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Pentagon Papers Ellsberg Supports Wikileaks

wierd_w writes "Daniel Ellsberg says: 'Every attack now made on WikiLeaks and Julian Assange was made against me and the release of the Pentagon Papers at the time.' Due to the recent debates over the pros and cons between the wikileaks releases and those of the historic 'Pentagon papers,' Daniel Ellsberg, who released the pentagon papers in 1971, has written an editorial on the subject declaring that he rejects the mantra of 'Pentagon Papers good; WikiLeaks material bad,' and that further 'That's just a cover for people who don't want to admit that they oppose any and all exposure of even the most misguided, secretive foreign policy. The truth is that every attack now made on WikiLeaks and Julian Assange was made against me and the release of the Pentagon Papers at the time.'"

464 comments

  1. Wtf pentagon? by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 2, Funny

    WTF were the Pentagon Papers? Were they pentagonal?

    1. Re:Wtf pentagon? by gestalt_n_pepper · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You kids! Get off my lawn!

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      Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
    2. Re:Wtf pentagon? by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      How do I get an "Offtopic" on an article about the Pentagon Papers asking what the Pentagon papers are? That seems to be directly on-topic.

    3. Re:Wtf pentagon? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      How do I get an "Offtopic" on an article about the Pentagon Papers asking what the Pentagon papers are? That seems to be directly on-topic.

      Probably because they were annoyed that you were too lazy to spend 5 seconds googling it instead of asking a rather useless question here where it will get, at best, a link to a source that would probably be near the top of the search results anyway. At worst it will lead to a bunch of additional uninformed posts to clutter up the thread.

    4. Re:Wtf pentagon? by spun · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm guessing you got that mod because the Pentagon Papers were quite famous, and anyone posting on Slashdot should be able to look up something that famous themselves rather than asking us to explain it to them.

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    5. Re:Wtf pentagon? by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Yes. It was an early model of the octagonal papers used on Battlestar Galactica.

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      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    6. Re:Wtf pentagon? by fishexe · · Score: 3, Funny

      WTF were the Pentagon Papers? Were they pentagonal?

      Basically, back then they didn't have laser printers that the papers had to fit through, so they had a little bit of freedom to play around with shapes.

      --
      "I don't care about the Constitution!" --Bill O'Reilly, November 17, 2009
    7. Re:Wtf pentagon? by Gilmoure · · Score: 1

      Did they ever explain what happened to the corners of all those pages?

      --
      I drank what? -- Socrates
    8. Re:Wtf pentagon? by AHuxley · · Score: 1

      Pentagon Papers exposed a long term interest in Asia by the US.
      As the US also had the draft, many young men and the woman who rasied/loved them could also read and understand the Papers.
      What they found was was a very different internal reality to the pro war "Faux" news of the time.
      This made a generation of smart, well educated, well connected middle and upper class men and woman sit up, wake up and become politically active in stopping the war.
      Was it one part of the US gov leaking to stop a war on its own terms, the blame falling on a past political generation, before real deep reform could/would have needed to take place?

      --
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    9. Re:Wtf pentagon? by Hatta · · Score: 4, Funny

      My guess is that someone in the props department really liked cutting corners.

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      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    10. Re:Wtf pentagon? by skywatcher2501 · · Score: 1

      i wonder what the printers in battlestar galactica would look like..

    11. Re:Wtf pentagon? by mattack2 · · Score: 1

      Along with the other responses, it surprises me that someone old enough to post here doesn't even know the VAGUEST idea about what they are (my paraphrase, and I admit I may be wrong) -- "a famous document that was leaked during the Vietnam War printed in the newspaper". Especially since it's been mentioned several times in the past few days regarding the wikileaks discussions.

      BTW, I generally wouldn't consider myself a history nut, and I would definitely go to wikipedia (and its cited articles) to educate myself further on a topic.

    12. Re:Wtf pentagon? by AlamedaStone · · Score: 3, Funny

      i wonder what the printers in battlestar galactica would look like..

      They look like us.

      --
      "All these years believing you're the signified monkey, only to find out you're just a big hunk of nobody cares."
    13. Re:Wtf pentagon? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then it should not have been offtopic, maybe redundant?

    14. Re:Wtf pentagon? by h4rm0ny · · Score: 2

      Less off-topic if you're not a US citizen, however. In fact, I'd be willing to bet there are a lot of US citizens who couldn't tell me what they are. Regardless of whether we can go off and re-search it ourselves, a bit of explanation in the summary wouldn't have harmed. I'm guessing more likely he was modded offtopic just by someone who's been annoyed by an opinion of theirs in the past. That sort of modding happens not infrequently.

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    15. Re:Wtf pentagon? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You got modded Offtopic, because while you're on topic, its not the main thrust of the post and the moderator probably doesn't care about it.

      By asking your question, you could have started a thread where people explain different aspects of the pentagon papers beyond what a google search would instantly put in your face, and then we could have discussed the merits of the wikileaks comparison. But this is slashdot, people both are lazy and like the "I'm right" powertrip that posting lmgtfy.com link provides.

    16. Re:Wtf pentagon? by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Hey, kid, haven't you heard the phrase "those who refuse to learn from history are doomed to repeat it"? You could Google, you know.

      If you're trying to be funny, you're not succeeding.

  2. That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by AdmiralXyz · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The other day, Lieberman (who is looooong past his expiration date as a politician. Let's get with the program, Connecticut) was mouthing off on Fox News about how the New York Times should be investigated for espionage for cooperating with Wikileaks and publishing the cables. It's like, has he really never heard of New York Times v United States ? This wasn't that long ago, and it was the same newspaper to boot. And apart from the really right-wing Neocon wingnuts, find me a person today who doesn't think the leak of the Pentagon Papers was ultimately for the best. Why should Wikileaks be any different?

    --
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    1. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by fishexe · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And apart from the really right-wing Neocon wingnuts, find me a person today who doesn't think the leak of the Pentagon Papers was ultimately for the best.

      I know! Joe Lieberman!...er...you said aside from right-wing Neocon wingnuts...um...at this point that's basically what he's become. So shoot, can't name one.

      --
      "I don't care about the Constitution!" --Bill O'Reilly, November 17, 2009
    2. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by SpeedBump0619 · · Score: 1

      I agree (I think) with the releases by wikileaks, but as I see it the major difference is that the New York Times is a paper of record, and Ellsberg is a US citizen. Frankly I think it just terrifies every government on the planet that a foreign national could choose to publish anything they receive with no real recourse.

      In the end I do believe wikileaks is in the right, but I can understand why the US is so keen to make it as painful as possible.

    3. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by OverlordQ · · Score: 1

      That may establish precedence but only for cases where prior restraint isn't justified. Depending on what all these cables contain, it may be justified.

      Justice Brennan reasoned that since publication would not cause an inevitable, direct, and immediate event imperiling the safety of American forces, prior restraint was unjustified..

      --
      Your hair look like poop, Bob! - Wanker.
    4. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The Supreme Court ruled that the First Amendment did protect the New York Times' right to print said materials.
      - New York Times v United States [wikipedia.org]

      In this case, I don't think Julian Assange is protected under the United States First Amendment.

    5. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but divulging classified information is certainly a felony, it's black-letter law (National Security Act).

      Correct.

      But the supreme court of the US held that the crime is committed by the one who leaks the classified information. The journalists who merely publish it (NY Times, wikileaks) committed no crime.

    6. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by MozeeToby · · Score: 4, Informative

      Then you had sure as hell better lock up all the good people at MSNBC, CNN, Fox News, Reuters, the AP, etc, etc, because the information certainly hasn't gone through the proper reviews yet and it's still technically classified. Therefore, they are publishing and distributing classified information, lock them up!

      Leaking the information in the first place is certainly illegal, there's little doubt in the argument that the man or woman (most likely Manning at this point) committed a crime. However, it has been shown that freedom of the press trumps the vague term national security, did you even read the link the GP posted? Here's some highlights regarding the Justices' decision:

      He [Justice Hugo Black] was against any interference with freedom of expression and largely found the content and source of the documents to be immaterial.

      Justice William J. Brennan, Jr. wrote separately to explain that the publication of the documents did not qualify as one of the three exceptions to the freedom of expression

      The President of United States possesses great constitutional independence that is virtually unchecked by the Legislative and Judicial branch. "In absence of governmental checks and balances", per Justice Stewart, "the only effective restraint upon executive policy and power in [these two areas] may lie in an enlightened citizenry - in an informed and critical public opinion which alone can here protect the values of democratic government."

      Justice Thurgood Marshall argued that the term "national security" was too broad to legitimize prior restraint

    7. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by blair1q · · Score: 0

      1. The NY Times and Wikileaks are two different beasts when it comes to "journalism". If they aren't, then every spy could be issued with a press pass from his intelligence agency's house organ and be immune to prosecution. This may be a matter for the courts to delineate further, but it's clear to reasonable observers.

      2. There's a distinction to be made between things that are improperly classified and should be released and things that are properly classified and should not. Since the Ellsberg case, those distinctions have been made a part of law and are explicitly spelled out in the presidential directive that delegates his authority to classify information, from which flows everyone else's authority (within the American system).

      3. There is a procedure for declassifying information and a system for getting that moving. People who simply ignore that and publish so as to maximize the publicity value of the information are not interested in security at all. The law accounts for that. Ask Scooter Libby.

      4. I'm about the farthest thing from a right-wing anything you could find wearing shoes, and I think that parts of the Pentagon Papers release suffer from the same problem that parts of the Wikileaks releases do. The information that shouldn't have been classified certainly should have been released, but the endangerment of the lives of people due to the release of information that was justifiably classified verges on negligent homicide.

    8. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Because it wasn't like 40 years ago and we're far, far from a hindsight position that tells us just how beneficial it eventually was.

      If you look back and watch the turmoil the Papers caused you'd think it was the worst that could possibly have happened to the US, the sky is falling, the world is ending, the commies win and they'll have their next party congress on wall street, all because Ellsberg betrayed the country and should be hung, quartered and drawn, right after being subjected to much worse ordeals.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    9. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Saishuuheiki · · Score: 1

      It's hard to hold it against NYT but not Wikileaks. Even if NYT didn't publish any of it, it would be publicly available for anyone to download, regardless of whether it's considered classified. Being that the purpose of being classified is to keep the information out of the hands of malicious people who could use the information to do harm, assuming that these people wouldn't be able to just get it form the widely available source is just silly.

      The main difference with the NYT is a larger portion of the American public would read it. One would hope that in general our documents aren't classified so law-abiding Americans can't read them.

    10. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      who said he needs to be? He's not a us citizen!

    11. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Saishuuheiki · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Divulging classified information may be a felony, but it's a felony in this country. It's hard to argue we should arrest a foreign citizen who hasn't set foot in American territory or stolen the documents himself. Now arresting the person who leaked the documents to Assange is a different matter.

      By your point of view, if someone leaked information detailing Iran's nuclear program, we should immediately send them back to Iran to be executed. After all, it's clearly against the law

    12. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by colinnwn · · Score: 2

      And regardless of what strained legal reasoning is used, no one should be subject to US law that is either not a US citizen, or physically inside US jurisdiction. Also, just because something is determined to be "illegal" doesn't mean it is dangerous or should be stopped. It just means the current government has decided it is threatening to its interest.

    13. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Bucky24 · · Score: 1

      Does anyone know what happened to the guy who leaked those diplomatic transcripts?

      --
      All the world's a CPU, and all the men and women merely AI agents
    14. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Nadaka · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Why would you think that?

      "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances."

      "Congress SHALL MAKE NO LAW ... abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press;" seems pretty clear to me. Rights belong to the people, all the people, not just citizens or certain classes of people.

    15. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Halo1 · · Score: 4, Informative

      1. The NY Times and Wikileaks are two different beasts when it comes to "journalism". If they aren't, then every spy could be issued with a press pass from his intelligence agency's house organ and be immune to prosecution. This may be a matter for the courts to delineate further, but it's clear to reasonable observers.

      The NT Times and Wikileaks are immune from prosecution under US law because they did not steal the information themselves (nor ordered anyone to steal it). That has already been delineated by the US Supreme Court. Whether or not they are journalists does not even enter the picture.

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    16. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Danse · · Score: 1

      That may establish precedence but only for cases where prior restraint isn't justified. Depending on what all these cables contain, it may be justified.

      Justice Brennan reasoned that since publication would not cause an inevitable, direct, and immediate event imperiling the safety of American forces, prior restraint was unjustified..

      Considering that they only released a tiny fraction of the cables, and those were redacted by professional journalists from several major newspapers, I don't think there's anything in there that would even remotely qualify it under that description.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    17. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      Indeed, this is the part I'm most curious about. At any rate, if the rumors are true and there's a US warrant waiting out there for when he gets dropped into Sweden, wouldn't that afford him pretty much immediately the protections of a US citizen, since he'll be thrown into a US court and, apparently, have US laws thrown at him. Unless they're going to Gitmo-ize him, but I can't see that happening. He's not a combatant of any kind.

      I still have mixed feelings about the whole thing, but quite frankly I think the war against Wikileaks is moronic, an abuse of process and ultimately futile. I mean, this is taking the Streisand Effect to a galactic level here. The more they make these leaked documents a big issue, the more traction Wikileaks gets. As to Assange, he's basically become a digital martyr, any court proceeding, even over those rape charges, is going to be seen as an attempt to shut him up.

      The smartest thing anyone could have done was to just go "That sucks", investigate who actually did the leaking (it's pretty obvious they already know), prosecute them and just leaving the complaints to muttering. Yes, it sucks that poor old Clinton will have to spend the next six months on a jet giving verbal blow jobs to various foreign governments over the unguarded language used by US diplomats, but that's got to be preferable to the method of attack being used now.

      Beyond that, it does strike me that there are a lot of people with an authority fetish. You would think, for instance, that British conservatives would be hailing the release of documents showing how the Scottish executive and the British Labour government was fearful of economic reprisals by Gaddafi over the Megrahi affair, and released him and bullshitted about the extent of Megrahi's illness (they made it sound like he might kick the bucket before he got a friggin' plain to Libya, and yet the sonofabitch is still alive nearly 16 months later).

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    18. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by MachDelta · · Score: 1

      Yeah, he's in jail awaiting court-martial.

    19. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Danse · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I have not studied the issue, but I have seen credible arguments that the leak of the Pentagon Papers was ultimately destructive of the best interests of the American people. I do not have an opinion one way or the other at this point and the event happened far enough in the past that I am not going to do the study needed to decide. I will say that those who at that time promoted the idea that publishing the Pentagon Papers was a good idea were pushing a destructive political agenda.

      Eh? You haven't studied the issue, you don't intend to study the issue, but you'll go ahead and declare that those who supported the release were pushing a destructive agenda. Why doesn't that surprise me? Seems like the sort of thing that people do when they can't be bothered to actually get informed on a subject. Just find some source that agrees with their pre-conceived notions and declare their verdict on the issue.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    20. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Why should Wikileaks be any different?"

      Because US society is grossly xenophobic, and this time foreigners are involved?

      It's much easier to create a bogeyman of someone who isn't inside your borders and hence has a harder time refuting your points to your face in debate. Much easier for inept politicians when you have a bogeyman to blame for everything that goes wrong, or to distract from the real problems, i.e. why US officials right to the top were ordering the illegal spying on UN officials and UN systems on UN territory which is meant to be completely independent precisely so politicians from all over the world can meet without any of that kind of bullshit.

    21. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Danse · · Score: 1

      The Supreme Court ruled that the First Amendment did protect the New York Times' right to print said materials. - New York Times v United States [wikipedia.org]

      In this case, I don't think Julian Assange is protected under the United States First Amendment.

      Not sure why he would need to be. The NYTimes and others published the documents first anyway.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    22. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Danse · · Score: 1

      4. I'm about the farthest thing from a right-wing anything you could find wearing shoes, and I think that parts of the Pentagon Papers release suffer from the same problem that parts of the Wikileaks releases do. The information that shouldn't have been classified certainly should have been released, but the endangerment of the lives of people due to the release of information that was justifiably classified verges on negligent homicide.

      What endangerment are you referring to, specifically? Is there some particular information that you believe has put lives in imminent danger?

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    23. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Requia · · Score: 1

      The supreme court disagrees.

      "it is clear to me that it is the constitutional duty of the Executive— as a matter of sovereign prerogative and not as a matter of law as the courts know law—through the promulgation and enforcement of executive regulations, to protect the confidentiality necessary to carry out its responsibilities in the fields of international relations and national defense"

      from New York Times v United States (1971).

      Though my favorite gem from the concurring opinions has to be: "For when everything is classified, then nothing is classified, and the system becomes one to be disregarded by the cynical or the careless, and to be manipulated by those intent on self-protection or self-promotion."

      --
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    24. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but everyone hates Iran.

    25. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think we should send random people to Iran to be executed.

    26. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Quite frankly, I'm surprised that I haven't seen two points raised:

      1. If there was information leaked that endangered specific lives, why was it leaked (to WikiLeaks) to begin with? Maliciously? Certainly the leakee was aware of what they were leaking considering the risks, no?

      2. Anyone practicing "Security via Obscurity" generally receives a thorough tongue-lashing on Slashdot, yet this doesn't seem to apply to national administrations charged with the protection of MILLIONS of people?

    27. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by E+IS+mC(Square) · · Score: 1

      I like how you are very clear on this. Keep it that way. Don't let facts cloud your judgement. The fact that reporting a leaked material in media is different than leaking the material itself from it's original 'secured' place or person.

    28. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by X.25 · · Score: 0

      Sorry, but divulging classified information is certainly a felony, it's black-letter law (National Security Act).

      Is there a point in life where people like you stop for a moment, and think?

      I mean, if there was a law that forced you to jump off the bridge once a day, you'd do it?

    29. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1

      And apart from the really right-wing Neocon wingnuts, find me a person today who doesn't think the leak of the Pentagon Papers was ultimately for the best. Why should Wikileaks be any different?

      It really strikes me as disingenuous when news agencies (both Fox and CNN come to mind) ask "why can't we do anything about this?" The answer should very quickly be "because there is nothing legal to do about it." But that doesn't seem to be the answer given. And in not doing so, the press is really setting itself up for the same treatment.

      As an aside, I find myself in a bad position. I don't believe Wikileaks (nor Assange himself) is what people are saying it is - either demon or savior. I'm rather critical of actions by Wikileaks (and I find the Pentagon Papers an inappropriate comparison). But by being critical, I know I'm being pigeon-holed with the likes of Lieberman and his ilk. Such is the nature of the polarized political scene the politcal gamers have crafted, I suppose.

    30. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Dare+nMc · · Score: 1

      we should immediately send them back to Iran to be executed.

      I think he was more saying anyone who knowingly posses that information, shared it or analyzed it should also be sent back to be prosecuted as well. So yeah that would seam to imply our intelligence offices should know almost nothing about Iran's Nuclear program, or all deserving of imprisonment/death if they do.

    31. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Brett+Buck · · Score: 0

      I agree that Assenge is not subject to US criminal law. He is, however, providing material aid to our enemies and is thus an enemy of the United States and is therefore subject to military action.

      The original supplier of the information was in the US Army and clearly committed treason, which in wartime is a capital offense. Arguably it's not wartime since it is undeclared, but he is certainly subject to military justice.

      The publishers of the classified portions of the information are clearly committing felonies. I haven't read any of it but it's my understanding that the vast majority of the information is not classified but something else that may or may not constitute a crime to release. It's hardly a new phenomenon for the NYT and I doubt anything will be done about it.

      You can argue that this is all somehow noble (the First Amendment permits you to make this, or any other patently asinine argument you might want) but you can't plausibly argue that it is legal.

                Brett

    32. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By your point of view, if someone leaked information detailing Iran's nuclear program, we should immediately send them back to Iran to be executed. After all, it's clearly against the law

      Well, if there was an extradition treaty with Iran, yes. But there isn't, so no.

      If you bother to read through most extradition treaties (which is pretty dull) it is common to include language that the criminal act must be sufficiently serious, and illegal in both countries.

      As an example, tax evasion is a crime in the USA, but it is a minor issue in Switzerland. So none of the Swiss bankers are going to jail in the USA (unless they travel to the USA).

    33. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Haven't you heard the latest news? Assange is a anti-American pedophile that orchestrated 9/11 attacks by hacking into the planes. Oh, he also killed 100,000 Iraqis and almost 10,000 soldiers, not to mention spreading fear through the globe for the last 200 years... Do I have that straight?

      Anyway, when will the real media that have access to all these files (including New York Times) start to do their jobs? They are the ones that have the clout and resources to not be steamrolled like Assange has.

    34. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, but which enemy? The american public?

    35. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One would hope that in general our documents aren't classified so law-abiding Americans can't read them.

      Some people in the government are attempting to make that more than hope, by defining anyone without clearance who reads them as not law-abiding, and possibly not American.

      Diplomatic documents that are Secret but not NOFORN are classified that way precisely because they don't want the average citizen to read them... usually because the contents could be misconstrued/misused, or would become damaging on a global level because the average citizen can't be trusted not to leak the information to foreigners.

      Or did I read your conclusion wrong, and you're saying that US diplomats aren't law-abiding Americans?

    36. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But the NYT (as several other papers) are distributed globally. They have been since before the Pentagon Papers so your point is moot. Besides, what harm are diplomatic cables doing? There have been no overthrows of foreign governments (or ours). Just because NATO troops have died every day in Afghanistan and Iraq since Wikileaks started releasing the information does not mean that those deaths are Wikileaks' fault.

      Also, Wikileaks did not just release the documents. They sent repeated requests to the State Department to help redact parts of the documents. If the Obama Administration cared at all about the security of the persons mentioned in the cables they would have said "Well, these idiots are going to release it anyway, we might as well protect the innocent." But ignoring what you're now trying to categorize as a terrorist organization makes more sense instead of preventing that transition to make-believe terrorist organization.

      Given that Wikileaks has edited (read: redacted) the documents they have acted like editors. Editors work in news organization and all the information released was news to the general population of these United States of Guantanamo Bay.

    37. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by CRCulver · · Score: 4, Informative

      The publishers of the classified portions of the information are clearly committing felonies.

      Except they're not, as the Supreme Court ruled in the Pentagon Papers case. Publishers are free to publish leaked material. Now, you might argue that there's something special about this case, and I agree that will take a while to play out, but we're not entering murky legal waters where it's just plain wrong to claim anyone is clearly committing a crime.

    38. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can we start with Lieberman?

    39. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but everyone hates Iran.

      Advice to US politicians... do not tempt us, we might very well end in having negative feelings for US (perhaps not as strong as hate, but at least the annoyment level is quite easy to reach).

    40. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by micheas · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, but which enemy? The american public?

      Judging from the reaction by the US government, Visa, EBay, MasterCard, and Amazon, that would seem to be a reasonable guess.

    41. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know I agree with you, but the subject is more complex than it appears on the surface.

      Current court precedent is ambiguous on the issue of online distribution and how to consider it's borders.

      Is it a push system where servers/senders are willfully shipping contraband across borders?
      Is it a pull system where clients/recipients are willfully requesting contraband be shipped to an unknown destination?

      The issue is as confusing as the drinking age in an airplane over the Atlantic ocean.

      The internet is so young, and the legal system is so illiterate, that what little precedent does exist on these subjects is poorly reasoned and draws from inadequate metaphors such as the postal service.

      Surely the United States isn't going to allow an Amsterdam citizen to sit in a boat 200 miles off of Florida launching bags of Cocaine & prostitutes at playgrounds. How much domestic impact and influence can a foreign citizen have before they become a sufficient nuisance to justify making an extraordinary rendetion?

      I suppose that largely depends on the relationship between the US government and their country of origin, but the sad state of the current world is that laws are guidelines with unwritten exceptions to them. The average voter lacks the spine to make the world otherwise, and gladly welcomes it by supporting the existence of laws that everyone breaks and therefor are only applied as a tool of oppressing undesirables.

      A constitutional amendment or interpretation of the equal protection clause of the 14th amendment requiring all laws to be enforced consistently would be a start to changing this status-quo but in the mean time: anonymity is the only way to guarantee yourself the protections which are supposed to be inalienable. Assange broke the first rule of pissing off powerful people: do it from the protection of anonymity.

    42. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by micheas · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but divulging classified information is certainly a felony, it's black-letter law (National Security Act).

      In the US, just because something is written as a law doesn't mean that it is the law.

      The US uses British Common law as its basis for laws, which means that common practice, and precedence of how previous cases revolving those sets of facts are more important than what is written in the code books.

      The reason that Westlaw and others publish annotated copies of the law, is that without knowing how the courts have ruled on a law, you really don't have any idea what the reality of the law is.

      There are many laws on the books of all levels of government in the United States that the courts have ruled unenforceable due to conflicts with the constitution or other laws, and on occasion, even because they did not properly overturn previous case law.

      Parts of the National Security Act have been found to not hold up to judicial scrutiny.

      I actually like legislators that spend time removing laws that have been struck down by the courts as it makes the laws easier for non-lawyers to read.

    43. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by micheas · · Score: 1

      Haven't you heard the latest news? Assange is a anti-American pedophile that orchestrated 9/11 attacks by hacking into the planes. Oh, he also killed 100,000 Iraqis and almost 10,000 soldiers, not to mention spreading fear through the globe for the last 200 years... Do I have that straight?

      Anyway, when will the real media that have access to all these files (including New York Times) start to do their jobs? They are the ones that have the clout and resources to not be steamrolled like Assange has.

      No, the pedophiles that sell preteen boys for sex are the US defense contractors. http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/us-embassy-cables-documents/213720

    44. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Very interesting point. In a semi recent case between Germany and Poland, an Israeli businessman (read: Mossad) was arrested in Warsaw based on a warrant issued by Germany in connection with assassination in Dubai. In the end Poland sent the agent to Germany, yet the Polish court forbid German court from penalizing him on the charges of espionage (only on some identity crimes) as spying against Germany is not a crime in Poland. Not sure how this will work, but what do I know?
      More on the case under google keyword "Uri Brodsky".

      I guess spying against US is not a crime anywhere BUT in the US, and vice versa.

    45. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by lennier · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Because I have studied those people. I know who made a big deal back in the early 70s about the Pentagon Papers. I don't need to do a study of the Pentagon Papers and what was in them and what effect that had on the country.

