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Amnesty Attacks Assange

Michael Moynihan | 8.10.2010 7:13 PM

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Last week, I argued that Wikileaks "editor-in-chief" Julian Assange is many things—hacker, Jackie Rodgers Jr. lookalike, paranoiac—but he's most certainly isn't a journalist. The real journalists at The New York Times, who mined the leaked data for stories while protecting the names of American intelligence sources on the ground in Afghanistan, denied that they worked collaboratively with Assange. "He's making it sound like this was some sort of journalistic enterprise between WikiLeaks, The New York Times, The Guardian, and Der Spiegel," said Times reporter Eric Schmidt, citing the other news organizations that were provided with a first glimpse of the material, "and that's not what it was."

And now human rights groups are having a go at Assange, reports the Wall Street Journal.

The letter from five human-rights groups sparked a tense exchange in which WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange issued a tart challenge for the organizations to help with the massive task of removing names from thousands of documents, according to several of the organizations that signed the letter. The exchange shows how WikiLeaks and Mr. Assange risk being isolated from some of their most natural allies in the wake of the documents' publication

Amnesty International, Campaign for Innocent Victims in Conflict, George Soros's Open Society Institute, the Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission, and the International Crisis Group signed the letter (delivered via email), citing concerns that Afghan informants named in the document dump will face the brutal retribution of the Taliban. Assange responded by asking Amnesty International to "provide staff to help redact the names of Afghan civilians," a pointless exercise now that the documents already exist online, unredacted.

Amnesty expressed interest in assisting, though warned that they are constrained by limited resources, and suggested a conference call to discuss the issue further. Assange responded, via email, with a threat: "I'm very busy and have no time to deal with people who prefer to do nothing but cover their asses. If Amnesty does nothing I shall issue a press release highlighting its refusal." On his Twitter feed, Assange told his followers to not "be fooled on the 'human rights groups'"—scare quotes are in the original—because they are "US led." That any of the signatories of the letter are "US led" is demonstrably false, something any journalist worth his salt would know.

And Assange's claim that the brave people behind the Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission are "primary (sic) funded by the occupying forces of Afghanistan" is designed to mislead, to suggest that the group is a propaganda arm of the United States military (the biggest single donor is the government of Canada, incidentally. Finland, Denmark, and USAID also underwrite a large portion of the group's budget). Read the group's latest report on the dire conditions in Afghanistan's prisons and detention centers to get a flavor of their work.

Assange is, stupidly, digging in his heels, first blaming the United States military for not better protecting the sources he exposed and now attacking Amnesty International for not providing free labor to help in redacting already released documents. As I said last week, I am generally pro-leak but this isn't the guy I want as the representative of government transparency.

One more wrinkle in the story: According to an article in Sydsvenska Dagbladet (in terrible translation here), Assange's claims, made ad nauseum in speeches and articles, that he and his sources are fully protected by Swedish law, where Wikileaks' servers are located, is slightly more complicated than he lets on. Håkan Rustand, deputy to Sweden's minister of justice, tells the paper that "it is too simple to claim that all Wikileaks sources are totally protected in Sweden." The reasons for this are rather complicated, but Assange apparently fancies himself an expert in Swedish law, tweeting that "The article [in Sydsvenskan] currently being spun (sic) about WikiLeaks source protection legalities is false." He apparently knows something the justice ministry doesn't, so stay tuned.

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Michael Moynihan
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  1. Fructose   15 years ago

    That's right Moynihan. Assange isn't a journalist, at least by the modern definition.

    Journalist, noun: A filthy parasite who earns a living by fellating the power-hungry, warmongering, authoritarian ruling class.

    See also journolist.

    1. BeltwayLurker   15 years ago

      "journolist" was fellating the surrender monkey currently in chief.

    2. G-Love   15 years ago

      JACKIE ROGERS JR. $100,000 JACKPOT WAD!!!

    3. gabe   15 years ago

      The US supported Taliban, are we sure they ever stopped

  2. BeltwayLurker   15 years ago

    This is so last weekend. How about the Queens flight attendant? The north Korean artillary barrage and capture of a south Korean fishing boat? The HPOA chick quitting work? Strippers protesting Ohio Church? something new!

    1. dbcooper   15 years ago

      HPOA chick quitting work

      Lamest shit in the history of the internet.

      1. BeltwayLurker   15 years ago

        Nothing wrong with you people who prefer the flight steward story. Your bitterness is odd.

        1. dbcooper   15 years ago

          It was just some lame, clearly fake stunt. Gay.

          1. BeltwayLurker   15 years ago

            The coppers did not find your gay friend's stunt fake, see? If you hid the HPOA from your gaze, don't even try the stripper story.

  3. Mike   15 years ago

    Assange is an enemy. He's also the same piece of sh!t who edited a previous video leak to make the U.S. military look bad. String him up!

    1. libertymike   15 years ago

      Somebody been' digesting the propaganda.

