. Craven behaviour in relation to the US government is unlikely to be seen sympathetically." Textbook egotistical. A company decided to stop doing business with WikiLeaks because of the actions the organization took. Assange believes he's so important that everyone else will jump away from Moneybookers because they won't deal with WikiLeaks.

      There's nothing egotistical about stating that people won't like knowing that their money can be withheld from them because a country away from where they have their money doesn't like them.
      Your examples show me that you are rationalizing your prejudice and seeing what you want to see, not that you are making your own judgment.

      There is more to the thing with Amnesty International then what you make it out to be, too. And why aren't they being reported on? Is it because the media is an arm of the military-industrial-congress complex, or because Assange is egotistical? Why aren't the other pictures of Abu Grahib shown inthe media, is it because the rape of a teenage boy isn't horrible enough to report on, or because the media agreed not to tell the world what really happened there?

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

  51. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by blair1q · · Score: 1, Troll

    Its not really treason since the owner isn't from the US. He's Australian.

    1. By that logic, then it's wouldn't really be against the law for America to have Assange killed.

    2. It's against Australian law to reveal the secrets of Australia's allies.

  52. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by blair1q · · Score: 1

    You are correct. If the information had no other reason to be classified, the person who classified it would be breaking the law. And there are procedures spelled out in the law for declassifying the information in a manner that maintains the secrecy of those portions that should remain classified.

    However, Assange is not the messenger. He revealed classified information without following the legal procedure to do so. In the process he broke the law against declassifying information inappropriately. He also, because of his haste and lack of reasonability, allowed information that should have remained classified to be revealed.

    Assange is a criminal idiot and deserves any punishment he gets.

  53. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by GrumblyStuff · · Score: 1

    War actions WILL get innocent people killed.

    Yay! We're pulling our troops out! ...err, right?

  54. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by luther349 · · Score: 1

    well the war was never bought foreign interests more like us interests in there oil. people seem to forget bush is all abought big oil. 911 was just there excuse to start a useless war. if they really wanted the terrest leaders they woulda just sent in the black ops and took them out without any sort of war. not to mention we sponsor there war agenst us anyways. we feed them we give them guns to shoot us with. wanna stop the sand people from fighting us stop feeding them stop giving them guns and let there god take care of them see how long that last.

  55. Re:Good riddance to wikilinks! by Scrameustache · · Score: 4, Insightful

    result in the deaths of Afghan civilians and US/coalition soldiers

    Wikileaks has killed no one, the people accusing them of doing so have killed tens of thousands: Use your head, figure out the FUD.

    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

  56. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by luther349 · · Score: 1

    yea unlike the food and guns we give the enemy. are own government is guilty of that and any other country helping them. cut there aid and you get a country of starving half dead sand people.and if wikileaks got the documents you can bet your ass they had them long before it got leaked on the internet.

  57. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What war crimes? Who has been charged with them? Who has been convicted?

    I thought so. I just DESTROYED and completely pwned you.

  58. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1. As long as he is not in the USA while getting murdered, you are right. It wouldn't be against US law to kill him. But it would be against Swedish law (if the murder happened in Sweden) and the murderer would be punishable under that law, even if he is US citizen (or should be at least - sadly the US have a history of not respecting laws of other countries).

    2. Australia has to handle the legal matters in that case: arresting, judging and punishing him, not the USA.

  59. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Australia is fighting alongside the US too you know, but I doubt we're going to trial anyone for treason, they never did it for David Hicks so I can't see them doing it for Assange .

  60. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 0, Troll

    100% of the time, information is classified to protects someone's ass.

  61. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

    Arguably though, the best way to avoid putting Afghan civilians and US troops out of harm is to have US troops go back to the US.

    Unfortunately: You break it, you bought it.

    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

  62. Re:Good riddance to wikilinks! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    Reading, sharing, and publishing classified information is not against the law unless you have a security clearance. Obviously the classified documents passed into the public domain by someone who obtained them by having the proper clearance, and that person (those people) are the ones that should be punished for the release. And if someone without clearance broke into the place where they were stored, they may be guilty of burglary or theft, but the person who failed to physically secure the docs is responsible for the unlawful dissemination of classified information.

    If you don't have a security clearance, you are not bound by the rules governing their access. Your access is the result of someone with a clearance (and thus bound by the rules) failing to secure them.

    It's like if I reveal trade secrets to someone not employed by my company, they are under no obligation to prevent the spread of those secrets. Since I am employed by that company, I am responsible.

    WikiLeaks is doing nothing wrong. They are acting honorably.

  63. You can say whatever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you want unless its *redacted* or *redacted* or *redacted,*but especially not *redacted.*

  64. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by metrix007 · · Score: 1

    Err, can you give a citation for the legislation you implicitly reference for 2. ?

    --
    If you ignore ACs because they are anonymous - you're an idiot.
  65. Re:Well, I do not usually get involved but... by master0ne · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1818524&cid=33877336 - you contradict yourself? so which is it? you ARE or ARE NOT religous?

    --
    Noone writes jokes in base 13!
  66. One more story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    My brother, a combat medic, was with a group that was being attacked. He was in the room when a sergeant told a soldier to stick his head out the window to see what was up. The kid stuck his head out the window and got a bullet to the face, and the sergeant turned without a word and walked into the other room. My brother had to clean the mess up.

    If you google the name of the deceased soldier the reports say he was killed by an IED. His family does not know the truth of how he died.

    Talk to any soldier that has seen action and ask them if they saw anything get covered up, I'm willing to bet you won't find any soldier who has been deployed that can say "no".

    1. Re:One more story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My brother, a combat medic, was with the 5th legion on Klendathu, when his group was attacked. He was in a cave when a sergeant told a soldier to stick his head in the next tunnel to see what was up. The kid stuck his head in the tunnel and got it chomped off by a warrior bug, and the sergeant turned without a word and walked into the other room. My brother had to clean the mess up.

      If you google the name of the deceased soldier the reports say he was killed by an IED. His family does not know the truth of how he died.

      Talk to any soldier that has seen action and ask them if they saw anything get covered up, I'm willing to bet you won't find any soldier who has been deployed that can say "no".

      True story.

    2. Re:One more story by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      It was the Zerg, I tell you! It was the Zerg!!!!!

      --
      Qxe4
    3. Re:One more story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damn...guys should carry mirrors to hold outside of windows....or how expensive is a cheap little toy video cam.....

    4. Re:One more story by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

      In other words, the first casualty of war is the truth. Which is why one of George Carlin's basic political principles was refusing to believe anything the government tells the public.

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    5. Re:One more story by diversiform · · Score: 1

      His family does not know the truth of how he died.

      What stops you or your brother from telling them the truth?

  67. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    they never did it for David Hicks

    I think that's a really bad example seeing as a US Military Commission managed to find him guilty for "aiding the enemy". So whilst Australia might not to do it, who knows about the US.

  68. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by blair1q · · Score: 1

    1. The USA can drop him out of a plane over the Atlantic Ocean. How he gets there will probably never be known.

    2. If Australia wants to let the U.S. take the trouble, it can. And apparently is.

  69. Re:Good riddance to wikilinks! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I hear that said, but I hear politicians say these kinds of things all the time - PROVE to me that someone(s) got hurt/killed due to this release and I may feel otherwise, but for now, I believe they are being targeted for "pissing off" the powers that be.

    They can't do that! It would require them to post more classified information that is going to compromise sources and result in the deaths of Afghan civilians and US/coalition soldiers!

  70. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1. It doesn't help you prove that Assange is the evil guy breaking laws if you assume the USA will kill people they don't like anyway. Which is morally twisted and wrong, but legally (as in "what is written in the law books") unproblematic.

    2. Even if it were so, that still doesn't make it legal. I never heard of a country "outsourcing" justice, unless they want to desperately circumvent their own laws (eg. gitmo),

  71. Re:Good riddance to wikilinks! by icebraining · · Score: 5, Informative

    They deserve criminal charges filed against them.

    Regardless of what you might think, the US law doesn't apply worldwide.