      Seriously?

      You haven't studied the issues "those people" were concerned with and spent their lives addressing, yet despite living in a wilfully self-created bubble of ignorance about them, you somehow believe you have "studied those people"?

      How does that chain of illogic even begin to make sense for you?

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
    46. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by hrvatska · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I have not studied the issue, but I have seen credible arguments that the leak of the Pentagon Papers was ultimately destructive of the best interests of the American people. I do not have an opinion one way or the other at this point and the event happened far enough in the past that I am not going to do the study needed to decide. I will say that those who at that time promoted the idea that publishing the Pentagon Papers was a good idea were pushing a destructive political agenda.

      Maybe you should take some time to study the issue. It could also be that the motivation of the people trying to suppress the publication was political. Maybe they knew that if the American public was aware of the real circumstances of the war it would rapidly lose support. Unlike subsequent wars, the Vietnam War relied on a draft to provide cannon fodder. Over two million Americans fought, more than 300,000 were wounded, more than 75,000 were permanently disabled, and nearly 60,000 killed. I'd say the American public had a right to know everything about why we became involved in Vietnam and what our long term odds of prevailing were. Daniel Ellsberg helped write the Pentagon Papers. He knew exactly what was in them and felt it was vital that the American people be aware of that information. He expected to spend the rest of his life in prison when he leaked them. He performed a great public service and was willing to sacrifice his freedom for the remainder of his life. Anyone that is willing to spend the rest of his life in prison in order to provide vital information to the public is a patriot in my eyes.

    47. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by martin-boundary · · Score: 1

      He is, however, providing material aid to our enemies and is thus an enemy of the United States and is therefore subject to military action.

      That's retarded. The US can't act militarily in sovereign countries without their permission, or starting a war. Since Assange's currently in the UK, you can shove the USian military where the sun don't shine, for all anyone cares.

    48. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by cold+fjord · · Score: 0

      Considering that they only released a tiny fraction of the cables, and those were redacted by professional journalists from several major newspapers, I don't think there's anything in there that would even remotely qualify it under that description

      Not quite.
      WikiLeaks Reportedly Outs 100s of Afghan Informants

      Hundreds of Afghan civilians who worked as informants for the U.S. military have been put at risk by WikiLeaks' publication of more than 90,000 classified intelligence reports which name and in many cases locate the individuals, The Times newspaper reported Wednesday.

      The article says, in spite of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange's claim that sensitive information had been removed from the leaked documents, that reporters scanning the reports for just a couple hours found hundreds of Afghan names mentioned as aiding the U.S.-led war effort.

      One specific example cited by the paper is a report on an interview conducted by military officers of a potential Taliban defector. The militant is named, along with his father and the village in which they live.

      "The leaks certainly have put in real risk and danger the lives and integrity of many Afghans," a senior official at the Afghan foreign ministry told The Times on condition of anonymity. "The U.S. is both morally and legally responsible for any harm that the leaks might cause to the individuals, particularly those who have been named. It will further limit the U.S./international access to the uncensored views of Afghans."

      One former intelligence official told the paper that the Taliban could launch revenge attacks on "traitors" in the coming days.

      Blood Already on Assange's Hands (and the WikiLeaks-Gitmo Connection)

      It is especially interesting that Wikileaks has endangered informants against the Taliban since the Taliban are reaching into the United States to train terrorists and fund attacks:
      Suspect in Times Square bombing attempt was paid by Pakistani Taliban, indictment says

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    49. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Danse · · Score: 1

      Because I have studied those people.

      Who, precisely, are "those people"?

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    50. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by The+End+Of+Days · · Score: 1

      You don't understand much, do you? I'd bother taking your argument piece by piece, but I can already tell you're one of those goons who substitutes his opinion for reality.

      For all those little places where you see things so clearly, I'd recommend having a quick google for the actual relevant laws and court cases. You're exactly dead wrong about everything you posted.

    51. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Pootie+Tang · · Score: 1

      It's possible to divide the major factions that way. I'm not sure it adds any insight. Sounds like http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/False_dilemma to me.

    52. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by DrugCheese · · Score: 1

      So war, illegal killings, torture, smart bombs that hit foreign embassies are a non-destructive agenda? And what is the best interest of the American people? To come across like dicks to the rest of the world?

      --
      *DrugCheese rants*
    53. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Antisyzygy · · Score: 1

      Just label Assange a terrorist and then we can go bomb Australia.

      --
      That brings me to an interesting point, / . is just "the ramblings of socially-inept, technology-literate news-mongers".
    54. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Jesus you're a douchebag. It's not even worth arguing with you, your sig says it all. You're an ideologue. You don't care about facts, you just assume that they conform to your ignorant point of view.

      Truly yours,
      The Facts

    55. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by quadrox · · Score: 1

      Assume a police detective investigating a gang of robbers. Then one day, the robbers prevent another gang from robbing a store. The police detective might not know much about that specific incident, but they could still say with some certanity that the robbers didn't act out of altruism, but that the action can be explained as part of a bigger picture (e.g. gang war).

    56. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 1

      Well since when has that stopped the US? I mean water boarding is OK, shipping people off to gito is no problem. Trial? We just declared you a terrorist, you don't get one if we don't want you to have one.

      --
      The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
    57. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by honkycat · · Score: 1

      I agree that Assenge is not subject to US criminal law. He is, however, providing material aid to our enemies and is thus an enemy of the United States and is therefore subject to military action.

      He is doing no such thing. Someone gave him a document and he released it, taking precautions to make it difficult to prevent his doing so. If the US does not want that material to be public, then it needs to do a better job keeping it out of the possession of people with no duty to respect its requests to keep it private.

      The original supplier of the information was in the US Army and clearly committed treason, which in wartime is a capital offense. Arguably it's not wartime since it is undeclared, but he is certainly subject to military justice.

      No, even if you grant it as "clear" that the accused actually is the source for the leak, it is far from clear that this amounts to anything even approaching treason.

      The publishers of the classified portions of the information are clearly committing felonies. I haven't read any of it but it's my understanding that the vast majority of the information is not classified but something else that may or may not constitute a crime to release. It's hardly a new phenomenon for the NYT and I doubt anything will be done about it.

      They *might* be if they're located in the US, but even then it's unclear.

      You can argue that this is all somehow noble (the First Amendment permits you to make this, or any other patently asinine argument you might want) but you can't plausibly argue that it is legal.

      You know what, I'm convinced. Some guy on the Internet who doesn't seem to understand the limited jurisdiction of US law, that freedoms granted by the first amendment trump laws when there's a conflict, or why it's critically important to our ideals that the first amendment actually provide this protection called contrary arguments asinine and implausible.

      None of what you said is clear or even likely to be correct.

    58. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by qmaqdk · · Score: 1

      I know! Joe Lieberman!...er...you said aside from right-wing Neocon wingnuts...um...at this point that's basically what he's become. So shoot, can't name one.

      No, no. Joe Lieberman is totally a democrat. It's not like he torpedoed health care or anything.

      --
      My UID is prime. Hah!
    59. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by wtfamidoinghere · · Score: 1

      Nope, he's not a combatant of any kind ... he's a TERRIST!!!!!!

    60. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't see any difference. Two treasonous Jews agree with each other. Film at 11. Too bad the Rosenbergs aren't still around to make it a party.

    61. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The vast difference between what Ellsberg did and what WikiLeaks is doing is that Ellsberg published specific leaks about the Vietnam War. Assange has stepped way over the line by not only publishing leaks, but engaging in blackmail with his so called "thermo-nuclear bomb" threat. I never thought I'd find myself agreeing with Sarah Palin on anything. But she is correct here. Julian Assange does have blood on his hands. By revealing the situations in US troop reports it is possible to piece together who US operatives and sympathizers are. For every good act that WikiLeaks performs by leaking, there are at least a dozen consequences that Assange and his group do not care about or understand the sensitivities involved. I'm not defending the US government here. I'm defending the right to privacy by a government, a corporation or an individual.

    62. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by greg_barton · · Score: 1

      Libruls.

    63. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

      The funny part was when he was asked why Assange hasn't been tried for treason and Lieberman said he doesn't know and Assange should be. One small problem with that, though. Assange isn't American! I know. Let's bring him over here and grant him American citizenship so we can try him for treason! (Probably shouldn't give them any ideas.)

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    64. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but I have seen credible arguments that the leak of the Pentagon Papers was ultimately destructive of the best interests of the American people.

      Oh really? Well the leak of the Pentagon Papers helped put an earlier end to the war and let the people of the US know what was really happening in Vietnam. I don't see how bringing me home from Vietnam was a "ultimately destructive of the best interests of the American people". I am an American. I am most likely still alive BECAUSE THOSE PAPERS WERE LEAKED!!!!

      So until you have been shot at for "God and Country" so you understand the true meaning and effect of war please you have no idea of the situation. You show your own stupidity by making a comment that the event is too far in the past because when we forget our past we will make the same mistakes again and again until we do remember our past mistakes.

      If you believe like you do I suggest that you call the US Army. They're hiring. Then you can say "I have studied the issue" and I am sure you will have a different opion too!

    65. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Danse · · Score: 1

      I was referring to the recent release of the diplomatic cables, which were redacted by journalists. I agree that the release of identities of informants in the Afghan cables was wrong, and if reports are true, has cost lives and may reduce the willingness of Afghanis and others to cooperate with us. However, I think Wikileaks and the Pentagon share the blame on that one. The Pentagon was given the opportunity to review the release to ensure that no names were exposed and they declined to do so. That was a political choice for them that shows that they put the politics of the situation ahead of concern for the lives of those involved and concern for maintaining faith with those informants. I do think Wikileaks learned something from that and have been more careful about releasing this latest info. The Pentagon doesn't seem to have learned anything though, as they did the same thing this time around.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    66. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by radtea · · Score: 1

      Unless they're going to Gitmo-ize him, but I can't see that happening. He's not a combatant of any kind.

      No, no: he's an "Information Combatant".

      One of the biggest lessons that the New Right took from the Post-Structuralist Left in the '90's was the role of language-creation in dominating the public discourse.

      The post-structuralists rightly observed that groups in power tend to dominate how language is used, but rather than making a case for more objective, empirically-oriented language they concluded from this that the meaning of words was pretty much completely up for grabs. Like Humpty-Dumpty, words were to mean only what the powerful meant them to mean, and the only question was "who is to be master."

      For some reason the Left thought this would be them, as the Old Right had a modium of objectivity about it.

      The New Right took this idea and ran with it, abandoning the vestigal objectivity of the Old Right and imposing new meaning and new language on the political discourse in the United States.

      Ever wonder how the term "Homeland" just happened to be all ready and waiting after 9/11? Conspiracy theories aside, the New Right was clearly looking for a new enemy and new language to allow them to continue the Cold War strategies that had worked so well in teh '80's, and 9/11 was a gift to them.

      So don't be surprised when language like "information combatant", or on reflection, "information terrorist" or "cyber terrorist" get applied to Assange. They probably already have.

      This is actually consistent with the modern usage of the word "terrorist", which is "anyone who does anything that the bi-partisan ruling class in the US doesn't like."

      --
      Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
    67. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Danse · · Score: 1

      Assume a police detective investigating a gang of robbers. Then one day, the robbers prevent another gang from robbing a store. The police detective might not know much about that specific incident, but they could still say with some certanity that the robbers didn't act out of altruism, but that the action can be explained as part of a bigger picture (e.g. gang war).

      So who are the "robbers" in the Pentagon Papers case? I'm still not clear on that. Is it just anyone who supported the leak, and he apparently has "studied" all those people and knows their motivations? Please explain.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    68. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Am I the only one who got excited when reading "Congress SHALL MAKE NO LAW"? You should really stop there. Oh, and also, enjoy your caps locks key while your at it.

      Honestly though, I yearn for the day that Congress doesn't exist. Is it too crazy to think we should ever have a society that doesn't need a congress and 50K convoluted laws on the books? I know, make everything transparent by law. Why does it feel to me that 90% have good intentions, and lack of transparency allows the 10% to abuse the rest? And the 90% has no fuck'n clue, and with every law the 10% get more loopholes. I suppose that's how it is and will be for quite some time.

      So, yay, wikileaks! Whatever the result, it's going to be positive. The meek shall inherit the earth, and I think this is the tipping point. Power to the people. Fuck amazon, fuck the banks, fuck big brother.

    69. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by blair1q · · Score: 1

      That isn't anything like the reason the Supreme Court found for the Times in the Ellsberg case. They found for the Times because the Nixon White House's point was that anything the President classified was a secret and therefore barred from publication. The Supreme Court decided that this was far too broad a power and would be used to chill free speech. The rules by which presidents delegate classification authority have changed because of that, and now it may be possible to find the Times guilty of releasing properly classified information included in a pile of documents that included improperly classified information. It's the responsibility of the journalist to determine if he's breaking the law. Nothing to do with whether he stole or solicited stealing himself.

      BTW, Wikileaks does solicit theft of classified information, constantly and vigorously, so don't try to help them with this when they're in court, you'll just confuse their defense.

    70. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by blair1q · · Score: 1

      yeah. you're who i want making legal arguments for me. next.

    71. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by blair1q · · Score: 1

      I'm going to have to punt, here, as I'm one of those people who won't actually read the releases on the grounds that I believe they're still legally classified.

      I have seen excerpts inadvertently in previous threads on slashdot that include names and/or enough specifics to directly identify people who are spying for us. I've also seen reports that we have had to scramble to protect a number of people because of it. Not so much in the recent state department release, but quite a few in the Afghanistan/Iraq military intel release earlier.

      This was the predictable and inevitable result of releasing the information and is the reason we need to classify information.

      I don't agree with classifying information merely to prevent prosecution or embarassment. Those are illegal acts, and the laws for classifying information state as much explicitly, and provide specific methods for declassifying such information to be sure that properly classified information is not declassified. But Wikileaks ignores that and acts as though it's alright to put people in danger as long as you're getting a lot of press throwing secrets around.

    72. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 1

      Since when has the government used the courts for these cases? Ask anyone in gito who there has as a defense lawyer.

      --
      The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
    73. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Danse · · Score: 1

      I'm going to have to punt, here, as I'm one of those people who won't actually read the releases on the grounds that I believe they're still legally classified.

      I have seen excerpts inadvertently in previous threads on slashdot that include names and/or enough specifics to directly identify people who are spying for us. I've also seen reports that we have had to scramble to protect a number of people because of it. Not so much in the recent state department release, but quite a few in the Afghanistan/Iraq military intel release earlier.

      This was the predictable and inevitable result of releasing the information and is the reason we need to classify information.

      I don't agree with classifying information merely to prevent prosecution or embarassment. Those are illegal acts, and the laws for classifying information state as much explicitly, and provide specific methods for declassifying such information to be sure that properly classified information is not declassified. But Wikileaks ignores that and acts as though it's alright to put people in danger as long as you're getting a lot of press throwing secrets around.

      I agree that some things should not be released, but the Pentagon was given the opportunity to protect those names and identifying information and they declined to do so, taking an all or nothing stance. That was, in my opinion, the wrong thing to do. They could have protected those people and they chose not to do so for political reasons. Wikileaks doesn't act as though it's ok to put people in danger. They are there to release information that allows people to know what's going on in the government and what their representatives are doing in their name. They have tried to ensure that they don't put people in imminent danger through these releases, which is why they have been releasing only a relatively small number of documents at a time rather than dumping all 250K+ documents out there, and why they've been working with journalists from major newspapers to redact information that could do that kind of damage.

      It looks like they failed to do so in some cases with the previous Afghanistan-related documents. They seem to have done better with this latest group. In both cases the US government had the opportunity to protect critical information, assuming they actually consider it to be critical. It seems like they decided it would be politically more profitable to allow that information to be revealed so that it could be used against Wikileaks, regardless of what happens to those people.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    74. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by blair1q · · Score: 1

      Anyone in gitmo was taken from a battlefield. I don't agree with much of the way anyone was treated under THE PREVIOUS ADMINISTRATION but so far the legality of their treatment has been upheld. Many of them have already been released. The rest are people even you wouldn't like living in your neighborhood. And they all have defense lawyers.

    75. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by blair1q · · Score: 1

      Like I said, this isn't 1971. The rules have changed. The executive order delegating classification authority spells them out.

      The NY Times now will go to the pentagon, show what it has, and ask for a redaction and declassification. It will get it. If it disagrees with the effects, it may or may not argue over it. But it knows that if it decides to publish something that should have remained classified, according to the court that the Pentagon will then bring into play, its 1st Amendment defense may not work.

    76. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Danse · · Score: 1

      Like I said, this isn't 1971. The rules have changed. The executive order delegating classification authority spells them out.

      The NY Times now will go to the pentagon, show what it has, and ask for a redaction and declassification. It will get it. If it disagrees with the effects, it may or may not argue over it. But it knows that if it decides to publish something that should have remained classified, according to the court that the Pentagon will then bring into play, its 1st Amendment defense may not work.

      That hasn't been tested, and it still sounds like it would be on shaky ground. I still think the Pentagon was wrong in deciding not to review the documents before their release.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    77. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by blair1q · · Score: 1

      That hasn't been tested, and it still sounds like it would be on shaky ground. I still think the Pentagon was wrong in deciding not to review the documents before their release.

      They probably knew what he had. They may have informed him that if he had issues with the propriety of classifying some of those documents there was a procedure to declassify them. His next step should have been to the President or the AG, not the Internet.

    78. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Danse · · Score: 1

      That hasn't been tested, and it still sounds like it would be on shaky ground. I still think the Pentagon was wrong in deciding not to review the documents before their release.

      They probably knew what he had. They may have informed him that if he had issues with the propriety of classifying some of those documents there was a procedure to declassify them. His next step should have been to the President or the AG, not the Internet.

      And they knew that was not going to happen, so they should have done what they could to protect the identities of their informants, but that was apparently not important enough to them.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    79. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 1

      And how exactly, do you know its only people taken from the battlefield? Because your glorious holy leaders told you so? At least one German citizen was taken from Germany to a "camp" in Afghanistan. Last i checked Germany was not a battle field.

      And don't give me that crap about the last administration. If this administration gave a crap they would have done more than nothing about it. They are as culpable as the last.

      --
      The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
    80. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by blair1q · · Score: 1

      Not sure I follow your pronouns.

      The Pentagon has few options: 1. help the person get the information released properly; 2. hunt down and arrest the person; 3. hunt down and kill the person.

      So if that's how they were supposed to protect their informant's identities, Assange hasn't really given them a chance to accomplish their mission. He's either ignorant of the options or doesn't care and intends to cause harm to gain fame.

    81. Re:That's what's so facepalm-inducing about it all by Danse · · Score: 1

      Not sure I follow your pronouns.

      The Pentagon has few options: 1. help the person get the information released properly; 2. hunt down and arrest the person; 3. hunt down and kill the person.

      So if that's how they were supposed to protect their informant's identities, Assange hasn't really given them a chance to accomplish their mission. He's either ignorant of the options or doesn't care and intends to cause harm to gain fame.

      2 is only an option if the person has actually broken the law, and it's not at all clear that any law was broken. 3 is even less justifiable for the same reason. That leaves 1. I don't understand your reluctance to make sure the information gets released properly. They're already on record vehemently opposing the release, but the information was already leaked and it's Wikileaks stated mission to publish this kind of information. They want to do it in a way that will minimize the harm that will come to people such as those informants. Presumably the Pentagon would also want that, given that the information is going to come out.

      Even if they want to pursue option 2 or 3, they certainly weren't going to be able to do so before the information was released, so again, you'd think they'd at least take the necessary action to protect those informants and others identified in the documents.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
  3. Re:Does this mean... by Surt · · Score: 1

    It could just mean that he's been smeared as a rapist to try to discredit him, which he has.

    --
    "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
  4. Vietnam war exposer by emj · · Score: 4, Informative

    Wikipedia article , basically Ellsberg copied a couple of meters of reports stating that there were now way the US could win the Vietnam war.

    1. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      More than just that it was un-winnable, but that it was entirely based on false pretenses and the public was told bald-faced lie after bald-faced lie from the very beginning.

    2. Re:Vietnam war exposer by black6host · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Have you ever been to the memorial to those that lost their life in Vietnam, located in Washington DC? What I refer to as "The Wall". No winning there. I remember watching the news videos of the last remaining people being pulled from the U.S. Compount in Saigon by helicopter. Not much winning there either.....

    3. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Surt · · Score: 2

      War lives lost:
      Vietnam War: 58,209
      WWII: 405,399

      Clearly, we lost WWII 8 times as badly as we lost Vietnam.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    4. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I'm certainly not going to argue that the US won the Vietnam War, your appeal to emotion makes for a pretty poor argument that they didn't. Would looking at a monument to soldiers lost in World War II prove that we didn't win there either?

    5. Re:Vietnam war exposer by kanto · · Score: 1

      Apparently the reports, as Wikipedia states, were basically an outline saying that the president lied to the public and was expanding the war. I see no evidence of the US "losing" and, in fact, given the nature of "expanding" the fronts of a war, I'm inclined to believe we were actually "Winning" and lying about it.

      Dr. Strangelove, I presume? I'd hardly call escalation as concrete evidence of "winning" anything; you've won when you no longer have to fight, there's no price for just showing up.

    6. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Nadaka · · Score: 2

      Sounds remarkably similar to recent history as well.

    7. Re:Vietnam war exposer by GrumblyStuff · · Score: 1

      Yeah, because that's totally an apt comparison, what, with Vietnam systematically killing millions and invading a dozen countries while their partner on the other side of the world does the same.

    8. Re:Vietnam war exposer by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      The article doesn't say anything about the US losing, and talks about the US expansion in the region. Lacking any other analysis, the facts presented do not indicate any form of losing. Basic reasoning would tie expanding fronts to winning by converse of being squeezed out of the war (if you invade 5 cities and months later you have control of 2, you are losing; if you invade 5 cities and months later you're shelling 15, it's hard to argue that they're steadily beating you back).

      The argument that "this says we were losing" is a clear mental disconnect in this case; and even more, seems to entirely avoid what the papers were actually about-- that several administrations were lying, top-down, to the public AND congress, saying they weren't engaging in certain acts of war while at the same time ordering those very acts of war.

      Saying that these papers basically said we were losing the war is ... I don't even know how to categorize that. A fantasy? It's not a misrepresentation of fact (that statement has no bearing on the contents of these papers). Maybe we could call it a lie, but it seems more like delusion to me. The kind of self-inflicted illusion you get when you have a political opinion and believe anything that touches the topic must only serve to justify that opinion, rather than either opposing it or talking about some other aspect of the topic entirely.

    9. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Surt · · Score: 1

      I fail to see how that's relevant to the definition of a war being won or lost being based on how many soldiers died?

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    10. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      Considering that Vietnam wasn't a war, and that we haven't had a war since WWII...

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

    11. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "context" - look it up.

      Wait... don't even bother, it wont help you.

    12. Re:Vietnam war exposer by hedwards · · Score: 5, Informative

      But, unlike Vietnam, we had little choice to avoid WWII. It was pretty clear that things were going to come to the US eventually. And allowing Hitler to take Europe would've just provided him with time and resources to come for the rest of the world. Just look at how much he was able to take out with only a portion of Europe under his control.

      Vietnam on the other hand represented no such clear danger and we had to cause the Gulf of Tonkin incident in order to justify the invasion.

    13. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You look it up. When you do, you'll realize that his comment was made in the context of another poster's assertion that the number of soldiers killed in Vietnam is, in and of itself, "proof" that the US lost the war. It isn't. The US did lose the war, of course, but the number of casualties they incurred is orthogonal to that point.

    14. Re:Vietnam war exposer by HungryHobo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      winning isn't a matter of who got the most kills.
      War isn't a round of counterstrike.

      If you decide who won based on the kill ratio or kill totals then Germany won world war 2.
      If you lose 10,000 soldiers and the other guy loses 100,000 but he ends up controlling whatever you were fighting over and/or he still has lots of soldiers there and you don't then he was won.

    15. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Maudib · · Score: 4, Interesting

      From wikipedia:
      "In another example, a memo from the Defense Department under the Johnson Administration listed the reasons for American persistence:

              * 70% - To avoid a humiliating U.S. defeat.
              * 20% - To keep [South Vietnam] (and the adjacent) territory from Chinese hands.
              * 10% - To permit the people [of South Vietnam] to enjoy a better, freer way of life.
              * ALSO - To emerge from the crisis without unacceptable taint from methods used.
              * NOT - To 'help a friend'[3][9]"

      - If the leadership of one of the world's two super powers is continuing a war with no end it sight, simply to avoid humiliation, its pretty easy to get the impression that they are loosing.

      - If after 4 years of war military leadership says that it will take 2x-3x current troop levels to win, one could conclude that there isn't much optimism for the current strategies chances.

      These are perfectly reasonable interpretations of the the book. You should read it.

      Of course the fact that leadership decided to quit the field after determining the war was un-winnable given the available resources should be enough to persuade anyone.

    16. Re:Vietnam war exposer by anyGould · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Considering that Vietnam wasn't a war, and that we haven't had a war since WWII...

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

      Hate to break it to you, but if you bomb like a war, and shoot like a war, you're in a war. No matter what the government decides to call it.

      Same reason I can't kill you with a knife and say "no, I'm not allowed to murder people. That was a 'love tap'."

    17. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Surt · · Score: 1

      Exactly my point.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    18. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Surt · · Score: 1

      Look it up yourself, then reread the thread.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    19. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Surt · · Score: 1
      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    20. Re:Vietnam war exposer by zakeria · · Score: 4, Informative

      But, unlike Vietnam, we had little choice to avoid WWII. It was pretty clear that things were going to come to the US eventually. And allowing Hitler to take Europe would've just provided him with time and resources to come for the rest of the world. Just look at how much he was able to take out with only a portion of Europe under his control.

      Vietnam on the other hand represented no such clear danger and we had to cause the Gulf of Tonkin incident in order to justify the invasion.

      Wow you almost sound as if your saying the US wanted to help Europe but history tells a very different story? Peal Harbor was the reason the US joined the war not because millions where being murdered by the Nazi's!