      1. Jim Treacher   15 years ago

        Somebody don' know what words mean.

  4. Yonemoto   15 years ago

    "(the biggest single donor is the government of Canada, incidentally.)"

    1) EVEN WORSE.

    2) WTF Moynihan? Isn't Canada one of the occupying forces? Technically correct. The best kind.

  5. Yonemoto   15 years ago

    3) digging in his heals

    Well at least he wasn't toeing the lion.

    1. Yonemoto   15 years ago

      Sorry, when I get upset with the content I either don't post or get annoying. It's incredibly childish of me, but then again, reason won't let me delete my post made in the heat of passion.

  6. Jeffersonian   15 years ago

    A self-justifying narcissist.

    1. Yonemoto   15 years ago

      Yes, but so are most libertarians, self included.

      1. Government of Wolves   15 years ago

        Yeah, but most libertarians are about protecting people fighting neo-medieval zealots, not hanging them out to dry on an ego trip.

        1. libertymike   15 years ago

          No, most libertarians are about protecting those who are doing what they can to topple the empire. Paid informants of the empire do not have a right to keep that secret.

          1. Government of Wolves   15 years ago

            Even if you think that the US shouldn't be involved, anyone who wants the Taliban gone is on the side of the angels. If you're going to support the actions of the Taliban, who executed a pregnant widow after giving her 200 lashes, I really don't see how you call yourself a libertarian.

            You can oppose war without willing our flagrantly, revoltingly evil enemy to win.

            1. Art-P.O.G.   15 years ago

              Absolutely right, G.o.W.

            2. BeltwayLurker   15 years ago

              Some people are into the whipping snuff scene. Not me, mind you. It's those people.

            3. Drax the Destroyer   15 years ago

              Hence, this is why mercenaries and assassinations should have been the rule of the day. Alas, it's too late to try something affordable that might have had a better chance of working. Oh well. Once we have terminators we should be able to wipe the Taliban out in 2156.

              On another note, a lot of horrible shit goes down everywhere on par with executing pregnant women for the hell of it. If that is our litmus test for invasion and occupation, I don't see an end to it.

              1. Jim Treacher   15 years ago

                Yes, sweetie, nihilism is comforting.

        2. gabe   15 years ago

          ya but the leaks reveal what all cynics knew. The US supports both sides in a war...they funded the ISI even though we knew they were supporting the Taliban....and oops the US government also directly supported the Taliban, this is just another instance that the empire fellating journ-o-list will ignore

      2. BeltwayLurker   15 years ago

        I thought he meant the wikileaks guy, not you.

  7. SIV   15 years ago

    but he's most certainly isn't a journalist.

    Why am I not surprised Michael Moynihahn is a "journalist" who wants to decide who can call themselves a journalist.

  8. mad libertarian guy   15 years ago

    If he's not journalist, as you keep asserting, why hold him to the standards of one?

    If all he is is a source, why hold him responsible for not redacting names according to journalistic standards? Since when is it a source's job to do a journalists work?

    You've beat the hell out of this. Perhaps it's time to move on.

    1. libertymike   15 years ago

      He wants to make sure that the world into which he so desperately seeks entry knows that he is prepared to swallow hard.

      1. BeltwayLurker   15 years ago

        I hear, on good authority, that he already has his monogrammed martini glass.

    2. wayne   15 years ago

      Since when is it a source's job to do a journalists work?

      A source does not publish his data on the internet for all to see. This guy is neither a source nor a journalist. He is just a cowardly fuck who thinks his opinions are correct and airing them makes the world a better place. A typical do-gooder. In typical do-gooder fashion, a lot of innocent people are fucked in the process.

  9. spur   15 years ago

    Assange is a hero in my book - and if his leaks get us out of the great game faster than sooo much the better - but based on what I've seen of his personality I have to wonder if he just isn't a libertarian in disguise - him and Rothbard would get along like a storm...

    1. People his leaks will kill   15 years ago

      We're no so crazy about him.

      1. Art-P.O.G.   15 years ago

        Assange is a piece of shit in my book.

        1. libertymike   15 years ago

          Why is he such a piece of shit in your book?

          1. Government of Wolves   15 years ago

            He put innocents at risk needlessly because he was on an ego trip.

            Fairly simple, no?

            1. libertymike   15 years ago

              Paid informants of the state do not have a reasonable expectation of privacy.

              1. Government of Wolves   15 years ago

                You'd apply that to paid informants against sex traffickers and other scum of the earth, then?

                And I don't think your personal definition of 'reasonable' carries much moral weight.

                1. libertymike   15 years ago

                  The scum of the earth are those who fellate the state.

                  1. Government of Wolves   15 years ago

                    Really? I would have thought the scum of the earth were those who violate others' human rights. Like the Taliban...

                    1. Anonymous   15 years ago

                      Like the State. So the State and the Taliban are scum. Yes?

