The Legacy of Assange's Prosecution
Julian Assange is free, but information isn't.

Julian Assange was released from prison this week after agreeing to plead guilty to conspiring to disclose classified documents related to national security. After five years behind bars, it's hard to exactly call this a win for the WikiLeaks founder. But on the surface, it is a loss for the U.S. government, which wanted to put Assange away for a much, much longer period of time.
And yet, on some level, authorities got exactly what it seems they wanted: a warning to anyone who would dare to publish information that makes the government look bad. It provides a clear view of what happens when you actively try to expose government secrets. Shots have already been fired against future renegade journalists.
"I hope journalists and editors and publishers everywhere realize the danger of the US case against Julian that criminalizes, that has secured a conviction for, news gathering and publishing information that was true, that the public deserved to know," said Assange's wife, Stella, at a press conference in Australia today. "That precedent now can and will be used in the future against the rest of the press."
Even if that prediction doesn't exactly come to pass, Assange's prosecution almost certainly serves as a deterrent for journalists who would encourage whistleblowers (as Assange did with Chelsea Manning) or any outlet that would aim to function, like WikiLeaks, as a source for unredacted publications of government information.
And while social media was supposed to make exposing government corruption easier, its current iteration only makes more clear why entities like WikiLeaks are so necessary.
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5 Years Behind Bars for Exposing U.S. War Brutality
Julian Assange "left Belmarsh maximum security prison on the morning of 24 June, after having spent 1901 days there," WikiLeaks posted to X (formerly Twitter) on Monday night. "After more than five years in a 2x3 metre cell, isolated 23 hours a day, he will soon reunite with his wife Stella Assange, and their children, who have only known their father from behind bars."
Assange is now back in Australia, where he is from.
Landing in 30 minutes. Julian Assange is in US airspace.
Follow flight VJT199: https://t.co/gxcbvNyvnj #AssangeJet pic.twitter.com/sgwdF0MMiY
— WikiLeaks (@wikileaks) June 25, 2024
The acts that cost Assange these five years of his life relate to WikiLeaks 2010-2011 publication of material sent by former Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning. In 2018, Assange was indicted on multiple counts related to the publication of this material, which, among other things, exposed the cruelty and carelessness of U.S. military actions in Iraq.
Assange was eventually indicted on 18 counts, which came with a maximum sentence of 170 years in prison.
At a hearing yesterday in the U.S. District Court for the Northern Mariana Islands, Assange pleaded guilty to one count of conspiring to unlawfully obtain and disclose classified national security documents. He "received a court-imposed 62-month time-served sentence, reflecting the time he served in U.K. prison as a result of the U.S. charges," the Department of Justice said.
The case has obviously been a travesty for Assange and his loved ones, but it also goes so much beyond them.
Making a Mockery of the First Amendment
As Stella Assange pointed out, the prosecution paves the way for journalists of all sorts—including investigative reporters and national security writers at major newspapers—to be prosecuted for publishing pieces about classified information. It seriously imperils the free press and makes a mockery of the First Amendment, which should protect publishing information about the government even if someone else broke the law in obtaining that information.
It seems impossible that this episode hasn't chilled enthusiasm for reporting on or publishing leaked information, or that it won't continue to do so for a long time to come.
The treatment of Assange serves as a warning to anyone who would so much as write about leaked information, not to mention publish classified documents, especially on the scale of something like WikiLeaks.
"It is in the interest of all of the press to seek for this current state of affairs to change through reform of the Espionage Act," said Stella Assange. "Through increased press protections, and yes, eventually when the time comes—not today—a pardon."
Exposing the Need for Independent Platforms
There was a time when some people talked about social media like it would serve a sort of WikiLeaks function—that it would be a democratizing force, enabling citizen journalists, anonymous speech, and people speaking out against abuses of power.
But social media's current iteration only makes it more clear why sites like Wikileaks are so important.
Bullied by politicians and regulators and beset with lawsuits, social media platforms have become increasingly censorious. "Jawboning" efforts by authorities encourage platforms to crack down on speech that makes people in power uncomfortable. And tech companies have proved willing to work closely with law enforcement to turn over information on the accounts of anyone whom officials want to unmask.
Social media now often seems like the government's lapdog. WikiLeaks was something different, something that they couldn't control.
After years of seeing how Assange was treated, or how the government has gone after other publishers who wouldn't kowtow to their tastes (like the founders of Backpage), it isn't surprising that tech leaders today would be wary of crossing the feds too much. Perhaps today's speech-squelching social media environment can be traced partly back to the Assange prosecution, too. (Certainly, the treatment of things like Hunter Biden's laptop story show shades of fear in this direction.)
Despite all this, I'm still something of an evangelist for the liberatory power of social media (it's at least better than the former gatekeepers everywhere system). But there's no denying that social media platforms are often non-conducive to fostering free speech generally, let alone fostering speech that the government wants hidden.
We still need platforms like WikiLeaks, and more of them. We still need people like Chelsea Manning, Edward Snowden, and Reality Winner, who are willing to risk their jobs and their freedom to expose things authorities would rather they not. And we still need people like Julian Assange, who are willing to publish what the Mannings and the Snowdens of the world risk so much for.
Assange's prosecution and conviction make all of this less likely—which makes it more likely that the American people will find out less about civil liberties abuses, wartime tactics, and more. The legacy of the Assange case is more government secrecy and all of us being a little more in the dark about what those who rule this country are doing.
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It pisses me off to no end that they made him plead guilty.