    21. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, that is just fail... Do you actually have any reading comprehension? black6host was saying that "The Wall" represents the dead of Vietnam. "The Wall" represents sadness, loss (as in loss of life!).

      In that respect every war, including WWII, is a loss from the very beginning. There is no "winning" in a war, just losing less or more (sometimes you lose more by not participating in a war too). But you are always losing.

      Vietnam was not as much lost, as being completely pointless. Not only were American and Vietnamese lives lost, today Vietnam still suffers long term effects from Agent Orange and other chemical warfare used against its people.

      War is not a game. It's always murder, by definition. How can you "win" that??

    22. Re:Vietnam war exposer by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      I remember watching the news videos of the last remaining people being pulled from the U.S. Compount in Saigon by helicopter. Not much winning there either.....

      On the contrary, what you saw there was the North Vietnamese Army winning. And why were they winning?

      What happened when Democrats in Congress cut off funding for the Vietnam War?

      Historians have directly attributed the fall of Saigon in 1975 to the cessation of American aid. Without the necessary funds, South Vietnam found it logistically and financially impossible to defeat the North Vietnamese army. Moreover, the withdrawal of aid encouraged North Vietnam to begin an effective military offensive against South Vietnam. Given the monetary and military investment in Vietnam, former Assistant Secretary of State Richard Armitage compared the American withdrawal to "a pregnant lady, abandoned by her lover to face her fate." 2 Historian Lewis Fanning went so far as to say that "it was not the Hanoi communists who won the war, but rather the American Congress that lost it." 3

      Sleeping With the Enemy
      .

      What I refer to as "The Wall". No winning there

      "The Wall" doesn't indicate anything about what government controls Vietnam, it is a memorial to American service members who lost their lives in the war to defend South Vietnam. The North Vietnamese lost far more lives than the United States, have political control over Vietnam, and consider themselves to have won the war. That sacrifice of American lives was thrown away as noted above. South Vietname could have been free today, just like South Korea. Of course, that would mean actually winning, and some people just won't see that happen. (See Sleeping With the Enemy)

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    23. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But, unlike Vietnam, we had little choice to avoid WWII. It was pretty clear that things were going to come to the US eventually. And allowing Hitler to take Europe would've just provided him with time and resources to come for the rest of the world. Just look at how much he was able to take out with only a portion of Europe under his control.

      Vietnam on the other hand represented no such clear danger and we had to cause the Gulf of Tonkin incident in order to justify the invasion.

      You know. It was just fucking recently December, 7th. As in less than 24 hours ago. Japan did come to us. We tried to avoid WWII because Germany was one of our largest foreign trade partners, if not the largest.

    24. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Xaositecte · · Score: 2

      lolwut?

      The US did want to help Europe, and was already providing economic assistance. Entering a European war was an unpopular idea to many people in the United States at the time, because it was Europe's problem, why should American sons die for it. They always believed war could never be effectively waged across the ocean, and a European war coming on American soil was pretty unthinkable.

      It was popular in the upper echelons of the government however, because they were aware war COULD effectively be waged across the pacific, and all the old economic benefits of a wartime economy were as known back then as they are now. Pearl Harbor was what allowed politicians to convince the American public to enter the war.

      Millions being murdered by the Nazis provided great American PR, but it was never really the prime motivator.

    25. Re:Vietnam war exposer by zakeria · · Score: 1

      lolwut?

      The US did want to help Europe, and was already providing economic assistance. Entering a European war was an unpopular idea to many people in the United States at the time, because it was Europe's problem, why should American sons die for it. They always believed war could never be effectively waged across the ocean, and a European war coming on American soil was pretty unthinkable.

      It was popular in the upper echelons of the government however, because they were aware war COULD effectively be waged across the pacific, and all the old economic benefits of a wartime economy were as known back then as they are now. Pearl Harbor was what allowed politicians to convince the American public to enter the war.

      Millions being murdered by the Nazis provided great American PR, but it was never really the prime motivator.

      So the US did not want to help Europe, this as you just noted was public opinion! why should should American sons die for it? because America was warned for years by many leaders to join the war for the fight for freedom and democracy. But as you stated the American's did not want to die for this.. Sure they sent aid but only after long long drawn out begging from people such as Churchill and this was almost too little too late.

    26. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That has nothing to do with Surt's point.

    27. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps you ought to look up manslaughter. It's not murder, but you kill them just as dead.

    28. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Surt · · Score: 1

      Wow ... just wow. Reading comprehension fail.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    29. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Alien+Being · · Score: 1

      Well, either you're at war, or you're on a homicidal rampage such as the current one started by that little cunt from Midland, Texas...

      Not that he's actually a Texan.

    30. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Antisyzygy · · Score: 1

      Hitler would have allied with the US if the US wanted it.

      --
      That brings me to an interesting point, / . is just "the ramblings of socially-inept, technology-literate news-mongers".
    31. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No nation enters a war to help anyone, any idea, or anything but itself. The only reasons for any war ever are money and/or power.
      If the USA didn't enter the war and Hitler lost (likely the case as the USA only joined the war after the hard part was over) Europe would become Communist. The money invested in Europe would be lost, and the USSR would've won.
      If Hitler somehow won, then not only the money would be lost but also he'd be so immensely powerful (he'd own Europe and the USSR, and Japan would have a big chunk of Asia) that there'd be no stopping him. On the other hand, since he was a vegetarian, there'd be no PETA, so it evens out.

    32. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think the US entered WW2 because it "was pretty clear that things were going to come to the US eventually", I think it was because things actually *came* to the US. You should visit the Arizona memorial one day :-)

    33. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's exactly what I thought when I read his comment.

    34. Re:Vietnam war exposer by secondhand_Buddah · · Score: 1

      You know of course that American companies continued to supply the NAZI's with throughout WW2..

      --
      Participatory Governance : The only feasible option for a real democracy, where everyone really does have a say.
    35. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wikipedia article , basically Ellsberg copied a couple of meters of reports stating that there were now way the US could win the Vietnam war.

      We didn't always think we could win WWII either. Quite frankly, you don't always go into any fight knowing you're going to win. That doesn't mean you tried in vain if you don't.
      Just like Wikileaks now, it's a bunch of crap that _looked bad_ to people who have no idea what's going on and doesn't actually amount to squat or change anything. In a year, the lessons learned from this will be the same as that of the Pentagon Papers. What, huh, wait, what were those? Based on that information, what could/would/should have changed? Rinse/repeat with cable leaks.

      There's always some secret which if revealed would change everything11!! Except it never does.

    36. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Jedi+Alec · · Score: 1

      Hate to break it to you, but if you bomb like a war, and shoot like a war, you're in a war. No matter what the government decides to call it.

      Considering that war can only be declared by the people in congress who in turn have been elected by "you, the people" of the USA, I'd say it's bloody important what it's called.

      --

      People replying to my sig annoy me. That's why I change it all the time.
    37. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But, unlike Vietnam, we had little choice to avoid WWII. It was pretty clear that things were going to come to the US eventually. And allowing Hitler to take Europe would've just provided him with time and resources to come for the rest of the world.

      Considering what the people who won have done to the world in the years since, I'm not convinced that would have been the worst possible outcome.

    38. Re:Vietnam war exposer by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1

      The US navy had been blockading oil supplies to the Japanese who were currently already at war with their own enemies. The USA military was thus supporting Japan's enemies. If the US didn't want Pearl Harbour to happen, they were going about it in a very funny way.

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    39. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On the whole I'd say in most cases no one wins, they just survive.

      Those who avoid the fight tend to do the best, they haven't wasted a fortune killing people and destroying resources.

    40. Re:Vietnam war exposer by TFAFalcon · · Score: 1

      The south was ruled by a corrupt dictator. So if the US had won the war, you'd probably just get another Saudi Arabia, just without all the oil revenues.

    41. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Ginger+Unicorn · · Score: 1

      murdered by the Nazi's

      Hate to be a grammar Nazi, but it's Nazis, not "Nazi's". Awful lot of Nazis in this post.

      --
      (1.21 gigawatts) / (88 miles per hour) = 30 757 874 newtons
    42. Re:Vietnam war exposer by zakeria · · Score: 2

      No nation enters a war to help anyone, any idea, or anything but itself. The only reasons for any war ever are money and/or power.

      So the reason for America helping out the South Koreans is to gain control near borders of China? I agree 100%

    43. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The south was ruled by a corrupt dictator.

      Put in place by a CIA coup, because the previous guy in charge wasn't amendable enough to U.S. demands.

    44. Re:Vietnam war exposer by royallthefourth · · Score: 1

      Exactly; if you don't bother to defuse the bomb then the other team wins no matter what!

    45. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The US was fighting WWII long before Pearl Harbor. We don't hear much about it because its a little fact that makes the whole "Dirty japs started it" a pretty clear lie.

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

    46. Re:Vietnam war exposer by quenda · · Score: 1

      I remember watching the news videos of the last remaining people being pulled from the U.S. Compount in Saigon by helicopter.

      Could you be thinking of the famous photo by Hubert van Es, with all those people on the rooftop staircase? It was actually an apartment building, not the embassy.

      http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/30755090/ns/world_news-asia-pacific/
      http://www.flickr.com/photos/16844030@N02/1920939675/

    47. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Magada · · Score: 1

      The US public was pulled into the war kicking and screaming. Roosevelt himself couldn't be convinced to go to war until Japan attacked, for all his interest in maintaining the status quo in the world and his buddy-buddy "former naval persons" relationship with Churchill.

      Read any history of the period, Churchill was damn near tears going out of the August 12 1941 meeting with Teddy - he had failed again to convince him to intervene directly, for all that had been begging and cajoling and generally making a nuisance of himself for the past two years. All he got was the "Atlantic Charter", a collection of unsigned documents, which was made much of but started to look like the ridiculous bullshit it actually was by the time of the Yalta agreements.

      --
      Something bad is coming when people are suddenly anxious to tell the truth.
    48. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Magada · · Score: 1

      Eh? That wasn't WWII, it was America's colonial war in the East. Those uppity Nips had it coming anyway. Asian co-prosperity sphere? What do you mean you don't need no stinkin' American cars?

      --
      Something bad is coming when people are suddenly anxious to tell the truth.
    49. Re:Vietnam war exposer by GooberToo · · Score: 1

      If it sounds like recent history, you've not been listening. Unfortunately, that's the majority of Americans. Government says, x, y, and z. Press reports x and maybe a tiny blurb on z. A tiny actually minority hear x. Then some idiot whos job is to entertain but the populous equates to the press says, x, -y, -z and everyone believes it.

      That's reality.

      Simple fact is, most people who make such claims, such as yours, have absolutely no idea what they are talking about - literally. And when questioned, generally can't answer the most basic facts. Rather, they are parroting incorrect information put forward by deceitful press or entertainment press. Or worse, parrot information said to them by someone else who read a headline and then proceeded to make wild assumptions.

    50. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      So you think the mission of creating a secular free iraq isn't doomed to fail? You think we were not lied to repeatedly to get us into that war?

    51. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Pearl Harbor was the reason that the public accepted the US joining the war. Roosevelt had been trying for some time to get the US into the war (although not because millions were being murdered by the Nazis.)

      There's also no question that Hitler would have come after the USA. In Hitler's second book he clearly states he regarded the USA as a greater enemy.

    52. Re:Vietnam war exposer by GooberToo · · Score: 2

      I *know* we were told some bad information. I *know* the press fabricated a lot of lies and horribly misrepresented lots of things. You can literally point a finger at the press for telling the most lies - by far.

      A minority of incorrect facts came from government; which is not to minimize their significance. The exact number of lies which came from government is questionable as there was a serious breakdown of the process which feeds information to the President and the DoD. It basically became a broken feedback loop. Exactly how much was knowingly false (as in, with malice) and how much was knowingly misrepresented and how much was a creation of the loop will likely never be clear.

      The number one lesson which should be learned from all this is the US press is almost entirely untrustworthy.

      This is an entirely different situation then presuming everything the government told you was a lie.

    53. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Beyond_GoodandEvil · · Score: 1

      The US was fighting WWII long before Pearl Harbor. We don't hear much about it because its a little fact that makes the whole "Dirty japs started it" a pretty clear lie. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flying_Tigers
      Did you even bother to read the fucking link? Quoted,"The group first saw combat on 20 December 1941, 12 days after Pearl Harbor (local time). "Emphasis mine. Btw genius the so called "Dirty japs" invaded Manchuria in Sept. 1931. Hardly the peace loving people your revisionist bullshit makes you believe.

      --
      I laughed at the weak who considered themselves good because they lacked claws.
    54. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wong, Pearl Harbor was the "casus belli" that people could be rallied around. The president already used up all his political capital setting up lend lease programs to help Great Britain and Russia couldn't get people behind the war until japan attacked. At that point we we at war with Japan. Hell, Adolph Hitler declared war on US!

      Seriously... watch the history channel :)

    55. Re:Vietnam war exposer by SleazyRidr · · Score: 1

      Pearl Harbour was Japan, yet the US were there on the Beaches of Normandy. Are you suggesting that they're just really bad a geography?

    56. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Gizzmonic · · Score: 1

      My, what a generous account. You honestly think that the Bush administration believed Iraq was a legitimate threat to the US? All the evidence is there if you want to see it. The Neo-Cons begging Clinton to invade Iraq in 1998. Rumsfeld setting up his own intelligence service because he wasn't happy with info he was getting from the CIA. You might say Bush was suckered by the rest of his rogue's gallery, but I don't even believe that. It is entirely certain that Rice, Rumsfeld, Cheney etc wanted war no matter what. The justification was cooked up later, and changed from "Saddam has WMDs" to "We think he might have WMDs" to "We're bringing democracy to Iraq!"

      As the US press? Yes, after 9/11 most of the press uncritically absorbed whatever the White House said. They bought into the talking points and undoubtedly helped drum up support for a needless war. But the Bush administration was definitely pulling the strings-and that was not a honest mistake-that was Karl Rove's public relations 101.

      --
      (-1, Raw and Uncut is the only way to read)
    57. Re:Vietnam war exposer by GooberToo · · Score: 1

      You honestly think that the Bush administration believed Iraq was a legitimate threat to the US?

      I never said such a thing. You did. Why it has to be black and white is beyond me. But those who see it as black and white and most assuredly wrong. I believe W had an agenda. The rest is as I described...but it doesn't change anything that I described, which is an accurate accounting.

      Yes, after 9/11 most of the press uncritically absorbed whatever the White House said.

      That's not really true either. The press absolutely knew better. But at the same time they knew nothing makes news like war. So they propped it up for their own interests. The moment reporters figured out they couldn't play in a war zone, suddenly, almost over night, everything changed. After all, they wouldn't be able to safely milk their fraud so best to turn it on its head and report on the fraud they created.

      But the Bush administration was definitely pulling the strings

      Which isn't overwhelming momentum. You forgot a lot of other people had to sign off on this. And this did so on the basis as I originally described.

    58. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Thing+1 · · Score: 1

      DON'T CONFUSE THE GOVERNMENT!

      --
      I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
    59. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Gizzmonic · · Score: 1

      OK, read what you wrote and tell me it's not a defense of the Bush administration and their march to war.

      A minority of incorrect facts came from government; which is not to minimize their significance. The exact number of lies which came from government is questionable as there was a serious breakdown of the process which feeds information to the President and the DoD... Exactly how much was knowingly false (as in, with malice) and how much was knowingly misrepresented and how much was a creation of the loop will likely never be clear.

      'Incorrect facts'? There ain't no such thing, honey. Your analysis is missing key pieces. You fail-er, purposefully exclude, any mention why there was a 'serious breakdown.' As if it were an honest mistake by the Bush adminstration.

      But it's well known that Rumsfeld's DoD deliberately inflated every tiny shred of evidence of WMDs, blatantly disregarding the veracity of his informers if it meant that he could make a stronger case for war. On the other hand, the majority of evidence which pointed to Saddam's inability to make or use WMDs was ignored. He set up his own freaking intelligence service because he wasn't happy with the CIA's of evidence! You are simply echoing the "Well, we know there are no WMDs now, but who could have known before we invaded?" rationalizing of the hawks.

      The press absolutely knew better. But at the same time they knew nothing makes news like war. So they propped it up for their own interests. The moment reporters figured out they couldn't play in a war zone, suddenly, almost overnight, everything changed. After all, they wouldn't be able to safely milk their fraud so best to turn it on its head and report on the fraud they created.

      You seem to think the media has the power to declare war. And that the media hasn't been reporting on wars for over a hundred years. Those are some pretty wacky assumptions, but nothing is as wacky as your condemnation of the press on the "number of lies" told. I'm sure I could outlie Bush myself, but that really doesn't matter since I don't have tanks and guns to send anywhere. You are waving your hand at the media while hoping no one notices the actual guys that started the Iraq war on false pretenses.

      --
      (-1, Raw and Uncut is the only way to read)
    60. Re:Vietnam war exposer by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      So if the US had won the war, you'd probably just get another Saudi Arabia, just without all the oil revenues.

      If South Vietnam and the US had won the war, it likely would have lead in time to a free and prosperous South Vietnam, similar to South Korea, or Taiwan, for that matter. Do you have any particular objections to South Korea or Taiwan? (I'm not sure why you think Saudi Arabia is an apt comparison.) On another point, if the outcome is going to be a corrupt dictatorship anyway, wouldn't you prefer one that was friendly to your country, that could be influenced towards moderation, rather than one that was hostile? Why would you prefer that a country end up being controlled by a hostile government?

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    61. Re:Vietnam war exposer by TFAFalcon · · Score: 1

      The US has a history of toppling governments it doesn't agree with, even if their countries are free and prosperous. And supporting other governments, which are anything but free, as long as they are 'allies'. It would likely have supported the South Vietnamese government in anything, as long as it didn't become communist, and any 'moderation' would probably just have been advice to not let mass killings be seen or filmed by reporters.

      Why would you prefer that a country end up being controlled by a hostile government?

      Isn't that a question for the American people? Let them decide if they want to support a brutal regime just because it's friendly to the US government.

    62. Re:Vietnam war exposer by GooberToo · · Score: 1

      'Incorrect facts'? There ain't no such thing, honey. Your analysis is missing key pieces.

      You are underscoring the need to work on your reading comprehension skills.

      I said:

      minority of incorrect facts...The exact number of lies

      Meaning, yes, we were told some lies but we absolutely were fed some incorrect information and its unknown, *for the most part*, which was which. Period. That's not to say every lie and/or misinformation is of equal merit and weight. Which I did previously attempt to make clear.

      As you're completely irrational about this, and seemingly unable to comprehend what it is you're reading, continued discussion is completely without merit.

      As if it were an honest mistake by the Bush adminstration.

      And to be clear, my explanation only requires people to be - gasp! - human. And I'm not alone in my analysis. There are literally many, many books, mostly damning of W, which all more or less come to the same conclusions I put forward.

      You seem to be under the impression that I'm attempting to excuse everything W did. I absolutely make it clear I am not. Just the same, while he did some egregious things, he's not the devil incarnate as irrational, impassioned people, such as yourself, attempt to portray.

      I strongly encourage you to go learn what actually happened rather than the rabid, group-think, bullshit media, mentality, which is almost completely wrong. Its not like its a secret. And in fact, its fairly well documented. But again, as I originally said, its unlikely we'll ever know exactly what was a lie and what was accidental misinformation, or just flat out bad intelligence, all working to create a broken feedback loop. To know for sure means you were a primary player. Since we both know you were not, and to suggest you do know in absolute terms exactly what happened, means you're both delusional and full of shit. Which again, underscores why continued discussion has absolutely no merit here.

       

    63. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would argue that Pearl Harbor was the justification for the US joining World War II, not the reason. The reason we joined was to stop a very powerful and cunning Nazi fuckhead.

    64. Re:Vietnam war exposer by Gizzmonic · · Score: 1

      You are underscoring the need to work on your reading comprehension skills.

      I read and analyzed your words. Including what you took great pains not to write. Let's back up again, shall we?

      The press absolutely knew better. But at the same time they knew nothing makes news like war. So they propped it up for their own interests. The moment reporters figured out they couldn't play in a war zone, suddenly, almost overnight, everything changed. After all, they wouldn't be able to safely milk their fraud so best to turn it on its head and report on the fraud they created.

      This sounds an awful lot like you think the media started the war. And that reporters have no idea what reporting in a war zone is like, since they haven't been doing that for over a century. And that rather than hide in their hotels or 'go embedded' and repeat the government line (which is what most of them actually did), they 'reported on the fraud they created,' again blaming the media who last I checked, does not have the power to send troops or tanks anywhere.

      Meaning, yes, we were told some lies but we absolutely were fed some incorrect information and its unknown, *for the most part*, which was which. Period. That's not to say every lie and/or misinformation is of equal merit and weight. Which I did previously attempt to make clear.

      No, actually you did imply that every lie or misinformation was equal and you even said that the press told more lies. Maybe that's just a poor choice of syntax, okay. I don't believe it, but let's go with that. Still, you want to stick the media with this war. You seem reluctant to even mention the government, any specific governmental organizations involved, and you especially don't like talking specifics about Rumsfeld, Rice, Cheney and other PNAC alums. You know, the actual people who started the march to war?

      If we remove the histories of the people involved, and refer to everyone in very vague and nebulous terms, then we can pretend like we're not sure who started the war and then focus the blame on some other vague and nebulous construct, the media! Or as people less subtle than you like to say, "that damned liberal media."

      I strongly encourage you to go learn what actually happened...its fairly well documented.

      I have, and I'm not afraid to talk specifics, even if it might make some politicians from my party I do look bad.

      But again, as I originally said, its unlikely we'll ever know exactly what was a lie and what was accidental misinformation, or just flat out bad intelligence, all working to create a broken feedback loop.

      And you immediately contradict yourself in order to continue with vague, buzzword-compliant, agent-deleted pablum. The even tone makes you sound reasonable. Congratulations, you'd make a good lawyer. However, what you're actually communicating is either disingenuous or ignorant. I think it's some combination of the two.

      Which again, underscores why continued discussion has absolutely no merit here.

      Finally we can agree on something!

      --
      (-1, Raw and Uncut is the only way to read)
  5. Re:Does this mean... by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 1

    Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't Assange accused of having consexual sex?

    --

    I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

  6. Trying to push into the spotlight by Uthic · · Score: 1

    Maybe I'm just being overly cynical about things.

    1. Re:Trying to push into the spotlight by blair1q · · Score: 1

      Are you saying Ellsberg is looking for attention?

      I doubt it. But this isn't the first time his name has come up regarding the comparison, and it's coming up a lot more often now, so it's reasonable to see him writing this, whether it's solicited or not, so as to reduce the flood of questions.

  7. Re:No Surprise There by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Instead of attempting to use social language codes (the appeal to popularity with "anybody", the sarcasm in "merits a front page story", the appeal to authority in "I'd like..."), why not stop beating around the bush and give some reasons why you don't agree with what wikileaks is doing.

  8. Re:Does this mean... by MrHanky · · Score: 1

    You mean consexual sense, of course.

  9. Re:Does this mean... by ifiwereasculptor · · Score: 2

    Yes, and locked up for that. Good riddance, I say. Sex is dangerous, and that's precisely why we have Playstations and D&D.

  10. Supreme court ruling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In the First Amendment the Founding Fathers gave the free press the protection it must have to fulfill its essential role in our democracy. The press was to serve the governed, not the governors. The Government's power to censor the press was abolished so that the press would remain forever free to censure the Government. The press was protected so that it could bare the secrets of government and inform the people. Only a free and unrestrained press can effectively expose deception in government. And paramount among the responsibilities of a free press is the duty to prevent any part of the government from deceiving the people and sending them off to distant lands to die of foreign fevers and foreign shot and shell. In my view, far from deserving condemnation for their courageous reporting, the New York Times, the Washington Post, and other newspapers should be commended for serving the purpose that the Founding Fathers saw so clearly. In revealing the workings of government that led to the Vietnam war, the newspapers nobly did precisely that which the Founders hoped and trusted they would do.
    Justice Hugo Black 1971

  11. Re: Assanges-chief-accuser-has-her-own-history by MRe_nl · · Score: 4, Informative
    --
    "Kill 'em all and let Root sort 'em out"
  12. Re:No Surprise There by Yvan256 · · Score: 4, Funny

    Then you should use AMD instead.

  13. Re:No Surprise There by Opportunist · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Go ahead and post one. Who keeps you from doing it?

    Freedom of speech swings all ways, it also means that you may post here something that people might not like. I would like to see it! Give me ONE good reason why Wikileaks is wrong in what it's doing. So far nobody manged to convince me, but I would very much enjoy reading a good reason why Wikileaks should cease to exist.

    I do think that Wikileaks did a great service to the world, but I do not benefit from listening to opinions that match mine. People telling me that I'm right do not give me any meaningful input. I already "know" that I'm right. People are always in the assumption that they're right. But to be "more right", I need more input. More input allows me to adjust my position, to test that input against my existing input and either verify or falsify my point of view. Welcome to science. It works for opinions, too!

    Only an input that challenges my point of view and presents me with an antithesis can offer me more insight. So please do. I would be happy to hear it!

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  14. Re:Does this mean... by Nadaka · · Score: 2

    But he didn't tell the women he was having a one night stands with that he might have a one night stand with someone else as well! She might not have had a one night stand with him if he had said so! He also said he would call her back and then he didn't!

  15. Re:Does this mean... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Of course he means consexual? What were you thinking?! Consensual?! Ha!

  16. Re: Assanges-chief-accuser-has-her-own-history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In other words, she is your father's brother's nephew's cousin's former roommate.

  17. I can't believe anyone is surprised by paulsnx2 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The Leak is Leaked and every corporations are pressured by the government to take silly actions against Wikileaks. All before we get any analysis of the content. Now it seems that everyone blasting Wikileaks must be for selling boys for sex parties (one of the cover ups documented in the leaks).

    Yeah, they called Putin "Batman", and yeah the US has been twisting arms all over the world to get governments to lie to their people. But selling pretty little boys out for sex and covering it up because an American company was involved?

    The "Danger" to American Diplomacy is accrued when our diplomats are involved in totally unethical and immoral behaviors. The "Danger" gets paid out when the documentation of such things gets out to the public. If our government wants to protect its diplomatic efforts, then DON'T ACCRUE the risk in the first place. Then you don't have to fear the leaks.