                    2. gabe   15 years ago

                      "I would have thought the scum of the earth were those who violate others' human rights. Like the Taliban..." ya and those who pay the Taliban 43 million dollars are also bad...and those who refuse to report it.

                  2. Jim Treacher   15 years ago

                    I'm with Libertymike: Three cheers for the Taliban!

              2. Ron L   15 years ago

                libertymike|8.10.10 @ 8:57PM|#
                "Paid informants of the state..."
                Citation required.

        2. Government of Wolves   15 years ago

          Damn straight.

        3. BeltwayLurker   15 years ago

          Ditto.

        4. Cata   15 years ago

          +1

    2. DG   15 years ago

      Rothbard respected human life. I doubt he would be down with innocent people getting killed just to further his own goals.

      1. Yonemoto   15 years ago

        FUCK that shit. Assange has not pulled the trigger on anyone. If the Taliban kills any source, two people are to blame.

        1) The taliban, for actually fucking doing the killing.

        2) The US, for not offering the source amnesty after their privacy has been compromised.

        1. Jim Treacher   15 years ago

          Assange has not pulled the trigger on anyone.

          Neither did Hitler. Now screech "Godwin!" like a good little drone.

        2. Will   15 years ago

          3) The US for invading the country in the first place. I wonder how many innocent civilians died compared to the potential deaths of those named in the report...

    3. Jim Treacher   15 years ago

      Unfortunately for spur, his book sits on the shelf, unread. Forever.

  10. Duckworth-Lewis   15 years ago

    "As I said last week, I am generally pro-leak but this isn't the guy I want as the representative of government transparency."

    I personally don't like the Paul family, Beck, and their whole right wing crew being the public face of libertarianism but sadly I'm not an omnipotent God and I'll work to support Paul if it means a bit more libertarianism hanging around...

    1. Irresponsible Hater   15 years ago

      As I said last week, I am generally pro-leak but this isn't the guy I want as the representative of government transparency.

      "You go to war with the army you have, not the army you might want or wish to have at a later time."

      1. Lord Ballsac   15 years ago

        I must have blocked that shit out.

        (Vomits for 20 minutes).

  11. Fluffy   15 years ago

    Personally, I would be delighted if the US government would abduct Moynihan and hold him in a torture chamber somewhere, and if someone leaked the information about his fate to the New York Times, it would be screamingly funny if they sat on it and refused to publish it "to protect informants" and "for reasons of national security".

    Dick.

    1. Art-P.O.G.   15 years ago

      Your post makes no sense to me.

      1. Ron L   15 years ago

        What Art-P.O.G said; care to render that comment in understandable English?

    2. dbcooper   15 years ago

      Of course, that's just a little contrived ...

    3. Government of Wolves   15 years ago

      So you're coming down on the side of allowing the psychos who shot a pregnant widow after lashing her 200 times access to more innocents. This isn't about whether you support the war, or what the government is doing in that war. It's about protecting innocent people when doing so is easy, just a matter of blacking out a few names.

      And by the way, morally, what the US Government does, as bad as it is and as much as it needs to stop, is not close to comparable to the Taliban.

      Dick.

      1. BeltwayLurker   15 years ago

        In their world, helping the US and our allies is a crime of which no punishment is too vile. To them, the informants deserve it.

        1. Art-P.O.G.   15 years ago

          I think you're right there, Lurker.

        2. gabe   15 years ago

          the governemnt funded ISI who they knew was funding the Taliban...it is in the leaked documents and most people already knew that...but this makes it official...so if you really hate teh Taliban you should be pretty mad at the bullshit that is our foreign policy.

      2. Fluffy   15 years ago

        Until every action of our government is undertaken in good faith, I no longer recognize any request for secrecy made by any government representative for any reason whatsoever.

        The very first time the Bush administration defended itself politically by asserting national security privilege in lawsuits, you lost me.

        When all of the Abu Ghraib and Bagram prison photos Obama has are released, we can talk about secrecy again.

        The fact is that every last one of you pro-war fuckers is a lying piece of shit when you claim this is all about the poor, poor informants. That's just the datum you latched on to because it put the best face on your REAL position, namely: that the government is allowed to lie to the public and declare entire areas of its operation secret if that helps it keep up "public morale". What you're REALLY pissed about is that information became available to the public without politicians deciding that it would be "useful" for us to know it. You were going to latch on to any criticism you could contrive in order to support your system of "managed public morale".

        My position is that the war policy is up for public debate every minute of every day, and to the extent that information is deliberately withheld from the public that debate is corrupted - and to the extent the war policy debate is corrupted, we cease to have a legitimate government.

        Look at the information in the files indicating that Pakistan is supporting the Taliban. That's information that war on terror opponents were absolutely entitled to have and to present to the public as part of the ongoing political debate about war on terror policy. Hiding that information corrupts the democratic process and is absolutely unacceptable.

        1. dbcooper   15 years ago

          That's a lot of wind there, yet nothing addressing the outing of the informants ...