I'm glad Assange is free, but in the end the managerial (deep) state won. They were able to make what Wikileaks did, criminal.
Foggy Bottom delenda est.
Purely by coincidence all 20,000 DNC emails have been removed from Wikileaks.
This is a massive win for Assange because he's out of jail. I'd have taken that deal too.
He's still eligible to be pardoned. Also while some members of the government wanted him jail for a much longer time, other members of government wanted to imprison him in a pine box forever. That's who these people are.
A study finds Texas' abortion ban linked to an increase in infant mortality.
Holy Jesus is this retarded... and evil.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Survivorship_bias
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-fulfilling_prophecy
If the law hadn't passed and the kids nominally (according to you) would've been aborted and you wouldn't even have the evidence to perform the analysis. Moreover, you say "linked" but you clearly don't understand what that word means. Ice cream sales are "linked" to rising crime but the idea of legalizing the slapping of ice cream cones out of peoples' hands reducing crime is beyond retarded.
Why do you do this to your readers? Or even just random people who might interact with retards who read what you wrote?
It is that the pro-abortion zealots really consider a pre-birth human to be of no moral worth, a mere object. Therefore, if they die by natural or willful causes it is a neutral matter. If they die after they born, then they accrue moral value. They literally are incapable of empathizing with any other way of understanding it, and can put this out without shame.
zealots really consider a pre-birth human to be of no moral worth
The accrual is a good point but, not *no* moral worth, frequently and loudly *negative* moral worth. If a burglar broke into your home, stole a bunch of shit, defaced a bunch of other shit, but left a nice, shiny new toaster on your counter and you said, "I can't begin the process of recovering my stuff and covering up the defacement until I destroy this toaster." a good portion of the population would rightly ask "What did the toaster do?" or point out "It's a perfectly good toaster!". Even the vast majority of the rest, even if they sympathized with whatever need you had to destroy the toaster would still, in a morally neutral fashion, recognize that my destroying the toaster is purely an act of emotional vengeance and doesn't get my stolen shit back or fix the defacement.
The pro-abortion zealots affix a negative moral value to the toaster by virtue of it's association with other actual moral wrongs (which it couldn't bear any responsibility for). Even if the "other actual moral wrongs" are themselves letting some sleazy toaster salesman leave a free toaster on their counter. Even if it means demonizing or dehumanizing other women who actually exercise their own agency and think "Yeah the guy was a sleazeball but, hey, free toaster!" or the women and men they wind up birthing.
Moreso than Presidents or Congress or journalists; however much you hate abortion zealots, it's not enough.
>>The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to hear a case concerning the constitutionality of a Tennessee law banning hormone therapy and puberty blockers for minors.
hopes are high the Kid Mutilation Lobby isn't as influential on Amy C-B and Kavanaugh as the Social Medial Lobby is
>>A study finds Texas' abortion ban linked to an increase in infant mortality.
everyone not aborted died even moreso?
If we kill them before they get out of the womb, then it is not "infant" mortality , but if they die after being born, it is.
It's the exact same tactic used to say that Cuba's socialized medicine is better than the US's or private healthcare.
Assange was charged with suborning a mentally ill soldier into stealing classified documents which published, among other things, an arguably libelous account of a combat action in which reporter's got misidentified as combatants in a fog of war situation and fired upon and killed.
If ENB is so concerned about whistleblowers being prosecuted, perhaps she might look into Dr. Eithan Haim being charged with felony HIPAA violations by Biden's DOJ in connection with exposing the goings on at the Austin Children's Hospital trangender clinic. The outrage about whistleblowers being criminalized is very selective, it seems.
That is (D)ifferent! = Crooked Joe's DOJ persecuting Haim
a warning to anyone who would dare to publish information that makes the government look bad
Assange isn't in trouble for publishing information. He's in trouble for acquiring information by aiding a traitor. Oddly, the treatment the traitor received is probably not a very good warning against being a traitor. Fuck Assange. Who wants to bet he "kills himself" soon?
Nice article, but the author misses one important point. The US Constitution and laws apply to US citizens. Assange is not a US citizen and he was not living in the USA. How does a US law apply to a foreigner living in a foreign country. Can we tax Chinese citizens? Can China tax US citizens?
Huh, makes me think about section 230.
Oop! That’s the sqrlsy signal!
The environment that we are in today is that it's the states who have the authority to make abortion law. One place the federal government should have authority is when people cross state lines to get an abortion. Some states want to punish those who do, even when no law was broken in an anti-abortion state. That is an area where congress should assert interstate commerce and protect the right to cross state lines for an abortion.
That is an area where congress should assert interstate commerce and protect the right to cross state lines for an abortion.
Not equality (between the sexes) and say “If we can go after a Hunter Biden across state lines for alimony, an act that doesn’t even kill a potential human being, we can go across state lines for a woman for aborting a potential human.”?
Not equality (between Constitutionally-guaranteed rights and emanations and penumbras) and say “If we can go after Hunter Biden across state lines for falsifying a 4473 form, an act that doesn’t even kill a potential human being, we can go across state lines for a woman aborting a potential human.”?
Not equality (between class, creed, political affliation) and say, “If we can go after Hunter Biden (or not) across state lines for any of the above, an act that doesn’t even kill a potential human being, we can go across state lines for a woman aborting a potential human.”?
Because it almost seems like you don’t understand how the law can and does otherwise work for far more trivial matters and matters where such infringement is far more clearly unconstitutional, to the point that you don’t really give a shit about justice or rights or equality or human life and you just want the government to impose your will on other people even if it kills people.