    And if Mastercard and Visa (who now look like they want a world safe for the KKK and those that sell "Boys for Sex") would just wait for the Analysis before bowing to pressure, then they might get out of this without looking like fools.

    1. Re:I can't believe anyone is surprised by SwordsmanLuke · · Score: 1

      Now it seems that everyone blasting Wikileaks must be for selling boys for sex parties (one of the cover ups documented in the leaks).

      Not that I'm doubting you, but I hadn't seen this reported. Citation?

      --
      Any plan which depends on a fundamental change in human behavior is doomed from the start.
    2. Re:I can't believe anyone is surprised by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Now it seems that everyone blasting Wikileaks must be for selling boys for sex parties (one of the cover ups documented in the leaks).

      Not that I'm doubting you, but I hadn't seen this reported. Citation?

      http://blogs.houstonpress.com/hairballs/2010/12/wikileaks_texas_company_helped.php

    3. Re:I can't believe anyone is surprised by ShaunC · · Score: 4, Informative
      --
      Thanks to the War on Drugs, it's easier to buy meth than it is to buy cold medicine!
    4. Re:I can't believe anyone is surprised by Peter+Trepan · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If our government wants to protect its diplomatic efforts, then DON'T ACCRUE the risk in the first place. Then you don't have to fear the leaks.

      I think putting this fear in the hearts of the powerful is the point of, and value of, Wikileaks. Regardless of whether they've broken a world-changing story so far, they've produced a chilling effect on corruption.

      --

      Step into a huge movement. Don't Tread In Me.

    5. Re:I can't believe anyone is surprised by b4upoo · · Score: 1

      The really sick part is that the Pentagon papers of forty years past and the current exposure indicate that excessive secrecy hasn't slowed up a bit.What does it take to get government to be transparent to the very people who vote to create and sustain the government?

    6. Re:I can't believe anyone is surprised by jkauzlar · · Score: 5, Insightful

      One more thing: people seem to forget that (unlike Ellsberg), Julian Assange does not actually have a classified status. I.e. he didn't actually leak the cables, or for that matter anything he publishes on the site. To the extent that the information is damaging, it is as much a failure on the part of our national security to protect the information from being leaked in the first place. Wikileaks is just an easy target. To actually clean up our fragile intelligence classification system would be expensive and, though it is the real problem here, those responsible for making the information so easily 'leak-able' have chosen to demonize the messenger instead.

      This is why I support Wikileaks and not those trying to hush them. If this is a national security issue (and not just a transparency issue), it has everything to do with our gov't's ability to keep the information secure and nothing to do with wikileaks. Let me say it again: he didn't commit espionage to obtain the information; he was GIVEN it.

      That being said, the press needs to be questioning the gov't to find out what steps have been taken to limit access to information that endangers our national security. I'm guessing nothing unless they find a way to outsource the mgmt of classified information to a multi-national company like Haliburton for twenty-seven times the cost, otherwise there's no money for it.

    7. Re:I can't believe anyone is surprised by TooMuchToDo · · Score: 1

      HO-LY SHIT. Where the hell is Dexter Morgan when you need him?

    8. Re:I can't believe anyone is surprised by Gorobei · · Score: 2

      I think putting this fear in the hearts of the powerful is the point of, and value of, Wikileaks. Regardless of whether they've broken a world-changing story so far, they've produced a chilling effect on corruption.

      According to JA's writings, that is their immediate aim. Their strategic goal, however, follows from this: by making secret groups more leaky, those groups are forced to slow down or compartmentalize their internal communications and control, thus making them less effective and less co-ordinated.

      Pretty much the same approach we use to tackle Al Quaeda, etc.

    9. Re:I can't believe anyone is surprised by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lots of conclusions leaped to in that news story.
      Contractor paid for party. Someone went home with someone else.
      Post hoc, ergo propter hoc.

    10. Re:I can't believe anyone is surprised by icebike · · Score: 1

      What Excessive security?

      These were all purloined by an Army Private (some say Sargent). How good can State Department security be is a buck private in the military is reading their cables?

      Transparency of all things is not practical.

      Do you seriously suggest that our diplomats not report anything that they come in contact with which might be important simply because if it was found out someone's feelings might be hurt?

      You find out your neighbor is banging his secretary. Do you bring that up for discussion at the dinner table, the church, or write a letter to the news paper, tell his wife?

      Total governmental Transparency you want? Please post a link to your tax records.

      I suspect naiveté has gotten the best of you.

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      Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
    11. Re:I can't believe anyone is surprised by icebike · · Score: 2

      [I]t is as much a failure on the part of our national security to protect the information from being leaked in the first place.

      Exactly so.

      Why aren't heads rolling at the state department?
      Why is only one low ranking military misfit under arrest?

      Australian Foreign Minister Kevin Rudd, meanwhile, said the people who originally leaked the documents -- not Assange -- are legally liable, and he told Reuters news agency the leaks raised questions about the "adequacy" of U.S. security.
      http://www.tri-cityherald.com/2010/12/08/1283306/australian-fm-says-us-to-blame.html

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      Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
    12. Re:I can't believe anyone is surprised by Nyder · · Score: 1

      HO-LY SHIT. Where the hell is Dexter Morgan when you need him?

      I catch him on Sunday Nights, about 9pm Pacific time...

      --
      Be seeing you...
    13. Re:I can't believe anyone is surprised by FatLittleMonkey · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Julian Assange [...] didn't actually leak the cables [...] If this is a national security issue, it has everything to do with our gov't's ability to keep the information secure and nothing to do with wikileaks.

      I just used the last of my mod-points, but you deserve to be modded up just to make sure more people see this point.

      The reason it was leaked is that, IIRC, 3 million people have access to this intel. We heard about it because of wikileaks, but isn't it likely that much much more has been sold to any nation that wants it?

      There might be a few allies who, out of politeness, haven't sought this info, but very few rivals. So the only people this stuff is news to is us.

      --
      Science is all about firing a drunk pig out of a cannon just to see what happens.
    14. Re:I can't believe anyone is surprised by mug+funky · · Score: 2

      b4upoo said "secrecy", not "security". i believe there's still an argument that there is excessive secrecy, but inadequate security to prevent a mass leak from a (potentially) marginalised and disgruntled person in a minor rank.

    15. Re:I can't believe anyone is surprised by mug+funky · · Score: 1

      Rudd's won some points in the last few days... in light of what the US have said about him in the cables, and the (huge) embarrassment he's going through, on the same day he pledges to support Assange (well, it's his job after all), and points the finger squarely at the US for the leaks. nice one.

      however, Gillard can eat a bag of dicks for her comments and subsequent dithering and failure to actually say why she feels Assange has committed a crime, or name an appropriate Australian or US law.

    16. Re:I can't believe anyone is surprised by icebike · · Score: 1

      There is no doubt that he violated a US law (can't speak for Australian law).

      The US 1917 Espionage Act is the most recent and most relevant law on the books.

      However, it is not at all clear that Assange might not prevail at trial in the US. There is this little matter of the First Amendment.

      It all hinges on him being a journalist. Therefore I doubt the US would try to extradite him, because the odd of getting a conviction on anything more than receiving stolen property are a toss up at this time.

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      Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
    17. Re:I can't believe anyone is surprised by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Not really.

      The best way to combat leaks is to offer misinformation. All they have to do is flood the gates with garbage, taint certain portions of it to close down in where it came from, and let it go.

      In this type of handling leaks, it won't take long to find out where they are coming from and put a stop to that but more importantly, it would prove the information wasn't reliable and it wouldn't gain that much attention.

      I mean seriously, how serious would the Iraq war leaks been taken if scattered all throughout them was documents pertaining to assistance receive in battle from the justice league and Superman? How about payment vouchers to mickey mouse and Pluto? How about the diplomat cables if there was realistic looking communications to an embassy office on mars pertaining to a military base on pluto and the categorizing of pluto to something other then a planet was just a cover to take attention away from the base?

      I mean what would you think if you saw crap like that in a document dump claimed to be secret communications and files stolen from the US government? You probably already think there is something wrong in the government, but would you trust the information claimed to be secret when it talks about Superman flying over metropolis and noticing Wonder Woman sunbathing nude on her balcony?

    18. Re:I can't believe anyone is surprised by cold+fjord · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Regardless of whether they've broken a world-changing story so far, they've produced a chilling effect on corruption.

      It isn't so much corruption that is shut down, as American diplomatic operations. Dealing with actual corruption would require a scapel, not the blunt object of the Wikileaks releases.

      Battered by a scandal which seems to provide a fresh wave of embarrassment with each passing day, the US government is being forced to undertake a major reshuffle of the embassy staff, military personnel and intelligence operatives whose work has been laid bare by the whistle-blowing website WikiLeaks.

      The Obama administration was yesterday facing a crisis in its diplomatic service, amid growing evidence that the ongoing publication of a tranche of supposedly-confidential communiqués will make normal work difficult, if not dangerous, for important State Department employees across the world.

      "In the short run, we're almost out of business," a senior US diplomat told the Reuters news agency, saying it could take five years to rebuild trust. "It is really, really bad. I cannot exaggerate it. In all honesty, nobody wants to talk to us ... Some people still have to, particularly (in) government but ... they are already asking us things like, 'Are you going to write about this?'"

      "We're going to have to pull out some of our best people – the diplomats who best represented the United States and were the most thoughtful in their analysis – because they dared to report back the truth about the nations in which they serve."

      Julian Assange’s EgoLeaks
      WikiLeaks’ Selective Morality

      WikiLeaks Reportedly Outs 100s of Afghan Informants

      ... in spite of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange's claim that sensitive information had been removed from the leaked documents, that reporters scanning the reports for just a couple hours found hundreds of Afghan names mentioned as aiding the U.S.-led war effort.

      One specific example cited by the paper is a report on an interview conducted by military officers of a potential Taliban defector. The militant is named, along with his father and the village in which they live.

      "The leaks certainly have put in real risk and danger the lives and integrity of many Afghans," a senior official at the Afghan foreign ministry told The Times on condition of anonymity. "The U.S. is both morally and legally responsible for any harm that the leaks might cause to the individuals, particularly those who have been named. It will further limit the U.S./international access to the uncensored views of Afghans."

      One former intelligence official told the paper that the Taliban could launch revenge attacks on "traitors" in the coming days.

      Blood Already on Assange’s Hands (and the WikiLeaks-Gitmo Connection)

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    19. Re:I can't believe anyone is surprised by Unequivocal · · Score: 1

      Let me say it again: he didn't commit espionage to obtain the information; he was GIVEN it.

      I am by no means an expert, but my understanding is that espionage crimes can include a whole pile of actions beyond the original obtainment. Those facilitating the transfer, publication or dissemination can also be tried (in absentia in some cases I think) and convicted. So it is possible that the US law might reasonably (that's the legal term "reasonably") be interpreted to indicate that Wikileaks is in violation of its espionage statutes.

      However the same might often be true for New York Times reporters when they leak information from "senior white house sources" (Valerie Plame anyone). However, the reporters have clear first amendment rights that protect them from gov't prosecution for espionage (so in general Justice won't even bring it to trial - fails a reasonableness test).

      The big question (as best I understand it) is does Wikileaks enjoy similar FA rights . I'm pretty sure the Justice Department wants to see that question answered in court, with Assange in the pokey for the whole (very very long) time the trial takes to resolve.

      The general point I think you're getting at is that there are some first amendment protections that can override any attempt to convict for espionage? And I think that's a very important point. Does one's first amendment rights prevents conviction for espionage in some cases?

      Someone with more FA and espionage legal expertise may be able to give a more precise answer.. hopefully!

    20. Re:I can't believe anyone is surprised by MissNoItAll · · Score: 0

      I would urge us all to protect the right of privacy for all individuals, companies and governments (everywhere!). I would also urge us to respect and foster the concept of a whistle blower. But how naive are we to think that if you dumped all the private information for any one individual, any one company or any one government, that harm, well beyond the deserved exposure of the usual percentage of crooks, would be done? Journalists the world over read this pile of stuff and pick out the cable that reports on the reported wrongdoing of some hired goons overseas and we go crazy with rage (as if the guy who found out about it was not supposed to report it). Can we for once think about the groups that will laugh at that cable and instead read another that prompts an execution? Both the jerk who downloaded the pile and Wikileaks had an opportunity to be whistle blowers but they committed a crime instead. There is a difference..

    21. Re:I can't believe anyone is surprised by bronney · · Score: 1

      It might work, but the fact that real newspapers are reporting it makes it real. Wait.. it's real right? Whatever the paper says is real.

      What I find interesting though, is that the panic mode of the gov actually confirms the leak more. Else, why panic? If this were to happened in China, the gov would stfu and nobody would care, flood superman for 6 months, nobody remembers.

    22. Re:I can't believe anyone is surprised by SETIGuy · · Score: 3, Interesting

      the odd of getting a conviction on anything more than receiving stolen property are a toss up at this time.

      I've said it before, I'll say it again. The cables are not stolen property. Data can only be property if it is subject to copyright. US government documents are never subject to copyright. The only way they could get him on receiving stolen property is if the media that the cables were on was US government property. I doubt anyone at wikileaks would have accepted it if that were the case. If the DOJ tries him for receiving stolen property, the case would be laughed out of court by the first judge that saw it.

      I also doubt that an Espionage Act conviction would survive. Its pretty clear that the act only applies to actions by people within the United States, otherwise we would be using it to prosecute and execute all of the Gitmo detainees for lying in an attempt to interfere with US millitary forces.

    23. Re:I can't believe anyone is surprised by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Total governmental Transparency you want? Please post a link to your tax records.

      I suspect naiveté has gotten the best of you.

      And I suggest ignorance has got the best of you. Just because it's a certain way in the US, that does not mean it is in other places.

      For example, I live and work in Sweden, where you can very easily find out nearly anything about you'd like to about my finances/taxes/property/etc. with a trip down to your nearest Skatteverket office.

    24. Re:I can't believe anyone is surprised by icebike · · Score: 1

      You have my deepest sympathy.

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    25. Re:I can't believe anyone is surprised by MrMarkie · · Score: 1

      I live in Sweden too and I do not see to horror of people finding out how much money I make and what property I own. People who want to do bad things will find these out anyway so I don't see any reason for secrecy. And it's actually kinda handy when taking down braggers who say "I make this and that much", one flick of the phone and you can say for sure "no you don't, you make this and that much" :)

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      /M
    26. Re:I can't believe anyone is surprised by Somewhat+Delirious · · Score: 1

      Maybe you should ask yourself: less effective and less coordinated at what? Less effective at sacrifing your military servicemen in wars that lead to many, many civilian deaths to try to obtain unobtainable stated goals? Less coordinated in making the regions where these wars take place even more dangerous than they used to be for the civilians who live there? Less effective at torture and illegal renditions? Less coordinated in systematically undermining the international rule of law, killing civilians, breaking international treaties, luring your friends into wars under false pretences by providing them with fake intel? Yeah, sounds like a real danger to international security to me...

      --
      The surest sign that intelligent life exists elsewhere in the universe is that none of it has tried to contact us.
    27. Re:I can't believe anyone is surprised by Evets · · Score: 1

      How many lives have been lost as the result of Journalism?

      Every major U.S. media player has published the name of at least one active CIA agent. Names of key witnesses have been published. We have media pundits calling for assassinations on a regular basis. Political commentators regularly and knowingly lie to the american public, and those lies have cost lives.

      The difference here is that although WikiLeaks has received numerous awards, and has been internationally recognized for their journalistic efforts, is that it is not a mainstream media entity, and it has information that people with a lot of political weight do not want published.

    28. Re:I can't believe anyone is surprised by Thing+1 · · Score: 1

      "The U.S. is both morally and legally responsible for any harm that the leaks might cause to the individuals [...]"

      I wonder if the US will go even farther, and take some of the information in the leaks and make sure some people end up dead, something of a self-fulfilling prophecy?

      My only hope is that they write about it.

      --
      I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
    29. Re:I can't believe anyone is surprised by dcblogs · · Score: 1

      No, the difference is that last year alone 72 journalists killed, according to the Committee to Protect Journalist, with 52 of them murdered. WikiLeaks isn't a journalistic organization; it's just a filter. Don't make the comparison.

    30. Re:I can't believe anyone is surprised by skarphace · · Score: 1

      Total governmental Transparency you want? Please post a link to your tax records.

      And why would you think that personal privacy has any comparison at all to governmental transparency? Don't compare the two. One is necessary to a healthy democracy, and the other is personal protection of sensitive information.

      "A popular Government without popular information or the means of acquiring it, is but a Prologue to a Farce or a Tragedy or perhaps both. Knowledge will forever govern ignorance, and a people who mean to be their own Governors, must arm themselves with the power knowledge gives."
      -- James Madison "

      --
      Bullish Machine Tzar
    31. Re:I can't believe anyone is surprised by Danse · · Score: 1

      Not really.

      The best way to combat leaks is to offer misinformation. All they have to do is flood the gates with garbage, taint certain portions of it to close down in where it came from, and let it go.

      In this type of handling leaks, it won't take long to find out where they are coming from and put a stop to that but more importantly, it would prove the information wasn't reliable and it wouldn't gain that much attention.

      I mean seriously, how serious would the Iraq war leaks been taken if scattered all throughout them was documents pertaining to assistance receive in battle from the justice league and Superman? How about payment vouchers to mickey mouse and Pluto? How about the diplomat cables if there was realistic looking communications to an embassy office on mars pertaining to a military base on pluto and the categorizing of pluto to something other then a planet was just a cover to take attention away from the base?

      I mean what would you think if you saw crap like that in a document dump claimed to be secret communications and files stolen from the US government? You probably already think there is something wrong in the government, but would you trust the information claimed to be secret when it talks about Superman flying over metropolis and noticing Wonder Woman sunbathing nude on her balcony?

      How would that impact the ability of people who have legitimate access to this information to do their jobs? Are you going to dump a bunch of crap like that into their databases? Will they have to sift through that stuff as well? The leak came from a person who had legitimate access to the data for operational needs. Why would he leak a bunch of garbage? That makes no sense.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    32. Re:I can't believe anyone is surprised by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nobody can 'own' the truth. Therefore it cannot be stolen.

  18. What I can't get my head around... by Somewhat+Delirious · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What I can't get my head around is al those people that spend their time complaining that Wikileaks is not careful enough in redacting the documents and is putting lives at risk. I mean talking about a skewed world view... Not one death on the whole planet has been directly or indirectly attributed to any of the Wikileaks revelations. Not one! Not even by US state officials who would have every reason to do so if they could only find one!

    Meanwhile, what digging in the wikileaks files has confirmed or revealed (so far) about the US: torture ongoing after Abu Graib, systematic lying to the electorate and the governments of friendly powers, the killing of thousands upon thousands of civilians including women, children, the elderly, even handicapped people by US armed forces, lying about civilian death tolls, the killing in cold blood of enemy forces after they surrendered, systematically turning a blind eye to the use of torture by allied forces, complicity in having allies break their own national laws in order to support the US war effort... do I have to continue?

    Seriously people...do you really want to spend your time and energy arguing about the way Wikileaks redacts the leaks?

    --
    The surest sign that intelligent life exists elsewhere in the universe is that none of it has tried to contact us.
    1. Re:What I can't get my head around... by hedwards · · Score: 2

      Those people are idiots. Assange offered the government the opportunity to negotiate for redactions, and was turned down because they, in effect, wanted the entire thing redacted. As in none of it released.

      Strikes me as a bit suspicious that if it's really that damaging that they didn't accept that the materials were out there and at least try to contain the damage.

    2. Re:What I can't get my head around... by jd · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Pffft. Those same people didn't seem to mind Wikileak's standards for redaction when they published papers by governments hostile to the US. Indeed, as I recall, those people didn't object in the slightest to leaks about any other government at all. Or indeed, leaks about corrupt organizations (other than popular American brands).

      The US government's position that Wikileaks has endangered informants is also questionable (given that one of those "informants" was feeding bad information and assassinated 7 CIA agents, another was a hoaxer, an unknown number of these informants have been killed by Predator strikes, and an unknown number have been discovered through inept US handling). It's also not terribly consistant with history, since informants have traditionally been regarded as expendable and informing entirely at their own risk.

      (I'd also note that informants for other governments over the course of history and for the Taliban have generally had a low survival rate at the hands of the US or other Western powers. I'm curious as to how these objectors explain why it's ok for one side to persecute collaborators but not the other.)

      It's one rule for those you like, another for those you hate. Politics as usual.

      It's also the American obsession with winning. The idea of losing is evil in their eyes, although anyone going to war is naive to pretend that the outcome is guaranteed. The reality is that the war cannot be "won" - partly though ineptness on the Allied forces, but also because nobody has been willing to actually say what "winning" means. There's no victory conditions to achieve and therefore no benchmarks to test against. The "war against terror" has no defined opponents (even the "Taliban" isn't a unified entity but an ill-defined collection of tribes and external parties with few - if any - objectives in common and certainly no leadership structure), so we can't even say "winning is beating such-and-such an opponent in some way".

      --
      It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
    3. Re:What I can't get my head around... by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      What I can't get my head around is al those people that spend their time complaining that Wikileaks is not careful enough in redacting the documents and is putting lives at risk.

      They are ill-informed and more than willing to believe government FUD, what's so hard to get?

      --

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

    4. Re:What I can't get my head around... by Somewhat+Delirious · · Score: 1

      Oh I understand the US government's refusal to redact perfectly. They probably asked themselves the next questions and came up with similar answers:

      1. Are Wikileaks going to accept any redactions that keep the worst from coming out? Nope.

      2. Will cooperating with Wikileaks affect our image as a super power around the world negatively? Definitely.

      3. Will there possibly be victims from not cooperating in the redactions? Perhaps but if so only on a small scale and people that are expendable, like common soldiers and informants. If that happens we can blame Wikileaks as long as we have not been involved in the redactions. Something like that might even give us the upper hand in the media war against Wikileaks and help to limit the damage to what really counts: the public images and careers of America's politicians and top administrators and the image of the US as a super power at home and abroad that provides them the means of exercising their power.

      --
      The surest sign that intelligent life exists elsewhere in the universe is that none of it has tried to contact us.
    5. Re:What I can't get my head around... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Meanwhile, what digging in the wikileaks files has confirmed or revealed (so far) about the US: torture ongoing after Abu Graib, systematic lying to the electorate and the governments of friendly powers, the killing of thousands upon thousands of civilians including women, children, the elderly, even handicapped people by US armed forces, lying about civilian death tolls, the killing in cold blood of enemy forces after they surrendered, systematically turning a blind eye to the use of torture by allied forces, complicity in having allies break their own national laws in order to support the US war effort... do I have to continue?

      Can you find citations for all of these claims? That is, specific references for each of them. It's not that I don't believe you, but the stories in news media about these leaks mostly serve to confirm facts that most of the world already knew, and most of the negative revelations seem to be about countries other than the US. All of these claims by Wikileaks supporters say that Wikileaks is revealing treacherous injustices by the US government, but I really can't find evidence of that. Most of the leaked information does not present this information, which makes me wonder why it is being indiscriminately revealed. It certainly makes it more difficult to find the supposed injustices that are being revealed.

    6. Re:What I can't get my head around... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A good propaganda campaign requires you to ignore the facts which would otherwise make your efforts futile.

      Whoever speaks the loudest, longest, usually wins these fights. However, we have the Internet, and it's backlog to apply appropriate perspective onto all this bullshit. Quite handy, isn't it!

    7. Re:What I can't get my head around... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is there something wrong with that? We have 12 aircraft carrier sailing around the world constantly. What are they for? Defense and world peace?

    8. Re:What I can't get my head around... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not to mention, that wikileaks asked the US gov to help in redacting the cables to remove anything that could put lives at risk - the US refused. Obviously, and as wikileaks pointed out, they dont really believe theres anything too bad in there...

    9. Re:What I can't get my head around... by lennier · · Score: 1

      Is there something wrong with that? We have 12 aircraft carrier sailing around the world constantly. What are they for? Defense and world peace?

      Of course. The squadrons of rainbow-pooping pegasus unicorns have to have some kind of reliable basing and deployment mechanism, and all the magic underwater love dragons are already occupied as strategic Care Bear launchers. Until the National Happiness Agency has populated all the orbital slots... but unless you have Lucy Sky Diamond clearance, I can say no more.

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
    10. Re:What I can't get my head around... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Meanwhile, what digging in the wikileaks files has confirmed or revealed (so far) about the US: torture ongoing after Abu Graib, systematic lying to the electorate and the governments of friendly powers, the killing of thousands upon thousands of civilians including women, children, the elderly, even handicapped people by US armed forces, lying about civilian death tolls, the killing in cold blood of enemy forces after they surrendered, systematically turning a blind eye to the use of torture by allied forces, complicity in having allies break their own national laws in order to support the US war effort... do I have to continue?

      [[CITATIONS NEEDED]]

      Seriously. I'm not going to read through all of WL, and I haven't heard or read anything confirming what you state, so citations are needed.

    11. Re:What I can't get my head around... by pangu · · Score: 1

      What I can't get my head around is al those people that spend their time complaining that Wikileaks is not careful enough in redacting the documents and is putting lives at risk. I mean talking about a skewed world view... Not one death on the whole planet has been directly or indirectly attributed to any of the Wikileaks revelations. Not one!

      Assange himself said 1,300 people died in Kenya as a result of wikileaks.
      http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2010/aug/01/julian-assange-wikileaks-afghanistan

    12. Re:What I can't get my head around... by DreadPiratePizz · · Score: 1

      That's not true. Wikileaks released papers in 2007 exposing corruption in the Kenyan Government, and there have been thousands of deaths of activists who used this information to protest the government.

    13. Re:What I can't get my head around... by Anthony+Mouse · · Score: 2

      Oh I understand the US government's refusal to redact perfectly. They probably asked themselves the next questions and came up with similar answers:

      You're forgetting to add that by delineating between what should be released and what shouldn't, they would in effect be admitting that the things they say are OK to release were improperly classified.

    14. Re:What I can't get my head around... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "[...] including women, children, the elderly, even handicapped people [...]"

      Why do you deem it noteworthy to mention these groups of people separately? Do you mean to imply that the deaths of adult male civilians are somehow less grave?

