The US informants in Iraq were not civilians in this context at all, but operatives. So, where is the irony? — Janus
Don't mistake Assange for a white knight. He might have been, but he's not. — Wayfarer
A domino chain of resignations at the secret-spilling site WikiLeaks followed a unilateral decision by autocratic founder Julian Assange to schedule an October release of 392,000 classified U.S. documents from the war in Iraq, according to former WikiLeaks staffers.
Key members of WikiLeaks were angered to learn last month that Assange had secretly provided media outlets with embargoed access to the vast database, under an arrangement similar to the one WikiLeaks made with three newspapers that released documents from the Afghanistan war in July. WikiLeaks is set to release the Iraq trove on Oct. 18, according to ex-staffers – far too early, in the view of some of them, to properly redact the names of U.S. collaborators and informants in Iraq.
'I am the heart and soul of this organization, its founder, philosopher, spokesperson, original coder, organizer, financier and all the rest. (said Assange) If you have a problem with me, piss off.'
On July 19 2016, Wikileaks released an unredacted database of emails from the Turkish party AKP, which also included the addresses and other personal details of millions of Turkish women, as reported by scholar and journalist Zeynep Tufekci. Three days later, in its leak of 19,252 emails from the Democratic National Committee, WikiLeaks once again included the social security and credit card numbers of donors, amidst other sensitive information.
The whistleblowing site WikiLeaks has published the sensitive personal data of hundreds of ordinary people, including sick children, rape victims and people with mental health problems, an investigation has revealed.
In the past year alone, the “radical transparency” organization has published medical files belonging to scores of ordinary citizens. Hundreds more have had sensitive family, financial or identity records posted to the web, according to the Associated Press.
In two cases, WikiLeaks named teenage rape victims.
The real issue is over whether he has by any reasonable criteria committed any crime, — Janus
I generally understand perfectly well what you say; what I often don't get from you is a reasoned argument for why you are saying it. — Janus
There must be an allegation that a crime has been committed to support indictment. — Janus
Reckless disregard for individual lives is not an indictable offense. — Janus
Assange would be a lot more credible if he could reveal some Russian or Chinese secrets. — YuZhonglu
I think the US already has an indictment. — Metaphysician Undercover
What's the alleged crime? — Janus
I understand. I think he was working for the Russian government, though. — frank
He calls himself a journalist but he has no qualifications in that discipline and has never worked for accredited media. — Wayfarer
I mean really, how do you or I know who Assange "works" for? — fishfry
Janus
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Don't mistake Assange for a white knight. He might have been, but he's not. — Wayfarer
I haven't said Assange is a "white knight". I see no reason to doubt he is a flawed human being just like the rest of us. The real issue is over whether he has by any reasonable criteria committed any crime, or whether he is just being made into a "whipping boy", to be set up as a cautionary example by corrupt power elites. — Janus
Janus
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↪Frank Apisa
No one seems to be able to say what law he has broken. Also Assange is not a US citizen.
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Options — Janus
Janus
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↪Frank Apisa
If you are not a citizen of a country then you are not subject to its laws unless you are in that country. — Janus
No one but a few bleeding heart philosophical types even care. — frank
I don't remember you being this loose-cannonish. If he worked for Russia, it just means he had a bias. — frank
The info about the war crime didn't shock anyone. It didn't change anything. No one but a few bleeding heart philosophical types even care. — frank
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