          1. Sidd Finch   15 years ago

            or the NGO complaints

        2. Government of Wolves   15 years ago

          And on the issue of redacting the informants' names, Fluffy says nothing.

          It's so easy to argue when you argue with the people in your head rather than the ones in the real world.

          1. Fluffy   15 years ago

            As I said below, in the current environment of absurdly manipulative state control of the flow of information, I can totally understand why someone would dump raw data in a completely uncontrolled way.

            If someone handed me a file labeled "Covert CIA Activity in Iran" or something similar, my first instinct would be to put it up as a torrent before I lost access to it. I might only have a brief opportunity to do so before that information was suppressed again forever. I wouldn't say to myself, "Hey, let me comb through this and judge every last piece of information myself before I release this."

            Would that be careless? Maybe. But after a few decades of lies, the state really has no right to complain if I act in haste.

            1. Government of Wolves   15 years ago

              We're not talking about the State's right to complain - we're talking about the right of the Afghan informants and their families to complain. Learn to distinguish between the State and innocent people - it's an important distinction for a libertarian.

              The way you act towards the Afghans really isn't that different to that of the Pentagon. What's the Phrase?

              "They're only a pawn in your game."

            2. grrizzly   15 years ago

              But after a few decades of lies, the state really has no right to complain if I act in haste.

              Somehow the worst of anti-war types always reveal their complete ignorance of history. I wonder when do you imagine the government told the truth?

              1. Fluffy   15 years ago

                Governments are always deceptive and self-serving, but the limits of both of those attributes wax and wane.

                And in this instance, I was referring specifically to deceptive government requests for secrecy - which are obviously much greater in number now than in the past, if only because the number of things kept secret has expanded by several orders of magnitude since 1941.

                1. Art-P.O.G.   15 years ago

                  OPSEC is also much more difficult now than it was in 1941 AFAIK.

        3. AA   15 years ago

          "The fact is that every last one of you pro-war fuckers is a lying piece of shit when you claim this is all about the poor, poor informants."

          So you completely ignore everything everyone says. Nice.

          "Look at the information in the files indicating that Pakistan is supporting the Taliban. That's information that war on terror opponents were absolutely entitled to have and to present to the public as part of the ongoing political debate about war on terror policy. Hiding that information corrupts the democratic process and is absolutely unacceptable."

          This has nothing to do with the main complaint about redacting the informants names.

          If we use the logic you use here: If you don't think is was right to release the informants names because there lives are at risk then you must be a war monger, then the same logic could be used to say you support the Taliban. Somehow I doubt thats the case. So STFU

          1. AA   15 years ago

            "There" should be "their."

          2. Fluffy   15 years ago

            Whatever.

            You pro-WOT guys were bitching about Wikileaks before anyone said anything about informants' names. You were pissed on the first day of the story. Go back and read Free Republic on the first day of the story.

            In fact, you were already bitching about Wikileaks before this particular leak was even made, back when the leaked video was released. There were no informants' names then, and you were already pissed - because Wikileaks wouldn't play ball and hide information that might embarrass the US government.

            It all boils down to bad faith. If this was 1944, and the US government came to me and said, "Hey Fluffy, don't print that info you heard about the invasion being scheduled for the first week in June. That would really hurt a lot of people!" I would say, "Sure, of course not!" I'd say this because I'd know the request was made in good faith, and that it wasn't being made so that one party could gain some Senate seats in the next election, or so that the President could avoid one measly uncomfortable question in a press conference, or so that the US could bury some dumb SOB they were hiding in a secret prison somewhere, or so they can protect some government official who broke one of the few laws that still restrain these guys in even the slightest way. I can't know any of those things now. In fact, I have to assume that's exactly why I'm being asked for secrecy. Whenever any US government representative asks me for secrecy, my first and last thought has to be that they're scamming me for someone's political benefit or to make sure they can keep on tricking the public about something. And you know and I know that they deserve to have me think that about them. So how do I go about deciding what information to suppress and what to release in such a context? In such an absolute and total sea of bad faith? I can't. The only possible course I can take is to release it all and hope for the best.

            1. AA   15 years ago

              "You pro-WOT guys were bitching about Wikileaks before anyone said anything about informants' names. You were pissed on the first day of the story. Go back and read Free Republic on the first day of the story."

              Seriously, what are you talking about? Nobody here supports the WOT. Free Republic? Come on. All you are doing is making any reasonable points you may make completely irrelevant. At least understand what we are saying without these wild accusations.

              1. Fluffy   15 years ago

                Fine.

                I'm lumping you guys in with Moynihan, and assigning his position to you, and that may not be fair in every instance.

              2. Fluffy   15 years ago

                By the way, Moynihan and Young completely support the war on terror, and would support a wider war if it was launched.

                So we really can't say "No one around here" etc etc etc.

                1. AA   15 years ago

                  If you are bitching about the WOT, and most war in general, great, I'm with you, as I'm sure most posters on this thread tonight are. That still doesn't excuse Assange's carelessness to stroke his own ego.