    15. Re:What I can't get my head around... by Steeltoe · · Score: 3, Informative

      Here is the excerpt:
      The leak exposed massive corruption by Daniel Arap Moi, and the Kenyan people sat up and took notice. In the ensuing elections, in which corruption became a major issue, violence swept the country. "1,300 people were eventually killed, and 350,000 were displaced. That was a result of our leak," says Assange. It's a chilling statistic, but then he states: "On the other hand, the Kenyan people had a right to that information and 40,000 children a year die of malaria in Kenya. And many more die of money being pulled out of Kenya, and as a result of the Kenyan shilling being debased."

      So, because of the truth, 1,300 people were killed, not because of corruption and a unstable region?

      Hiding the truth is good, because we fear the truth?

      Coward.

    16. Re:What I can't get my head around... by The+End+Of+Days · · Score: 1

      Those same people didn't seem to mind Wikileak's standards for redaction when they published papers by governments hostile to the US. Indeed, as I recall, those people didn't object in the slightest to leaks about any other government at all.

      Did you keep a list or something? I suspect you're just using a bullshit rhetorical device to make a point.

    17. Re:What I can't get my head around... by pangu · · Score: 1

      Here is the excerpt:
      The leak exposed massive corruption by Daniel Arap Moi, and the Kenyan people sat up and took notice. In the ensuing elections, in which corruption became a major issue, violence swept the country. "1,300 people were eventually killed, and 350,000 were displaced. That was a result of our leak," says Assange. It's a chilling statistic, but then he states: "On the other hand, the Kenyan people had a right to that information and 40,000 children a year die of malaria in Kenya. And many more die of money being pulled out of Kenya, and as a result of the Kenyan shilling being debased."

      So, because of the truth, 1,300 people were killed, not because of corruption and a unstable region?

      Hiding the truth is good, because we fear the truth?

      Coward.

      The claim is that no one has ever been killed due to wikileaks. Assange himself said otherwise this is not true.

      Whether "hiding the truth" is good or not is irrelevant to the initial claim, since a fact has no bias.

    18. Re:What I can't get my head around... by intheshelter · · Score: 1

      I'd re-read that again if I were you. Earlier in the article Assange says not one case of a death has been directly attributed to Wikileaks. The section you referenced can be interpreted many ways, and it seems more likely that he's saying that the exposure of corruption in Kenya was caused by Wikileaks. That would be more consistent with the rest of the article and Assange's earlier statement which I mentioned in my second sentence.

      I'm not saying you misrepresented this, but at best that paragraph you are referring to could be interpreted several ways.

    19. Re:What I can't get my head around... by Danse · · Score: 1

      Oh I understand the US government's refusal to redact perfectly. They probably asked themselves the next questions and came up with similar answers:

      You're forgetting to add that by delineating between what should be released and what shouldn't, they would in effect be admitting that the things they say are OK to release were improperly classified.

      I don't see that they would be admitting that anything is OK to release by cooperating to redact parts of the documents. They would be limited to redacting information that would directly put lives in danger, such as the names of informants and such, rather than just redacting anything that they find embarassing. Essentially they would have to decide to put the lives of those involved ahead of the politics, which is why it didn't happen.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
  19. Slashdotted already? by chemicaldave · · Score: 1

    ...or something more sinister. I'd hate to see his site being flooded requests misinterpreted by the media as an attack.

  20. _every_ attack? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "The truth is that every attack now made on WikiLeaks and Julian Assange was made against me and the release of the Pentagon Papers at the time."

    Wow, I didn't realize they DoSed his website in 1971!

    1. Re:_every_ attack? by FunPika · · Score: 1

      Maybe they sent him a black fax or stuck a lace card into a computer belonging to him, RAND Corp, or the Times. ;)

      --
      After years of not using a signature, I am going to make one to say the following: Fuck Beta
  21. You can't have it both ways by copponex · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Either Assange is subject to US law or he isn't. If he is, he should be protected by the First Amendment. If he isn't, then they have no legal right to prosecute him.

    All of the idiots who want to temporarily suspend the law to punish one person always forget that it could be their turn sooner than they think. And, frankly, I'd rather not continue to establish the precedent that the world's most powerful country gets to arrogantly ignore international law and kidnap people to kill or torture them. In fifty years, it could be someone else putting hoods over US citizens who dare to mention the truth in public.

    1. Re:You can't have it both ways by makubesu · · Score: 1

      Either Assange is subject to US law or he isn't. If he is, he should be protected by the First Amendment. If he isn't, then they have no legal right to prosecute him.

      Sounds like a good rule of thumb to me. Too bad the people running Gitmo don't think the same.

    2. Re:You can't have it both ways by OzPeter · · Score: 1

      All of the idiots who want to temporarily suspend the law to punish one person always forget that it could be their turn sooner than they think.

      There is already at least one US Citizen[1] on a government death list who has had his rights to a trial magically removed. So I already think that it *is* sooner than you think

      [1] Yes I know he is a terroist etc, but from what I understand he still remains a US Citizen

      --
      I am Slashdot. Are you Slashdot as well?
    3. Re:You can't have it both ways by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In 50 years it WILL be someone else, most likely China.

      Setting the precedent of universal exercise of human rights, worldwide, without exceptions, is the only way we will prevent China from becoming what some people seem more afraid that the US is becoming.

      The de-facto "world leader" does not get to unilaterally decide the policies and politics of the world.

    4. Re:You can't have it both ways by zakeria · · Score: 1

      I think the Blackmail charge against a state might be the tricky one to be found innocent on!

    5. Re:You can't have it both ways by l0b0 · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, those who have the power to suspend the law are rarely the ones who have to be worried of it turning against them. At least until and unless there's a political takeover by the people.

    6. Re:You can't have it both ways by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 1

      Labeling someone a terrorist shouldn't make any difference. The most amazing part of all this is how many in the US are like, "oh yea, we know we kidnap people from there home country, ship them off to another one and torture them for a while. Ops, you only have the same name as the suspected terrorist, sorry about, we will just dump you in the middle of the desert..". They know and don't care. Don't start with the government is not us.

      There should be a call for "political assassinations" (aka resignations). Hell, since when are you suppose to *publicly* call for assassinations? That should cost you your job in politics in western "civilized/enlightened" world.

      --
      The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
    7. Re:You can't have it both ways by jimicus · · Score: 1

      The US has been prosecuting people who never actually set foot on US soil to commit their crimes for years.

      If his autobiography is to be believed, Howard Marks is an obvious case in point - he shipped vast quantities of marijuana around the world, some destined for the US. While he himself didn't go to the US, the drugs were traced back to him and US agents had him extradited to the States where he spent several years in prison - and that was in the late 1980's.

    8. Re:You can't have it both ways by Jedi+Alec · · Score: 1

      The de-facto "world leader" does not get to unilaterally decide the policies and politics of the world.

      Isn't that pretty much the issue anyway, since the cables seem to indicate otherwise?

      --

      People replying to my sig annoy me. That's why I change it all the time.
    9. Re:You can't have it both ways by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      While he himself didn't go to the US, the drugs were traced back to him and US agents had him extradited to the States where he spent several years in prison - and that was in the late 1980's.

      Sure, but in that case, one can reasonably argue that he was involved in illegal activity in the United States itself. Assange, OTOH, has done nothing on US soil.

      'course, he hasn't broken any US laws, either, but that doesn't stop people from demanding blood.

  22. Ummm, because it is different information? by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 2

    While I don't agree with a lot of what is going on, this automatic assumption that any leak = good on the part of many I also disagree with. I believe the pentagon papers leak was good over all because the public needed to know the information and that needs was enough to outweigh any harm it would cause and just generally breaking the oath and trust to keep information confidential he'd taken. So the reason it was a good thing was the context, what was leaked, and why.

    So Wikileaks can very well be seen as different because their information is different. Personally I have thus far not seen a good reason for the leak. All the information I've been pointed to thus far (I don't have the time to go and sift through it myself) has either been things the public already knows (like the fact that there are civilian casualties in a war) or things that the public has no compelling interest to know (like diplomats private conversations about other world leaders). I haven't seen anything that I've said "Yes, the public needed to know this, it is important and shouldn't have been secret."

    1. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by grcumb · · Score: 1

      While I don't agree with a lot of what is going on, this automatic assumption that any leak = good on the part of many I also disagree with.

      Er, no. Every leak is damaging to those whose actions are exposed. That's pretty much the definition of a leak.

      Freedom of the press, however, is always good. Even -especially- when the publisher in question is a douche.

      Please don't confuse the two. Leakers quite often get punished. Ellsberg's life was ruined by the Nixon administration. A free press should never be punished or in any way intimidated by the state.

      --
      Crumb's Corollary: Never bring a knife to a bun fight.
    2. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by AdmiralXyz · · Score: 1

      I haven't seen anything that I've said "Yes, the public needed to know this, it is important and shouldn't have been secret."

      Here'ssomethingyou might be interested in then: US-based PMC pimps out underage Afghan boys to local law enforcement officials. Your tax dollars at work! I can provide other examples on request.

      I actually agree with you when you say that if the sensitive documents have nothing of value to the public in terms of exposing illegal activity, then it's best for diplomacy if they remain classified. But that is most definitely not the case here.

      --
      Dislike the Electoral College? Lobby your state to join the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact.
    3. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by miro2 · · Score: 5, Informative

      I haven't seen anything that I've said "Yes, the public needed to know this, it is important and shouldn't have been secret."

      Its probably because you are self-filtering information that contradicts your own opinion. There are in fact many examples of information in these documents that the American public has a right to know. Here is a clear cut example:

      The United States has been knowingly lying to the American public about its participation in military strikes in Yemen. State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley in answered "No" to the question "Is the U.S. involved in any military operations in Yemen?" But the documents reveal the answer was a lie. Crowly was not misinformed. He was lying. Dont you believe that US citizens have a right to know when killing is being done in their name?

      A good article with several links, and fascinating audio: http://www.salon.com/news/wikileaks/index.html?story=/opinion/greenwald/2010/12/08/wikileaks/

       

    4. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by Wraithlyn · · Score: 5, Informative

      That's because the actual contents of the leaks are not the point. The leaks themselves are the point.

      Wikileaks' goal is essentially to make secretive regimes so paranoid about leaks that they clamp down on themselves, crippling their ability to communicate and operate efficiently.

      In Assange's words:

      The more secretive or unjust an organization is, the more leaks induce fear and paranoia in its leadership and planning coterie. This must result in minimization of efficient internal communications mechanisms (an increase in cognitive “secrecy tax”) and consequent system-wide cognitive decline resulting in decreased ability to hold onto power as the environment demands adaption. Hence in a world where leaking is easy, secretive or unjust systems are nonlinearly hit relative to open, just systems.

      Source

      --
      "Mind, as manifested by the capacity to make choices, is to some extent present in every electron." -Freeman Dyson
    5. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      I think, for instance, the fact that Gadaffi managed to overwhelm the British government and the Scottish Executive over the Megrahi release is just the kind of abuse of state secret/national security laws that can bring governments in general into disrepute.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    6. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by I+cant+believe+its+n · · Score: 1

      Uhm.. Just in my tiny part of the universe, Sweden, there is the issue of our country cooperating much closer with NATO than government/public policy has let us voters know. Although I personally am pro NATO membership, it is a sensitive issue politically. It is something that if stated openly, could have cost all members of the old socialist government their paychecks, BMW's and callgirls. They left office in 2006, but the current government has continued this great tradition of lying to the voters about NATO. For example "the engagement in Afghanistan" makes it necessary to purchase US military equipment. In reality they are working to make all our forces technically compatible with and dependent of NATO, but they do not tell the voters.

      In addition, the current prime-minister did make a great and popular statement regarding file-sharing, in public, during the elections in 2006. He said "we can not criminalize an entire generation of youths". His party then won the election and completely reversed on that statement. Wikileaks shows that they have so far implemented 5 out of 6 orders given to them by the US regarding intellectual property, completely reversing their public pre-election policy.

      If they state one goal in public before an election, but secretly their goal is 180 degrees from the public one, you no longer have a functioning democracy. If the government is secretly planning to implement laws designed by a foreign power, but at the same time that government pretends to their own electorate that they are not going to implement such laws, you have a form of treason by the government against its own people.

      This will of course not change anything because in a real democracy, as we all know, politicians state some popular goals and then the people go to elect the ones who say that the other parties kill more kittens.

      I guess you are right. Wikileaks have not changed anything, but managed to increase my cynicism. Damn Wikileaks!

      --
      She made the willows dance
    7. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Stunning. And I thought Haiti was behind the strikes.

    8. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 1

      The problem is that you can make that judgement about the Pentagon Papers because it was leaked. If it hadn't been leaked, you wouldn't have the opportunity to make that judgement because you'd never know that the papers existed.

      Frankly, I believe that any leak is good because it allows me judge these things. I may decide that it is unimportant. I may decide that it is very important. But keeping it from me does not allow me to judge anything.

    9. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, first we need to remember that Wikileaks is not American. So when asking if there is valuable information in the leaks, we have to consider that other countries might find the information interesting. We're all on the same planet, all humans... I know some nations are the enemies of the USA but many are not, and the USA also has ''Allies'' (quotation marks because the USA does not seem to always treat them as allies) who clearly are not a threat to the USA and who may find the leaks interesting.
      Why should foreign countries, particularly in Western Europe, be ignorant of illegal American actions against them such as espionage? (These actions should not even occur in the first place).
      It's difficult to argue that Wikileaks should side with the USA and not with foreign nations. The only argument I see would be "Wikileaks should side with the USA because we are the mighty USA" or something just as self-absorbed. So yeah, the US government can say "Wikileaks is bad for us". But if they said "Wikileaks is bad, period" then I'm sure the rest of the world would disagree (except those governments who think they could be the next target of leaks).

      Second, you have to consider who the leaks are bad for exactly. They can be bad to the government as a whole, they can be bad to specific individuals in positions of power who try to hide their wrongdoings, they can be bad to businesses and corporations, or they can be bad to the population. Saying the leaks are bad to an entire country seems an over-simplification to me.

      Third, the benefits of the leaks are not the same in the long run and the short run. In the short run, maybe a few people will be killed (I haven't seen a leak that could endanger anyone though... They censored names in the Iraq Diaries). In the long run, the leaks could put a break to government secrecy, which seems to be abused (for instance, the Department of Defense can present secret evidence during trials. They don't actually show the evidence to the court if the evidence is classified, they simply say "we have proof that the accused shot the victim" and the judge must believe this evidence is real - the possibility of abusing this for political or personal interests is very real and should have people worried). In both long and short run, the leaks have uncovered serious wrongdoings that should not go unpunished.

      Fourth, factual data is much more important than popular knowledge. You said we know civilians have died. Yes, we do, we did not need the leaks to know that. However, the leaks have provided us with precise information - how many civilians died, how did they die exactly, etc... We now know the US military uses tactics that recklessly endanger civilian lives just to keep their soldiers safe (I understand the desire to protect your own troops, but THEY are the soldiers, they should take the risks, not the civilians),
      Once you have factual data, you can take action. Try suing the US military because "We just know they endanger civilians recklessly", the judge will laugh at your face. Now try suing specific soldiers or officers for "giving the order to launch an artillery attack on village X on August 6 even though they knew many civilians lived there, and just because they wanted to take out a sniper. It was estimated sending troops in the village could result in 4 casualties for the US military, while the artillery attack killed 25 civilians" - now there you might have a case.
      Factual data also lets you have more serious debates and discussion. You won't go far by saying "Civilians die in Iraq, we should stop the war" but if you provide a list of civilians who died, how they died, how your own military is recklessly endangering them, then you'll be taken a lot more seriously. It's just easy to ignore popular belief if you don't like it. It's harder to ignore real facts.

      But in the end it comes down to who you side with and what your perspective is. Do you belief the USA should have it their way all the time, or do you think we should try building a better world

    10. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dont you believe that US citizens have a right to know when killing is being done in their name?

      Absolutely NOT, and it is TREASON to release this information when it is critical to our national interest! You liberals need to WAKE UP an dget with the program. We are in a war for our VERY SOULS and the terrorists are kicking our asses because we are operating from a playbook that assumes your opponen is honorable. Well they ARENT. They are out to kill every last one of us and replace our democracy with a muslim theocracy! This is unacceptable to ANYONE excpet (apparently) you people who are more concerned with the rights of our enemies than those of our own people!

    11. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by flyingkillerrobots · · Score: 0

      We had drone strikes. Big freaking deal. Not a single American soldier was put in danger by the strikes, as they were by drones. Why does the public really need to know, given all the politics that may be screwed up as a result of the public knowledge?

      --
      "It is a good thing for an uneducated man to read books of quotations..." -Winston Churchill
    12. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The United States has been knowingly lying to the American public about its participation in military strikes in Yemen. State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley in answered "No" to the question "Is the U.S. involved in any military operations in Yemen?" But the documents reveal the answer was a lie. Crowly was not misinformed. He was lying. Dont you believe that US citizens have a right to know when killing is being done in their name?

      They are called covert operations. They let the US handle problems in cooperation with the local government that would be too politically sensitive to handle in other ways. It would be difficult if not impossible to tackle terrorism in some countries if the information was widely disclosed. The practical result would be either nothing would be done, or a much larger shooting war. Take your pick of the three. As it is, Yemen will be a hotbed of terrorism for years to come. You may remember that the last attempt to bring down an airliner was with a package shipped from Yemen.

      And no, US citizens don't have a right to know all of the specifics of on-going military operations, or specific confidential arrangements with other governments. That is what the executive branch and elected representatives do, it is part of life in a republic. You don't decide everything that happens about our military operations any more than you do about the level of ozone in parts per million that a car is permitted to emit, or the distribution of radio frequencies, the funding for cream corn in the public school lunch program, or if the black spotted jack rabbit will be on the endangered list.

      You do have a say - write your representatives or the President. Vote. Run for office yourself. Write the heads of agencies. Check the Federal Register to see what agency is looking for input, and write them. Have your say, but don't fool yourself about what power or influence you have. And, again, no, you don't have what is defined as a "need to know" for classified covert operations. Want and need are two separate things.

    13. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I worry more about the United States government taking my freedom than I do about the terrorists.

      The government lies to us and misleads us routinely. The media are complicit in this. So I support Mr. Assange.

    14. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by flyingsquid · · Score: 0
      The United States has been knowingly lying to the American public about its participation in military strikes in Yemen.

      Give me a break. The U.S. isn't lying about this to deceive the American public. Seriously, is anyone actually outraged by this? My response is more along the lines of, "America, FUCK YEAH!" I expect my government to be up to this kind of shit. I'd be pissed off if we *weren't* secretly taking out terrorists with Predator drone strikes. Same goes for covert U.S. military operations in Pakistan. And I'm speaking as a certified member of the NPR listening, New Yorker reading, free-range organic vegetable eating Liberal Elite.

      The reason the U.S. is lying about this isn't to deceive the American public- it'd probably be fantastic for approval ratings. The reason is that the Yemeni people probably wouldn't be happy to hear that a foreign military power is killing people in their country, even if their government might find the arrangement acceptable. Similarly, the Pakistani public sentiment would be strongly against U.S. special forces working in Pakistan. I suppose you could argue that the people of Pakistan and Yemen are being decieved and that's a crime, and perhaps that in the long term this kind of behavior causes more damage than good... and maybe that's true. But it's kinda hard for me to buy that this is a serious crime against the American people.

    15. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yea, who gives a f**k about the rest of world. We aren't real people anyway. As long as Americans aren't at risk. It's OK.

      --
      The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
    16. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by flyingsquid · · Score: 2
      Hence in a world where leaking is easy, secretive or unjust systems are nonlinearly hit relative to open, just systems.

      The problem is that not all secretive systems are unjust. I mean, a healthy relationship with your girlfriend (I know this is Slashdot, but humor me) is a "secretive system" and obviously your relationship would suffer if all your conversations, arguments, and snarky comments about her relatives and bitchy friends were suddenly thrown out in the open. In Assange's terms, your relations would be "nonlinearly hit", in practical terms you wouldn't see any nookie for a while.

      Similarly, peaceful diplomatic relationships are highly dependent upon trust and confidentiality, and they are "nonlinearly hit" by the release of the cables. That's Hillary Clinton's argument and here Assange's own writings back her up 100%. The release of the cables doesn't just expose wrongdoing, it attacks American diplomacy at its most fundamental level by attacking the trust between the people who make up the system. And I don't think that's collateral damage: it's the entire point. The fact that Wikileaks aims to release the entire quarter-million cables is clear evidence that they're not after the abuses of the system: they're trying to attack the system itself. Sure, there are some bad apples in there. But Assange isn't after the few bad apples, he's trying to burn down the whole damn orchard.

    17. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by brit74 · · Score: 1

      He said [in regard to filesharing] "we can not criminalize an entire generation of youths".

      Wow. What a dumb statement considering that lots of kids also shoplift, get in fights, drink underage (the drinking age in Sweden is 20), smoke pot, and break traffic laws. So, to be consistent, he'd have to disavow all of those laws as well. I guess enforcing those laws also amounts to "criminalizing an entire generation of youths". The fact that there's people breaking those laws doesn't justify complete legalization of all those things. There are ways to work against all of those actions without boisterously labeling it "they're criminalizing an entire generation!!!!" (And you can be against piracy without accepting that massive fines are the way to accomplish it.)

    18. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by Jedi+Alec · · Score: 2

      The release of the cables doesn't just expose wrongdoing, it attacks American diplomacy at its most fundamental level by attacking the trust between the people who make up the system.

      You know, you're absolutely right. If there is one thing that the cables show(once again) it is that contrary to the public display, the US of A is not our friend. You're the slightly stupid big kid on the playground dividing the world into people whose lunch money you take and those willing to suck up to you.

      And we, the parents of the other kids, are going to have a good talk with our children. Because sucking up to a little cunt who just happens to be taller than everyone else is wrong.

      From a western point of view the threat of, say, terrorists or countries like Iran or North Korea are mostly hypothetical. Whereas the threat posed by the US government is clear and imminent.

      --

      People replying to my sig annoy me. That's why I change it all the time.
    19. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by the+entropy · · Score: 1

      Key sentence in the GP's post: "Dont you believe that US citizens have a right to know when killing is being done in their name?"

      It's not about Americans being put in danger or not. It's about the world's image of America going further and further down the shithole while an ignorant american public complains about "Terrorism".

      When american citizens are targeted in terrorist attacks, they have a right to know, and potentially prevent, their government from taking actions that can put them further in danger as they become more and more hated around the world. If it is their decision that the US's foreign policy and the resulting "attacks on freedom" should go on, then so be it. It should at least be with their knowledge and consent, not hidden and lied about yet perpetrated in their name.

    20. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "YEAH, FUCK America!"

      FTFY.

      (On a more serious note, your post reeks of what's wrong with the world-view of the US administration, of which you appear to be an avoid supporter, and thus part of the problem. I have nothing against US people in general, but individuals like you sure give the rest a very bad rep.)

    21. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by El+Royo · · Score: 1

      Well said. I wonder whatever became of my mod points?

      --
      Author of Enyo: Up and Running from O'Reilly Media
    22. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by gnola14 · · Score: 1

      Best. Comment. Ever. (though sadly, I think that's how the average USA American thinks...)

    23. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by gnola14 · · Score: 1

      [...]And I'm speaking as a certified member of the NPR listening, New Yorker reading, free-range organic vegetable eating Liberal Elite[...]

      And that should make your opinion (which BTW, is totally self-centered and shows how little you care about the rest of the World) valid?

    24. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Word.

    25. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by I+cant+believe+its+n · · Score: 1

      Wow. What a dumb statement

      I do not consider his statement to be dumb at all, since I want laws to be perceived as just by the people. I believe strongly that any justice system that is not perceived as just, will make people more prone to violence. People will not hate the system as much as they will hate the ones perceived to be receiving all the benefits of the system.

      All those laws which you claim he would also need to disavow have strong support from the people.

      Did you have an opinion on the democracy issues I raised?

      --
      She made the willows dance
    26. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny, as an American, I feel the same way. It doesn't matter what the majority of us are doing or thinking to the rest of the world because our entrenched government officials represent us to the rest of the world.

      Personally, I've voiced my opinion that I don't want us to go attack or bomb anyone. Know what it gets you here? A visit from the Secret Service and a jail sentence on charges while anyone important is visiting town... amazingly enough, charges dropped when they leave. Why? Because us pacifists are, y'know, a violent threat...

    27. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by MadTwit · · Score: 1
      Here's a great example of just how amazing Americans are! Watch 6:16 onwards.

      http://www.boingboing.net/2010/12/09/video-of-kids-reacti.html

      This is horrifying. That a child has been brought up and taught that the conversion rate for American lives too an entire country is; a few Americans at risk, (after first attempt fails) KILL THEM ALL, because yeah who cares?

      Yes he's only a child and may not have a better understanding of the sanctity of human life, but someone taught him this!

      --
      Reality is in fact, Virtual
    28. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by flyingkillerrobots · · Score: 1

      It was specifically NOT being done in the name of Americans. Yes, t was being done by the US, but in Yemen's name. The Yemenites even said something along the lines of "we will continue saying they are our bombs." Targeting American citizens in such a way would be illegal, I agree, but issue was not his point.

      --
      "It is a good thing for an uneducated man to read books of quotations..." -Winston Churchill
    29. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by TFAFalcon · · Score: 1

      So to defeat them we have to become as bad or worse then them? Why not exterminate everyone outside the US borders then? It's not like the US people should care about them, since they are potential enemies.

    30. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by Danse · · Score: 1

      It was specifically NOT being done in the name of Americans. Yes, t was being done by the US, but in Yemen's name. The Yemenites even said something along the lines of "we will continue saying they are our bombs." Targeting American citizens in such a way would be illegal, I agree, but issue was not his point.

      If we're doing it, then it's being done in our name, regardless of whatever lies the governments involved are telling.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    31. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by Danse · · Score: 1

      And no, US citizens don't have a right to know all of the specifics of on-going military operations, or specific confidential arrangements with other governments. That is what the executive branch and elected representatives do, it is part of life in a republic. You don't decide everything that happens about our military operations any more than you do about the level of ozone in parts per million that a car is permitted to emit, or the distribution of radio frequencies, the funding for cream corn in the public school lunch program, or if the black spotted jack rabbit will be on the endangered list.

