House Committee: Edward Snowden's Leaks Did 'Tremendous Damage' (nbcnews.com)
An anonymous reader quotes a report from NBC News: The U.S. House intelligence committee on Thursday unanimously approved a blistering report on the activities of Edward Snowden, saying his disclosures of top-secret documents and programs did "tremendous damage" to national security. "The public narrative popularized by Snowden and his allies is rife with falsehoods, exaggerations, and crucial omissions," said the report by staff members of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence. Contrary to Snowden's statements that he intended to reveal programs that intruded on the privacy of Americans, the House report concluded that the vast majority of the 1.5 million documents he stole "have nothing to do with programs impacting individual privacy interests. They instead pertain to military, defense, and intelligence programs of great interest to America's adversaries." The report said Snowden did not, as he claimed, try to express his concerns about potentially illegal intelligence gathering in a way that would qualify him as a whistleblower. The report was disputed by Snowden's ACLU-provided attorney. "This is a dishonest report that attempts to discredit a genuine American hero," said Wizner. "But after years of 'investigation,' the committee still can't point to any remotely credible evidence that Snowden's disclosures caused harm. The truth is that Edward Snowden and the journalists with whom he worked did the job that the House Intelligence Committee was supposed to do: bring meaningful oversight to the U.S. Intelligence community. They did so responsibly and carefully, and their efforts have led to historic reforms."
Anything that ass fucks the government is right as rain for me.
the government doesn't hesitate to ass fuck you every chance it gets.
too bad those that we trusted to uphold the constitution failed us SO MISERABLY.
even their lies are transparent and shameless.
--
"It is now safe to switch off your computer."
Provided a vital service to all people of the world and deserves a presidential pardon, post haste.
The US government is the villain and Snowden is the hero. Nothing but a full presidential pardon will be acceptable. Heck, I'll sleep on my couch and he can move into my bedroom, for free.
Yeah, Snowden's stuff is probably ripe with falsehoods because it was a setup. If the NSA didn't figure out what kind of person he was and start watching him long ago, then they are completely incompetent as well as criminals. My level of paranoia has concluded that Snowden was fed more or less exactly what they wanted to leak and the real goal was to scare the sheeple into submission. The really nasty stuff was kept far away from Snowden (and from anyone remotely like him) and some of the stuff he was fed was just diversionary. Plenty of falsehoods to ripen.
Okay, maybe "criminal" is unfair. Do the NSA spooks even swear to defend and uphold the Constitution? Even if they do, the meaning of "defend and uphold" remains quite ambiguous, and the bottom line is that they are not now and never will be convicted of any actual crime for abusing our Constitutional rights.
"Baaa baaa." So speaketh the sheeple.
Freedom = (Meaningful - Coerced) Choice != (Speech | Beer^2), and sad sock puppets' bad mods avail them naught.
Without offering any opinion on whether what Snowden did was good, bad, or potato, my first though here is:
The odds that Snowden was given refuge in Russia without turning over 100% of what he took are about the same as the odds of him getting his pardon: zero.
Which is better than him putting it all up on the internet, I suppose. While I'm sure there's national security intelligence in that data dump of great interest to Russia, they will do their best (which is very good) to coerce him into not revealing any of that to anyone else.
You mean he leaked nasty stuff you were doing illegally but you don't think are related to the other nasty illegal stuff you are doing?
*cough* Say what??
“He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
CHELSEA MANNING should also receive a FULL pardon from President BARAK OBAMA. She is being tortured by the US Navy and is being DENIED access to her attorney and the internet and a cell phone and a laptop. She is also being force-fed through a tube because she refused to eat because she is being treated unjustly and has come down with several throat infections. When you forcefully shove a tube down someones throat, this causes irritation and ultimately leads to infection. She is denied linen and clothing and lives with a bright halogen light on in her cell 24 hours a day. SHE IS BEING TORTURED. What is America going to do about this???
Snowden did do our government a disservice when he posted those documents online. What the report didn't state was that our government did the US people a HUGE disservice when they acted as they did to force his hand. Torture of POW's ? The violation of US laws to support US interests. The means does not justify the end and just because they chose to take the acts out of the US doesn't absolve them of the guilt.
errr....umm...*whooosh* *whoosh* Is this thing on ?
I'll save you the time - the article is devoid of any reference to what "tremendous damage" was done.
