Cool. How do you show that? Do you take a moment of silence? Do you contribute to Doctors w/o borders? Do you write songs about it or paint? Do you talk to friends about it? Or what? — frank
Dear Mr. Assange, Reporters Without Borders, an international press freedom organisation, regrets the incredible irresponsibility you showed when posting your article “Afghan War Diary 2004 - 2010” on the Wikileaks website on 25 July together with 92,000 leaked documents disclosing the names of Afghans who have provided information to the international military coalition that has been in Afghanistan since 2001. Wikileaks has in the past played a useful role by making information available to the US and international public that exposed serious violations of human rights and civil liberties which the Bush administration committed in the name of its war against terror. Last April’s publication of a video of the killing of two employees of the Reuters news agency and other civilians by US military personnel in Baghdad in July 2007 was clearly in the public interest and we supported this initiative. It was a response to the Obama administration’s U-turn on implementation of the Freedom of Information Act. The White House broke its word in May 2009, when it defied a court order and refused to release photos of the mistreatment of detainees in Afghanistan and Iraq. But revealing the identity of hundreds of people who collaborated with the coalition in Afghanistan is highly dangerous.
Journalistic work involves the selection of information. The argument with which you defend yourself, namely that Wikileaks is not made up of journalists, is not convincing. Wikileaks is an information outlet and, as such, is subject to the same rules of publishing responsibility as any other media.
you cannot claim to enjoy the protection of sources while at the same time, when it suits you, denying that you are a news media.
Janus
7k
↪Frank Apisa
Are you claiming that all persons are subject to the laws of all countries, even if they are neither citizens of, nor residing, nor traveling, in the countries in question? Is that what you are saying I am not correct about?
If I am incorrect about that I would be very surprised. If I am correct about that, then unless Assange was in the US when the alleged crime was committed the US 'justice system' has no legal right to indict him in the first place. — Janus
Janus
7k
↪Frank Apisa
It's trivially obvious that if Assange is indicted by the US, then he can be indicted by the U S. The question is as to whether that indictment is just and in accordance with international law and general international agreements, or whether it is being, despite those laws and agreements, facilitated by US croneys. — Janus
Do you think that if there were a Russian or Chinese investigation or an investigation by any country you care to name, that US citizens who had never been in the country in question could be indicted by that country? — Janus
Do you believe the US government would accept that?
NOTHING trivial about it. In this case, legal battles will be fought both in the UK and the US. If you are going to consider the fact that something has happened to be trivial in determining whether or not it CAN happen...you are missing the point. — Frank Apisa
I do not do "believing"...but if you are asking if it is my opinion that the US government would accept that...under certain circumstances, I do, indeed. — Frank Apisa
The laws of the UK will determine that. And I expect the US to accept the decision of the UK courts. — Frank Apisa
Do you think he committed a crime? Or not? — frank
then it would seem that what is legal is not something fixed by principles of justice at all, but something determined by power and influence. — Janus
If you feel satisfied with that and supportive of it, then that is your business. personally I find it quite repugnant. — Janus
Janus
7k
NOTHING trivial about it. In this case, legal battles will be fought both in the UK and the US. If you are going to consider the fact that something has happened to be trivial in determining whether or not it CAN happen...you are missing the point. — Frank Apisa
I have no idea why you would say I am missing the point. It is trivially true that whatever happens can happen. For me the point is that if whatever happens that is sanctioned by governments and judicial authorities is defined as what is legal, and yet what happens in one instance might not be the same as what happens in another identical instance, whether it is determined by negotiation between the same countries in both instances or between different countries altogether, then it would seem that what is legal is not something fixed by principles of justice at all, but something determined by power and influence. If you feel satisfied with that and supportive of it, then that is your business. personally I find it quite repugnant. — Janus
I do not do "believing"...but if you are asking if it is my opinion that the US government would accept that...under certain circumstances, I do, indeed. — Frank Apisa
What is the difference between believing that something is so, and being of the opinion that something is so? — Janus
The laws of the UK will determine that. And I expect the US to accept the decision of the UK courts. — Frank Apisa
Well, that is trivial too. What other options but acceptance do you think the US would have? Trade sanctions? Declaring war? — Janus
Of course all these matters are power plays, not examples of some fine principle of justice at work. We may not be able to do much about what goes on at the highest levels of international power relations, but we don't have to like it!
↪fishfry Yes. As I suspected. — frank
I'd say I've been more politically active in real life over the years than the average person. By a pretty good margin. — fishfry
In many countries it's barely over fifty percent who vote, so saying that you're more politically active than the average person doesn't say much. — Metaphysician Undercover
There's little point in talking about one's personal life on an anonymous forum. I've done a lot more than vote. Out there in the world, in real life. But what is your point? — fishfry
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