      You do have a say - write your representatives or the President. Vote. Run for office yourself. Write the heads of agencies. Check the Federal Register to see what agency is looking for input, and write them. Have your say, but don't fool yourself about what power or influence you have. And, again, no, you don't have what is defined as a "need to know" for classified covert operations. Want and need are two separate things.

      That sounds rather ridiculous. Your examples prove the point. If we know what the representatives are doing, then we can vote for or against them based on that information. If we think it's stupid to put the black spotted jack rabbit on the endangered species list, we can vote for someone who will let us kill the little bastards. We have no such ability when it comes to covert operations, because we don't even know they're happening! How can we cast an informed vote when we don't even know what these representatives are doing in our name?

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    32. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by sycorob · · Score: 1

      Sorry, OT, but ... what did happen to mod points? I haven't been selected as moderator in a long time - it used to happen every couple of weeks. They must have changed something.

    33. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Excuse me - I see nothing in the cables that suggests the Scottish Government (hasn't been the Executive for at least 2 years now) misled it's public in any way. They were offered bribes, they refused them and took their own course of action regardless of the bribes.

      The UK government on the other hand are a bunch of spineless gits - pressuring Salmond, telling the US and their own public that they can do nothing to stop it and don't support it (when they could and do) and accepting the Libyan bribes.

      The Scots don't have any embassy staff in Libya to 'harass', we didn't take their money and we don't have any personal trade ties with them - all on top of the fact that we took major international heat from countries that were secretly pushing for his release for their own sakes.

      So I agree with your point about the leaks - these are great things to know - now I know what craven acts the UK government are really capable of, instead of just suspecting it.

    34. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by Grym · · Score: 1

      Similarly, peaceful diplomatic relationships are highly dependent upon trust and confidentiality, and they are "nonlinearly hit" by the release of the cables. That's Hillary Clinton's argument and here Assange's own writings back her up 100%. The release of the cables doesn't just expose wrongdoing, it attacks American diplomacy at its most fundamental level by attacking the trust between the people who make up the system. And I don't think that's collateral damage: it's the entire point. The fact that Wikileaks aims to release the entire quarter-million cables is clear evidence that they're not after the abuses of the system: they're trying to attack the system itself. Sure, there are some bad apples in there. But Assange isn't after the few bad apples, he's trying to burn down the whole damn orchard.

      The U.S. government has a very big credibility problem with not only the world but its own people as well. The distance between the US's Realpolitik and it's rhetoric has become so great that they now polar opposites. Official U.S. positions have devolved into literal doublespeak. It is an unstable situation all-around. There are no WMDs in Iraq. The Afghan War is lost. The War on Drugs is a failure. The U.S. economy is a hollow, paper-tiger. The U.S. leadership ineffectual and functions primarily to divert largess to the powerful and corrupt. Most of all, there is no American Way: the U.S. does not give a shit about freedom, democracy, justice, environmentalism, capitalism, or any other ideals... And everybody knows it.

      Wikileaks and the social movement it represents is the inevitable response to decades of corruption, deceit, and duplicity out of Washington. Is is it strictly fair? Certainly not. Will it likely interfere with legitimate operations of the government? Of course. But that's not why the establishment is angry, and it's certainly no reason for Wikileaks to stop.

      In my opinion, Wikileaks represents a safety valve. It is blowing off the dangerous pressure that has built up in a relatively safe and controlled fashion. The worst thing that could happen at this point, is for their work to be stopped or for them to be removed from the equation. If that happens, the next release of pressure will be far more damaging and less controlled.

      For instance, imagine in the future you are an activist in possession of a large amount of government information which you feel should be made public. If the establishment gets its wish and makes an examples out of Assange and wikileaks, what incentive would you have to even attempt analyzing and redacting legitimately classified information? As just one person or a small group (because large groups such as wikileaks and cryptome have been disbanded), you might not even have the resources and know-how to do so if you tried. So what do you do? If you seek assistance, you risk exposing yourself. The only logical response is to not bother censoring anything at all, as this is logistically simpler and personally safer.

      Just as disabling a safety valve does nothing to fix the underlying problem and creates the conditions for catastrophic failure, pretending that wikileaks is the cause our woes instead of a natural, healthy response to what actually ails us would be a disastrous mistake. The potential for far graver consequences than a few disgraced diplomats looms. -Grym

    35. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by teh*fink · · Score: 1

      Well said, and thought provoking.

      --
      "I DARE you to make less sense!"
    36. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interesting viewpoint - but is it actually true? Russia, China and North Korea weren't hit at all as far as I can see.

    37. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by brit74 · · Score: 1

      I do not consider his statement to be dumb at all, since I want laws to be perceived as just by the people.

      "The people" are composed of more than "the youth". Also, the fact that many youth are pirating stuff doesn't automatically mean "the laws are unjust" - otherwise, you'd have to say that "the people don't support laws against underage drinking, traffic laws, etc, as evidenced by the fact that people are breaking those laws."

      Sure, lots of youths don't like laws against piracy (just as they don't like laws against underage drinking, smoking pot, etc), but that's more an issue of education and youthful self-centeredness.

      "All those laws which you claim he would also need to disavow have strong support from the people."

      And that's a different argument because you expanded it from "the youth" to "the people" and changed it from "breaking the laws" to whether or not they support the laws. (I know some people who pirate stuff and they consider it an absolutely wrong thing to do. Case in point: the podcaster Keith Malley says that he pirates stuff and he's a scumbag just like all the other pirates, so pirates need to stop trying to convince him that pirating is perfectly okay.)

    38. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by RewriteQuran · · Score: 0

      Why none of the US Senators condemning Assange arrest?

      --
      Govt must constitute a panel to rewrite US Constitution and Quran
    39. Re:Ummm, because it is different information? by I+cant+believe+its+n · · Score: 1

      Sorry for the late reply.

      You claim that I expanded my arguments from "the youth" to "the people" and from "breaking the law" to weather or not they support the laws. I've tried to argue from the position that "the people" must perceive laws imposed upon them to be just, all the time. I'm sorry if I strayed off course.

      A large percentage of our voters break the law when they speed on the motorway, but still a large percentage of the voters also support those same traffic laws. Although a majority of Swedish youth now file-share illegally, me arguing against making this illegal (the law came into effect in 2006, making the sharing of copyrighted files not-for-profit illegal, beyond your closest relatives and a "few" friends) was that the VOTERS, not only file-sharing youth, would consider such a law unjust. When the voters did not want the law and the then would-be prime minister stated before the election that "we can not criminalize and entire generation of youths" the voters/"the people" took this to mean "we will not impose this law on the people". He then proceeded to act on US pressure which had been present from 2004 and onwards, and imposed this type of law on "the people".

      I do not file-share illegally but I still can not see how something that strongly reminds me of recording music from the radio when I was young can be such a crime. A lot of the Swedish voters see it the same way. Back then, if you "broke a window" you or your parents had to pay for a new window. Now if you "break a window" you or your parents have to pay for all the broken windows on the planet, because it is easier for the people who own buildings. "Break a window an we will destroy you" does not feel just. (I read that you also did not support hefty fines in file-sharers. I'm just trying to make you see how otherwise sane and honest Swedish voters could possibly be against this law.)

      --
      She made the willows dance
  23. Re:Does this mean... by chibiace · · Score: 0

    oh noes!~!@!

    --
    he who controls the spice controls the universe
  24. Re:Does this mean... by AndrewNeo · · Score: 1

    I misread that as PlayStations and the Department of Defense.

  25. Re: Assanges-chief-accuser-has-her-own-history by spun · · Score: 3, Insightful

    No, in other words, she worked directly with a group funded by the CIA.

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  26. Not a good argument by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 1

    Just because the statements made against Ellsburg back in the 70s were similar to those made against Wikileaks now doesn't infer that Wikileaks has the same moral high ground. Either Wikileaks' actions stand on their own merits, or they fail.

    Drawing a poor analogy: If I call someone a liar, it's not automatically a falsehood just because Joe Wilson called Barack Obama a liar a year or so ago. You have to look at the circumstances and evaluate whether the statements are true in each case.

    --
    #DeleteChrome
    1. Re:Not a good argument by lwsimon · · Score: 1

      I agree, but that's a bad example. I can show you videotaped instances where Barack Obama *has* lied.

      Just sayin'.

      --
      Learn about Photography Basics.
    2. Re:Not a good argument by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Just because the statements made against Ellsburg back in the 70s were similar to those made against Wikileaks now doesn't infer that Wikileaks has the same moral high ground.

      Can you infer that the same talk about dire consequences and "putting lives at risk" bullshit is going to turn out to be just as prophetic now as they were back then?

      --

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

    3. Re:Not a good argument by Steeltoe · · Score: 1

      Then you should send that to the press.

      After all, weren't Clinton put out of office because of a supposed lie, because he didn't regard oral-sex as Sex?

    4. Re:Not a good argument by lwsimon · · Score: 1

      Clinton was impeached, but not removed from office.

      Obama ran for President on a platform that included letting the Bush tax cuts expire. This week, he gave a speech wherein he explained that allowing them to be renewed would be stimulating to the economy, and therefore he's reached a "compromise".

      See this site: http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/promises/

      --
      Learn about Photography Basics.
    5. Re:Not a good argument by Danse · · Score: 1

      Clinton was impeached, but not removed from office.

      Obama ran for President on a platform that included letting the Bush tax cuts expire. This week, he gave a speech wherein he explained that allowing them to be renewed would be stimulating to the economy, and therefore he's reached a "compromise".

      See this site: http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/promises/

      True, he said that, but he obviously doesn't believe that it's an efficient or sensible way to spend that money, as we can get much more economic stimulus from using it in more efficient ways, like he did with the other tax cuts he got as part of the deal or the unemployment benefits extension. While it was one of his campaign promises, he's not the only one that gets a say in it, and Congress certainly wasn't willing to let it happen. I think he made the right decision, even though I'm not sure he really got the best deal he could have gotten. I don't have much faith in his negotiation skills, and the Democrats in general suck at getting their message across.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    6. Re:Not a good argument by lwsimon · · Score: 1

      I'm slowly coming to the realization that while I have an utter hatred for the rhetoric of Obama, he's been utterly incapable of making any real impact.

      The real enemy is Congress, and we seem to have made a real impact this time around. We'll see how that holds up - if the freshmen in both houses continue to stay true to their campaign lines, or turn into establishment Republicans.

      I'm glad of my contributions to the "Elect more Pauls" fund, though. They seem to be working out.

      --
      Learn about Photography Basics.
    7. Re:Not a good argument by Thing+1 · · Score: 1

      No. He lasted until the end of his term.

      --
      I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
  27. Re:Does this mean... by Surt · · Score: 1

    He's accused of having non-consensual sex. The claim is that there was consensual sex up to a point, but the woman asked him to stop and he failed to do so, at which point it became non-consensual.

    --
    "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
  28. Written by Michael Ellsberg by wonkavader · · Score: 3, Informative

    "Daniel Ellsberg, who released the pentagon papers in 1971, has written an editorial on the subject..."

    The editorial was written by Michael Ellsberg, not Daniel Ellsberg, though it quotes Daniel Ellsberg.

    1. Re:Written by Michael Ellsberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      Check out Daniel Ellsberg's site.
      http://www.ellsberg.net/archive/public-accuracy-press-release#more-451

      you'll find he's very much involved with the editoral posted above.

    2. Re:Written by Michael Ellsberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, you are wrong. The news release (not an editorial), which was written and signed by Daniel Ellsberg, among others, was posted to his ellsberg.net website by Michael Ellsberg. Michael Ellsberg did not write the news release.

  29. Re:Does this mean... by fishexe · · Score: 2

    Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't Assange accused of having consexual sex?

    Yes. The formal charge is consensual sex contrary to the condom laws of Sweden. Previous charges of non-consensual sex have been dropped.

    --
    "I don't care about the Constitution!" --Bill O'Reilly, November 17, 2009
  30. Assange is going to come out of this a hero by Animats · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Assange is going to come out of this a hero. The "rape charge" is already falling apart. The press is now mostly supporting Assange. Give it a week, and there will be calls for resignations of some Government officials.

    Some of his opponents are already in trouble. One of the "commentators" calling for calling for Assange to be killed is now the subject of a complaint that he was inciting to commit murder.

    Meanwhile, Wikileaks remains online, and response times are good.

    1. Re:Assange is going to come out of this a hero by Requia · · Score: 1

      Assange is going to come out of this a corpse.

      --
      By all means mod me troll. I'm always happy to see my enemies are afraid to debate me.
    2. Re:Assange is going to come out of this a hero by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We've seen worthless politicians hit and kill people on the road or worse, and get away without so much a slap on the wrist because of diplomatic immunity. Why can't you apply your way of thinking to protect this guy?

      Weather the charges he faces are real or not, it honestly doesn't matter anymore. The good that will come out of this whole situation will easily offset those accusations.

    3. Re:Assange is going to come out of this a hero by Toze · · Score: 1

      You know, I was going to make a post about how that was likely only if he went after the Russians like he promised, but then I realized that the small-minded petty thugs busy ordering DNS servers and credit card companies to deny service to WikiLeaks aren't long-sighted enough to realize the implications that an assassination would have on their careers- or they are, and are sufficiently insulated to be reasonably sure they won't face consequences.

      Good luck, Mr. Assange.

      --
      No OS on the planet can protect itself from a user with the admin password. - Yvan256
    4. Re:Assange is going to come out of this a hero by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Assange is going to come out of this a hero.

      Assange is already a hero, and if he were American I'd say that he is a great one. At significant risk to himself, he struck a powerful blow against corruption and tyranny. The more he is persecuted the more powerful (although not more heroic) his act becomes.

    5. Re:Assange is going to come out of this a hero by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Absolutely right.

      There must be at least 5 people within the intelligence community (including State Dept) whose bad decisions let these "secrets" out in the first place. From bad security policy to bad software selection to contractor and govt incompetence. For these job-for-lifers the media attention to Wikileaks sounds like "mission accomplished!' Our mainstream media is SO SO easily manipulated.

    6. Re:Assange is going to come out of this a hero by SinGunner · · Score: 1

      This is what bothers me more than anything. Anyone able to remain that calm in the spotlight is probably a bit of a dick. I'd like Wikileaks to turn out to be a hero and everyone to slowly forget the name Julian Assange. But then again, nobody wants to remember the message, just the name (I'm looking at you, Christians, Buddhists, etc.).

    7. Re:Assange is going to come out of this a hero by dbIII · · Score: 2

      The "rape charge" is already falling apart.

      It fell apart within the first few hours when the boss of the person that laid the charges came into work and dismissed the charges, but by then, ironically, they had been illegally leaked to the press. The charges been only been revived because it is politically convenient.

    8. Re:Assange is going to come out of this a hero by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 1

      Assassination is pretty much ineffective. It works in movies. Not so much in real life. You think wikileaks is run by just one person do you?

      Character assassination on the other hand.....

      --
      The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
    9. Re:Assange is going to come out of this a hero by Requia · · Score: 1

      No, I think that between the governments he's pissed off, the Banks he's threatened, and the mercenary companies whose illegal actions he's exposed, at least one will be dumb enough to think killing him will solve problems.

      This is of course assuming he doesn't get shanked for being a sex offender once he's in a US prison.

      --
      By all means mod me troll. I'm always happy to see my enemies are afraid to debate me.
  31. This is worse than the New York Times in 1971 by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The New York Times, after publishing the Pentagon Papers, did not have its bank accounts frozen. Their legal defense was able to proceed without losing their defense fund.

    1. Re:This is worse than the New York Times in 1971 by Heretic2 · · Score: 1

      And who says the gov't doesn't improve? They've obviously gotten a lot better at this.

    2. Re:This is worse than the New York Times in 1971 by TrancePhreak · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure, but I think the New York Times also didn't give false info to Swiss banks so they could have a bank account there.

      --

      -]Phreak Out[-
    3. Re:This is worse than the New York Times in 1971 by Sovetskysoyuz · · Score: 1

      The New York Times wasn't likely to skip bail.

    4. Re:This is worse than the New York Times in 1971 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That was one bank account.
      What does it have to do with Paypal, Visa, Mastercard blocking donations to WikiLeaks? Nothing.

  32. Re:Does this mean... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just the other day the Pope announced he's going to move the whole of Vatican over here.

    (I'm Swedish. We're not allowed outside without condoms)

  33. Good by e-d0uble · · Score: 1

    I was wondering if and when Ellsberg would weigh-in on this sad story. Can't wait to read what he has to say, and will do so when his site is no longer slashdotted.. At this moment ellsberg.net is giving: "Error establishing a database connection"

  34. Re:raep by spun · · Score: 5, Interesting

    No, but there was this:

    Ellsberg later claimed that after his trial ended, Watergate prosecutor William H. Merrill informed him of an aborted plot by Liddy and the "plumbers" to have 12 Cuban-Americans who had previously worked for the CIA to "totally incapacitate" Ellsberg as he appeared at a public rally, though it is unclear whether that meant to assassinate Ellsberg or merely to hospitalize him.[24][25] In his autobiography, Liddy describes an "Ellsberg neutralization proposal" originating from Howard Hunt, which involved drugging Ellsberg with LSD, by dissolving it in his soup, at a fund-raising dinner in Washington in order to "have Ellsberg incoherent by the time he was to speak" and thus "make him appear a near burnt-out drug case" and "discredit him". The plot involved waiters from the Miami Cuban community. According to Liddy, when the plan was finally approved, "there was no longer enough lead time to get the Cuban waiters up from their Miami hotels and into place in the Washington Hotel where the dinner was to take place" and the plan was "put into abeyance pending another opportunity".

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  35. Re: Assanges-chief-accuser-has-her-own-history by MozeeToby · · Score: 1

    If the CIA were going to frame him for rape, I'd think they could do a better job of it than they did. No evidence, flimsy and contradictory testimony by the victims, crazy interpretations of the law, public and friendly interactions with him after the fact, waiting days before making the accusation, not even an accusation of violence. I would imagine that a CIA frame up would be a bit better constructed that the case against him is.

  36. Re:No Surprise There by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why can't you post one opinion (there have been many published) that don't agree with what Wikileaks is doing here.

    there aren't any coherent opinions to that effect, bro. the existence of wikileaks or a comparable entity is implied by the existence of the internet. you're asking them to post something that doesn't exist.

  37. Re:No Surprise There by The+Moof · · Score: 4, Insightful

    All you have to do is look at how that post was modded to know why you don't see opposing opinions on the matter (unless you browse at -1).

    There are some valid points on both sides, and my personal beliefs on the matter tend run in line with Wikileaks. However, anything brought up here that may look at this with any negative light on Wikileaks are usually censored with mod points (and, based on my experience, met with anti-American insults).

  38. Re: Assanges-chief-accuser-has-her-own-history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Actually, this smells of a 100% typical CIA op. It is the same organization that planned to topple the Cuban regime by chemically shaving Castro. Can you get any more stupid than that?

    You should not believe Tom Clancy's books so much, you know. In reality, Jack Ryan never shot anyone in London, and the only non-GS job he's ever had was his brief appointment as a Secretary of the Treasury, where he was instrumental in helping Lehman Brothers sink.

    While his dumber subordinates were covering for Madoff.

  39. Overblown Response by anonicon · · Score: 2

    Wow, interesting early comments. I remember the Pentagon Papers release (their release caused Nixon to go into a paranoid overdrive that resulted in Watergate) and the blowback it caused due to the government's lies.

    Frankly, the more secrets they release, the more transparent national leaders' lies will be to the public. That's not to say that's good or bad, it just is.

    As for being a traitor to America or Russia or the banking system, riiiiiight.

  40. Wilkileaks on Guantanamo by Animats · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Some of the cables shed light on why closing down Guantanamo is so hard. The US has some captured Kuwaitis, and Kuwait doesn't want them back. Kuwaiti Minister of Interior Shaykh Jaber al-Khalid Al Sabah: "If they are rotten, they are rotten and the best thing to do is get rid of them. You picked them up in Afghanistan; you should drop them off in Afghanistan, in the middle of the war zone." About a group of Iranian drug smugglers the US had captured after their boat foundered, he said "God meant to punish them with death and you saved them. Why?"

    1. Re:Wilkileaks on Guantanamo by MartinSchou · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Why are drug smugglers being kept in Guantanamo? Wasn't that particular prison designed for highly dangerous terrorists? Drug smugglers aren't terrorists.

      Now, one can argue that the drug trade funds terrorism, and that argument is being made quite a bit, but why not bring terrorism charges against every day US citizens buying and selling drugs then?

    2. Re:Wilkileaks on Guantanamo by L4t3r4lu5 · · Score: 1

      According to the Season 3 DVD of House I watched last night, piracy (copyright infringement) also funds terrorism.

      I think Jammie Rassett-Thomas got off quite likely, as far as charges go!

      --
      Finally had enough. Come see us over at https://soylentnews.org/
    3. Re:Wilkileaks on Guantanamo by radtea · · Score: 1

      Why are drug smugglers being kept in Guantanamo?

      For the same reason innocent people are being held in Guantanamo Bay: all power gets used, and without the check of a robust legal system police powers will be used however the police feel like using them. In this case the "police" are the various DHS agencies and the US military, and they have been given free reign by the American government to operate beyond the law.

      Unless people being held in Gauntanamo have full access to the US legal system there will be a very substantial levening of innocents and people guilty of crimes unrelated to terrorism there.

      --
      Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
    4. Re:Wilkileaks on Guantanamo by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      Some of the cables shed light on why closing down Guantanamo is so hard.

      Agreed. Why? Because the US doesn't have the balls to try them as criminals. If they're criminals, trial and imprisonment are perfectly reasonable, and the US should have no need to attempt to return them to their country of origin. If they're innocent, the US should have no trouble returning them to their country of origin.

      But, of course, the US government is spineless, the citizenry doubly so.

  41. Different era by JockTroll · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That was the Seventies. This is the 21st Century. Back then people rioted, now they keep their heads down. Nowadays, Ellsberg would be silenced, nobody would print his story, and he would have an international arrest warrant issued against him for, huh, farting without authorization. Welcome to the Age of the Wimp.

    --
    Geeks are so full of shit that "beating the crap out of them" takes a whole new meaning.
    1. Re:Different era by Un+pobre+guey · · Score: 1

      That's fucked up. I've heard Gen Y kids try to contradict the notion that TSA engages in unlawful search and seizure. They find the "it's for our safety" a perfectly reasonable argument. God help us.

    2. Re:Different era by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm from Generation Y. I find the TSA's behavior to be unlawful and an abuse of their power. I realize there is an inherit danger in taking any aircraft, and no amount of the kind of security they keep pushing out will have a tremendous effect.

      You're welcome.

    3. Re:Different era by The+End+Of+Days · · Score: 1

      SIlenced? Nobody would print his story? Are you paying any attention here, or maybe this whole Wikileaks thing is a figment of the collective human imagination?

    4. Re:Different era by Un+pobre+guey · · Score: 1

      Thanks! I needed to read that.

    5. Re:Different era by Danse · · Score: 1

      SIlenced? Nobody would print his story? Are you paying any attention here, or maybe this whole Wikileaks thing is a figment of the collective human imagination?

      I think he's referring to Americans, and attempting to work through the mainstream media rather than something like Wikileaks.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
  42. Re:No Surprise There by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm not of the position that wikileaks should not exist, but consider some counterarguments. The consequences may be the opposite of honest, open, accountable governments, which are presumed to be desirable. Diplomats all over might no longer be candid in communications knowing that anything they say may turn up later.

  43. Are they "Public Domain" now? by Heretic2 · · Score: 1

    You know, I'm really curious. I remember the big thing about the Pentagon papers was that a sitting Congressman entered the whole of the Pentagon papers into Congressional record during a meeting of a committee this Congressman was on. Wikipedia search says he name was Gavel and there was a Supreme Court case over it.

    I do see some differences with the Pentagon Papers. First the Papers were not widely disseminated on a network where anyone could get them. Since it's all over the Internet by now, does this mean it's going to become Public Domain? I don't see how it couldn't, there's no putting the cat back in the bag on this one. Secondly, the Pentagon Papers were kept from the vast majority of Congress and even National Security Advisors at the time. The majority of the state cables I'm guessing was pretty well known throughout Congress, the State Department, etc.

    Anyway, I'm sure there will be some legal precedents set here. I'm curious to see what...

    1. Re:Are they "Public Domain" now? by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      does this mean it's going to become Public Domain?

      This isn't about copyright, so that doesn't matter. No one has made any copyright assertions regarding the case. It is about the data being classified, which the data still is. Privacy issues may also be a factor for some of the emails, but that is pretty much overshadowed by the classified nature, and that it was official email, not personal. And for that matter, not all the data is classified, and the government would still be going after him if he only released info that wasn't classified.

      I'm not a big fan of how Wikileaks operates (too much showboating and drama) and even disagree with releasing some of the data that they released previously, but jacking him up with trumped up charges by putting pressure on other governments, when he isn't subject to US law to begin with, well, that makes the US government a much bigger asshole than Assange is, so it is pretty hard to not take his side in the matter.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    2. Re:Are they "Public Domain" now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Generally speaking, anything created by the US government is already in the public domain (or at least not copyrightable). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copyright_status_of_work_by_the_U.S._government Of course documents may be classified, and therefore not released, but it has little/nothing to do with copyright.

    3. Re:Are they "Public Domain" now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This isn't about copyright, so that doesn't matter.

      Tell that to Amazon....

  44. Now VISA.COM is down! by arcite · · Score: 5, Funny

    Go see for yourself!

  45. Re:Does this mean... by falzer · · Score: 1

    He also did not cuddle afterwords, for which he may get the chair.

  46. Re:Does this mean... by Gilmoure · · Score: 1

    The Air Force is building a super computer using like a 1000 playstations. They're part of the DoD I think.