Bullfucking shit. Snowden's leaks did no such thing. It was you god damn bastards illegally spying on American citizens and foreign citizens that did the damage. If I had my way I would fly Snowden back here and pin a medal on his ass.
Supporting World Peace Through Nuclear Pacification
This is an election year. they wont dare be authoritarian against such rallies. it would force them to eat the crow.
I'll bet the House's rebuttal to ACLU is, "it did, but the harm is too secret to show you."
For example, maybe Putin now has our Roswell technology?
It's okay, we already swiped their 1908 Tunguska Saucer crash tech. Share and share alike.
Table-ized A.I.
If the NSA does not want the hassle of whistleblowers, then it should simply follow the law.
Contractors reputations as they design, build and service vast illegal domestic spying systems?
The well educated staff at US computer brands that allowed the US gov and mil to get plain text from their best encryption efforts globally? PRISM
The top academics that hid the junk quality encryption systems and educated generations into thinking decades of US junk standards was best practice?
The political leadership that never kept up with the findings of the Church Committee https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... on the domestic actions of the NSA, GCHQ and CIA?
The fourth estate, the media, the press, the profession mentioned in the US Constitution that could not like reporting on junk encryption, total domestic collection?
Lawyers who never bothered to uncover the true origins of their cases based on illegal domestic spying and parallel construction over the decades?
The US hardware manufactures than shipped junk hardware with weak encryption over generations of product lines?
The weaknesses in wifi that allow OVERHEAD to capture all and exposed all wifi users to more poor quality networking standards?
Not seeing a lot of harm, just generations of people who designed and shipped junk globally or never bothered to publish any findings or solutions.
Decades of junk hardware and software has now left networks around the world wide open.
The damage was in the practice of collect it all. Now academics, the private sector and smarter staff working for real brands can start fixing decades of plain text access to networks than anyone could enjoy thanks to decades of policy and global exports.
Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
To the Unconstitutional and Illegal actions of the NSA against American citizens in our own country?
To the terrorist creating Saudis, Yemenis, and Pakistanis who continue to create terrorism worldwide today but pretend to be our "allies"?
Look, I knew directly about what they were doing since the 1980s. Your gorvernment is still lying to you, and still ignoring the US Constitution.
-- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
Here's to a thousand more extremely damaging leaks.
With whom would you place your trust ?
Mr. Snowden or ANY member of our bought and paid for leadership ?
Dead simple answer for me. No matter what they claim he did, his actions had a more positive impact for this country than all of those buffoons combined.
The only thing a polititian does is for the benefit of a polititian. Period.
...the House report concluded that the vast majority of the 1.5 million documents he stole "have nothing to do with programs impacting individual privacy interests. They instead pertain to military, defense, and intelligence programs of great interest to America's adversaries."
Since when did they know what Snowden copied? The NSA publicly stated they don't know what he got and had no way of knowing. Their systems were wide open to administrators, and they said as much. So... were they lying then or are they lying now?
Considering who was speaking then and now, I say they're lying now. They don't know what or how much he got. They're just making shit up. The 1.5 million is at best a probability, but is most likely a wild-ass guess. Anybody who has worked in any human enterprise for a few years knows that the whole system runs on WAGs, and where engineers and mathematicians refuse to guess, outright lies. There is a lot less certainty in the world than anyone in power wants to admit.
And this report? Pure gamemanship, waiting in the wings for precisely this moment when Congress knew that the ACLU would be pushing for a pardon. Now the talking heads have something to babble about, to drown out the ACLU. There doesn't have to be a true word in it for it to serve its purpose. House Intelligence Committee? There isn't a true word in it. Even the bylines are lies. It was written by spooks for spooks, not by Congress or congressional aids.
We now know that we're being spied upon (which most of us probably already suspected)
As a result, we've begun encrypting our data, websites are using https as a default, and the nation has become generally MORE secure.
This is the digital equivalent of the gestapo bitching about the 4th amendment making their jobs impossible and protecting criminals.
This signature is false.
He just doesn't know it yet. Maybe he knows it, but is not able to do anything about it.
If Snowden truly believes that being a whistleblower is a noble thing, then I would like to see Snowden call for Russian and Chinese whistleblowers to reveal state secrets.Surely Russian and China must also be spying on their own citizens.
Snowden is Russia's puppet. They will use him as long as he dutifully continues his anti-US stance. If he even remotely suggests that Russia(or any country that is NOT the US)) is pulling the same shit, he will promptly and quietly disappear.