  72. Re:Good riddance to wikilinks! by Scrameustache · · Score: 2, Informative

    there was such a rush to publicize them without proper redaction and editing. PROVE to me that

    You're spreading FUD. Read this instead:

    A lawyer representing the whistle-blowing Web site WikiLeaks says
    U.S. government officials have been given codes and passwords granting them online access to official U.S. government documents that WikiLeaks so far has not published.

    Timothy Matusheski, a lawyer from Hattiesburg, Miss., who says he represents whistle-blowers and has been in touch with both WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange and at least one government official involved in investigations of WikiLeaks, said the site had set up a “secure channel” through which authorized users could access the unpublished material. He said credentials for using this channel had been forwarded to representatives of the U.S. government whom he did not identify. Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

  73. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by Scrameustache · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Its not really treason since the owner isn't from the US. He's Australian.

    It's against Australian law to reveal the secrets of Australia's allies.

    Still not treason.

    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

  74. Are donations to Wikileaks tax deductable? by 3seas · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ....if not they should be.

  75. He can't even say why he believes that meme by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

    I can get behind Wikileaks, but not Assange. He is egotistical tool.

    Character assassination: Done and done!
    Now instead of focusing on the issue, you will parrot out the "the spokesperson is bad, we must not listen" line every time wikileaks is mentioned. You don't even say why you believe what you say, you probably don't even know yourself that you only believe it because of a campaign of repetition in the media made you absorb this baseless meme.

    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

  76. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by icebraining · · Score: 1

    What law? US law? Doesn't apply. He's neither an US citizen nor was he on US soil.

  77. To add a bit about blowback by dbIII · · Score: 5, Informative

    Remember guys that the government that was installed in Chile with a lot of US help was the same one that later set off a car bomb in Washington D.C. to get rid of an exiled political opponent.

    1. Re:To add a bit about blowback by ushering05401 · · Score: 2, Informative

      We not only didn't do anything about it, it later turned out that the U.S. was an official advisor for the program which has been claimed to have killed over 100k people though 60k is the more commonly cited number.

      The message was clear and influential in my education as I am sure it has been for others. Any accusation may be shown to be true at any time against an organization of a certain size, but the U.S. government on balance is the nearest thing to a global 'final solution' actor since the U.S.S.R. went down.

      The saddest part is it seems there are many people that honestly believe it is within our rights to organize and empower political holocaust. I can only hope hell is real, because pacifism is my dedication here on earth so I won't ever get the chance to show these punks what *I* learned from Artichoke & Paperclip. Now if only they would stop trotting out all the things they learned from the Nazis we might be able to get somewhere.

    2. Re:To add a bit about blowback by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      And Bin Laden was trained by US forces as a weapon against Russia. Starting to see a pattern here?

    3. Re:To add a bit about blowback by dbIII · · Score: 2, Informative

      HE wasn't but enough others in Afganistan were to come back and bite us. At least Charlie Wilson lived long enough to know that he will burn in hell with the blood of US troops on his hands for that bit of stupidity.

    4. Re:To add a bit about blowback by drinkypoo · · Score: 2, Informative

      HE wasn't but enough others in Afganistan were to come back and bite us. At least Charlie Wilson lived long enough to know that he will burn in hell with the blood of US troops on his hands for that bit of stupidity.

      Actually, we knowingly trained lots of his people. But that aside, we also funded him, under the hand of Bush we sent a BILLION dollars to the Taliban to "halt heroin production" which happened for one year (a little less actually) and then it picked up not just where it left off, but with most of what was not supposed to be produced any more but which had clearly simply been stockpiled being released as well. Interestingly the Bush family made its initial fortune by funding Hitler's S.S. The more things change...

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    5. Re:To add a bit about blowback by Artemis3 · · Score: 1

      And funding terrorism worldwide, then giving them protection. The case of Luis Posada Carriles and Orlando Bosch are exemplary samples of US Terrorism.
      One would think detonating bombs in jet airliners and hotels would qualify as terrorism, not for Bush father (Gave presidential pardon to O.Bosch) or Bush son and Obama who keep protecting Carriles in US soil; when international law clearly states in case of civilian aviation crimes either turn the criminal to be judged in the affected country, or judge him using your own laws on the matter in yours. Neither is carried by the USA and thats exactly how they want cooperation against terrorism... In fact Cuba sacrificed 5 agents who infiltrated anti-cuban groups in Florida to warn the US gov about probable acts of terror against their own people. The result, instead of disbanding the terrorist groups, the agents were captured and convicted to life sentences (for "Spying"), Their only crime was helping prevent more terrorism against Cuba. As you can see in the videos, it's not the first time these groups got carried out of their way and commit acts even in US soil.

      http://www.cubadebate.cu/especiales/2010/09/28/under-the-sign-of-terror/
      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kx7TptU3taQ

      http://blogcritics.org/video/article/dvd-review-posada-carriles-terrorism-made/
      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gOz-_9fBvtE

      Fact: The US government help and protect murderers when it happens to benefit their foreign policy. Some like Bin Laden eventually turn around...

      --
      Artix
      Your Linux, your init.
    6. Re:To add a bit about blowback by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Forget Bin Laden since the links are indirect.
      Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, a current leader of Taliban forces, was the guy that got the millions of dollars worth of equipment in "Charlie Wilson's War".
      The problem with uncontrolled spooks is they sometimes do things that badly hurt their own country. It looks like all you need to do if you are a foreign power and you want the CIA on your side is to find a sleazy senator and bribe him.

  78. Bad! BAD! BAD! by b4upoo · · Score: 2, Interesting

    No trial, no hearing, no law, just the same old anti American action taken by an arm of government.

    1. Re: Bad! BAD! BAD! by Bigjeff5 · · Score: 1

      Who the fuck is the American here? Assange is Australian, and is in Sweden. All the US Govt did was put him on a watch list.

      If you think he's such a great guy, then why has the Australian government banned a site created by one of their own? The US hasn't done anything close to that, they just put him on a watch list (it was a private company that chose not to do business with him - frankly, I wouldn't either).

      --
      Security is mostly a superstition... Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. - Helen Keller
    2. Re: Bad! BAD! BAD! by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

      the truly fucked up shit always happens in secret.

      this should be of no surprise to anyone who's even partially awake, these days.

      and if he was an american citizen, he'd be fucked with even more so, and directly, too.

      very sad. but educational, in a twisted kind of way. better to know the real mind of the country you think 'represents freedom to the world' than to live in a disney fantasy movie.

      the world is a messed up place, in many ways. the notion of fairness is only a child's concept. the big power boys play by entirely different rules.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    3. Re: Bad! BAD! BAD! by BobMcD · · Score: 0, Troll

      Who the fuck is the American here? Assange is Australian, and is in Sweden. All the US Govt did was put him on a watch list.

      Do you believe, for even a moment, that Australia took action independently of the US? Really? Are you genuinely unaware of the impact the US dollar has on the world economy? Really??

      If you think he's such a great guy, then why has the Australian government banned a site created by one of their own? The US hasn't done anything close to that, they just put him on a watch list (it was a private company that chose not to do business with him - frankly, I wouldn't either).

      And even if the guy was pedobear himself, what would that have to do with the content of his website? You can elect not to do business with him if you'd like, and this is perfectly fine, but to collude to restrict his ability to utilize banks is an entirely different manner.

      Bigjeff5, you're really opposed to this guy all up and down this thread, but there's almost no substance here. You don't seem to be thinking through the things you're saying. Do you have a Swedish sister, by any chance? Does your paycheck come postmarked from Virginia? What's your interest in this, if not to participate in a discussion??

  79. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by icebraining · · Score: 1

    if nobody volunteered they would just start a draft.

    And what if nobody complied?

    being in the army isn't all bad.

    Yes, if you only join based on financial and not moral grounds, being in the army isn't all that bad.

  80. Wikileaks is right by roman_mir · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    This just proves more than ever that Wikileaks is right, it's in the right and the US government is wrong.