    --
    I drank what? -- Socrates
  47. The reaction makes it worse by AllWorkAndNoPlay · · Score: 1

    It's sad that the US Government would go so far out of it's way in the face of basic guaranteed freedoms. It seems that their efforts to control the situation are backfiring one after another. I don't think the MasterCard/Visa cable would have been nearly as interesting or shocking if it weren't for the pageantry leading up to it's release. So many of these cables fall flat from "smoking gun" whoppers that everyone expected. I'm not saying there aren't a few gems in there, but it seems like it is mostly mundane communications that no one would have been terribly surprised by. The stories released are scrutinized so much more by disenfranchised citizens, and on the world stage, because of this giant PR abortion.

    Agree with it or not, this is NOT the way to handle a bad PR situation. They clearly didn't learn from their mistakes the first time. I for one look forward to seeing them flail around the next time they make the same mistakes.

  48. Re:Does this mean... by Gilmoure · · Score: 1

    Surely you can't be serious!

    --
    I drank what? -- Socrates
  49. Hell, I'm Spartacus too, Mr. Ellsberg! by Aristophon · · Score: 1

    I'm Spartacus and I'm glad Anonymous is too. Power to the people!

    --
    "Nothing we despise in the other person is entirely absent from ourselves." -- Pastor Dietrich Bonhoeffer
  50. Not prior restraint here by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

    The other day, Lieberman (who is looooong past his expiration date as a politician. Let's get with the program, Connecticut) was mouthing off on Fox News about how the New York Times should be investigated for espionage for cooperating with Wikileaks and publishing the cables. It's like, has he really never heard of New York Times v United States [wikipedia.org]?

    One might note that NY Times v. United States only invalidated the injunction preventing the publication on prior restraint grounds, it explicitly allowed the government to prosecute those involved for publishing. And, in fact, the government did prosecute them (the prosecution was thrown out due to actions of the government that were tangential to the charges, including illegally wiretaps for which they then claimed to have lost the tapes.)

    Since the government did not, in this case, seek an injunction imposing prior restraint on publication of the information, the applicability of NY Times v. U.S. would seem to be remote at best.

  51. Re: Assanges-chief-accuser-has-her-own-history by AGMW · · Score: 1

    If the CIA were going to frame him for rape, I'd think they could do a better job of it than they did. No evidence, flimsy and contradictory testimony by the victims, crazy interpretations of the law, public and friendly interactions with him after the fact, waiting days before making the accusation, not even an accusation of violence. I would imagine that a CIA frame up would be a bit better constructed that the case against him is.

    Actually, all they need to do is get him to Sweden and from there a rendition flight back to the Good 'ol US-of-A where the real fun starts.

    --
    Eclectic beats from Leeds, UK
    handmadehands.co.uk
  52. Re:No Surprise There by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    Personally, I'd consider diplomats being "diplomatic" in their choice of words a step ahead. Right now it feels like office gossipping, i.e. smiling at your boss or coworker when they're around and then telling very ugly stories about them as soon as they turn their back. With a more "delicate" approach, one might arrive at a more sophisticated way of communication and in the long run a more friendly diplomatic climate altogether.

    I can see the threat of even less information being recorded, of course. Yet, let's be honest, certain information has to be recorded, like it or not. The real solution would of course be to establish some kind of supervising entity that oversees everything... but then again, who gets to be that, and who would supervise them?

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  53. Difference by jav1231 · · Score: 0

    I think where Wikileaks loses sympathy is with the release of diplomatic cables that have no other purpose than to release them. It's one thing to release information of wrong-doing. It's another altogether to release materials simply because you have them and can. It's disappointing that a) Ellsberg would equate the two and b) that Wikileaks is attempting to justify it.

    For that reason I'm against Wikileaks. I don't consider them a journalistic organization. The NYT wouldn't ever say, "Look if you go after our reporter we'll release even more information!" They would take a stand or not take a stand. So Wikileaks really throws any media protection they may have had out the window. They've moved into a retaliatory mode. I'm not sure this doesn't make their actions combative and therefore a legitimate threat.

    1. Re:Difference by BradleyUffner · · Score: 2

      I think where Wikileaks loses sympathy is with the release of diplomatic cables that have no other purpose than to release them. It's one thing to release information of wrong-doing. It's another altogether to release materials simply because you have them and can. It's disappointing that a) Ellsberg would equate the two and b) that Wikileaks is attempting to justify it.

      For that reason I'm against Wikileaks. I don't consider them a journalistic organization. The NYT wouldn't ever say, "Look if you go after our reporter we'll release even more information!" They would take a stand or not take a stand. So Wikileaks really throws any media protection they may have had out the window. They've moved into a retaliatory mode. I'm not sure this doesn't make their actions combative and therefore a legitimate threat.

      How do you know is or isn't important at the time? Some minor paper that at first glance appears totally trivial could provide the one piece of information that adds the context necessary to understand something much larger.

    2. Re:Difference by The+Breeze · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Every government on the planet is calling for Wikileaks to shut down. It seems like they are twisting the legal system, and that we are being governed by immoral, corrupt bastards who will break any law, twist any fact, in their effort to smear anyone who dares speak the truth.

      Under that standard, and under the belief that Tom Jefferson said that a corrupt government has no authority, I see that Wikileaks has no option but to use any and all means to defend itself. The governments will piss on their own laws and due process to crush Wikileaks; therefore Wikileaks is perfectly justified in trying to destroy the governments' credibility by publishing every bit of damaging info that they can.

      Anyone who thinks that any truly dangerous information that Wikileaks has isn't already in the hands of our enemies is living in a dream world. Wikileaks' greatest "crime" is revealing that the massive security appartus of the state has no idea what the hell it is doing and is useless against anyone with a brain. It's a money & freedom consuming monster that does more harm than good to the society it purports to protect.

    3. Re:Difference by VortexCortex · · Score: 2

      The NYT wouldn't ever say, "Look if you go after our reporter we'll release even more information!" They would take a stand or not take a stand. So Wikileaks really throws any media protection they may have had out the window. They've moved into a retaliatory mode. I'm not sure this doesn't make their actions combative and therefore a legitimate threat.

      The NYT has much more resources and people than Wikileaks does.

      Put yourself in their shoes:
      I have all this juicy information that I think the public should know about. I want to comb through, redact, and release the info (with the help of large news orgs like NYT), but I'm scared that I may get disappeared before I've had the chance. I've distributed an encrypted copy of the info for which the key will be released if I'm dead to make sure the info can't be suppressed, and to reduce the benefit of killing me in the first place.

    4. Re:Difference by BitZtream · · Score: 1

      If you think EVER government in the world is corrupt, you have issues you need to work out.

      I suggest you at least not broadcast you feel that way, it makes you sound like a raving nutter.

      --
      Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
    5. Re:Difference by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 3, Insightful

      No, he is quite correct. Every government in the world is corrupt, not only that but every government that has ever existed was corrupt. The only difference between them is the degree of corruption. Anyone who believes otherwise is a naive dolt who has no business outside of a kindergarten.

      Why is this so? It is very simple: governments are nothing but collections of people with power over others. In this analysis it is irrelevant what basis that power is derived from - be it hereditary despotism or democratic media circus or something else entirely - it matters not. That is because people are imperfect and corruptible to various degrees irrespective of their location in the world or a political scheme they were raised within. Laws of probability alone guarantee that a number of corrupt individuals is present, and was present, in every possible governmental scheme, with the absolute numbers present increasing with the size of a government. Even if others within the same government detect the corruption and work against it (which itself is based on chance) there will be only so many that get expelled and due to natural generational cycles they will be replaced with new crooks elsewhere.

      Its basic, historically testable, undeniable logic. It is the way things are. Corruption-free government is a theoretical ideal that has never been (and will likely never be) achieved as long as the nature of the human race does not somehow change dramatically.

    6. Re:Difference by AK+Marc · · Score: 2

      New Zealand was found to be one of the least corrupt government on the planet (top 3, I think). And they've had a number of politicians step down within the past year because of corruption. Sure, not the massively bad stuff, just little stuff like expense fraud and such, but still certainly not zero. And yes, the politicians work with corporations to make decisions that may benefit donors above constituents.

    7. Re:Difference by jimicus · · Score: 1

      Now this is very true, and it's also an interesting point.

      I can't think of any past incident which has simultaneously threatened so many governments. There's been loads of instances where leaks have seriously damaged - and even collapsed - a single government. But here we're looking at things which could damage governments the world over.

      Paradoxically, the best chance Julian Assange has to survive is probably if he's thrown in prison. Lots of countries are run by governments with a rather lower tolerance for people who embarrass them - governments that don't mouth off to the press, they just quietly send someone with a phial of poison over to meet whoever's upsetting them. Sooner or later (if they haven't already) Wikileaks is going to release something that affects such a government.

      While I'm not sure killing Assange would make one whit of difference to what's going on now, it'd send a powerful message to anyone else who wants to run such a site: "Embarrass us and you too can die horribly!".

    8. Re:Difference by Jedi+Alec · · Score: 2

      Every government on the planet is calling for Wikileaks to shut down.

      Really? Because I just did some digging and so far I can find exactly 2 governments that have said so, being the US and France. I see a ton of press debating both sides of the issue, as well as stances being taken by elected officials, but no calls to shut it down.

      --

      People replying to my sig annoy me. That's why I change it all the time.
    9. Re:Difference by jav1231 · · Score: 1

      My point is I don't think it is going down as altruistic as Assange would have us believe. Why should the cables be released? I'm not convinced that the public needs to know about what diplomats are discussing if it's not illegal. And for the most part, that appears to be the case. The cables are the pawns to protect the release of so-called "war crimes." And Assange gets to decide what is and isn't a war crime. They're left the realm of "media" and have turned against various states in what their follows admit is a war. Hopefully, they'll be treated like soldiers and dealt with. I'm all for whistle-blowing but this has gotten way out of hand.

    10. Re:Difference by VortexCortex · · Score: 1

      I'm all for whistle-blowing...

      No, you are certainly not.
      You seem to be partially for whistle-blowing, so long as the whistle-blowing reveals illegal activity.

      I'm not convinced that the public needs to know about what diplomats are discussing if it's not illegal.

      What harm does releasing documents that reveal non-illegal activity cause? Embarrassment? I, as a voter, need to make informed decisions. I am denied the very information I need to make these decisions without releases like this.
      Note: Freedom of Information Act is very limited, and would not have revealed these, as you say, perfectly legal activities.

      Now, as for the illegal activities you say should be revealed -- Who make the laws that determine the legality of their actions? Hint: The very same that are performing the "illegal" actions.

      An Example:

      Before the Patriot Act the US government was illegally spying on the citizens, and major Telecom companies were aiding in this illegal activity. Guess what? With the Patriot Act in play it is no longer illegal to do the illegal activities that were already taking place. The Telecom's were retroactively granted immunity for their crimes against the public as well.

      Far too much information is kept from the public that shouldn't be. Things that shouldn't be secret or top-secret are labeled as such.

      I wonder if things would have turned out differently if the Stamp Act, and Tea Act would have been "classified" information, having the increased prices simply rolled into the sale prices of paper and tea? I'm certain this would have been better for the English Government than their Colonies (read: citizens).

    11. Re:Difference by jav1231 · · Score: 1

      First, don't put words in my mouth. Second, you don't vote for diplomats. You "as a voter" have very little to do with who becomes a diplomat. Advantage, moi.

      There's a reason many things are kept secret. I don't have a problem with it. I think we have whistle-blowers who risk life and limb to bring these to light and in cases of illegal activity or more importantly, injustices, that's good. Wikileaks is nothing more than a bunch of petulant attention whores who thought it would be cool to poke their finger in the eye of the U.S. and other countries. I say that because, again I'll point out, they went beyond what they thought was injustice and started releasing everything.

      It's sad to see Anonymous get involved. I generally think much of their work is fairly altruistic. Defending Assange isn't, however. This man should be prosecuted along with anyone else who can be from Wikileaks. They lost the high ground. They got their attention. Now they should live with it.

      As for the British, the Tea Act, and the Colonies we eventually revolted as a nation. But it wasn't for such leftist ideals. I'm fully convinced, however, that the left in the U.S. will eventually have to secede, that or the conservatives. We'll see how transparent their (your?) new government is. Remember Obama and Pelosi promised the most transparent government ever.

  54. sex! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "The truth is that every attack now made on WikiLeaks and Julian Assange was made against me and the release of the Pentagon Papers at the time."

    So, Ellsberg had sex with^H^H^H"raped" Swedish women?

  55. Vietnam war was never about Vietnam. by AJWM · · Score: 1

    I'm inclined to believe we were actually "Winning" and lying about it.

    Ding ding ding! Give the man a cigar.

    The Vietnam war was, strategically, about stretching it out to siphon Soviet assets (military and otherwise) into that conflict and away from Eastern Europe. Yes it had secondary objectives more local to the region and much of the actual execution sucked donkey balls (although never as bad as portrayed in the media), The military defeat didn't happen until after the US and allied forces withdrew and Congress reneged on promised support to South Vietnam, leaving them twisting in the wind.

    --
    -- Alastair
    1. Re:Vietnam war was never about Vietnam. by Maudib · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The Vietnam war was, strategically, about stretching it out to siphon Soviet assets
      How many Soviet combat troops were there in Vietnam again? Oh right, zero. The soviets provided limited support, but Hannoi wasn't such a fan of the Soviets, so it was very limited. The U.S.'s grand strategic vision was to commit half its fighting force and political capital to a theater with almost no Soviet involvement? How does this not qualify as a loss? At best it would be an egregious miscalculation...

      The military defeat didn't happen until after the US and allied forces withdrew and Congress reneged on promised support to South Vietnam
      "allied forces withdrew", yes, this is what happens when you are loosing a war and decide to stop fighting it. The fact that there was a political element changes nothing. People like to say the U.S. didn't loose military. Who the hell cares? This isn't college football, there is ostensibly a reason/objective for waging war, achieving it is winning. Failing to achieve the objective (or never having one) means you lost.

      "war is the continuation of politics by other means." This isn't some hippy revisionist history theory. Its Von Claus, the grand daddy of western military theory and the Prussian says we lost.

    2. Re:Vietnam war was never about Vietnam. by AJWM · · Score: 0

      How many Soviet combat troops were there in Vietnam again?

      "Combat troops"!? The US and the USSR were facing each other down over the Iron Curtain with a few thousand nuclear bombs, and you're worried about troop counts? Vietnam was a skirmish in the Cold War. That's the war we won, and the only one we were ever worried about. It was a badly-run skirmish I'll grant, but still just a skirmish.

      --
      -- Alastair
    3. Re:Vietnam war was never about Vietnam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The poster was disagreeing with your claim:

      The Vietnam war was, strategically, about stretching it out to siphon Soviet assets (military and otherwise) into that conflict and away from Eastern Europe.

      Then now you mention nuclear bombs. If that's your supporting argument, your claim is wrong as the poster said.

      I doubt the Soviets had to move their "few thousand nuclear bombs" much just because of the Vietnam war, nor would it have cost them that much even if they had to.

    4. Re:Vietnam war was never about Vietnam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's actually 18th century Prussian Carl von Clausewitz, whose most famous book, Vom Krieg (On War) is still studied today at military academies worldwide.

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

      - US Air Force Academy Graduate, Military History

    5. Re:Vietnam war was never about Vietnam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm usually not one to be a spelling nazi, but in two of your most recent up-modded posts you misspelled "lose" (opposite of win) as "loose" (opposite of tight). Your posts are otherwise insightful and accurate. You might get more attention if you correct these types of things in the future.

      "Loosing" is a word, but you've probably never needed to use it.

    6. Re:Vietnam war was never about Vietnam. by Maudib · · Score: 1

      You are absolutely right that the U.S. won the cold war against the Soviets using a long term strategy of arms buildups and indirect competition.

      Its hard to argue that the Vietnam war was really even a skirmish in that given the relative absence of the Soviet's compared to the U.S.. If this was a battle in the Cold War, then the U.S. lost. If it wasn't, but was rather a war against North Vietnam, then the U.S. lost.

      The constant attempts to re-frame the Vietnam war as anything other then a loss for the U.S. reeks of jingoism. One should understand the war for what it was and the mistakes that were made so that they can be avoided. This is true weather one is a peace loving hippy or realpolitik master mind.

    7. Re:Vietnam war was never about Vietnam. by Maudib · · Score: 1

      "It is a damn poor mind indeed which can't
      think of at least two ways to spell any word."

    8. Re:Vietnam war was never about Vietnam. by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      this is what happens when you are loosing a war and decide to stop fighting it.

      Loosing a war stars a war. Losing a war ends it.

  56. Re:No Surprise There by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    All you have to do is look at how that post was modded to know why you don't see opposing opinions on the matter (unless you browse at -1).

    I'm seeing the post at 0 - which is the level of posts comming from AC-es. Like this one (which I chose to post as AC not to ruin my mod points on stupid arguments).

  57. Liability not a hero by Martin+Spamer · · Score: 0

    He's a massive liability for WikiLeaks and even WikiLeak insiders are starting to realise that ...

    "It has nothing whatsoever to do with WikiLeaks or the CIA and I regret very much that Julian Assange does not publicly say that himself."

    "I don't think it was a conspiracy, but this provided a golden opportunity for the enemies of WikiLeaks to use the situation"

    "I spoke to him (Assange) about this. I warned him that it was not a good way to behave ethically."

    "His (Assange) weakness was - is - women. I warned him it would cause him trouble."

    1. Re:Liability not a hero by zakeria · · Score: 1

      But this is Slashdot home of the intelligent moron and people that still believe in super hero's so it will go unnoticed!

    2. Re:Liability not a hero by djmurdoch · · Score: 3, Informative

      Those quotes are not from Wikileaks insiders. The first is from the lawyer representing the victims, and the others are from "an acquaintance".

  58. Re:No Surprise There by anyGould · · Score: 2

    Ellsberge and Assange are two peas in a pod. Why would anybody be surprised by this? This merits a front page story here?

    Unless there's a /. page 2 I haven't noticed, isn't every story a "front page story"?

    I can see some merit here - the "good leak" guy saying "you know, the only difference between me and him is that history hasn't moved on far enough for him to become a hero too."

  59. Re:No Surprise There by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm not of the position that wikileaks should not exist, but consider some counterarguments. The consequences may be the opposite of honest, open, accountable governments, which are presumed to be desirable. Diplomats all over might no longer be candid in communications knowing that anything they say may turn up later.

    My advice? Keep the pressure on govs to stay honest and transparent... instead of giving up because "wikileaks might not work.

  60. I think winning by goldcd · · Score: 1

    is a wonderfully subjective word - as it is entirely subjective and short-term-ist (I wish I had the vocabulary for the word that should have been there).

    People 'win' in Vegas, when they hit a jackpot. Nobody ever subtracts their previous losses from the total.

    If you play a game with pre-defined rules you can win in a clear fashion - We won a football game, I won a chess match etc.

    The term should NEVER be applied to any situation where the rules haven't been defined up-front. If we'd clearly stated we were going into Iraq to remove a nuclear threat - well we'd have forfeited that a long time ago.
    If we'd invaded Afghanistan with a rule of 50,000 lives limit (1/5, military/civilian split sub-clause) stated up-front, then maybe we could have pundits and stats and tracking and oh oh some swoopy CGI graphics.
    I'm not trying to cover my own personal feelings on various conflicts - but just get very pissed off when people just announce they've 'won' and somebody else has 'lost'

    1. Re:I think winning by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People 'win' in Vegas, when they hit a jackpot. Nobody ever subtracts their previous losses from the total.

      Sure they do. If you have $1 and you take it to Vegas and put it in the first machine you see and hit the jackpot and win $1000 and walk away, what do you have in your pocket afterwards? Thats right, you have $1000.. so technically your winnings are only $999, eh? That is your incomings ($1000) minus your outgoings ($1)..

      but the rest of your arguments, please carry on..

    2. Re:I think winning by SleazyRidr · · Score: 1

      "You can no more win a war than win an earthquake."

      I forget who said that. I think it might have been Mother Teresa.

  61. Re:Does this mean... by KeensMustard · · Score: 1

    Though this is not a claim supported by Assange nor the woman involved - which suggests that to be supported there must have been someone else in the room watching, and thus able to supply evidence contrary to that of the two primary parties.

  62. What?! by mosb1000 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I wish there was a +1 - holy fucking shit moderation. Every time I think my opinion of the US government can not get any worse, something else comes up. What's next? Am I going to find out they've been abducting little girls from daycare and shipping abroad as sex slaves to fund human mind control research?

    Don't answer that, I'll wait for the Wiki Leak.

    There really is no limit at all to human depravity.

    1. Re:What?! by squiggleslash · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The locals including a US contractor, DynCorp, taxpayers money, and a US government-organized cover-up.

      But remember kids, it's just diplomatic gossip, that would be irresponsible to make public!

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    2. Re:What?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you actually click the link and read that article. Fuck, did you even look at the URL?

    3. Re:What?! by mosb1000 · · Score: 1

      The article clearly says a government contractor paid for the party.

    4. Re:What?! by dbIII · · Score: 2

      What's next? Am I going to find out they've been abducting little girls from daycare and shipping abroad as sex slaves to fund human mind control research?

      That's disturbing close to what North Korea did with Japanese schoolgirls, only it was probably to train spies in addition to being sex slaves.

    5. Re:What?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Am I going to find out they've been abducting little girls from daycare and shipping abroad as sex slaves to fund human mind control research?

      No, why would anyone want to spend more money on research when it can be given to you favourite megacorp of choice directly.

    6. Re:What?! by VShael · · Score: 1

      Yes, even though you might *think* the mainstream media is treating wikileaks as a leading story, the fact that you hadn't even heard of this child-sex purchasing story, should show you how badly the mainstream media is doing its supposed job. (Their actual job, on the other hand, protecting the rich and powerful, they do reasonably well.)

    7. Re:What?! by DrBoumBoum · · Score: 1

      Your tax dollars at work!

    8. Re:What?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, you poor, small-minded, brain-less person. You appear to be able to spell correctly, so it's confounding why you are unable to read and/or comprehend what you read. Try again, perhaps, and maybe a tad slower? Dear me...

    9. Re:What?! by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Locals working for a US company which receives 95% of its $2bn-a-year profit from US taxpayers, held a party that included selling off boys for sex, with the full knowledge of the US government, which failed to do anything about it.

    10. Re:What?! by jonaskoelker · · Score: 1

      Am I going to find out they've been abducting little girls from daycare and shipping abroad as sex slaves to fund human mind control research?

      You could read Naomi Klein's "Shock Doctrine", the parts about the CIA.

      [side note: If you do, and if you read anything about Milton Freedman, I encourage you to read the Cato Institute's rebuttal. And maybe Listen to four episodes of EconTalk: the two with Freedman himself on it, and the two with Mike Munger (one of the "Chicago boys") about Chilean busses.]

  63. Re:Does this mean... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    condom brake. Girls say stop. He did not stop. Is that rape?

  64. Re:Does this mean... by sconeu · · Score: 1

    He is, and don't call him Shirley.

    --
    General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
  65. Re: Assanges-chief-accuser-has-her-own-history by badboy_tw2002 · · Score: 1

    He'll never touch US soil until they've gotten everything they need out of him. The "information extraction" will occur in Cuba or another secret prison.

  66. Re:No Surprise There by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are opinions to that effect, brah, and the rest of your post is a nonsequitur.

  67. Text of the cable: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/us-embassy-cables-documents/213720

    Wednesday, 24 June 2009, 11:37
    C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 03 KABUL 001651
    SIPDIS
    DEPARTMENT FOR SRAP, SCA/A, INL, EUR/RPM
    STATE PASS TO NSC FOR WOOD
    OSD FOR FLOURNOY
    CENTCOM FOR CG CJTF-82, POLAD, JICENT
    KABUL FOR COS USFOR-A
    EO 12958 DECL: 06/23/2019
    TAGS PREL, PGOV, MARR, MASS, AF
    SUBJECT: 06/23/09 MEETING, ASSISTANT AMB MUSSOMELI AND MOI
    MINISTER ATMAR: KUNDUZ DYNCORP PROBLEM, TRANSPORT FOR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES AND OTHER TOPICS
    REF: KABUL 1480
    Classified By: POLMIL COUNSELOR ROBERT CLARKE FOR REASONS 1.4 (B) AND ( D)

    1. (C) SUMMARY: Assistant Ambassador Mussomeli discussed a range of issues with Minister of Interior (MoI) Hanif Atmar on June 23. On the Kunduz Regional Training Center (RTC) DynCorp event of April 11 (reftel), Atmar reiterated his insistence that the U.S. try to quash any news article on the incident or circulation of a video connected with it. He continued to predict that publicity would "endanger lives." He disclosed that he has arrested two Afghan police and nine other Afghans as part of an MoI investigation into Afghans who facilitated this crime of "purchasing a service from a child." He pressed for CSTC-A to be given full control over the police training program, including contractors. Mussomeli counseled that an overreaction by the Afghan goverment (GIRoA) would only increase chances for the greater publicity the MoI is trying to forestall.

    2. (C) On armored vehicles and air transport for presidential candidates, Atmar pitched strongly to have the GIRoA decide which candidates were under threat and to retain control of allocation of these assets. He agreed with the principle of a level playing field for candidates but argued that "direct support by foreigners" demonstrated a lack of confidence in GIRoA. If GIRoA failed to be fair, international assets and plans in reserve could be used. On another elections-related issue, Atmar claimed that two Helmand would-be provincial candidates (and key Karzai supporters) disqualified under DIAG rules had actually possessed weapons as part of a GIRoA contract to provide security for contractors.

    3. (C) Atmar also was enthusiastic about working out arrangements with the 2nd Marine Expeditionary Brigade (MEB) in RC-South to partner with the Afghan Border Police (ABP) on training and joint operations to extend GIRoA governance south. He is considering giving BG">BG Melham, a highly regarded Afghan officer, responsibility for ABP in Nimruz and Helmand provinces. END SUMMARY.

    KUNDUZ RTC DYNCORP UPDATE

    4. (C) On June 23, Assistant Ambassador Mussomeli met with MOI Minister Hanif Atmar on a number of issues, beginning with the April 11 Kunduz RTC DynCorp investigation. Amb Mussomeli opened that the incident deeply upset us and we took strong steps in response. An investigation is on-going, disciplinary actions were taken against DynCorp leaders in Afghanistan, we are also aware of proposals for new procedures, such as stationing a military officer at RTCs, that have been introduced for consideration. (Note: Placing military officers to oversee contractor operations at RTCs is not legally possible under the currentDynCorp contract.) Beyond remedial actions taken, we still hope the matter will not be blown out of proportion, an outcome which would not be good for either the U.S. or Afghanistan. A widely-anticipated newspaper article on the Kunduz scandal has not appeared but, if there is too much noise that may prompt the journalist to publish.