I hope he enjoys his well deserved holiday in Russia.
Adults who had been paying attention to news since before 2001 were not even a little bit surprised about the domestic spying, so we don't see Snowden through rose-colored savior glasses.
Snowden tried to play the hero kid in the Emperor's New Clothes who tells all the adults that the emperor is naked. The difference is that in real life all the adults already openly acknowledged that the Emperor was naked, and that he was monitoring all of our communications. We weren't pretending not to know; we honestly thought you watched the news too, so there was no reason to keep telling you. We didn't like it, but there's not much we could do since the majority wanted it.
Result: All of the kids and young adults were shocked to find out about the spying think Snowden is a hero, but most people who were living away from their parents in 2001 watched enough news to know about all the domestic spying.
Former CIA Officer: President Obama Should Pardon Edward Snowden
Barry Eisler spent three years in a covert position in the CIA’s Directorate of Operations and is the author of 12 novels, including The Detachment
He let Americans evaluate omniscient domestic surveillance for themselves
This week, Edward Snowden, multiple human rights and civil rights groups, and a broad array of American citizens asked President Obama to exercise his Constitutional power to pardon Snowden. As a former CIA officer, I wholeheartedly support a full presidential pardon for this brave whistleblower.
All nations require some secrecy. But in a democracy, where the government is accountable to the people, transparency should be the default; secrecy, the exception. And this is especially true regarding the implementation of an unprecedented system of domestic bulk surveillance, a mere precursor of which Senator Frank Church warned 40 years ago could lead to the eradication of privacy and the imposition of “total tyranny.”
That today we are engaged in a meaningful debate about whether such a system is desirable is almost entirely due to the conscience, courage and conviction of one man: Edward Snowden. Without Snowden, the American people could not balance for themselves the risks, costs and benefits of omniscient domestic surveillance. Because of him, we can.
For this service, the government has charged Snowden under the World War I-era Espionage Act. Yet Snowden did not sell information secretly to any enemy of America. Instead, he shared it openly through the press with the American people.
For this service, Snowden has been accused of having “blood on his hands“—the same evidence-free cliché trotted out every time a whistleblower reveals corruption, criminality or anything else the government would prefer to hide. That this charge is being aired by the very people responsible for wars that have led to thousands of dead American servicemen and servicewomen; hundreds of thousands burned, blinded, brain-damaged, crippled, maimed and traumatized; and hundreds of thousands of innocent foreigners killed, is more than ironic. It’s also a form of psychological projection, or propaganda, intended to distract from where true responsibility for bloodshed lies.
And for this service, the usual suspects have claimed Snowden has caused “grave damage to national security.” As always, the charge is backed by nothing but air, and ignores—in fact, is intended to distract from—the real damage caused by metastasizing governmental secrecy. This includes not only disastrous government mistakes and cover-ups (see the Bay of Pigs, the “missile gap,” the Gulf of Tonkin, Iraqi wea
"Flyin' in just a sweet place,
Never been known to fail..."
Slam dunk. That was a great read. Thanks for sharing.
What does it mean to invoke the chain of command when the top of that chain is lying to Congress? Congress might be dumb enough to believe that doesn't matter, but the rest of us are not.
Thus undermining the unquestioning trust we're supposed to feel in them, and limiting their ability to do whatever the hell they want. Don't we realise it's all for our own good??
Why would anyone engrave "Elbereth"?
Their bullshit propaganda/FUD campaigns?
I have no sympathy. It's like they did everything possible to lose public trust and then they whine about being exposed? Too fucking bad.
These people are citizens too, do they not realize they are trying to protect an agency that does not have their best interest in mind?
I get it when the people getting the paychecks to do this kind of stuff want to protect their jobs but congresspeople? WTF?
When you think about it. Clinton had already did some horrible shit with her email server both intentionally and claimed unintentionally.
And out of all of it, the FBI found gross incompetence and breaking of procedure over it but declined to indict based solely on the claim that they could not find anything to point a malicious motive (which is besides the point since some of the charges did not matter what motive was).
Using the FBI's own claim that motive was needed, they can find no motive of malicious intent with Snowden's actions as his justification was actually a pure one.
So regardless of what they try to claim on him, his motives and his actions give no claim of a motive to hurt America and infact his actions have actually helped to reveal crimes and help the American people to protect themselves from it and allow for proper debate and suspected criminals proper looks at evidence when before the police would have lied through their teeth with parallel reconstruction making them, in many occurrences, more evil and screwed up than the ones they were pressing charges on.