            2. Night Elf Mohawk   15 years ago

              It all boils down to bad faith. If this was 1944, and the US government came to me and said, "Hey Fluffy, don't print that info you heard about the invasion being scheduled for the first week in June. That would really hurt a lot of people!" I would say, "Sure, of course not!" I'd say this because I'd know the request was made in good faith...

              With 4+ decades of 20/20 hindsight you know it was made in good faith. You'd have no way of knowing that at the time any more than you know that with 4+ decades of 20/20 hindsight you wouldn't be outing good faith requests now. What an imbecilic "point" you are trying to make.

              1. old rpm daddy   15 years ago

                Sorry, 'Hawk. I didn't see your comment when I typed mine. You said it better. In addition to hindsight, it might be useful to consider that the government lied a whole lot about what it was doing during WWII, just to keep the enemy off-balance. So again, how would one determine whether a request was made in good faith or not?

            3. old rpm daddy   15 years ago

              In your 1944 scenario, how would you have known the government was acting in good faith? Without the benefit of hindsight, I mean?

        4. Marshall Gill   15 years ago

          Science you can be dense. I don't think a single person, here, has argued that this information shouldn't have been released. I haven't read anyone, on this board, claim "national security".

          What you miss entirely, is that there almost certainly were names of Afghani civilians who simply didn't want their sister murdered for not wearing a veil. Some attempt to prevent danger to these people could have been made without minimizing the information leaked. Failure to do so was the height of ass-hatishness. Failure to understand this simple fact is the second in ass-hatishness.

          Or since we love to place words in other people's mouths should I simply say "Sorry, Fluffy, I don't have any cake". (They all want cake)

          1. Fluffy   15 years ago

            What you miss entirely is that Robert Gates and the other administration spokesmen howling about the informants really don't give a shit about them one way or the other. Their real goal is to politically isolate Wikileaks to create a climate of opinion where they can get away with arresting everyone and shutting them down, and bringing Assange to the US [if he's lucky]. That's what this is really about - trying to whip up sentiment so they can make sure no one does an end-run around them again.

            "But Fluffy, no, they DO care, really - " No they don't.

            1. Art-P.O.G.   15 years ago

              Yes, because sources being put in danger doesn't harm intelligence-gathering due to possible reluctance of future sources. Really, Fluffy? Really?

              1. Government of Wolves   15 years ago

                I don't think he thought that far ahead... or that logically.

              2. Fluffy   15 years ago

                Well, if that's the concern, then it actually isn't concern for the informants. It's a pragmatic concern for the effectiveness of future intelligence operations.

                So that doesn't actually constitute a rebuttal.

                In any event, if it wasn't the informants' names that had the war party's apologists in the media gasping and clutching their pearls, it would just be something else.

                "This puts US operatives at risk! Their methods could be deduced!"

                "This puts US servicepeople at risk! The Taliban will hold out longer if they see any evidence of dissension between us and Pakistan!"

                There is an endless list of objections that could be raised to the leaking of any information. And they WOULD be raised, because the real argument here is "Shut up and stop asking questions about the war, because once a war starts the public no longer has any role but to read our press releases and clap at parades."

                1. Art-P.O.G.   15 years ago

                  [citation needed]

                  1. Chinny Chin Chin   15 years ago

                    Art - not a citation, but to me good evidence of Fluffy's final point is the shift in news coverage from the time of Vietnam to now. Back then, cameras were allowed more unfettered access to the battlefield, and the top commanders regularly held the "Follies" news conferences. Many have pointed to the news coverage as a key factor in the erosion of public support for that military action.

                    Now, the situation is far different. The military is far more sophisticated in managing war zone stories, and they are abetted by the political leadership. From my perspective, they (more than ever) seek to arrange coverage in as positive a light as possible... even if it requires dishonesty. I agree with Fluffy that this is detrimental to legitimate governance.

                    That written... Fluffy, is it not possible that libertarians posting here really *are* concerned about the safety of individual Afghans?

                    1. Art-P.O.G.   15 years ago

                      I really appreciate your thoughtful response, Chinny, and that is a fair point.

          2. scruffy   14 years ago

            Mm, publishing the informants names was asshatish, not admitting error and redacting was willful asshatish.

            Assange's willfully ignorant response to Amnesty, that's been confirmed?

        5. johnl   15 years ago

          No Fluffy it's really reasonable to expect that anyone publishing this would take the time to first black out the names of Afghan civilians. Don't have time to black out names == don't have time to publish.

  12. Jay   15 years ago

    Carrying water for the baby-killers in the Military, hu, Moynihan?

    /Jay

    1. libertymike   15 years ago

      I guess Art is as well.

      1. Art-P.O.G.   15 years ago

        Yes, "baby-killers in the military". Both of you eat a dick and die.

        1. Jay   15 years ago

          Mmmm....dick...

