Sunday, July 28, 2013

Whatever happened to "citizen journalism"?

I've been wracking the lump of meat I jokingly call a "brain," trying to figure out when, exactly, we turned the corner, as a country, with regards to whistleblowers.

I've been wondering this for a while. It crops up in weird places: earlier this year, a hacker revealed that the police were ignoring blatant evidence that a rape had been committed. He's facing ten years in jail, while the now-convicted rapists only got two years each. Was exposing the rape a worse crime than committing it?

At what point did we start to think it was more important to keep secrets hidden, instead of dealing with the crimes being covered up by those secrets?

Edward Snowden is currently hiding in a Moscow airport, living on vending machine borcht and energy drinks (I assume); he's under fire for disclosing the fact that the American government is spying on American citizens. And everybody else on the planet. His guilt is just accepted, at this point: the focus of the argument against him seems to be "well, he ran to another country! And he's a traitor!"

But what's being ignored here? Maybe the nature of his crime? Maybe the fact that... well, let me just quote from some people who were much smarter than me.
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
Does anybody remember what the phrase "probable cause" means? I'm pretty sure that a global, sweeping review of every phone call in America isn't covered by "describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized."

Yeah, but fuck that Fourth Amendment, right? The Second Amendment is the only important one!

I think the best response came from the Rude Pundit:
The reaction that most infuriates the Rude Pundit is that Snowden didn't do the nation any favors because, well, fuck, we all knew that our phone calls and other information was being monitored... Yeah, but there's a huge difference between strongly suspecting that your husband is fucking around and being shown pictures of him balling the babysitter. There's vast gulf between "knowing" and knowledge. The intelligence services have been forced to say, "Okay, yeah, you caught us." The twist is that they're adding, "And, oh, by the way, we're gonna keep boning the babysitter. Just try to stop us from fucking her."
But if we're honest with ourselves, Snowden isn't the problem. His story is just a symptom of a larger problem.

In Maryland, the closing arguments in the Bradley Manning trial have been made, and as I write this, we await the judge's decision. Was Manning guilty of espionage?

Let's remember what he's guilty of, shall we? He leaked documents that showed that, despite our noble words and fine sentiments, America was still torturing and killing innocent people. He didn't damage our war effort, or put any spies in danger. He just told us that the American government was lying to us. He showed us what our tax dollars are paying for. He didn't commit espionage - he committed journalism.

Julian Assange, who's "guilty" of the same "crimes," held a press conference by telephone last week, where reporters also got to hear from Daniel Ellsberg - Ellsberg, you may or may not remember, was "guilty" of a similar "crime." He leaked the Pentagon Papers, embarrassing the US government; he never went to jail for telling the truth. Why should Manning? Why should Snowden?

Why should it be a criminal act to tell the truth?

11 comments:

  1. It shouldn't be criminal to act to expose the truth, especially when that truth is relevant to the general population and their right to the privacy. The privacy the GOVERNMENT is violating.

    So, why is the Obama justice department pursuing Snowden as a common criminal?

    Inquiring Minds Want To Know...

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  2. Last I heard, you were okay with the Navy shelling of Baghdad, the seige of Fallujah and the totalitarian mass arrests of every male in an Iraqi village. News flash. This post is also about Bradley Manning. His is a far more egregious case in that he has been in custody since day one and has been abused the entire two years. Manning was bringing the crimes of a military and intelligence cartel to the light of day. He knew that he was breaking the law. He did it so that people like you would understand that torture, rendition and unjust captivity were really happening in Afghanistan and Iraq. He fell on his sword for the greater glory of the U.S.A.

    Snowden is a clown. A comparison to Ellsberg is not valid. He betrayed the trust that was given to him with his security clearance to bring to light nothing of any importance whatsoever. What kind of idiot would think that he or she had any privacy on the telephone in this day and age? Watch another episode of "The Unotuchables." Maybe you can begin to understand what it was to tap a phone in the mid-twentieth century. We'll all stay tuned for updates. What would you have the DOJ do in a case like this? Just tell him it's okay to come home to Mommy and Daddy?