So long as they refuse to indict Clinton on her email, they have no justification for not letting Snowden free that doesn't make them out to legitimately being a hypocrite themselves.
We're talking about politicians here. When did they ever have anything to do with intelligence?
Those with power see themselves as being fundamentally above those without it. They give respect and deference to their peers, but not their subordinates. Justice is something they posture about in order to maintain their power base, but the only moral values that might inhibit them amount to politeness, and that only to fellow holders of power.
They don't see lying as wrong. They see it as a necessary means to an end. They do it as easily as breathe.
But they absolutely DO see dirt-publishing as wrong, whether the dirt is true or not. And to have such a thing done by a low-level functionary is outright blasphemous. The little people DO NOT have the right to challenge their superiors like this, evidence be damned.
So, Snowden stood up for truth, and now reaps what he has sewn.
While very informative, it should be modded Insightful for the comments inside
Slashdot, fix the reply notifications... You won't get away with it...
"The report said Snowden did not, as he claimed, try to express his concerns about potentially illegal intelligence gathering in a way that would qualify him as a whistleblower."
Having seen the State responses to other, earlier whistleblowers, you'd be an idiot to try to go that way.
I doubt this was mentioned in the report. I'm sure the committee regards the intense and prolonged legal prosecutions and consequential financial ruining of whistleblowers as being completely fine, since it's "legal". The morality of it is utterly irrelevant - and that same failure underlies the notion that mass surveillance is okay.
They are going to try to black ball Edward every chance they get. I saw this coming the day he came out about this stuff. The government has done this over and over throughout history in the US.
That was WAY too long. I'm not going to read that.
The article title was MUCH shorter. It said "House Committee: Edward Snowden's Leaks Did 'Tremendous Damage'
That pretty much clears it up. Our government, for whom we voted and who serves us, just gave us the straight dope. I will be able to sleep easy tonight knowing that our governors were the good guys all along.
EOM
I mean, _really_ read it and considered all the implications of how it sets up our system of government? The entire thing was built from the ground up to protect the interests of wealthy land owners. I'd say they're doing a fabulous job of uphodling the Constitution.
Now, if you mean the parts of the Constitution that have no legal meaning I guess I could agree. But they're meaningless fluff. Want a real government by the people for the people? Then you want a parliamentary system. Not a Representative Democracy with branches structured to prevent populist uprisings. This is why we can't have nice things.
Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
Yes, his leaks did do tremendous damage... To those who would like to continue breaking the law with impunity.
A cop with a radar gun does tremendous damage to people speeding. A cop with a breathalyzer does tremendous damage to people driving drunk. Et cetera.
AC
" "The public narrative popularized by Snowden and his allies is rife with falsehoods, exaggerations, and crucial omissions," said the report by staff members of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence. "
But we're politicians and therefore we can be trusted, because we're politicians and therefore as trustworthy as the day is long. Trust us on this. Besides, it's all for your own good - we gain nothing from being able to snoop on you, and give the data to any Federal Agency that requests it, and on-sell your data to anyone, foreign and domestic, who will pay for it. Trust us ... we'll look after your interests, and rights, and privileges ... and we'll only snoop as much as we need to, because, look ... all we're talking about is tiny breaches to your privacy here.
I mean, it's not like we're going after privacy and freedom.
OK, OK, maybe we're going after privacy and freedom just a little bit. But only enough to ensure your absolute security against terrorism. Yeah, yeah ... we know there's no such thing as absolute security, and we know we may be going just a bit overboard with the security thingies ... but not with the snooping. OK? We really need the snooping, and lots more of it, to ensure that we don't make stupid calls like the Iraq Weapons of Mass Destruction and Lets Create a Power Vacuum that Al Qaeda Can Fill policies of the past. I mean, Bat Crap crazy policies like that only happen when we don't have the necessary degree of public surveillance of our own people. And we need to know everything that can be known about our own people ... I mean, they could become the enemy. You never know.
I mean ...look at Edward Snowden. He worked for us, we paid him good money, and he became our enemy. So the chances of the Average Joe turning against us have to be high.
And therefore we need the surveillance of our own citizens ... OK?
So what Snowden released clearly shows that forces in government are violating the constitution. Where are the prosecutions and why aren't any of them going to jail?