        2. libertymike   15 years ago

          Art, truth hurts? Libertarianism is not about fellating the military industrial security surveilance income tax make war all over the world state.

          1. Art-P.O.G.   15 years ago

            Shut the fuck up, LibertyMike. Go ride your hobby horse somewhere else.

            1. Jay   15 years ago

              Let's salute the men and women in uniform and thank them for their service:
              "At least 23 unarmed men, women and children died in the attack"

              http://www.aolnews.com/world/a.....s/19496450

              Thank you for killing innocent civilians. You're making the world a better place.

              /Jay

              1. BeltwayLurker   15 years ago

                That's what they get for starting shit without arms.

            2. libertymike   15 years ago

              Art, Fluffy is pretty much a pure libertarian-not a pretend one. What he has to say should carry a great deal of weight.

              1. Art-P.O.G.   15 years ago

                Yes, I'm sure that means he's always right.

                1. libertymike   15 years ago

                  Yes, I'll admit when he disagrees with me, he's wrong.

          2. Ron L   15 years ago

            libertymike|8.10.10 @ 8:52PM|#
            "Art, truth hurts? Libertarianism is not about fellating the military industrial security surveilance income tax make war all over the world state."
            M'k. And about Assange?

          3. Azathoth   15 years ago

            Liberaltarianism is not about fellating the military industrial security surveilance income tax make war all over the world state.

            FIFY

        3. SIV   15 years ago

          Their Che t-shirts are MORE than just a fashion statement;)

    2. BeltwayLurker   15 years ago

      Moynihan made no mention of abortion centers.

      1. Jay   15 years ago

        http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kmgbSjLT1xE#t=8m47s

        /Jay

  13. libertymike   15 years ago

    Libertarianism is not about "making peace" with the warfare state and its factotums. Its about smashing it.

    1. Art-P.O.G.   15 years ago

      Spoken like a true Bolshevik.

      1. libertymike   15 years ago

        Yes, Art. You got me. I am so anarcho-free enterprise-individualist that I'm red.

        1. Art-P.O.G.   15 years ago

          You missed the point entirely.

    2. Government of Wolves   15 years ago

      Thank you, Grand Libertarian Strategist!

    3. Marshall Gill   15 years ago

      Libertarianism is not about "making peace" with the warfare state and its factotums. Its about smashing it.

      The question isn't if outing government duplicity is wrong. Every single person on this board agrees that it is the thing to do.

      The question is if risking others lives, so that you can jack off while taking no risk, but claiming to "Carry the Banner of Libery" with Mike and Fluffy, equals being a hero or being a douche bag. There is absolutely nothing heroic in risking other peoples lives.

      The answer is douche bag, of course.

      1. AA   15 years ago

        Thank you. Exactly the point. Its so easy to whine about Liberty from your fucking computer without having to take any real risk yourself.

      2. Fluffy   15 years ago

        There is absolutely nothing heroic in risking other peoples lives.

        There would be plenty of people who would say it was heroic if he was risking other people's lives by flying killer robots around in the sky looking for people to assassinate.

        I'll tell you what: have the Obama administration hand over to me every piece of data that would embarrass war supporters or undermine public political support for the war on terror, and I promise to redact all proper names of non-Americans in the war zone.

        Until that's done, our real problem is the state stranglehold on information and political management of information, and one antidote to that is the uncritical and unfiltered dumping of raw data in a completely uncontrolled way.

        Don't like anarchy? Then give me an honest government with absolutely no finger on the scale in the public debate over its policies. If you don't want to give me that, fuck it - I'll cheer on the anarchists, in that case.

        1. Ron L   15 years ago

          And about Assange?

        2. Government of Wolves   15 years ago

          So, in your fantasy, the very real lives of those opposing murderous zealots should be held hostage to what you well know is an unrealistic goal - a perfect 'honest' state.

          It's nice to know you have such respect for the lives of your fellow men.

          1. DG   15 years ago

            It's the exact same reasoning that the government uses to justify civilian casualties. Our cause is just, so a few innocent deaths is acceptable.

        3. Marshall Gill   15 years ago

          If you don't want to give me that, fuck it - I'll cheer on the anarchists, in that case.

          I understand. If you don't get Utopia, you will hold your breath until you do.

          1. Fluffy   15 years ago

            Who said that?

            I said if you lie to me, don't come around asking me to be pissed if someone takes your secret files and publishes them.

            And if you hide shit from me over and over when you're just doing so for your own political advantage, don't come to me when someone publishes your secret files and say, "Damn it, we had a good reason for some of that stuff to be secret!" Your absence of a good reason for the rest of the stuff gives Anarchist Dude Of The Moment all the moral authority he needs, in my book.

            1. Marshall Gill   15 years ago

              Gotta break some eggs and that whole thingy, eh?

            2. AA   15 years ago

              I do understand your gripe. That still doesn't mean you get to act a careless as you want, regardless of your principles.