    US government is wrong about the economics, it's wrong about policy, it's wrong about politics, it's pretty much wrong on everything at this point, I don't think it can be redeemed.

    1. Re:Wikileaks is right by Bigjeff5 · · Score: 1

      What exactly is wrong about the US Govt putting Assange on a watch list? Seems reasonable to me.

      --
      Security is mostly a superstition... Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. - Helen Keller
  81. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by icebraining · · Score: 1

    A US Citizen is bound by US law (at least, by some laws, like murder) everywhere in the world. So it is against the law for America to have Assange killed.

  82. Ya by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do you actually use the word "Ya" in real life or is it just for the internet?

  83. Sadly, everyone does it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I guess the US is just discrete about trying to overthrow (or prop-up) governments...

    The French and British mostly just sent over the troops (see the history of the middle east conflicts like the suez canal in egypt, vietnam, cambodia, ivory coast, central africa, rwanda, chad, iran, iraq, mexico, etc, etc).

    Even the french provided covert aid to the US colonies to overthrow the government and install a new government...

    I guess the rule is don't write things down ;^)

  84. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    napalm girl, Kim Phuc, now Canadian citizen, fyi

  85. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by dbIII · · Score: 1

    Did he sell US weapons to Iran while embezzling a bit on the side for a car and a house airconditioning system? Still not treason.
    Playing a Russian at chess - now that's treason!

  86. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by Bigjeff5 · · Score: 1

    The US has a long-standing executive order against assassinations.

    Every president since Gerald Ford (who initiated it) has reaffirmed this order.

    G. W. Bush got a little fuzzy with it (as long as they could be classified as enemy combatants/terrorists it was a go), but he did not recind the order.

    In other words, assassination (at least of folks like Assange) is currently illegal in the US, and if caught the assassins and those who ordered the assassination would face serious jail time.

    --
    Security is mostly a superstition... Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. - Helen Keller
  87. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by Rakshasa+Taisab · · Score: 1

    Countries do not usually take light at other countries sending in agents to murder or kidnap people, even foreigners, on their soil. It's the kind of thing that usually causes huge diplomatic crisis.

    --
    - These characters were randomly selected.
  88. Re:Good riddance to wikilinks! by Jafafa+Hots · · Score: 1

    I'll take it a step further. if the names named are US servicemembers, and details of their exploits infuriate civilians, or encourage their enemies, and civilians or the US's enemies use the data and kill them...
    I DON'T FUCKING CARE.

    Assange has NO requirement of loyalty to either side in the conflict. If Assange got information on the whereabouts of Osama Bin Laden and published it, and US used it to kill him, would you complain?

    Of course not.

    Because you've bought into the lie that the US is the "good guys" and the Taliban are the "bad guys." Assange has no duty to buy into the "US #1 !!!" hype. He can present reality and let both sides deal with the consequences of their actions.

    The truth is, there ARE NO GOOD GUYS, and if you need a bad guy, both sides qualify. The Taliban qualifies because they're theocratic sexist murdering thugs who want to take their country back into the dark ages.

    The US is also the bad guy because they are murdering thugs who CREATED THE TALIBAN IN THE FIRST PLACE as a useful tool. NOT to spread freedom and democracy, NOT to "nation build," but rather as a short-sighted (and now clearly bad) tactic in a continuing grab to control everything. To "advance US interests" which has nothing to do with freedom, and everything to do with hoarding resources, being the biggest and baddest power, and protecting our wealthiest classes' sources of income.

    And so we have been the ENEMY of freedom repeatedly, toppling stable governments, overthrowing DEMOCRACIES to install dictators, all at the behest of fruit companies, oil companies, whoever else, etc.

    We are BOTH bad guys fighting each other, and if anything the Taliban is less of a problem because they only want to turn their OWN region into a shithole, and are just trying to get us to leave the area, whereas we are trying to run the world.

    I say all of this as a person who has several relatives who are military, who have fought over there. They bought the lie, they signed on to be a pawn for the imperialistic death machine, and if they get killed it's their own damned fault.

    --
    This space available.
  89. What's going on? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What are they using this service for? How much money was in there and if it was more than nothing, why were they letting it sit there? Does any money in there get returned, or just get forwarded to the MI6 Reptile Fund? Or do Moneybookers.com get to keep it for services rendered?

    Also, aren't there 100s of similar companies offering escrow/online wallets/donation and payment collection services? And surely aren't some of those companies friendly ones, based in places that have warm climates and friendly tax laws, with friendly managers who look the other way? Who would quite happily file correspondence from the US Government in their shredder?

    Given that there are people willing to donate money to Wikileaks, I can't believe that being shut out by one or two donation/payment services is that much of a show-stopper. Is the reach and competence of the US really so vast that it can prevent any international commerce that conflicts with its interests?

  90. Good imagination there by dbIII · · Score: 1

    I don't know where you are getting all this from. There are several occasions when I would have been in the same room as Mr Assange yet never noticed him or even heard of him until wikileaks.
    It's quite funny really hearing the bit about a more moral spokesman when half of the USA is listening in wonder to the deranged words of a former cocaine addict on Fox.

    1. Re:Good imagination there by flyingkillerrobots · · Score: 1

      It's quite funny really hearing the bit about a more moral spokesman when half of the USA is listening in wonder to the deranged words of a former cocaine addict on Fox.

      Do you mean Glen Beck, or Barack Obama?

      --
      "It is a good thing for an uneducated man to read books of quotations..." -Winston Churchill
    2. Re:Good imagination there by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      It's quite funny really hearing the bit about a more moral spokesman when half of the USA is listening in wonder to the deranged words of a former cocaine addict on Fox.

      Do you mean Glen Beck, or Barack Obama?

      I thought he meant George W. Bush. No, wait, he's a current cocaine addict, and nobody wants to hear what he has to say any more.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  91. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by blair1q · · Score: 1

    1. They aren't doing it because they don't like him. They're doing it because he deserves it.

    2. Sure it makes it legal. Australia wants Assange's head, and says to the U.S. if you find him, lop it off. That's what military allies are for. Please don't be a dope.

  92. Re:Good riddance to wikilinks! by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

    you've bought into the lie that the US is the "good guys"

    I really haven't.

    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

  93. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by blair1q · · Score: 1

    Unless the diplomacy is conducted before the operation is approved, in secret, by both sides.

    Then there's a mild kerfuffle for the benefit of the press and shortly thereafter everyone gets distracted by a missing-child story, of which there are enough you don't even have to create them.

  94. just as i thought by skoony · · Score: 0

    the hate america firsters are in a uproar. good. people that commit espionage are spies and should be treated as such. and NO the world does'nt need to know. if palistinian state secrets where published you people would be screaming to holy hell about privacy. and another thing,arrest the traitor and try him and all his cohorts. you cant have it both ways regards, mike

  95. All else being equal by voss · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The simplest explanation usually the correct one....

    The problem with your assumptions is that you assume the US government is WAY more capable and competent than it actually is.

    What is closer to the truth Assange is a reckless narcisstic jackass who got put on watchlists for leaking US intelligence, along the way
      he probably pissed off some women with his narcisstic jackass ways which caused them to accuse him of various misdeeds. Moneybookers cut him off because Moneybookers is a company based in Bahrain about to do an IPO and does not need the drama that his pitifully small accounts brings with them. Moneybookers wants to do things that are far less likely to bring them trouble like online gambling, international money transfers,etc,etc

    http://www.ecommerce-journal.com/node/30006

    1. Re:All else being equal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Its pretty sad when online gambling and international money transfers bring less trouble then wikileaks.

    2. Re:All else being equal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Moneybookers even cut me off, without explanation and before I had received a single dime in my account. WL was stupid to select them in the first place.

    3. Re:All else being equal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...he probably pissed off some women with his narcisstic jackass ways which caused them to accuse him of various misdeeds.

      Which never happened before in his life, but did happen within a few months of him pissing off the US? The simple explanation requires a rather unlikely coincidence...

    4. Re:All else being equal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I see the CIA is good enough to convince you.

