Wikileaks has had 100% publication accuracy and always has, — discoii
Well, guess we should all give up then. — discoii
In the leaks, it says the CIA had to do a bunch of mental gymnastics to get around some regulations -- which effectively compromised their organization's ability to act covertly, which ultimately led to these leaks.
So what we should be doing is adding a whole bunch of forced mental gymnastics clauses to make them just not do any of this. — discoii
2) They are an instrument of Russian state media.
Counter: Wikileaks has had 100% publication accuracy and always has, even before the alleged association with the Russian government. They have released documents implicating both Democrats and Republicans since almost a decade ago. Do you not like accurate news? — discoii
I can't see anything good about it, exposing corruption is one thing, but simply publishing all this stuff because it's secret is something else altogether. — Wayfarer
This stuff comes out as an act of whistleblowing, which is an act of alerting attention to a perceived wrongdoing. — Sapientia
4) We have nothing to hide, so why is this relevant?
Counter: Let me put it to you in a way you can understand. Trump has the ability to blow up your car at will and no one will know who did it. And that's just one tool he has, among multiple thousand. Even if you trusted Obama with these tools (which, by the way, were developed under the Obama presidency), do you really trust Trump to be responsible? — discoii
Call me reactionary but I trust Assange a great deal less than the institutions he's exposing - in this case anyway. — Wayfarer
Assange doesn't have the ability to assassinate anyone driving a smart car, transform your smart TV into a surveillance post, and thousands of other goodie goods. He has the ability to publish information. The two are hardly analogous. — Sapientia
Assange may indeed have much of that ability, as have others.
Recently, the CIA lost control of the majority of its hacking arsenal including malware, viruses, trojans, weaponized "zero day" exploits, malware remote control systems and associated documentation. This extraordinary collection, which amounts to more than several hundred million lines of code, gives its possessor the entire hacking capacity of the CIA. The archive appears to have been circulated among former U.S. government hackers and contractors in an unauthorized manner, one of whom has provided WikiLeaks with portions of the archive. — tom
It was these very cyber-attack tools that were used to wire-tap Trump and his transition team during the election and during the transition. It was these very tools that were used to masquerade as Russian hacks, to provide probable-cause to get the FISA warrant to spy on Trump. Furthermore, Obama seduced the security clearance of the wire-taps on Trump and ordered their wide dissemination among the security community - basically facilitating the leaks. — tom
Assange doesn't have the ability to assassinate anyone driving a smart car, transform your smart TV into a surveillance post, and thousands of other goodie goods. He has the ability to publish information. The two are hardly analogous. — Sapientia
I think your claim that the Russian hacks are fictitious is a little far-fetched. — Metaphysician Undercover
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