              1. RyanXXX   15 years ago

                Fluffy, that was perfect.

            3. Scruffy   14 years ago

              And so, don't complain if someone outs Assange's face saving.

              He's just scared to admit he blundered badly and now you are going to war for him on it.

              He's human, he screwed up. Don't turn it into a virtue, like he foresaw it and morally justified it ahead of time.

              If that was the case, he wouldn't have asked for help redacting it later.

              If you want to be so moral, admit that.

      3. libertymike   15 years ago

        "risking other lives?" Sounds like typical pretextual crapola the state advances in support of its mass murder.

        1. Art-P.O.G.   15 years ago

          "Mass murder"? Sounds like typical crap you spew.

        2. AA   15 years ago

          As bad as the US Government is at times, comparing it mass murder is pretty fucking ridiculous. Perspective man, try it.

          1. gabe   15 years ago

            the government gives money and aid to the ISI...who trains/aids and funds teh Taliban...all of whom are using the weapons from the anglo-saxon military industrial complex...which is good in the eyes of Westinghouse, GE and their media outlets. The government has killed a million or so in the Iraq/Af/Pak wars...that counts as "mass" in my book...and killing counts as "murder". Yes you pay your taxes to mass murderers...you don't want to believe it so you lie to yourself and attack those speaking truth.

            1. Art-P.O.G.   15 years ago

              How 'bout a cite there, buddy? And if killing large groups of people is mass murder, then every battle is mass murder in your book, then, correct?

  14. libertymike   15 years ago

    From the time I was a little kid, I just never bought the hero worship of clown costumed pussies.

    Real, grown up men, do not join state sponsored military or para-military organizations. Period.

    1. Art-P.O.G.   15 years ago

      Seek mental help immediately.

      1. Colin   15 years ago

        +1

    2. dbcooper   15 years ago

      Can you just commit suicide by cop already.

    3. Marshall Gill   15 years ago

      Real, grown up men, do not join state sponsored military or para-military organizations. Period.

      libertymike defining "real men"? BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA no, seriously, I mean, BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA. Funny, funny stuff.

    4. Government of Wolves   15 years ago

      And from the moment the brave, clever internet commenter bravely, cleverly defined what 'real men' are and do, satire became obsolete.

      1. AA   15 years ago

        +1

    5. DG   15 years ago

      You sound just like a general justifying collateral damage from a bombing raid. As long as the goal of more government transparency is achieved, some deaths are OK, right? Your mentality is no different from those in the military that you rail against. You simply have different goals you are trying to achieve.

  15. Colin   15 years ago

    This whole affair is pretty sad.

    Assange lost a lot of supporters here. And for no good reason.

    1. Ron L   15 years ago

      For very good reason.

  16. Sidd Finch   15 years ago

    You just said that Teddy Fucking Williams was not a real, grown-up man. Teddy Fucking Williams.

    1. Sidd Finch   15 years ago

      was supposed to be a reply to libertymike

    2. gabe   15 years ago

      baseball players are know as the "boys of summer"...it is a fucking game...played by immature boys.

  17. Jackie Rogers, Jr.   15 years ago

    No "D," please, Sir. As in the school graing system.

  18. Yungi   15 years ago

    Remember Himler-- didn't he try character assassination in the 40's --that is so ridiculous -- and you have it sooo wrong with your so called reporting-- read what Amnesty international said for real-- this is like Jon Stewart when he snipped the Shirley Sherrod tape to show she was against the enviornment -- so funny--
    Come on-- did you know Nelson Mandela and Daniel Ellsburg where also dangerous men -- now they are revered

    1. Ron L   15 years ago

      Yungi|8.10.10 @ 10:16PM|#
      "Remember Himler-- didn't he try character assassination in the 40's"
      Remember godwin --- din't he get your number in the 80s?

      1. libertymike   15 years ago

        The state has no right to confiscate my property in order to wage war upon foreign lands, thereby expanding the size and scope of its intrusiveness, pay informants and then try to character assassinate one who obtains "secret" information in an attempt to rally the folks behind the flag upon the pretext that "innocent lives are in danger" sophistry.

        1. Art-P.O.G.   15 years ago

          I like how you put "secret" in quotation marks. Grow up.

        2. gabe   15 years ago

          The defenders of the state will claim that dropping a atom bomb on a city of 200,000 people is "saving lives" yet revealing leaked emails is "killing innocent people"...can't make this shit up!

          "innocent lives" were put in danger when they decided to start dropping bombs on people. When people engage in a infowar to reveal that our government is supporting the Taliban via Pakistan's ISI....to show the war must be stopped...he is trying to save lives.

  19. pickles   15 years ago

    It's ridiculous how this has been spun, and sad that reason is in on it. Assange's leaks exposed hundreds of civilian killings and possible war crimes. The pentagon is selling a line that it exposes hundreds of Afghan "sources" who are now in danger. Why do you buy this line, when you disbelieve most everything else from the military?