    5. Re:All else being equal by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Moneybookers even cut me off, without explanation and before I had received a single dime in my account. WL was stupid to select them in the first place.

      What do you suggest he use, paypal? He's probably just working his way down the list of payment services until someone makes the (probably bad, but possibly laudable) decision to stick with him instead of taking a gigantic shit on him the first time they're asked to.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    6. Re:All else being equal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I fail to see how your explanation is necessarily simpler. I think it stretches the imagination to think that a woman he pissed off accused him of rape, and just happened to do so at a time when a powerful body wanted to discredit him. I also think it's a stretch to think the authorities would officially charge him with said crime, without enough evidence to even have the charges stick for more than 24 hours, without being pressured to do so by some external influence, especially because he's a public figure. If some floozie when to the police and said Glenn Beck raped her in the late 90's, I'm pretty sure the police aren't going to go file the charges, and the find out if there's any merit to them.

    7. Re:All else being equal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To simple minded people.

    8. Re:All else being equal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually he's assuming that the CIA is capable and competent. Which it largely is for some things, not so much for others. The influx of inexperienced people doesn't help anything though.

    9. Re:All else being equal by SleazyRidr · · Score: 1

      Wow, those US tactics to discredit him really worked fast!

  96. Half of Europe listed right here: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.fas.org/irp/offdocs/nsdd/nsdd-054.htm

    Love the "UNCLASSIFIED" yet censored documents. Don't you?

    1. Re:Half of Europe listed right here: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      no dumbass, they're unclassified *because* they're censored. note how it orgiinally said 'secret' at the top.

  97. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by c0lo · · Score: 1

    2. Australia has to handle the legal matters in that case: arresting, judging and punishing him, not the USA.

    IANAL, but I think Australia has to handle the legal matters if and only if the breach of law happened on Australian teritory.

    --
    Questions raise, answers kill. Raise questions to stay alive.
  98. Re:Good riddance to wikilinks! by Jafafa+Hots · · Score: 1

    Yeah, I know you haven't, I was referring more to the "yous" out there who were taking a different opinion than yours, which I was going :one step further" than.
    Inartfully worded, my apologies.

    --
    This space available.
  99. Wikileaks held back fifteen thousand pages! by Scrameustache · · Score: 4, Informative

    AIUI, those documents contain the names of people in Afghanistan who are giving information to the US. Publishing the documents without redacting the names tells the Taliban exactly who to kill. Does that answer your question?

    Publishing the names without redacting them WOULD HAVE told the Taliban who to kill. But they DID REDACT AS MANY NAMES AS THEY COULD.

    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

    1. Re:Wikileaks held back fifteen thousand pages! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, I'll bet that really makes the ones whose names they didn't redact feel much better. "Sorry dude, you're going to die, but we did as much as we could!" Woohoo!

    2. Re:Wikileaks held back fifteen thousand pages! by flyingkillerrobots · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "AS MANY NAMES AS THEY COULD." Even you are implicitly admitting they did not succeed in redacting them all, and as a consequence, Wikileaks told the Taliban who to kill.

      --
      "It is a good thing for an uneducated man to read books of quotations..." -Winston Churchill
    3. Re:Wikileaks held back fifteen thousand pages! by ushering05401 · · Score: 1

      How about "sorry dude, you are going to die because the U.S. lied when they said they would not negotiate with the extremists or stop until they had the perps behind 9-11 and they were lying on both counts."

      Every individual in the world that has ever thought about cooperating with the U.S. government must be put on notice. When the going gets tough the U.S. is going to have to pull out because "tough" makes the war money too expensive to go after for a while.

      Anyhow, it is always only a matter of time until the lax ass QA of the U.S. military is going to result in pictures of naked human pyramids and all potential allies need to know this.

      I can't imagine who the fuck would do business with our government after the last nine years.

    4. Re:Wikileaks held back fifteen thousand pages! by EllisDees · · Score: 3, Insightful

      So who has actually been harmed by any of it? Just one name, please.

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
    5. Re:Wikileaks held back fifteen thousand pages! by BenJCarter · · Score: 1

      AIUI, those documents contain the names of people in Afghanistan who are giving information to the US. Publishing the documents without redacting the names tells the Taliban exactly who to kill. Does that answer your question?

      Publishing the names without redacting them WOULD HAVE told the Taliban who to kill. But they DID REDACT AS MANY NAMES AS THEY COULD.

      Sorry we didn't redact your name and they killed you. We did the best we could...

      --
      For in politics, as in religion, it is equally absurd to aim at making proselytes by fire and sword. - Publius
    6. Re:Wikileaks held back fifteen thousand pages! by nosferatu1001 · · Score: 1

      After USG refused to help redact.

      They played chicken with other peoples lives and wikileaks didnt blink

    7. Re:Wikileaks held back fifteen thousand pages! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it weren't for Slashdot, I'd have no idea what was in there. We're under orders to not review the site, and to report ourselves if exposed to anything pertaining to it. Go go Air Force?

      Hmm.

    8. Re:Wikileaks held back fifteen thousand pages! by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      "AS MANY NAMES AS THEY COULD."

      Even you are implicitly admitting they did not succeed in redacting them all, and as a consequence, Wikileaks told the Taliban who to kill.

      Who to kill? Really? No: not really. Not in reality, but only in the FUD of the pentagon, so you won't pay attention to the thousands and thousands of real people they really killed, so they can keep killing more with your consent and unwavering, unquestioning support.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    9. Re:Wikileaks held back fifteen thousand pages! by PhinMak · · Score: 1

      THIS! A thousand times THIS! Mod parent up.

    10. Re:Wikileaks held back fifteen thousand pages! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But you know, for every innocent informant that might die due to a wikileak, hundreds or more innocents will die at the hands of NATO forces and CIA drones, not to mention the fraction of innocents that will die to oppressive local regimes.

      In the grand scheme of things, every one of these FUD comments about OMG WIKILEAKS HAS BLOOD ON ITS HANDS should instead read: This war is a crime and needs to be stopped to mitigate the actual killing of actual innocent people.

    11. Re:Wikileaks held back fifteen thousand pages! by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      AIUI, those documents contain the names of people in Afghanistan who are giving information to the US. Publishing the documents without redacting the names tells the Taliban exactly who to kill. Does that answer your question?

      Publishing the names without redacting them WOULD HAVE told the Taliban who to kill. But they DID REDACT AS MANY NAMES AS THEY COULD.

      Sorry we didn't redact your name and they killed you. We did the best we could...

      That has never happened, but there has been tens of thousands of deaths recently. You should learn to tell the difference between "a person or two could die maybe at some point possibly" and real people who really died by the tens of thousands.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

  100. Re:Good riddance to wikilinks! by c6gunner · · Score: 1

    You're trying to make it into a joke, but you've actually got it exactly right. The fact that you don't realize it is at the very root of the problem here. You, as someone who has no understanding of how military ops and intelligence gathering are done, have no basis for evaluating what's a threat and what's not. You're like the business-marketing major who walks into an IT shop, tells the admins that firewalls and anti-virus software are unnecessary and dumb because they slow down his computer, and then laughs when they try to explain the security implications. To anyone who understands the relevant fields you look like an ignorant, arrogant asshole, as you smugly stroll away, congratulating yourself on the clever rejoinders which you used to shut down those dumb computer dweebs.

  101. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by Gofyerself · · Score: 1

    You are right, you are always right. I'm too tired to argue.

  102. Julian does not need to worry about the US Govt. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Julian has his own creepy fanboy stalker to worry about.
    Julian's inbox is probably littered with mash notes from Scrameustache.
    Julian really ought to get a protective order.

  103. Seems to me, by Grand+Facade · · Score: 1

    That if you live by the sword, expect to get cut.

    Better to leak the info anonymously,

    than to stand in a puddle of blood.

