16 April 2019, Sydney
In 2011, Wikileaks, with Julian Assange as its editor, received a Walkley Award in Australia for its outstanding contribution to journalism. Walkley judges said Wikileaks applied new technology to “penetrate the inner workings of government to reveal an avalanche of inconvenient truths in a global publishing coup”. One of those many inconvenient truths was the exposure by video of US helicopter attacks in Baghdad that killed 11 civilians including two Reuters journalists.
Many mainstream journalists worked with Assange’s material to publish their own reports including media outlets such as the Sydney Morning Herald and The Age in Australia, The Guardian in the United Kingdom, The New York Times in the US, El Pais in Spain, Le Monde in France and Der Spiegel in Germany. There has been no attempt by the US Government to prosecute any of those journalists involved. …
Journalism is not a crime, and Evan went to Russia to do his job as a reporter —risking his safety to shine the light of truth on Russia’s brutal aggression against Ukraine. Shortly after his wholly unjust and illegal detention, he drafted a letter to his family from prison, writing: “I am not losing hope.”
...we will continue to stand strong against all those who seek to attack the press or target journalists—the pillars of free society. — Biden
Do you think Wikileaks was a bona fide media organisation? — Wayfarer
Who decides what criteria counts as 'bona fide" in that context? — Janus
I did comment that the NY Times, Guardian, etc, would probably not have published classified documents stolen from military organisations... — Wayfarer
Do you have any evidence to support the claim that it would happen? — Janus
Assange was obviously playing a dangerous game, and it has cost him. — Leontiskos
Journalism is not a crime, and Evan went to Russia to do his job as a reporter —risking his safety to shine the light of truth on Russia’s brutal aggression against Ukraine. Shortly after his wholly unjust and illegal detention, he drafted a letter to his family from prison, writing: “I am not losing hope.”
...we will continue to stand strong against all those who seek to attack the press or target journalists—the pillars of free society. — Biden
Hmm. — Banno
Maybe the fact that they didn't! — Wayfarer
The record suggests that the government has historically been largely unsuccessful, or simply unwilling, to prosecute national security leaks: “Excluding cases of true espionage, all those thousands upon thousands of national security-related leaks to the media have yielded a total of roughly a dozen criminal prosecutions in U.S. history.” Only one espionage case in recent history has been brought against “anyone other than the initial source,” and no journalists in the past half-century have been prosecuted for publishing leaked information.
I doubt that would happen to a large media organization that published leaked documents. Do you have any evidence to support the claim that it would happen? — Janus
Of course the crimes which Wikileaks exposed deserve to be exposed, and governments ought not to use secrecy as a shield for wrong-doing, which they inveterately will. It’s a balance of ‘right to know’ vs ‘need for confidentiality’. But then how much ‘transparency’ could be expected from, for example, the CCP, or from Russia? Presumably if one of Assange’s counterparts had hacked and leaked information from the Russian FSB - well, he or she would face a fate much worse than legal threats, and we in the West would probably never even know their name. — Wayfarer
there were strong grounds for believing that these had been fed to them by Russia in an attempt to have Trump elected. — Wayfarer
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