He did give it to the enemy, as you stated:
For this service, the government has charged Snowden under the World War I-era Espionage Act [freedom.press]. Yet Snowden did not sell information secretly to any enemy of America. Instead, he shared it openly through the press with the American people.
If you haven’t already noticed, the American people are the enemy
one way or the other. Claiming their was "tremendous damage" doesn't mean there was any, or that it was indeed "tremendous". It just means you slapped an adjective onto your claim. By the same token calling someone a "hero" doesn't change anything about his actions; nor does calling him a "traitor". You shouldn't get a different set of rules based on whether your nametag has a smiley face on it or a frowny face.
Be especially wary of statements like this:
The Committee found no evidence that Snowden took any official effort to express concerns about U.S. intelligence activities — legal, moral, or otherwise — to any oversight officials within the U.S. government, despite numerous avenues for him to do so.
It sounds damning, but it really depends among other things on where those "official" channels lead to. If they lead to the people who are responsible for the situation he was blowing the whistle on, it's a meaningless condemnation.
Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
WW3 still hasn't happened..
... it seems to me national security is just fine.
Haven't heard of any terrorism other than the usual random crazies, certainly nothing organized.
The worse thing that might have happened as I gather... is a few ops may have been compromised and scuttled (we never should have been doing these ops) and a few politicians and diplomats have been severely embarrassed which is just great.
I'm sitting here typing this
Tremendous damage to the idea that the establishment hacks running this country aren't doing a terrible job.
Unfortunately, the US gov't now considers and treats the American people as "the enemy".
Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
Snowden sold America down the river. He is nothing more than a traitor to his country who works for the KGB.
Where are the fucking damning documents on China, North Korea, Russia, Iran etc etc. What he didn't release any of them? Hmmmm
Snowden told us about the NSA's worldwide surveillance; that they compromised Cisco routers, Chancellor Merkel's phone, and anything else feeding from the teat of global telecommunications. This is not just about individual privacy. The stakes are much higher - free enterprise and arguably humanity itself. If Obama can pardon the likes of Jonathan Pollard, Snowden certainly deserves more than just a pardon. He deserves the Medal of Freedom. Hell, I'd vote him.
What about Mitnick who did time for hacking into government telephone surveillance systems?
...did "tremendous damage"...
to bloated shills.
Edward's whole family way back several generations fought and worked for the United States. He is a honest man. He did not do any damage to great working people of the United States, such as John Steinbeck, Angela Davis, and the like.
This is what they cannot get: there are always honest people who do not like lies, fraud, greed, hypocrisy. They are ready to blame anyone - hackers, foreign countries, etc., but they should look at yourself first. And remember that there are always good people around. It could be a secretary, an IT man in a cellar, etc. who should report a sham to the community.
Why are they still blaming the messenger rather than the crimes he uncovered? Catch the criminals, not the guy who exposed them.
When your approval rating is 11%, you're going to have to work a lot harder to convince us. Maybe by "damage to national security" they really mean "damage to our money-making schemes built up over decades of selling out the American people". BTW, a quick googling showed a number of sources citing a poll that 33% think he should be pardoned. Literally 3X more popular than you guys, so take your report and stuff it.
"tremendous damage"
Well, what did you expect from a trumpism :)
It sounds like something he would write on twitter...
"The public narrative popularized by Snowden and his allies is rife with falsehoods, exaggerations, and crucial omissions," Sounds like a murderer who was found with bloody weapon and hands at the crime scene, who screams "every but me is a liar!" in court.
On the other hand, the narrative popularized by the U.S. House intelligence committee and the TLAs is not even worse, but its actions are also directed against the law and the rights of the citizens, and billions of innocent people worldwide.
Even though I am not American, I would rather see Snowden running for US president than the idiot Trump. I cannot see how Snowden could do more damage to the US and the world at large than Trump.
~_~ Not tonight, dear, I have a modem.
it was you who brought this on yourself by conducting illegal mass surveilance, Snowden did what was right and what was in our interest, at an enormous cost for him,
and snoop off my private life! SNOOP OFF!
the illegal behavior of government?
no - there was no way, within the system, to show it would work. Snowden saw the examples of those that tried. Yeah - whistleblowing was the only real choice to change anything.
To a lot of really bad people that not only richly deserved it for their crimes against decency and human rights, but that were plotting to commit even more deeply dangerous and highly unethical things. The only thing not right here is that those exposed are not in prison and that Snowden is treated as a criminal instead.
Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
I suspect piano wire will be a valuable commodity in some places, soon...