    --
    Rick B.
  104. What type of posion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh, thank goodness.
    I read that as erotic poisons . and was getting kind of worried about my upcoming trip to Chernobyl

    Captcha: accuracy

  105. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by AHuxley · · Score: 1

    never heard of a country "outsourcing" justice ..
    Australia was hard hit in the late 1940's and the UK had to fly in Sir Percy Sillitoe to help try and work out Verona issues.
    ASIO spent a lot of time following anyone with friends of friends of friends .. of Russians.
    Dec 1945 was really the last time Australia considered doing intel work alone.
    The US and UK where spooked by the fact Australia might start collecting its own intel and and also been very leaky.
    Australia was offered a deal, Teddy Poulden from the UK was installed to run things, with GCHQ staff, in return Australia got UK access. NSA and GCHQ have had very close relations from day one.
    Nobody wants wants to the the Uk in 1973 or New Zealand in 1985 when the NSA turns off the tap.
    So always good to be "outsourcing" justice, over any issue in any decade. Downlink stations do not ensure a flow of material, saying 'yes' is the only way.

    --
    Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
  106. Cyber Pirate by teachknowlegy · · Score: 1

    To me, this is just an organization pirating information using the digital age. While I don't condone it, I also don't condemn it, or the defense against it. I welcome responses, of course.

  107. Baseless Accusations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The reality is that they are funded by the CIA so I doubt money is really an issue.

  108. Re:Good riddance to wikilinks! by Americano · · Score: 1

    It's not FUD. The first round of publication was rushed, and as such, contained names of informants. The article you linked was a full month after the initial publication of the Afghan War Diaries.

    Other articles have cited Wikileaks insiders expressing concern to Assange over his decision to publicize the second round this month, with the major concern being that they would not have time to fully review the documents before publication.

    That they offered access to the US government a month after they published a slew of documents does not absolve them of responsibility for what they have already published, nor absolve them of responsibility for continuing to publish documents that haven't been properly edited to reduce harm.

    Please let me be clear here, too - I don't dispute their right to publish the documents. I simply dislike the rush to grab headlines with such facile disregard for the harm it could cause.

  109. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by dyfet · · Score: 1

    Protecting democracy often requires treason. Certainly trying to create it did...

  110. Australian Govt Blacklist? by AbRASiON · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Ok well that's piqued my interest, never intended on donating before, now I do. How can I go about this?

  111. Take cash, put it in a safe box. by Kaz+Kylheku · · Score: 1

    Doh.

  112. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

    actually, the information was out already, it had to be to get into the hands of an unauthorized person (assange) even if he were a citizen he would have no obligation under the law to help the government fix their fuckups.

    --
    Snowden and Manning are heroes.
  113. No. by adamofgreyskull · · Score: 0, Troll

    Are you for real? That doesn't make any sense. Though I appreciate they probably did so with the best intentions, it does not make any sense for WikiLeaks to ask. It is gross stupidity, of the highest fucking order, on the grounds that the answer they would get is so very very obvious. They only reason I can see, apart from stupidity, is so that they can tell the world that the Pentagon refused to help them, bolstering support. What? You think WikiLeaks incapable of playing the PRopaganda game? Similarly, it would not make any sense for the Pentagon to help. In doing so they could potentially endangering more lives.

    Consider what would happen if the Pentagon agreed to help them, and then claimed that 75% of it must be redacted to protect "innocent" lives? Either a) Wikileaks agree, and redact that 75%, or b) they publish the whole thing, or c) they decide for themselves what they're going to leave in or redact. (Oh, options b & c are the options they have now, by the way). Now, WikiLeaks knows which 75% of the documents that the US government cares about most, who they want to protect, and who they don't. That, in itself, is very valuable information.

    What guarantees do the U.S. government have that the names/information that they ask to be redacted won't be leaked, on top of the original documents? None. What guarantees do they have that WikiLeaks hasn't already been compromised by some nefarious third-party? None.

    You don't agree? Ok, assuming WikiLeaks are on the straight and level, what guarantees do the U.S. government have that the names they tell them to redact will never find their way into "The Wrong Hands". None. No matter how secure they claim to be. One compromised server, one leak from within WikiLeaks who thinks they're not going far enough, one person with a sick aunt who needs a cash injection from anywhere to pay for an operation and BAM! even more information has been exposed, i.e. the names/information the U.S. government wants to protect most out of those documents.

    Anything else that they, the U.S. Government, do from now on is damage limitation. Letting the world know which portions of those documents that they care about the most would be stupidity. Not to mention incredibly irresponsible. So, pretty much, the only option they have is to try and stop these other documents being published.

    "The road to hell is paved with good intentions."
    Now, I respect the work that WikiLeaks does, or tries to do, but if they're incapable of self-editing to protect "the innocent", then they have no business leaking those documents. No matter the response from the Pentagon, WikiLeaks will always be bound to release precisely whatever they think is important or they end up being toothless minions of the Pentagon. Are they going to take on a liaison from the Pentagon as an editor/"fact"-checker?

    Their unease is their own fault. Either they stick to releasing OT documents from the Cult of $cientology or they play with the big boys and run the risk of getting innocent people killed. If they are that fucking uneasy about publishing the documents they should delete them, shred them, burn them. If they think the documents are that bloody toxic, even having them around is endangering those lives, whether they wind up releasing them eventually or not.

    1. Re:No. by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Are you for real? That doesn't make any sense. Though I appreciate they probably did so with the best intentions, it does not make any sense for WikiLeaks to ask. It is gross stupidity, of the highest fucking order, on the grounds that the answer they would get is so very very obvious. They only reason I can see, apart from stupidity, is so that they can tell the world that the Pentagon refused to help them, bolstering support. What? You think WikiLeaks incapable of playing the PRopaganda game? Similarly, it would not make any sense for the Pentagon to help. In doing so they could potentially endangering more lives.

      Okay, just stop. Your last sentence is completely bugshit insane. They could have simply accepted a document from Wikileaks and returned it with the relevant names removed, plus enough other names removed to disguise relevance. Instead they elected to remove zero names, which makes them complicit for every name ultimately released, period, end of story. There is zero way in which their editing of the document could be more dangerous than permitting Wikileaks to make these decisions on their own without a full understanding. Further, by not taking this opportunity to add noise to the channel by censoring unimportant names, they left Wikileaks in a position where they will be censoring only those names which they think are relevant, and thus providing information to anyone else who has the uncensored material. This material may already be in the wild (I never trust that there is only one copy of any data) and if it is not, attempts to acquire the data to compare it to the censored documents will have been increased dramatically, potentially with some success.
      So yes, there certainly is the element of being able to tell the world that the Pentagon refused to help. But unlike you, I believe that this is a valid argument. The Pentagon had the opportunity to save lives, and passed it up, because that is not their business.

      Consider what would happen if the Pentagon agreed to help them, and then claimed that 75% of it must be redacted to protect "innocent" lives? Either a) Wikileaks agree, and redact that 75%, or b) they publish the whole thing, or c) they decide for themselves what they're going to leave in or redact. (Oh, options b & c are the options they have now, by the way). Now, WikiLeaks knows which 75% of the documents that the US government cares about most, who they want to protect, and who they don't. That, in itself, is very valuable information.

      Any asshole who has read Cryptonomicon knows that you add false information into the channel to smooth out the bell curve. I cover this above as well, in case you missed it.

      What guarantees do the U.S. government have that the names/information that they ask to be redacted won't be leaked, on top of the original documents? None. What guarantees do they have that WikiLeaks hasn't already been compromised by some nefarious third-party? None.

      See above. How many fucking paragraphs will you waste belaboring the same point? We already get that you don't understand disinformation.

      You don't agree? Ok, assuming WikiLeaks are on the straight and level, what guarantees do the U.S. government have that the names they tell them to redact will never find their way into "The Wrong Hands". None. No matter how secure they claim to be.

      And indeed, the unredacted documents might well find their way into the wrong hands. And the further Assange is pushed towards the fringes of society (which is pretty much where he hangs out anyway) the more likely it is that will happen.

      Anything else that they, the U.S. Government, do from now on is damage limitation.

      And yet they passed up the chance to do that.

      Now, I respect the work that WikiLeaks does, or tries to do, but if they're incapable of self-editin

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    2. Re:No. by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      I mean this in all due respect. You sir, are stupid. Stupid meaning that you are not knowledgeable enough to draw the conclusions you are drawing (I know, because they are wrong.)