    5. (C) Atmar said he insisted the journalist be told that publication would endanger lives. His request was that the U.S. quash the article and release of the video. Amb Mussomeli responded that going to the journalist would give her the sense that there is a more terrible story to report. Atmar then disclosed the arrest of two Afghan National Police (ANP) an

    1. Re:Text of the cable: by MissNoItAll · · Score: 0

      Thank you for posting this. It's like nobody can tell the difference between reporting a crime and ordering a crime. The minute Hillary read this she should have dispatched Judge Judy to hold a TV court in country to dispense Afghan justice. On the way home, she could have stopped at DynCorp and prosecuted them for hiring someone who later committed a crime in a foreign country. It would have made for some great TV drama.

  68. Re:Does this mean... by zakeria · · Score: 1

    But he did for her a taxi so their even!

  69. Re:No Surprise There by gilleain · · Score: 1

    Personally, I'd consider diplomats being "diplomatic" in their choice of words a step ahead. Right now it feels like office gossipping, i.e. smiling at your boss or coworker when they're around and then telling very ugly stories about them as soon as they turn their back.

    I may not be a diplomat, but I see no problem with honest reports from diplomats to the people back home. Lets take the comments about Putin 'playing Batman to Medvedev's Robin'. That's the diplomat's opinion - expressed in private - but no doubt it has some truth to it.

    Obviously it would be undiplomatic for ambassadors to say such things to their host governments. Presumably they don't do that. Probably Putin is a bit of an arse sometimes - it might be useful for Washington to know this. How is it possibly bad for communications to reflect this?

  70. mod parent up by bussdriver · · Score: 1

    Parent is correct- it has NOTHING to do with citizenship whatsoever!

    The unalienable rights endowed by our creator (sound a little familiar?) concept has nothing to do with government GIVING you rights - you have them inherently already and it also has nothing to do where you live or come from just that you are "mankind" which was later expanded to include women and other races (which the generic term always could apply to.)

    Far too often it is asserted that we are GIVEN our rights or that foreigners have no rights or even that its a rights issue in the 1st place! Free press has nothing to do with their rights and everything to do with PROHIBITING Congress's rights to fool with the press doing it's job. I would argue that taxation of the press abridges the press especially in difficult times. Its more clear than not taxing churches which is entirely legit (as long as you tax them all evenly otherwise it can be seen as establishing 1 over another... which isn't anymore of a leap than I just made with taxing the press.)

    1. Re:mod parent up by Leebert · · Score: 1

      The unalienable rights endowed by our creator (sound a little familiar?)

      Yes, but it's in the Declaration of Independence, not the Constitution. And the Bill of Rights is not about inalienable rights, it enumerates legal rights. Which, depending on how you argue it, might or might not apply to non-US citizens. I personally think they do.

      Inalienable rights are ones that you have by virtue of being a human, e.g., a right to live, and a right to liberty.

    2. Re:mod parent up by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      The bill of rights does not enumerate the rights of people. It places absolute limits on the power of the govornment to interfere with you innumerable rights

    3. Re:mod parent up by Leebert · · Score: 1

      Well, yes, very true, and I've corrected other people in the same way.

      But the point I'm trying to make is that the Bill of Rights concerns itself with legal rights, as opposed to inalienable rights.

    4. Re:mod parent up by Atzanteol · · Score: 1

      Really?

      "The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people."

      --
      "Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge"

      - Charles Darwin
    5. Re:mod parent up by Leebert · · Score: 1

      Read my reply to your sibling reply: http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1902038&cid=34502196

    6. Re:mod parent up by Atzanteol · · Score: 1

      And it states that it does *not* enumerate rights. It was never meant to be a list of all rights we have. Legal or otherwise.

      --
      "Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge"

      - Charles Darwin
  71. Yes and there are still people ... by unity100 · · Score: 2

    ... who try to put conditions to freedoms. like '.... if you arent doing x' or '........ if you arent for y'.

    are there ANY conditions, prefixes or suffixes regarding the freedoms in bill of rights, human rights declaration, or the first amendments of american constitution ?

    are there ANYthing that says 'you have freedom of x IF ....'.

    there arent.

    leave aside that, on top of this, it says GOD GIVEN and INALIENABLE rights there. this means, the rights are inalienable. inalienable means inalienable, period - no conditions of national secrets, or trade secrets, or other kind of prefixes or suffixes to the amendment.

    if something is inalienable, there can be no excuse made to make it otherwise.

    yet we see a lot of people around internet now, in forums, trying to justify hampering of these inalienable freedoms with various excuses. 'national security' 'government property', 'your intent'.

    there is no wordage like 'national security', 'government property', 'intent' in the documents that determine the modern civil principles and rights we have today. they are called rights, because they ARE inalienable, natural rights of people.

    arguing otherwise, is betraying to these principles and papers. they include declaration of human rights, bill of rights, and various constitutions including the american constitution. what's appalling is, doing this call them 'patriotic'. since when going against one's own country's founding principles, leave aside constitution, has become patriotic ....

    1. Re:Yes and there are still people ... by cheekyjohnson · · Score: 1

      are there ANY conditions, prefixes or suffixes regarding the freedoms in bill of rights, human rights declaration, or the first amendments of american constitution ?

      The supreme court reserves the right to interpret the constitution as they see fit, because we all know that to interpret something means to change its meaning completely, right?

      Also, how could we forget all of those nonexistent people who died because of these information leaks?

      --
      Filthy, filthy copyrapists!
    2. Re:Yes and there are still people ... by unity100 · · Score: 1

      The supreme court reserves the right to interpret the constitution as they see fit,

      courts can do interpretations as long as they remain within the law. they cannot reinterpret its meaning to add conditionals to it. freedom exists. it cannot be conditionalized.

      Also, how could we forget all of those nonexistent people who died because of these information leaks?

      yeah, like who ? like the nonexistent people whose names never got out because wikileaks has been censoring their names with the help of 4 major new media outlets ?

      or, the nonexistent people who did not die, even if they have voluntarily and while being paid, helped perpetrate what filth is being exposed in the documents ?

      i mean, gee, you sign up to be a double agent, in order to arrange drone strikes which kill countless innocents, but, if your name gets out, youre dead.

      and somehow, good people are supposed to feel sorry for that. because .... really, why are we supposed to feel sorry for them ?

    3. Re:Yes and there are still people ... by cheekyjohnson · · Score: 1

      Actually, I was being sarcastic. Courts can't just interpret the constitution to change its meaning as they see fit, and people keep saying how all of these people are in danger and Wikileaks is irresponsible, but as far as I know, there's not a single report of someone dying because of them.

      --
      Filthy, filthy copyrapists!
    4. Re:Yes and there are still people ... by unity100 · · Score: 1

      Courts can't just interpret the constitution to change its meaning as they see fit, and people keep saying how all of these people are in danger and Wikileaks is irresponsible

      there are some interpretations in regard to how certain freedoms apply to a new field of life (ie freedom of speech in internet, this that) occasionally. but as you said, they cant interpret the validity/condition of freedom. it exists.

      but as far as I know, there's not a single report of someone dying because of them.

      thats probably because wikileaks has been removing names.

      actually maybe they should have given them out openly. because, it seems, the powers that be in the u.s. do not understand from that kind of courtesy. maybe losing all their dirty spy network and double agents and moles and whatnot, make them realize that they should not attempt to repress freedom of information.

  72. Re:Does this mean... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    thus bringing it full circle. well played, sir.

  73. I call BS by das3cr · · Score: 0

    "any and all exposure of even the most misguided, secretive foreign policy"

    Oh yeah ... I suppose that's exactly the issue. NOT.

    The issue now, as it was then. Is it's irresponsible to release the information. Leaking the Pentagon papers was bad then just as this is bad now.

    This BS about information wanting to be free is a huge load of crap.

    --
    Hurricane Island Outward Bound
    OB
    1. Re:I call BS by cheekyjohnson · · Score: 1

      Yes, releasing information that reveals the corruption of our elected officials that are supposed to be representing us (or corporations abusing the system) is horrible, and they deserve all of that privacy and secrecy. I just can't even stand to think of all of the people who died because of Wikileaks' irresponsibility!

      --
      Filthy, filthy copyrapists!
    2. Re:I call BS by das3cr · · Score: 1

      The butchers bill isn't paid in full yet. The people who run Wikileaks should have to pay in kind.

      The people who release info to wikiLeaks also. Only one way to deal with rabid animals ..

      --
      Hurricane Island Outward Bound
      OB
  74. Question about legality... by vacadios · · Score: 1

    I am actually curious about something, so please go easy on the flames if this has been spelled out or is obvious. While Assange didn't take the material itself, isn't it against US law to be in possession of classified/Secret material if you're not authorized to do so? If so, could this been seen similar to receiving stolen goods? Like if I were to steal a TV and give it to you, you're just as liable as I am if you knew the TV was stolen when I gave it to you? I realize there have been arguments made about ethical/moral "obligation" and what not, but that's a personal choice -- just wondering about the possession piece...

    1. Re:Question about legality... by TFAFalcon · · Score: 1

      Let's look at it in a different way. I'm sure drawing a picture of Mohammed is against the law in many countries. Should the world lock up everyone that does it, even if it was done in a place where it was legal?

  75. Looking back at History by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    When Lenin and his crowd of happy murderers took over Russia during WW1, the various Revolutionaries who started running the Russian foreign Service started publishing ALL of the Tsar's Diplomatic files.

    As the Tsar had been talking with everyone in Europe, Asia, and the Americas, his diplomats had sent home thousands of reports - polite and impolite, about all sides of the War, and how it all started.

    The diplomatic cr%p hit the fan, and outraged people and governments everywhere; it was one of the reasons President Wilson announced his policy of "Open Agreements, Openly Agreed to" as part of his peace plans.

    We've been here before, and we'll be here again. Diplomacy is about haggling with people you'd prefer to shoot, which results in agreements that everyone hates, but can't live without.

    1. Re:Looking back at History by Thing+1 · · Score: 1

      Diplomacy is about haggling with people you'd prefer to shoot, which results in agreements that everyone hates, but can't live without.

      I love the similar quote, "Diplomacy is saying 'nice doggy' until you find a rock."

      --
      I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
  76. You think as I do but small modification... apk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Welcome to the Age of the Wimp." - by JockTroll (996521) on Wednesday December 08, @05:36PM (#34494232)

    Correction: "Age of the STUPID APATHETIC Wimp" is more like it... why do I say that? Because "Intelligent life takes a stand!" Jerry, from ENEMY MINE (from the book of "shzzzma") - yes, I know, a film only (but, it makes a hell of a point), and intelligent life imo @ least? Even Jerry there needs a correction/modification: "Intelligent life not only takes a stand, but makes one too!" the book of APK (lol).

    Especially when it's getting f'd over, in any way, shape, or form... I'm not the only person saying it either, this ought to go over well w/ the "Open Source" crowd here too, because I am about to quote one of their own, as regards apathy too:

    "Justified anger is better than sitting aside while bad stuff happens." - by Bruce Perens (3872) *
      on Saturday April 07 2007, @12:59PM (#18647947) Homepage Journal

    FROM -> http://bsd.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=229865&cid=18647947

    ( ... & I agree 110%/totally ++ here, on that account - with you too, but, that's only because things have NOT gotten "bad enough" yet where things are done the way you see it is all... )

    APK

    P.S.=> See - at times? Hey - I feel much as you do man, but when times are tough (& I think they're being made to be artificially, especially financially + employment-wise w/ offshoring especially, & intentionally done so (so the housing market prices drop/bottom out even more as a single example why, while more & more US folks lose the good paying jobs that keep getting offshored for example - heh, there's a BACKLOG of foreclosures still coming in banks is why I say that, & due to folks losing GOOD PAYING JOBS & instead being given "hand-to-mouth" no disposable income for "goods &/or services" beyond food, rent, & utility + tax bills, nothing left over for fun etc. beyond that...))?

    In hard times, folks especially then do what Thoreau said:

    "Most men lead lives of quiet desperation" - Henry David Thoreau

    (For the reason it's hard times, & they don't want to raise a stir that can affect them feeding them & their own/family etc./et al ("significant others" etc., you get my point) - if you've got something good, hold onto it & do NOT "make waves" etc.))

    It's NOT really that they're "wimps", folks KNOW what's going on!

    (E.G.-> I talk to more & more everyday on things going bad in many areas, & even complete strangers - they're more informed than you think perhaps, & know what you do/I do, but they're just scared to "rock the boat" in ANY way/shape/form, epsecially so, IF they are still on the "good receiving end" of things today (good job etc.) & do not want to blow it for themselves is all by getting the "powers that be" to come down on them - like Assange is having happen to he (unjustly imo, he's press imo, & he didn't steal the info.: His source did, & he doesn't have to divulge that afaik either))... apk

  77. I don't give a rip; let people die by bussdriver · · Score: 1

    The US government constitutionally can not make any laws prohibiting a free press. period. end of story. If the press releases some information that gets people killed, SO BE IT. Tough luck if you happen to get screwed over by some newspaper. I do not give a rip. Why is this such a huge deal?? The government kills many people directly and indirectly ALL THE TIME (in the middle east its over 1 million in the wars) often INTENTIONALLY so why can't the 4th branch of government (the press) acting on its own in the process of doing its job have a little collateral damage? Hell, we don't even seem to care about collateral damage. The press can by the fact the government has no right or power to prohibit a free press.

    Many things the press has printed can be argued to have caused the death of somebody, proving that in court is a huge problem especially 1st degree... but like I said, they can't be put into court for doing their job. I suppose some reasonable limits might make sense; however, the cost of imposing "reasonable" is far too great when its done by politicians.

  78. In a time of universal deceit - telling the truth by bussdriver · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In a time of universal deceit - telling the truth is a revolutionary act.
    -George Orwell

  79. Re:No Surprise There by HBI · · Score: 1

    Actually, those of us who know better are mostly just keeping mouths shut and enjoying the foaming at the mouth going on here every time Assange and the Wikileaks people get what they are manifestly deserving. Also, now I know for a fact that many people here are just anti-American, and not just all about 'information wants to be free'. Don't bother protesting, both my mind is made up, and my country's collective government's mind.

    A lot of people who *think* they are accomplishing something are instead entirely discrediting themselves. EFF, take note. By the time this is done, the EFF will be about as effective in Washington as the US Communist Party.

    The PR war has already been lost on this one. Anyone associated with Wikileaks will be branded a terrorist within days*, with the full assent of the US public. Furthermore, failing taking the next plane to Iran or North Korea, the principals will be turned over to the US ultimately and face the penalties for what they have done. Just watch... Refusing to extradite these people amounts to a cassus belli. No one will risk it, even China would turn them over. It should be noted that the revelation of the documents is a cassus belli as well.

    Assange and his crew have attempted to blackmail a great power (the insurance file). Watch how well that is going to work... Those two Swedish women he allegedly raped might just be the last two women he ever experiences. He's already a man without a country. Those who associated with him should make arrangements, now, to flee to countries who have no diplomatic relations with the US. Time is short.

    Basically, the OBL mistake was made. Since no effective response was forthcoming previously, the assumption was that the infowar against the United States could continue with impunity - even be escalated. Since Democrats are in control of the government, their native perceived weakness on national security assures that the response will be overkill. Regardless, an example has to be made to deter this type of action in the future. Those who collaborated with Wikileaks will be making the perp walk and showing up on every TV channel until the message is drummed into everyone's head. Their plaintive begging for a sentence that might let them see the outside of a prison someday (when they are old) will be transmitted widely, as well.

    It might have been worth it to get all the America-haters out from under their rocks, though.

    * To the extent this hasn't happened already. Some mainstream press traffic on this over the past few days.

    --
    HBI's Law: Frequency of calling others Nazis is directly correlated with the likelihood of the accuser being Communist.
  80. Re:No Surprise There by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    There have been a lot of postings lately related to Wikileaks, and in the first few it seemed (to me at least) that the discussion was about equally modded on both sides. As there have been more posts and more discussion around Wikileaks and related issues, it seems that the modding has moved strongly in favor of Wikileaks. I personally believe this has more to do with the fact that the valid criticisms of Wikileaks are few and minor, and the criticisms of the US and other governments handling of the releases are numerous and serious. Most of the early criticisms of Wikileaks that many people agreed with have turned out to be misleading or completely false.

    Just to give one example, many people early on criticized Wikileaks for supposedly carelessly dumping thousands of documents which endanger innocent lives. The US military has now admitted that there has been no evidence thus far of any innocent lives lost due to wikileaks releases. And contrary to the popular media myth, Wikileaks has not released all the diplomatic cables, for the most part they have only released the cables which were already released by other news organizations, and they included the same redactions.

    So, yes, I find the modding now heavily in favor of Wikileaks, and I think that's the way it should be because they clearly did the right thing by releasing these documents.

  81. Re:No Surprise There by porges · · Score: 2

    Unless there's a /. page 2 I haven't noticed, isn't every story a "front page story"?

    Check out the Sections on the left of the main page. There are stories in there that don't make it to the main page. Not all that many, but they're there.

  82. Re:No Surprise There by itsthebin · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The PR war has already been lost on this one. Anyone associated with Wikileaks will be branded a terrorist within days*, with the full assent of the US public

    how well will logic resolve if the numbers come in that more than half the population of the world supports the leak/publication of these documents ? democratic terrorists ?

    I am Australian and it is extremely disturbing to me to see just how much influence the US Govt has over who is elected Prime Minister of Australia.

    --
    ...I obey the laws of physics....
  83. Re:No Surprise There by mr_bubb · · Score: 1

    To those who believe wikileaks was in the wrong, here's an example of what we're trying to cover up: we're pressuring the Germans not to arrest CIA agents who kidnapped, on *German* soil, a *German national* who was *mistakenly* believed to be a terrorist. We *tortured him*, then let him rot in a hole in the ground for years before letting him out with no acknowledgement of guilt or even responsibility. This shit needs to come to light. Assange may have his own axes to grind, but what he's doing is right and protected under US law (Pentagon Papers case, duh). The Times article is here: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/09/world/europe/09wikileaks-elmasri.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

  84. Re:No Surprise There by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not only that, but it has also been revealed that Wikileaks contacted the US State Department, requested that the State Department identify which cables should be held back because they might endanger lives, and the State Department refused and instead demanded the return of the cables. So the State Department had the opportunity to avoid the most important charge levelled against Wikileaks, that the document release endangered the lives of allies or undercover assets, and refused to do so. Now of course, if the State Department had agreed and missed something then the responsibility would have been transferred to them, so some bureaucrat somewhere decided they didn't want the responsibility. But once that offer had been made, even its refusal doesn't absolve the State Department of its responsibility. If State had been over-broad in its censorship recommendations and Wikileaks had published despite that, then the responsibility would have devolved back to Wikileaks. But it appears CYA won out over common sense at the State Department.

  85. Re:Does this mean... by the_womble · · Score: 2

    One of the articles on the subject it is a crime in Sweden to use emotional pressure to get someone to have sex. If that was rigorously enforced in most countries the prisons would be REALLY full.

  86. Re:No Surprise There by Opportunist · · Score: 2

    If the scenario you paint is becoming real, freedom and democracy as we know it is dead.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  87. Re:No Surprise There by AK+Marc · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Also, now I know for a fact that many people here are just anti-American,

    You miss the fact that many of us are anti-Republicrat. I love the USA and hate the idiots running it into the ground the last 50 years. Both sides of the fence, most 3rd parties, and a sadly growing number of the general population that are happy to give up essential liberties to infringe on other's liberties they don't like.

    Don't bother protesting, both my mind is made up, and my country's collective government's mind.

    Ah yes. Another prick who has made up his mind that he's right and anyone who disagrees is obviously wrong and you don't need to think about anything, ever. You are the reason this country is going down in flames.

  88. Don't confuse the Italian Mafia with the CIA by ppanon · · Score: 1
    Roberto Begnini made fun of Berlusconi's claims that reports of the 74 year old Italian President's relationship with a teenage belly dancer and wild parties with young women were plots by the mafia to discredit him.

    Benigni asked if the Mafia were now using pretty young girls instead of guns and bombs, and imagined the premier returning home one night to find three girls in his bed, and shrieking: “The Mafia are after me!”.

    Now it appears that Begnini's joke is the truth if you substitute the CIA for the Mafia. It's starting to look like at least one of the girls in Julian Assange's bed had CIA ties, a history of politically motivated lies, and is very likely part of a CIA plot to discredit him. Well, I suppose it's more pleasant than a bullet from a sniper rifle.

    --
    Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
  89. Neil Patrick Harris by uolamer · · Score: 1

    I am just saying they look quite similar..

    http://bayimg.com/dABEnaAde

    --
    s/©//g
  90. Re:No Surprise There by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 1

    Many of the anti wiki posts have been modded up.--also many of them simply tow the party line. "endangering lives", "illegal", "anti American", etc. Nothing that Fox hasn't already covered.

    --
    The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
  91. Patriotism is the last refuge of the scoundrel by Serious+Callers+Only · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The PR war has already been lost on this one. Anyone associated with Wikileaks will be branded a terrorist within days*, with the full assent of the US public.

    Those who collaborated with Wikileaks will be making the perp walk and showing up on every TV channel until the message is drummed into everyone's head.

    Do you enjoy living under tyranny? I ask because what you are describing with relish are the actions of a tin-pot dictatorship at the level of North Korea. Is that what you wish America to become?

    1. Re:Patriotism is the last refuge of the scoundrel by CBravo · · Score: 1

      And to think that some people can not envision war in their own country.

      Most countries do not have global stability, only local (in mathematical sense).

      --
      nosig today
  92. The Assange-Ellsberg Axis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I for one welcome our new, um ... uh, never mind.

  93. Re:No Surprise There by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1

    Also, now I know for a fact that many people here are just anti-American

    The American People != The American Govt. Having lived in the US, I found the people some of the friendliest and most welcoming as a nation I'd ever encountered. I am a big critic of US foreign policy but that doesn't make me blanket "anti-american". Hell, can you pick a single nationality on Slashdot where people of that nation would post "hey - please judge me by my government?" Don't muddle the issues.

    --

    Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
  94. Does the Great Firewall of China allow access to W by sjmac · · Score: 1

    Does the Great Firewall of China allow access to WikiLeaks? I think it was on the Australian internet filter blacklist for a time.

    Any plans for similar system in the US?

  95. Re:No Surprise There by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    It might have been worth it to get all the America-haters out from under their rocks, though.

    To be clear, I don't hate America, I hate those who are in control of it, and it is not the voters. Two out of the last three elections were decided by vote fraud and the third was decided by airing an unelectable ticket against the chosen candidate.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  96. Re:In a time of universal deceit - telling the tru by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Two treasonous Jews agree with each other. Film at 11. Too bad the Rosenbergs aren't still around to make it a party.

  97. Re:No Surprise There by anyGould · · Score: 1

    Ah. I knew about the sections, didn't realize that some stories skip the front page. Thanks!

  98. Re:In a time of universal deceit - telling the tru by Deefburger · · Score: 1
    --
    Most people are mostly good most of the time.
  99. Re:No Surprise There by frost_knight · · Score: 1

    -1 is the only way to browse. Otherwise you let modders with axes decide what you get to read.

    The line between insightful and flamebait is often blurry. Why let someone else draw the line for you?

    you == generic && != The_Moof

    --
    It always takes longer than you expect, even when you take into account Hofstadter's Law. --Hofstadter's Law
  100. It's existential... by it5complicated · · Score: 1

    The reason we know Mr. Ellsberg is Pentagon Papers. If he were to deny the morality of Wikileaks, it'd be like vanishing himself, no?

  101. Re:raep by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That would have been fucking awesome if they managed to carry that out! LSD soup. mmm

  102. Journalism by odysseus_complex · · Score: 1

    But the difference is that the Pentagon Papers was the culmination of a study that was done by the military. What WikiLeaks released is raw data with no investigation, no analysis and no context. We aren't seeing how one cable was rejected because the sender was a loon or another needs to be taken in context of some other document. This is why comparing the Pentagon Papers to the diplomatic papers is laughable at best.

  103. Re: Assanges-chief-accuser-has-her-own-history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If the CIA were going to frame him for rape, I'd think they could do a better job of it than they did. No evidence, flimsy and contradictory testimony by the victims, crazy interpretations of the law, public and friendly interactions with him after the fact, waiting days before making the accusation, not even an accusation of violence. I would imagine that a CIA frame up would be a bit better constructed that the case against him is.

    Actually, all they need to do is get him to Sweden and from there a rendition flight back to the Good 'ol US-of-A where the real fun starts.

    Not likely. If he disappears, keys to the insurance file will go out. Then the shit will presumably hit the fan for real. Given how squeemish the US Government is about anything that could remotely make them look bad (aside from, you know, just being themselves), I don't think they're willing to take that chance.

  104. Re:raep by Thing+1 · · Score: 1

    Imagine them doing this to someone functional? "I've done acid before, and although you are all pretty unicorns spinning in circles and such, and I can clearly smell your auras, I must say that I can no longer provide the prepared words to you because I have been drugged. I know the effects of LSD, and I am experiencing them right now, and I did not intend to do this."

    --
    I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
  105. I know that, silly by bussdriver · · Score: 1

    The declaration of independence is akin to a mission statement, the goals... Which the founders also supported. Its not the constitution, which sadly is only a legal document and does not include the specificity of intent/purpose which weakens the document and is a large reason why the federalist papers were written to fill that void but those lack the weight of placing the intention in the document itself. The declaration is the best mission statement of intention from the same group; arguably a better supported document by the people of the day.

    If you want to be picky, then you are incorrect that the bill of rights enumerates rights because it often prohibits GOVERNMENT instead of granting rights; its phrased this way because of the purpose expressed by the declaration of independence.

    Prohibiting government action against free press logically applies to everybody. This is not a legitimately debatable matter, its a simple fact of logic.