Well, they're right in that it did great damage: To their reputations, which in fact does hurt national security, but not in the way they want you to think.
It means their careers are harmed, and people are less likely to trust us, such as when negotiating treaties. Not everyone was around, but the finding of the wireless microphone in the state seal hurt Russia's reputation immensely. It also taught the USA how to be better at counter-intelligence. Now we're in their shoes. XD
"So how the fuck did you arrive on that conclusion is beyond me. " Easy, they're gullible or think we are. Actually, correction. It's quite possible to think in terms of black and white when dealing with law and order. Either full-blown feudalism, or being abandoned in the Antarctic. Of course that tends to fall under "believes anything". Only reason a lot of people support libertarians and anarchists, is because the state has gone so full-blown regressive spyocracy (LOL, swear I didn't know Alex Jones uses that term before searching for the spelling). Black mail for all!
Unfortunately, the US gov't now considers and treats the American people as "the enemy".
Nonsense. The American people are the ones enabling the life style of the U.S. government in the first place. They aren't considered and treated as enemies but as cattle. Only those consistently resisting to be reined in will be sent to the slaughterhouse early. The others are looking forward to being milked for what they are worth.
...Our government ... who serves us ...
That's a mighty big assumption you have there
Maybe our government should stop breaking the law and invading our privacy. I bet one of these butt hurt government officials are reading these comments right now getting all steamed up in the head like, "But, he broke our rules! He's a criminal! He invaded our privacy!".
Such irony in the fact that they call this guy a criminal when all he's trying to do is show everyone what our government really thinks they can get away with. Guess what? You're not invincible and one day, you assholes are going to feel the hardships that the American public has to go through just to live under the US Government.
If something does 'tremendous damage' and nothing happens as a result, and you can't point to single instance of actual impact, seems to be that particular branch isn't really useful.
Snowden did assist the enemies of the US Government - this is true.
The US Government believes its enemies are its very own citizens.
That so-called national security did tremendous damage to the people
This from the bafoons who got us embroiled in a pointless wars, who have caused the creation of ISIS, who have generated false "intelligence", spied on our allies, helped tank the economy (with said pointless wars/false intel). If Snowden has caused any harm in the process of a national service, helping inform the public of the overreach of these organizations, then it is NOTHING compared to what these monsters caused.
Why does shit like this get upvoted? The US only differs from a parliamentary system in that the President is elected by electors via a popular vote. Congress and Parliament are otherwise functionally equivalent.
The US constitution doesn't give the elite any particular power. Yes, read it. The elite get their power, influence and wealth from their power, influence and wealth. No document has ever been able to redistribute wealth, power or influence on a societal level and maintain any real equality. Certainly not communism which if anything further concentrates power and effective wealth into a smaller class of elites that control everything.. Redistribution of wealth is something that is done as a result of force and usually ends up with just a different set of people with wealth power and influence above others without really leveling the playing field.
If anything having power derived from the people in the broadest modern sense ensures that we can at least limit the power of the elite.
Bullfucking shit. Snowden's leaks did no such thing. It was you god damn bastards illegally spying on American citizens and foreign citizens that did the damage. If I had my way I would fly Snowden back here and pin a medal on his ass.
Seems a fair portion of classification is done to avoid political embarrassment. Or to make the information usable at a later date to "make news" to create embarrassment when the political winds shift... ie the tail wagging the dog.
When our enemies know, when our allies know, when pretty much anyone paying attention can figure it out, but the only people that don't know are the American public... that is an abuse of the classification system which is not protecting America.
Yet Snowden did not sell information secretly to any enemy of America. Instead, he shared it openly through the press with the American people.
If you haven’t already noticed, the American people are the enemy
Sorry, but there's a logical fallacy in that deduction. He shared data with everybody. "Everybody" includes both the enemies of America and also the American people. So, yes, sharing data with everybody entails sharing data with the enemies of America; but no, that does not imply that the American people are the enemy.
I can sell popcorn to Yankee fans and Red Sox fans, but that statement does not imply that Yankee fans are Red Sox fans.
... Actually, correction. It's quite possible to think in terms of black and white when dealing with law and order.
I think you've nailed it there. It's very easy for the security people to see things in black and white; that anything that gives them more power to stop the bad guys-- and there actually are bad guys here, you know-- has to be good, and anybody who tries to limit that power has to be bad.
http://www.geoffreylandis.com
What an oxymoron, House Intelligence Committee. I doubt there is any intelligence at all in the House of Reps, or congress in general. Just a bunch of lying, corrupt scumbags that will do anything for a bribe (i mean lobbyist).