      You claim that the pentagon could have had them remove important names, as well as enough unimportant ones. But they would also have to LEAVE some important ones, or else they are increasing the amount of sensitive information in the wild.

      The end result of this line of thinking is that they would have to have them remove names COMPLETELY RANDOMLY, which is no better than removing NONE AT ALL from an information-increasing standpoint, but has the downside that IT PAINTS A BULLSEYE ON RANDOM PEOPLE.

      Citrations:

      Game Theory
      Information Theory
      Monty Hall Problem

      Master all of these subjects (the last one is easy) and then shove your argument up your ass. People who argue endlessly about shit they dont know anything about make me fucking sick.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
  114. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by cOldhandle · · Score: 1

    The ground troops that coerce civillians to provide information on enemy traps/movement etc. put their lives at an infinitely greater risk. I watched a documentary last night ("Dispatches - Bravo's Deadly Mission") where US troops just took over some civillians' property at gunpoint so they could camp the night there. One of the civillians was later found beheaded. The ground troops don't care if any civillians are put in danger, as long as they can glean any information about booby traps etc. to protect themselves. The possibility that Wikileaks "could" get innocent people killed in the future is a fairly small concern compared to the constant revenge murders against US collaborators/informants since their occupation began (Which of course the US doesn't care about as long as it can be kept secret from the public).

  115. Moneybookers is also popular with scammers, go fig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Moneybookers is also popular with people who scam auction sites as a "alternative to paypal" So no story here.

  116. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mods, seriously no troll post? The evidence in wikileaks speaks for itself. This parent is either trolling, or seriously believes that, either way they are spewing fantasy.

  117. The 'red scare' wasn't real by rsilvergun · · Score: 2, Insightful

    After WWII Russia didn't even have enough fuel to drive their tanks home, they used Horses & Mules. Russia never was and never would be a threat to anyone. We made them a threat because Truman was afraid without a strong enemy our economy would stagnant like it is now (e.g. all the wealth gathered into the hands of 1% of the populace). In his own sick little way he was helping the average joe by creating what we call the Military Industrial Complex.

    As for 'Soviet style communism', Russia never was a communist country. It was a dictatorship using Marx's Rhetoric. For Americans communism == socialism == evil stuff we learned about in school. Thing is, all that 'socialism' is the only thing between the average American and the 'nasty, brutal and short' life of the 1800s. Maybe you're one of the 'haves'. Maybe you've got a trust fund and you're set for life. But if not, you're a freakin' idiot, and you're part of the problem. The socialists want to protect you (and themselves, they're realists, not altruists). The capitalists want to grind you into hamburger. Of course, you're probably too busy planning on being they guy cranking the grinder to notice they've got your arm in it.

    Moron.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
    1. Re:The 'red scare' wasn't real by brit74 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      After WWII Russia didn't even have enough fuel to drive their tanks home, they used Horses & Mules. Russia never was and never would be a threat to anyone.
      Boom! Irrefutable logic. The USSR had so little fuel (or poor supply lines) that they couldn't drive their tanks home in 1945. Ergo, they were completely powerless between 1945 and 1992. I heard that Khrushchev did *not* in fact go to the United Nations and declare that "We will bury you". And since the Soviet Union didn't have enough fuel in 1945, it's obvious that they didn't launch Sputnik into space, didn't have nuclear weapons, and didn't have ICBMs. It's all fiction - how could a country lacking in fuel in 1945 possibly get all those other things? Hellllll, I bet the Soviet Union didn't even have enough fuel to get Khrushchev to the UN in the first place!

      As for 'Soviet style communism', Russia never was a communist country.
      Even if it was true, it's totally, utterly irrelevant. The Soviet Union wasn't a threat because it wasn't a "true" communist country?

    2. Re:The 'red scare' wasn't real by robot_love · · Score: 1

      Your post made my brain smile.

      --
      .there is enough of everything for everyone.
  118. Truth shall set you free. by ifiwereasculptor · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Oh, wait.

  119. Re:Good riddance to wikilinks! by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

    The first round of publication was rushed, and as such, contained names of informants.

    Really?Which ones? If it's such common knowledge, then I'm sure you can provide me with the names of the informants that were leaked. And don't worry about endangering the lives of the informants through your actions, their names have apparently already been revealed.

    Of course, if you can't, then I have to assume that the names of the informants were not released.

    --
    Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
  120. Re:Good riddance to wikilinks! by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

    Of course, master. Tell us plebeians how to live, as we have no understanding how to do so.

    Unfortunately, you are exactly like the dumb computer dweebs who think that because they know how to configure a firewall, they know what the purpose of the firewall is.

    --
    Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
  121. Aw, So What? by rally2xs · · Score: 1

    So what if a website decides to post the tech manuals of some counter-IED equipment that may allow an enemy to defeat it? _YOU_ are not going to be riding around Afganistan or Iraq in a vehicle that could have an EFP go tearing thru it, maybe take both your legs with it if you're lucky, or cut you clean in two if you aren't. Its someone else, or someone else's kid / husband / daugter / father / mother. YOU don't have anything to worry about. No sir, not a problem for you...

    1. Re:Aw, So What? by Artemis3 · · Score: 1

      Not a problem when you are not invading another country expecting it to be a picnic stroll... Besides, this happens all the time. Eventually technology gets defeated, leaked, etc. You can't blame your enemies for trying to defend their own land, instead condemn your leaders who sent your kids to die where they don't belong...

      --
      Artix
      Your Linux, your init.
    2. Re:Aw, So What? by rally2xs · · Score: 1

      Don't belong? Look, jerk, we were attacked. We could either sit back and wait to be attacked some more, maybe lose another 3000 people every 6 months or per year, or go after the bastards.

      As for Iraq, sure, we could have kept flying air cover to keep Saddam from launching air attacks against his own people, and kept in place economic sanctions that were killing 100,000 Iraqi children per year from things like not being able to purify water because they couldn't buy chlorine, or we could go in and end all that, as well as making sure that there were no credible threats against us either. Saddam hated our guts, shot at our planes every day (ask those who flew the Northern Watch), and if he did have access to such weapons, as he claimed he did every other day or so, he sure would have deployed them against us.

      As for revealing information that helps the enemy, that makes you an enemy. Should you get shot down like a dog as you deserve, I will rejoice.

  122. thats what you get for taking CIA money. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    those documents contain the names of people in Afghanistan who are giving information to the US.

    So what? these quislings accepted money from a foreign country intelligence organisation (and armed protection from an occupation army) to rat on their own countrymen. They knew how such behaviour is seen in their society: they are traitors to all afghani people.

    If they want to complain now, they should take it up with the CIA folks who promised them anonymity.

  123. Hopefully... by copponex · · Score: 1

    Hopefully one day you will criticize China and get a bullet in the head for it.

  124. Don't get in a pissing match ... by Katchu · · Score: 1

    Don't get in a pissing match with an entity that is full of it.

    --
    Keep Doing Good.
  125. Re: New Java Update, Bing replaced with (guess...) by qubezz · · Score: 1

    New security update for Java today: 6u22, critical so you now get Carbonite slamware instead of Bing!

    For your convenience, here's a spam-free win32 Java installer: Deep link to jre-6u22-windows-i586.exe or start clicking here for other platforms (last page before the cookiewall).

    Now that Java is officially owned by pure evil , and installs quickstarters all over your OS and browser, consider it deprecated.

  126. Make your own opinion. Don't believe in everything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    The fact is Wikileaks serves a good purpose. Unlike what so many people want you to believe Wikileaks doesn't have an "US agenda".
    They have systematically leaked information on all sort of cases such as corporate wrong doings, political corruption and so on from all over the world and all sorts of nations.
    The irony is if the leaked documents and the registered wrong doings were from other not so democratic nations those criticizing Wikileaks would probably have a different position now.
    Wikileaks may be controversial but still the information they post is the truth and provides a valuable service so that the people realize what is really going on backstage.
    I fail to understand why so many fail to mention other valuable information Wikileaks leaked over the time and that had such a positive impact. Stuff like the documents of "Kenya: The Cry of Blood – Extra Judicial Killings and Disappearances".
    In this day and age people are so used to consume information in quick bursts and never get deep into what everything is really all about.
    If there is a cool guy on TV that has such a good argument against Wikileaks thousands simply accept his view and don't even care about getting the facts straight.
    I urge people to at least read the Wikileaks page on Wikipedia to get a grasp of what this guys have made over the years and what they had to deal with.
    And please, pay the site a visit at least while its available and make your own conclusions.

    Many people may not feel comfortable with the US leaked documents, but so what? It is part of history.
    What you should be more worried about is in protecting your freedom, and democracy. You should not take anything for granted. "The price of freedom is eternal vigilance". Wikileaks may not be perfect, but it does help YOU in your vigilance.

    Some examples.

    2008 Peru Oil Scandal, Toxic dumping in Africa and so on and on and on

  127. What to do about it (financially) by l0b0 · · Score: 1

    This is a grave day for democracy, but instead of bemoaning the known failure of the US to uphold democracy, and the known failure of WL being perfect in all that they do, what should be done on a financial level? The first obvious thing would be to spread out the finances - Send some of it to Norway, Finland, Switzerland, New Zealand, and others that have more trusted governments. An investor knows to spread the risk, and unfortunately it looks like Wikileaks will have to learn as well.

  128. war of the quotes by commodoresloat · · Score: 1

    "Please stop quoting me. Not everything I say is some witty quotation." -- Mark Twain

  129. Ready, Aim by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Shoot the messenger! Seriously. The message makes us look bad. Shoot the messenger! American democracy ends at the water. Rule of law ends at the shoreline. Outside of the US, the American Government is free to break any law to get whatever it wants, since it does not respect or even consider any other countries laws, and strongly favors the "Might makes right" rule. Wikileaks gets the truth out. The US Government doesn't need anyone telling the truth. Even if no harm is done by Wikileaks, its the idea that someone is telling the truth.

  130. Re:Make your own opinion. Don't believe in everyth by lordandmaker · · Score: 1

    I'd find it much easier to respect wikileaks if they spent more time "leak[ing] information on all sort of cases such as corporate wrong doings, political corruption and so on" and less time just poking governments they dislike. That 'collateral murder' video is what did it for me; there wasn't even a hint of impartiality there and I'm not sure who was supposed to gain from the release of that video with that commentary. Though, on the other hand, perhaps that got them the big burst of publicity and therefore funding that they needed to carry on. But would that just make them no better than those they're 'reporting' on?

  131. MOD PARENT UP! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    MOD PARENT UP!

  132. uh, no? by fireylord · · Score: 1

    For Christ's sake all the US Govt did was put him on a watch list, which is entirely understandable, given the fact that he facilitated the theft of a large number of confidential military documents.

    I call bs on that, he didn't facilitate anything! publishing the information is somewhat different from stealing it in the first place

  133. Dumbass right back atcha by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who said anything about the sequence of censoring and unclassifying, dumbass?
    Personally, I find the juxtaposition of terms "unclassified" (as in no longer secret) and the action of censoring parts of the document to be hilarious.

    See, it is no longer secret. Mostly.
    There's a big difference between mostly secret and all secret. Mostly secret is slightly free (as in information).
    With all secret, well, with all secret there's usually only one thing you can do.
    Suck it up. Real hard.

  134. Get back to me by Shivetya · · Score: 2, Insightful

    when he starts picking on nations known to remove people who offend them. He picks on a target that cannot afford to take him down. While the US has its flaws it is far far from being the worst of the lot when it comes to the strong countries of this world. The difference is that most of the others would have no fear of dealing with him.

    --
    * Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
    1. Re:Get back to me by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      when he starts picking on nations known to remove people who offend them. He picks on a target that cannot afford to take him down. While the US has its flaws it is far far from being the worst of the lot when it comes to the strong countries of this world. The difference is that most of the others would have no fear of dealing with him.

      The wikileaks people are not picking exclusively on the U.S.A., and they have an acute sense of the kind of security is required when people do what they do (piss off powerful people). I don't know if there's polonium heading for his shin or PCBs headed for his soup, but this won't stop at false rape charges and blacklisting their funding.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

  135. The weird thing is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The weird thing is that there are the people like the parent poster who complains bitterly that they edited out stuff from the video and others complaining bitterly that Wikileaks didn't edit the documents enough.

    Neither case holds water, since the full video is available and there was no editing out of anything that makes a difference to the message from the video and there's no evidence that anyone was harmed or outed even from the names in the documents.

    WL's problem is that they've outed the USA.

  136. Moneybookers are swindlers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    MB's actions do not surprise me. The question is, did MB hang onto the funds currently in the Wikileaks account with them, like they did with me?

    For me, it was just some hundreds of pounds, but I'm not rich. The excuse of MB: the person sending me money was fraudulently pretending to be an individual when they were in fact a charity!

    This was utter nonsense as was explained in long and clear detail. The first name of the person concerned is Charity, so the payment was listed as coming from Charity XYZ. Similar transactions had been made several times before with no querying, so this reaction from MB was clearly fraudulent on their part.

    Moneybookers just looks for excuses to freeze or close down accounts without notice, and then keep as much money as they can lay their hands on.
    [AC because saying 'rude' things about MB.]

  137. Since the entire subthread is offtopic... by mcgrew · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Your sig -- do you mean Peter Noone of Herman's Hermits, or the fictional Buddy Noone? And why would either of those guys write a nerd joke, anyway?

  138. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by meadowsp · · Score: 1

    So pay for it, leave the shop and stop breaking other things.

  139. Re:Good riddance to wikilinks! by Americano · · Score: 1

    So you haven't read any of the news coverage about the Afghan War Diaries, including press statements Mr. Assange made, where he acknowledged releasing informant names, and then tried to blame the Pentagon for not scrubbing the data for him?

    Pay attention to the news coverage, and then people might take your comments seriously.

  140. Re:Make your own opinion. Don't believe in everyth by rally2xs · · Score: 1

    "The fact is Wikileaks serves a good purpose."

    No, it doesn't, not when it publishes things like tech manuals for counter-IED jammers in use in places like Iraq and Afghanistan. It is the same as handing the enemy a bazooka to use on an approaching armored personnel carrier full of US troops. They'll use that info to tune their IED radio controlled triggers outside the frequency bands that they now know can be jammed by the jammer with its tech manual online, and possibly kill you, if you're a soldier in Iraq or Afganistan, or maybe your friend / husband / wife / father / mother / son / daughter.

    Doing stuff like posting secret technical deetails of defensive weapons totally negates any other good they may be doing. It is the lowest of the low of things that they could be doing online.

  141. Re:Well, I do not usually get involved but... by mcgrew · · Score: 1

    Everyone is irrational. Try getting someone who thinks pot should be kept illegal to explain why. They can't; I had a discussion like that in someone's journal a few days ago. The question "why do you think it should be illegal?" was one he couldn't answer, and just because he knew one pot smoker with a screwed up life he was convinced that it was the pot that did it, despite all valid research. We're all irrational and we all rationalize.

    You are entirely correct. The athiest rationalizes as much as the religious person. For example, if there's some sort of mirical, the athiest rationalizes it to be a coincidence, no matter how improbable that coincidence may be.

    But, you know, the guy probably had one of those annoying Jehova's Witnesses knocking on his door. And Pat Robertson has converted more Christians to athiesm than all the athiests at slashdot combined.

  142. Exactly! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not to trivialize the loss of life on 9/11, but to the country as a whole, the destruction of the economy / creation of huge debt / restriction of freedoms is the most damaging result of the attack.

  143. Vietnam was one of the worst by Internetuser1248 · · Score: 1

    I heard that some people still believed the Vietnam war propaganda, I just never heard anyone say it before. I could write pages here about how wrong you are but I have the feeling it is going to have to be simple. So here is a very very very simple explanation of why Vietnam was a fuckup, in the form of a very very very simple timeline.

    Ho Chi Minh wrote a letter to US president Truman asking for help in their colonial independance war.

    Diplomacy and foreign policy

    US drops 6.7 million tons of explosives on Vietnam and its neighbours (its neighbours for god sake? Why?)

    US realises that bombs are no match for a civilian population that will never give up, and pulls out.

  144. US Gov. 11th commandment by Programmer_In_Traini · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    US Gov. 11th commandment:

    Thou shall not know

    --
    If you look like your passport photo, you're too ill to travel. - Will Kommen
  145. Its not a coincidence by voss · · Score: 1

    He's an aussie, aussie guys fooling around with foreign girls when away from home is not a coincidence, its a proud tradition. However
    its a tradition that perhaps Swedish women dont appreciate.

  146. Shooting by DrYak · · Score: 1

    Well, they tried framing Assange for rape, and saw it didn't work.
    Now, they try to harass the bank getting the donations, and once they see that doesn't work, well..
    They might indeed move toward more classic methods as the poison-tipped shoe.

    --
    "Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
  147. Why the Surprise? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So an organization leaks your governments classified documents, who do you think would possibly fund such an organization?

    I'm not debating the 'right' or 'wrong', just pointing out that this move to put them on a watchlist just seems like a common sense response from any government.

    Some governments would do alot worse, and not recieve nor care about any 'public outrage'.

  148. wikileaks is a dead man by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Good. America should bomb wikileaks next.

    1. Re:wikileaks is a dead man by rally2xs · · Score: 1

      I vote for a black ops midnight snatch of the perpetrator at Wikileaks, the body never being found. Much better derrent than any court proceeding or prison.

  149. Re:Well, I do not usually get involved but... by CarpetShark · · Score: 1

    Try getting someone who thinks pot should be kept illegal to explain why. They can't

    I think you'll need to back that up with a lot of statistics, not just an anecdote ;)

  150. Re:Good riddance to wikilinks! by BobMcD · · Score: 1

    You're like the business-marketing major who walks into an IT shop, tells the admins that firewalls and anti-virus software are unnecessary and dumb because they slow down his computer, and then laughs when they try to explain the security implications. To anyone who understands the relevant fields you look like an ignorant, arrogant asshole, as you smugly stroll away, congratulating yourself on the clever rejoinders which you used to shut down those dumb computer dweebs.

    You know what else we are? We're the owners, because we're the ones paying the bills. We're the board of directors, because we hold all the stock. Those experts you revere so much are OUR EMPLOYEES, and they'd damn well better do what we say, or we'll fire them.

    Democracy. It's as easy as that.

  151. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by BobMcD · · Score: 1

    Arguably though, the best way to avoid putting Afghan civilians and US troops out of harm is to have US troops go back to the US.

    Unfortunately: You break it, you bought it.

    Yeah, well, we're broke, so I hope you accept hot-checks.

  152. Re:Uh-- Nope. by Will.Woodhull · · Score: 1

    Knowingly receiving stolen property makes you accessory after the fact.

    True enough in most western cultures with regard to tangible goods. However what was "stolen" and then received by Wikileaks was information and the quote does not apply to it.

    I suppose you could argue that it is "intellectual property", but then you have to face the question of who is the legal owner of the leaked material when there is an established history that writings developed by USA agencies funded by taxpayer money are part of the public domain. How the courts should apply that principle in this day and age is something that no government agency wants to test. Up and down the hierarchy, each manager, drone, and workerbee wants to be able to copyright the PowerPoint presentations they produce. The USA could claim that the leaked documents were intellectual property and governed by the copyright laws... that would be farcical.

    Perhaps more to the point, this situation parallels the handling of hidden information by investigative reporters and their publishers. What Wikileaks has done is fully legal under USA laws and I believe under all European laws. Otherwise arrests would certainly have already been made.

    --
    Will
  153. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by BobMcD · · Score: 1

    The US has a long-standing executive order against assassinations.

    False.

    Not only has the US affirmed the ability to assassinate foreign nationals, they have recently decreed that this can be applied to American citizens without any sort of 'due process'.

    What do you think those CIA drones are DOING? Do you think their missiles tickle?

  154. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by BobMcD · · Score: 1

    And it seems that the data backs you up, particularly recently:

    http://smallwarsjournal.com/blog/journal/docs-temp/532-osoriosullivan.pdf

  155. A little skewed by nilbog · · Score: 1

    You can't punch someone in the face multiple times, then call yourself a victim when they punch you back. When Wikileaks changed from a neutral harbor to an anti-American spin machine I stopped caring about them. Wikileaks should go back to neutrality and leave the sensationalism and slant to the media.

    --
    or else!
    1. Re:A little skewed by rally2xs · · Score: 1

      At last, someone who sees the world as it is. Yeah, AQ sets up in Afghanistan, constructs multiple terrorist training camps, and we lose crewmen from the Cole, 3000 people on 9/11, etc. Then the wonder why we invade? How stupid can you get?

      They keep it up, so will we.

  156. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by huzur79 · · Score: 1

    Its not soldiers being killed over the leaks, its family man living in those countries that helped US forces, inniocent civilian lives at risk. Its informants that are being killed over the leaks.

  157. 1979 Grenada revolution suppressed -- a good thing by Shompol · · Score: 1

    The revolution was (and always is) toppling of government by a small group of armed "revolutionaries". US intervened and locals are grateful that it did [1], not to mention it was sponsored by Cuba in the first place.

    [1] - I asked them personally.

  158. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by BJ_Covert_Action · · Score: 1

    Well not really. Supposing that there are civilian informants that are in danger due to the wikileaks stuff, as long as the U.S. military remains in Afghanistan, it can offer some bit of sanctuary to said civilian. If, however, the U.S. military pulls out, then those civilians are still in danger due to nothing more than the desire for vengeance. Whoever was fighting the U.S. military while it was there will just use the power vacancy as an excuse to do whatever the hell they want, including hunting down those that conspired with Americans.

    Now, I want to make it clear that such an argument should never be used as a reason to keep the U.S. military in the middle east perpetually, but it's not quite as simple as, "Just leave and everything will get better."

  159. Re:Good riddance to wikilinks! by c6gunner · · Score: 1

    Hey, you'll get no disagreement there - if you want to drive your corporation into the ground, that's your call. You're still a fucking idiot, though.

  160. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by strikethree · · Score: 1

    "Arguably though, the best way to avoid putting Afghan civilians and US troops out of harm is to have US troops go back to the US."

    You are partially correct. The best way to avoid putting US Troops in harms way is to bring them to the US. However, I suspect that would be a VERY bad thing for Afghan civilians, especially the Afghan women. Islamic philosophy is not kind to women (they are essentially pieces of property that are used for creating more people). I am not sure it would get as bad as Somalia, but I am certain it would become worse for the civilians when the US withdraws.

    strike

    --
    "Someone needs to talk to the tree of liberty about its ghoulish drinking problem." by ohnocitizen
  161. Re:Good riddance to wikilinks! by BobMcD · · Score: 1

    Hey, you'll get no disagreement there - if you want to drive your corporation into the ground, that's your call. You're still a fucking idiot, though.

    If you're completely wrong, why should it matter who you think is an idiot? Indeed, it could well be an indication of going the right direction - being the opposite of what you advise.

    Food for thought.

  162. Re:Good riddance to wikilinks! by c6gunner · · Score: 1

    You think the phrase "you could be wrong" is food for thought?

    Wow.

    You must be starving.

  163. Re:Wikileaks puts lives at risk by ras · · Score: 1

    It's against Australian law to reveal the secrets of Australia's allies.

    I doubt that, but in any case it is probably beside the point. Even if it is against the law it requires someone in power in Australia to follow it through. Given that Australian intelligence warned Assange that something was up just before the rape allegations that seems unlikely at this point. http://www.nypost.com/p/news/international/australian_intelligence_warned_wikileaks_9YIoc83Fq9VyPJ2FsujU8I