    What I'm saying is just that Nameless only raised some questions.

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    Replies
    1. Okay, I get it. On the one hand you're okay with whistle blowing and on the other hand your not.

      I guess it depends on the template. Got it.

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  3. "describing the place to be searched"- the earth

    "and the persons or things to be seized."- anyone or anything we can get our hands on.

    There- satisfied? And the advantage of this is that the Feds could just get one judge to sign off on one warrant, and they are off to the races.

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  4. The moral and ethical questions of breaking the law and abrogating contracts aren't always clear. I do think people like Manning and Snowden and their predecessors know the penalties and assumed the risk knowingly, but I don't think the public really thinks all that much about the longer term trends each and every time we give up a bit of liberty to buy the safety and security the authoritarians offer us. Each step seems minimal and necessary but each step leads us further away from the home of the brave.

    They probably don't dare shoot Manning or Snowden, but in a sense they will be punished for our sins because while we bicker about bullshit, WE let this happen. The American voter let this happen because we're selfish cowards, because we're too busy inflating petty things to cosmic proportions to notice what's going on, because we crap out pants about terrorists blowing up Keokuk, about the Supreme Court instituting Sharia law and Flouride in the water while they read our Mother's day cards and hide cameras in our bathrooms, track our travels and count our calories. Isn't this supposed to be the job of Democrats? And don't we waste our time bickering and accusing and arguing with each other?

    So I care less about the fate of these individuals than I care about living in a country where we're all under observation all the time; where guilt is presumed, where we're all under suspicion, where everyone is treated as a potential criminal, where due process isn't due and where our property is theirs for the taking. Secret trials, secret prisons, secret wars - none of this is new: Nixon, Reagan, Bush, Cheney - we could have stopped this a long time ago, but we're too busy with Family Values, with being soft on crime, defining everything as communism and of course, taxes. We could have stopped this long ago and why do I think we'll be saying this ten years from now and twenty and fifty?

    the headlines in my local paper yesterday were about the discovery that not only does the county have cameras nearly everywhere, but that there are no rules setting conditions and limits for their use. the county response to the whistle was that since nobody has complained yet, we don't need rules.

    Sweet Jesus, are they saying that as long as we don't notice, as long as they keep it all hid, all things are legal? Yes, they are. God bless the whistle blowers.

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  5. We REALLY need to kill the Patriot Act form which all these gag abominations are borne.

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    1. Yes we do rockync. I'm wondering why President Obama hasn't used his bully pulpit advocating just that. But, then again, I think I know the answer.

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    2. I strongly agree and yes, it's been a disappointment that he has not at the very least tried to do away with at least some of the more egregious aspects of the "patriot" act.

      Ever notice that when politicians talk about patriotism, they're trying to screw us?

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    3. RN - the answer is no one, not Dem, not GOP is going to give that up now that they have it. I thought that at the time when they first crammed it down our throats and now I know that.
      Fogg - Yes, interesting how that word "patriotism" comes to mean interference, intrusion and violation in so many countries that have used it; China, North Korea, Cuba, Nazi Germany, just to name a few. An yet to our founding fathers patriotism meant, freedom and insurrection and yet those who support the corrupting of the word are always quick to trot those FFs out aren't they?

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  6. I call it civil disobedience, but that comes with being guilty of breaking the law. To bad Snow-job doesn't have the guts to stand on his convictions. Other Americans have gladly gone to jail to express the convictions of their cause, especially against their government. Instead he flees from the law and buddies up to the KGB dictator. Have fun living in Putin land. Hope you are not gay. A guy who is willing to go to jail for his convictions, and stand, and fight, I can respect. This guy, no thanks.
    If I were an American Olympian I would not go to Russia where just talking about homosexual issues can get you arrested, you don't have to be gay. I wonder if the Obama administration will fight just as hard to have a person arrested in Russia for simply talking about gay issues, released? They seem to "put it all on the table" to get this law breaker back to the USA.

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    Replies
    1. Have you seen his (former) girlfriend? Pretty sure the guy isn't gay...

      Delete

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