To the public image of the highest crooks and liars.
Which is why they want him swimming with the fishies.
so this and other reports*TM will not surprise me at all, only solution to this is vote them all out or be doomed but this may be already too late for that as the military industrial complex has a very nice grip on the USA/most part of earth.
PEACE
Snowden is a Hero just like the Individuals that created the Constitution... For the people by the people.
Using Math(algorithm) & the info(Real or injected Propaganda) that Snowden collected can be used to calculate how much Top Secret info Foreign Intelligence has about Top Secret/Majestic13 in USA.
WikiLeaks is in the same boat as Snowden for this type of Math(Algorithm).
Now we have an idea of what Foreign Intelligence has that is beyond what WikiLeaks is reporting & what Mr. Snowden has collected.
OFF-TOPIC: Why isn't China in the same boat? There is so much Top Secret info leak going to China + Top Secret projects?
He relesed top secret military and government secrets that didn't help the people at all. Of the documentation he respelled most of it simply hurt real humans that were out in the field serving our country, it didn't actually hurt the gov't.
Please look into the documentation he releases and his careless actions before hailing him the hero he isn't....
Ahaha; the what is what?
Ahhahhahha rofl.
Where would one find such a place?
Requiem for the American Dream
Serves us with carrots, green beans and an high-fat sauce.
Requiem for the American Dream
One does damage to all the underhanded acts the government is engaging.
The other damages the institution in which the country is founded upon.
Who's more damaging?
ELOI, ELOI, LAMA SABACHTHANI!?
We now know what we thought before because of him.
A government is an organic entity that seem not have to capacity to admit that it was wrong and unlawful.
Those who broke the supreme law of the land, Our U.S. Constitution should instead be arrested and tried.
https://www.youtube.com/c/BrendaEM
Fumble-fail or javascript bug?
Please ignore.
Requiem for the American Dream
After the election President Obama should plea bargain him down to 1-2 years suspended sentence and thank him for pointing out government overreach and give him full immunity from further charges.
Since news agencies are terrible at providing links, here are the links to the unclassified report summary:
http://intelligence.house.gov/uploadedfiles/hpsci_snowden_review_-_unclass_summary_-_final.pdf
It's as biased a document as it is possible to be, filled with unsubstantiated assertions, misrepresentation, and seems to be based largely on *3RD HAND* "evidence".
Among the interesting tidbits though:
"...in June 2016, the deputy chairman of the Russian parliaments defense and security committee publicly conceded that Snowden did share intelligence" with his govemment."
no citation is given, and the partial quote I suspect is taken out of context by the 3rd hand sources.
"two weeks before Snowden began mass downloads of classified documents, he was reprimanded after engaging in a workplace spat with NSA managers. Snowden was repeatedly counseled by his managers regarding his behavior at work. For example, in June 2012, Snowden became involved in a fiery e-mail argument With a Supervisor about how computer updates should be managed. Snowden added an NSA senior executive several levels above the supervisor to the e-mail thread, an action that earned him a swift reprimand from his contracting officer for failing to follow the proper protocol for raising grievances through the chain of command. Two weeks later, Snowden began his mass downloads of classified information from NSA networks. Despite Snowden's later claim that the March 2013 congressional testimony of Director of National Intelligence James Clapper was a "breaking point" for him, these mass downloads predated Director Clapper's testimony by eight months."
This show ignorance of what Snowden has said. He said he started looking into this when a scan for misfiled documents turned up a top secret document on a server it didn't belong on that outlined some serious constitutional violations.
" He claimed to have left Army basic training because of broken legs when in fact he washed out because of shin splints. He claimed to have obtained a high school degree equivalent when in fact he never did. He claimed to have worked for the CIA as a "senior advisor," which was a gross exaggeration of his entry-level duties as a computer technician. He also doctored his performance evaluations and obtained new positions at NSA by exaggerating his resume and stealing the answers to an employment test"
shin splints=cracked bones. And if he stole and used test answers, he would have been fired - he wasn't. So this is a baseless lie.
"Nevertheless, even by a conservative estimate, the U.S. Government has spent hundreds of millions of dollars, and will eventually spend billions, to attempt to mitigate the damage Snowden caused. These dollars would have been better spent on combating America's adversaries in an increasingly dangerous world."