    1. Art-P.O.G.   15 years ago

      I find it odd that you put "sources" in quotation marks. So you don't think the military or intelligence community uses sources or...what?

      1. libertymike   15 years ago

        Real men do not join state sponsored military or para-military organizations. Only the those who are pussies do. You know, the types that are not self actualized. The types that can't make it in the private sector. The types that pledge allegiance to the state. The types that do nothing to stop the raping, robbing, pillaging and murdering done by the state.

        1. Art-P.O.G.   15 years ago

          Think about what you're saying and realize how stupid it is to paint people with a broad brush.

          1. gabe   15 years ago

            ok real men who are naive, nhave little grasp of history and do not understand the modern nation state very well do sometimes join the military...but we shouldn't really treat these sadly duped people as role models.

            1. Art-P.O.G.   15 years ago

              Again: broad brush.

      2. pickles   15 years ago

        I'll remove the quotes from "sources" if you'll respond to the actual point of my comment

        1. Art-P.O.G.   15 years ago

          Who disbelieves "Most everything they hear from the military"? Obviously you don't believe everything you hear, but your point, with all due respect, is fucking stupid.

    2. Ron L   15 years ago

      pickles|8.10.10 @ 11:11PM|#
      "It's ridiculous how this has been spun, and sad that reason is in on it. Assange's leaks exposed hundreds of civilian killings and possible war crimes..."
      How about even one cite?

      1. libertymike   15 years ago

        One cite which proves that, as direct and proximate result of Assange's actions, a person, not paid by, or assisting the US, Canada, Israel, Great Britian and Australia in their invasion and occupation of Afghanistan, has been harmed.

  20. Yungi   15 years ago

    Thank you pickles -- this is amazing how people have spun the information -- does anyone remember how Poland used this valuable leaked information -I don't think many of these people on the comment line have been truly aware of this information and the history of Wikileaks--yes Ron L- Mr. Assange included Israel as a rogue state- its not so simple-- they have no affiliation with countries-- they just get the word out --sometimes not so important-- sometimes Right on time --
    check out the WHO leak and Big pharma from the 90s

  21. RyanXXX   15 years ago

    Do people know that Assange submitted the material to the White House asking for the necessary redactions, but the White House refused to acknowledge the request before the release?

    That seems missing from the discussion. Obama and his war chieftains could have blacked out the informants names and VOILA! Problem solved.

    1. Art-P.O.G.   15 years ago

      "Submitted material to the White House asking for necessary redaction" doesn't sound like a process that would work efficiently if that did in fact happen.

      1. RyanXXX   15 years ago

        Well if Obama and co. didn't want to take the trouble of reviewing the material, any collateral damage lands at their feet as well

      2. gabe   15 years ago

        whose fault is that?

  22. RyanXXX   15 years ago

    It's also interesting how this "poor Afghan informant" line has derailed coverage of the leak. The covered-up civilian casualties from OUR forces and the massive aid we indirectly give the Taliban through the ISI have been swept under the rug.

    Or how coverage of Bradley Manning has degenerated into speculation that he's a homo.

  23. Luke   15 years ago

    Julian is my hero!

  24. Leroy   15 years ago

    So if I understand this correctly...

    The people supporting Assange hate the civilian casualties caused by collateral damage in an effort to set up a stabilized government that will protect the rights of its citizens, but have no problem with civilian casualties caused by Wikileaks because it did not want to take the time or put in the work needed to simply remove names from documents.

    Is this really their position, or did I get this mixed up?

  25. Virginia   15 years ago

    Who needs Sweden when you have Iceland's Modern Media Initiative?

  26. bubba   15 years ago

    Assange is at war with the US and should be hunted down and killed as an unlawful enemy combatant.

    1. RyanXXX   15 years ago

      Lynch him!!!!!!! Waterboard his family!!!!!

  27. Yungi   15 years ago

    Dear Leroy
    Please go to the interviews on UTube by TED democracy Now -the frontline interview
    The information that said an Afghan man was killed by the Taliban for being an informant was two years ago two years ago --our country has a vested interest that region of the world even recently with the cache of minerals found there-- there are very greedy folks in our government - that will lie and cheat to get what they want weapons of mass destruction-- an example-- be careful in the propaganda coming from the Murdock owned media

    1. Leroy   15 years ago

      Ummm...

      Huh?

      Are you really back on the 'We're there for the Oil!' theme?

  28. Kent   15 years ago

    Moynihahn - thanks for reminding me why I rarely visit this site anymore.

    1. Art-P.O.G.   15 years ago

      Drink!

  29. Scooby   15 years ago

    No Evidence WikiLeaks Disclosed Names of Afghan Informants

    Any evidence of actual informants named, or is Amnesty just parroting of the gov't line?

  30. Mary Mullarkey   15 years ago

    WikiLeaks: Amnesty International spokeswoman Susanna Flood confirms there was no authorized statement on WikiLeaks.

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