Or, you know, don't spend any money on updating and replacing blatantly illegal programs. The only money that should be spent is by the DOJ prosecuting anyone who authorized them.
To top all this crap off, based on this ridiculous report, several government congress critter shills signed a letter to Obama to not pardon Snowden (http://intelligence.house.gov/uploadedfiles/hpsci_members_letter_to_potus_re_snowden-15_sep_16.pdf). These include:
Devin Nunes, California, CHAIRMAN
Jeff Miller, Florida
K. Michael Conaway, Texas
Peter T. King, New York
Frank A. LoBiondo, New Jersey
Lynn A. Westmoreland, Georgia
Thomas J Rooney, Florida
Joseph J. Heck, Nevada
Mike R. Pompeo, Kansas
lleana Ros-Lehtinen, Florida
Michael R, Turner, Ohio
Brad R. Wenstrup, Ohlo
Chris Stewart, Utah
Adam B. Schiff, Callfornia, RANKING MEMBER
James A. Himes, Connecticut
Terri A. Sewell, Alabama
Andre Carson, lndiana
Jackie Speier, California
Mike Quigley, llllnois
Erie Swalwell, California
Patrick E. Murphy, Florida
Joaquin Castro, Texas
Paul D. Ryan, SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE
Nancy Pelosi, DEMOCRATIC LEADER
Please vote these people out.
We aren't the enemy. We are the slaves. Anyone who tries to organize or inspire the slaves to revolt is the enemy.
Could it just be possible that this an effort to head off a possible presidential pardon, or least make such a pardon appear to be ill-considered?
Count St. Germain
A "blistering report" by the insider trading, lyingist douchetards who never, ever went after the banksters for all their perfidy, but instead still enable them as they receive their filthy payoffs. Too bad that fourth flight didn't fly into congress on 9/11!
I think Snowden did hurt America in some regards. He allowed the Chinese to realise how to really snoop on people and intercept data. He meant well and I hope it works out for him.
Okay, find me a case of someone who negligently got classified material where it shouldn't be and faced felony prosecution. The cases I know of where there was criminal prosecution involve deliberate moves of classified material to unauthorized places.
"When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
So let's get this straight. The government spies on its citizens illegally, then get's mad when they are called out...
If you aren't part of a well regulated militia, you should be. Time to take this country back from corrupt corporations and greedy elites and bankers. Oh wait, everyone is too busy arguing about Trump and Clinton. Those two are executing their jobs perfectly. Keep being distracted my little sheeps.
We may be the slaves, but Thomas Hobbes reassures everyone that we really are our own worst enemy and need protection from ourselves by the government threatening us in order to keep us in line. Plato? Aristotle? Completely wrong according to Thomas Hobbes.
I made the comment that the US government was already too close to Sharia law for my tastes and I got compared to a Muslim. Now that's crazy!
Well maybe if the Constitution was created by people who actually meant the provisions to restrain government power to hold water, it might. I don't know about the other players, but the Hamiltonians who wanted strong government and advocated the hardest for the Federal government were believers in Thomas Hobbes' philosophy which promoted the notion of government with absolute authority. They accepted the restrictive clauses knowing that the rest of the document rendered them ineffective, such as not having grand juries determine whether government officials committed crimes while in office.
We should be able to change our Social Security Numbers at will and they should increase the digits when they run out.
Wrong. It's the US government officials who approved the NSA's infiltration of the web that put America at risk. You can try to blame the one who squealed on the illegal actions, but no one with a brain is fooled.
There are two types of people in this world:
1. Those who want to be watched all the time, because they think it is safer.
2. Those who want to left alone, because they think it is safer.
IMO, history shows that those in group #2 are correct and those in group #1 are incorrect most of the time. These politicians are in group #1.
Well, many years ago I would get them from time to time, but never often. At some point I stopped getting any.
More subjective, but my impression is that there are fewer mod points being given out these years, too. In particular, "funny" posts seem much scarcer. Or maybe the real world has gotten sadder?
Freedom = (Meaningful - Coerced) Choice != (Speech | Beer^2), and sad sock puppets' bad mods avail them naught.
The cases I know of where there was criminal prosecution involve deliberate moves of classified material to unauthorized places
Unauthorized places, like someone's unsecured computer in an unsecured home?
Sure. That counts. If Clinton had deliberately put classified material there, criminal prosecution would be appropriate.
"When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes