Statues of Assange, Snowden and Manning Go Up In Berlin 161
HughPickens.com writes: RT Times reports that Alexanderplatz square in Berlin has become the stage for a provocative art piece which celebrates whistleblowers and encourages ordinary citizens to speak out. "They have lost their freedom for the truth, so they remind us how important it is to know the truth," says sculptor Davide Dormino. The life-sized statues of the three whistleblowers stand upon three chairs, as if speaking in an impromptu public meeting. Next to them is a fourth, empty chair. "The fourth chair is open to anyone here in Berlin who wants to get up and say anything they want," says the artist. Dormino, who came up with the idea together with the US journalist Charles Glass, specifically chose a classical bronze statue for his depiction – and not an installation or abstract piece – since statues are usually made of establishment figures. According to Domino while men who order others to their deaths get immortalized, those who resist are often forgotten, so "the statue pays homage to three who said no to war, to the lies that lead to war and to the intrusion into private life that helps to perpetuate war." Activists and members of Germany's Green party unveiled the life-size bronze statues on May Day.
Re:Statues, really? (Score:4, Insightful)
Is a heroic sacrifice to open an escape route from a burning building any less heroic because the people inside decided they'd rather roast marshmallows than flee?
Even if we here in the US refuse to organize to bring our government to heel, at least the truth of the rot has been exposed to the rest of the world, so there's some hope that nations whose population have not abandoned democratic responsibility can fight its spread into their own governments.
Re: (Score:2)
Ordinary folks (Score:4, Insightful)
No matter what you agree with what Manning and/or Snowden and/or Assange have done, no one can deny that they are ordinary folks, just like you and me
What makes them special is the system
What I mean is, if the supposingly ' Democratic System ' that we have is truly democratic, that the system would never do despicable things it accuses THE OTHER SIDE (them 'Commies') of doing, such as Trampling on human rights, violating the Constitution, spying on its own citizens, and so on, neither Manning, Assange nor Snowden would have any reason to do what they have done
It is The System which makes them what they are --- Because The System has become so goddamn rotten that the three ordinary folks had no choice but to tell the truth
I have tried to imagine what I would do, given the same circumstance ... and the only honest thing I can say is, I simply do not have the guts to do what they did ... yes, I have yet to grow my own pair
Re:Ordinary folks (Score:4, Interesting)
I have to disagree. Not with them being ordinary folks - that's true enough, and a good reminder that ALL of us have the potential to be heroes, if we only have the courage to do what's right, rather than what's convenient.
But that a democratic system would never do despicable things that it accuses the other side of? Many a mob would disagree, and a mob is probably the most democratic system that has ever existed. In fact even a very many individuals are prone to accusing others of their own failings - why would you assume we would become more virtuous en mass?
The problem is not "The System", though it has admittedly become twisted enough by institutionalized corruption that it would be difficult to fix. The problem is not even that pretty much since its inception it has been populated by the sort of people who want power - such is true of most any system that grants it.
The problem is that we, the populace, trusted "the system" to protect us from the inevitable corruption of the very people who run it. We abdicated our democratic responsibility to keep our government to heel. We embraced party politics, despite be warned of their dangers by the very people who created "the system". We vote for the people who run the flashiest ads appealing to our hopes, fears, and biases, rather than spending the time and energy to actually investigate the candidate's track records and put our support behind the ones who actually best represent our interests. There is no system that can protect us from the abuse of power so long as we continue to freely hand that power to those who wish to abuse it, and reward that abuse with reelection rather than retribution.
Re: (Score:2)
If you think a mob is democratic, you know little of mob psychology.
Re: (Score:2)
Or do I know enough of mob psychology to draw some unflattering parallels with how democracy works in practice?
Re: (Score:2)
I'm using corruption very much according to your definition - perhaps you read some other intent into my comment, in which case please re-read it with that in mind so we can have a more fruitful discussion. Or do you contest the assertion that our representatives at the national level are, by and large, comfortably in the pocket of corporate and other wealthy interests?
As for the best interest of the nation being debatable - you are absolutely correct. So long as we can agree that the foundational premise
An empty chair? (Score:5, Funny)
Dammit, once again the Europeans give Obama undeserved recognition!
Re: (Score:1)
Snowden, et al. have revealed more about our society and its individuals than our government.
Transphobic assholes (Score:1)
Manning's name isn't "Bradley Chelsea Manning", it's Chelsea Manning. And depicting her as a male is just lack of respect. She doesn't need that kind of support, and much less from Putin TV.
Re: (Score:3)
What this says is that the originators of the idea (sculptor Davide Dormino and journalist Charles Glass) are more interested in the agenda (and self-promotion) than in the people behind the story. You don't honor someone by actively disrespecting who they are, insulting them and putting the lie to the greater truth. Hopefully, since the stated purpose is to encourage ordinary citizens to speak out, hopefully others will also call out these two (and everyone who backs this misrepresentation of Ms. Manning).
Re: (Score:2)
What this says is that the originators of the idea (sculptor Davide Dormino and journalist Charles Glass) are more interested in the agenda (and self-promotion) than in the people behind the story. You don't honor someone by actively disrespecting who they are, insulting them and putting the lie to the greater truth. Hopefully, since the stated purpose is to encourage ordinary citizens to speak out, hopefully others will also call out these two (and everyone who backs this misrepresentation of Ms. Manning).
And before anyone starts with the "we don't have the data to make a representation of her as a woman" argument, if you can't do it right, then maybe you shouldn't be doing it at all. Ditto for the "artistic integrity" argument - artistic integrity my arse!
Portraying her as she last appeared in public and as she looked when she did the leaks is now somehow insulting?
Re: (Score:2)
Yes it is; she was trans long before she was publicly identified as trans, and you can be sure that she did not maintain a male appearance 100% of the time. Once someone transitions, they want to move on to what is their real life.
Once Bruce Jenner is done transitioning, do you think it would not be considered both insulting and exploitative to make a statue of how he used to look?
Re: (Score:3)
If the statue was for something he did before the change, it would be odd if it didn't.
You don't go around aging statues either just because the people they portrait has aged and changed.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Dressing like a female doesn't make him one. Even mutilating his body doesn't change his DNA.
Anonymous Coward once again proves that what's between the ears is more important than what's between the legs. Last time I looked, DNA programs how you develop - which includes the failure of the testes to produce sufficient testosterone to masculinize the fetus brain at 12 weeks. So, it's only logical to say she's that way because of her DNA.
Now that further studies have shown that transsexualism is actually quite common (between 1:500 and 1:2000), you've certainly run into us - we're pretty much everyw
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
And how exactly do you know what her DNA is? There are XX men and XY women.
And seriously, of all of the stupid measures of who someone is, DNA has to take the cake. "Okay, okay, this Stephen Hawking guy seems to be smart, but that doesn't matter, what does his DNA say? Does his DNA say he's smart? If not then I don't care what he has to say."
Re: (Score:1)
I'm transgender (also MtF), and while I appreciate your inclusion, I also somewhat disagree with it in this very specific case. Why, you may ask? Because it's a monument to Bradley Manning, and not Chelsea Manning. The statue should reflect the person that it symbolizes at the moment of their action(s) for which the statue is being erected. The way I see it, it's not much different from statues showing other inspirational figures in their youth. As such, I do not think it is being disrespectful in this case
i see dead people (Score:1, Interesting)
"Activists and members of Germany's Green party unveiled the life-size bronze statues on May Day."
...depicting Manning as a male while s(he) asked to be considered as a female, standing next to the fugitive suspect for the rape of a female mister Assange, between a transexual and mister Snowden who is protected by a goverment declaring that homosexuals are not welcomed...
Even i, a right-wing Greek, couldn't plan it better! Don't you just love our left-wing Europeans?
Re: (Score:1)
Yes, that "rape", in a country that considers rape to be a way overly broad definition compared to any sane country in the world.
Yes, that "rape" whose "victim" suddenly shut up and vanished when asked for further questioning.
Fuck off. He never raped anyone. It is a blatant attack of his character because they know rape is a good tool to destroy a persons character there. (next to pedophile in a bunch of countries like the UK and USA)
Re: (Score:1)
Yes, that "rape", in a country that considers rape to be a way overly broad definition compared to any sane country in the world.
Yes, that "rape" whose "victim" suddenly shut up and vanished when asked for further questioning.
Fuck off. He never raped anyone. It is a blatant attack of his character because they know rape is a good tool to destroy a persons character there. (next to pedophile in a bunch of countries like the UK and USA)
You write to me "Fuck off. He never raped anyone." (by the way, should i understand that you was his judge...), but i just wrote "fugitive suspect for the rape of a female mister Assange", and the rest of your comment is a proof that you missing the point of my comment... since Germany's Green party (the one honoring him with the statue) STRONGLY SUPPORTS the laws about rape in Sweden (from where Assange is... fugitive suspect for the rape of a female)!
Re: (Score:3)
You have so completely missed the point of why these people are heroes.
Re: (Score:1)
You have so completely missed the point of why these people are heroes.
You have so completely missed my point of why left-wing European people are hypocrites
Re: (Score:1)
Everyone is a hypocrite at some point. One of the good things about our (EU) politics is that there are way way more people who float between left/right depending on context and current issues. Not as many extremists shouting left or right like idiots.
This is our strength, not a weakness. Only the really dumb people like you do not see this. You need to pick a colour/side and rant about that, you do not have the intelligence to decide on a per-issue basis.
You should move to the US, would fit in well over th
Shills all over this thread. (Score:5, Insightful)
Cute asshattery is still asshattery (Score:3)
FTFY. If it had anything at all to do with rape, the Swedish government would have taken Assange up on his offer to return to the country if they promised not to hand him over to the U.S. they way they did to Mohammed al-Zari. [hrw.org] They never have.
Are you a recent national socialist, or does it run in your family? [theguardian.com]
Assange was in no position to bargain (Score:1)
If it had anything at all to do with rape, the Swedish government would have taken Assange up on his offer to return to the country if they promised
Assange had no legal right to bargain with the Swedish authorities; the Swedish legal system precludes the prosecutors from striking the kind of deals Assange proposed. Assange obviously knew that - his whole act was for dramatic effect, not for any tangible benefit.
Long story short, Assange duped you.
Re: (Score:1)
depicting Manning as a male
....as Manning was when the cables were handed over to Wikileaks.
That is a good explanation/excuse for why our left-wing Europeans depict Manning as a male while s(he) asked to be considered as a female - but i wonder if you suggest that the "new" transexual Manning is less of the man who the left-wing Europeans honor now (!) and if that "new" transexual Manning him/her-self believes that s(he) should not be associated with the acts of the "Manning the man"?
standing next to the political fugitive mister Assange
FTFY. If it had anything at all to do with rape, the Swedish government would have taken Assange up on his offer to return to the country if they promised not to hand him over to the U.S. they way they did to Mohammed al-Zari. [hrw.org] They never have.
I will insist with my own original version ("fugitive suspect for the rape of a female mister Assange"), and i woul
Re: (Score:2)
The warrant for Assange's arrest was properly sent through Interpol, and upheld by the English courts. I haven't noticed anybody calling for Assange to be brought over here except for some idiot politicians, and if the US wanted to get him I'd think it would be easier to do so from the UK. Standard legal procedure is that Sweden can't send him to some other country without UK permission, so he'd be in a position where it would take UK and Swedish agreement to be sent to the US, not just UK.
Re: (Score:2)
"Even i, a right-wing Greek,"
Oh, sure you are. Did you have to check your onscreen prompt to remind you which country your current sockpuppet is supposed to be from?
Re: (Score:1)
"Even i, a right-wing Greek,"
Oh, sure you are. Did you have to check your onscreen prompt to remind you which country your current sockpuppet is supposed to be from?
I am a real Greek - and you are one more real "malakas"! (in Latin characters because we are in Slashdot -a site for "nerd"...-, where still can't present UTF Greek)
Re: (Score:2)
Yeah, it bites all of us (I can't write a thorn here). They only care about Americans so after countless redesigns there's still no proper unicode support.
Re: (Score:1)
Yeah, it bites all of us (I can't write a thorn here). They only care about Americans so after countless redesigns there's still no proper unicode support.
I understand that it's not that easy to add proper unicode support but i know that it's not that hard... especially since this is a supposedly a site for "nerds"...
By the way, (and thanks to wikipedia!) your "thorn" is our (indispensable) Greek "theta" (also not supported).
Re: (Score:1)
So are you blaming Mr Assange for being a suspect (of a crime which doesn't have a witness)? Or are you blaming him for refusing to go to another country because he is a mere suspect?
I just mention some facts: Assange is a fugitive (from the Swedish justice) suspect (accused by the victim) for the rape of a female - facts are just facts (facts are not my opinion - i have an opinion, but i did not mentioned it... i mentioned just facts!)
Canadian Memorial to Vietnam opponents (Score:5, Interesting)
War Resisters Remain in Canada with No Regrets [go.com]
Many opponents of the Vietnam war fled to Canada rather than face conscription, "An estimated 125,000 Americans fled to Canada in the 1960s and '70s to avoid the Vietnam War military draft, according to the American Veterans of Foreign Wars" according to the article
The town of Nelson planned to build a memorial to these folks, who once they settled into Canada became exemplary citizens and active participants in their communities.
The flood of hate mail from the USA caused them to reconsider.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Obedience is not a virtue.
If they ran away from a clear and present need to defend their country, I might agree with you. But they ran away from a political decision to go kill foreigners in a foreign land. I will not look down on them for that.
Re: (Score:3)
No, resistance to the Middle Eastern invasion, the growth of the national security state and ubiquitous surveillance stems directly from that same national security state that gave us the Vietnam War. NSA surveillance is made necessary by the national security state.
Providing historical context for the current problem is not "changing the subject", it explains the current resistance.
What Daniel Ellsberg did for the Vietnam War is echoed in what Assange and the others have done.
Re:Canadian Memorial to Vietnam opponents (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, I don't know about you, but to me not wanting to go to war to die senselessly to protect the interest of a few and participate in the dick-measuring contest between US and USSR sounds like a really sane reason to get out of it.
Re: (Score:3)
You can tell me all you want that the US intervention in Vietnam was disastrous and should have been avoided. You can say what you will about its execution, and your public policy interpretation. Have fun. And maybe all the draft-dodgers gone up to Canada believed this verbatim. Sure.
But while you're considering US motives, please pause a moment to pay some respect for the million or so (South) Vietnamese who were killed in the war proper (the majority civilian), and for the millions who died afterwards i
Re:Canadian Memorial to Vietnam opponents (Score:4, Insightful)
These victims have already been paid their respects. The country that tried to send them to the stone age, that poisoned their landscape and murdered their children has not acknowledged its complicity.
The United States never learned from the Vietnam War. The folks who refused to fight for this lie and emigrated, who built themselves a new life as solid citizens of another country, are not granted the respect they deserve. This simple memorial to their participation in their new homeland became a target for the US right wing hate machine, the same media machine that continues to send us into wars.
The draft dodgers were right. if we had listened, we would not be involved now in the destruction of the Middle East.
People do not leave their homeland to become lifetime emigres for frivolous reasons. The former Americans who moved to Canada and contributed to their adopted homeland deserve credit for what they accomplished.
Re: (Score:2)
But while you're considering US motives, please pause a moment to pay some respect for the million or so (South) Vietnamese who were killed in the war proper (the majority civilian), and for the millions who died afterwards in re-education camps, doing hard labor, escaping the country on ramshackle boats, executed for being enemies of the state, or simply starved through disastrous implementation of collectivized agriculture policies.
Sure thing, as long as we also pause and pay some respect for all of those who died at the hands of the Southern Vietnamese regime and all of those who died during the hundred years of French invasion and occupation that immediately preceded American involvement. I'm not one to wave a Viet Cong flag (unlike, say, Christopher Hitchens), but there is just a tiny bit of context here that supporters of the war either don't know or don't care about. A great many VC viewed this not as a pro-communism war, but as
Re: (Score:3)
If you want to wage war, do it. Go grab a gun and go to war. But do it yourself. If the assholes who want a war would have to fight it, they'd not only be far shorter, there would also be far fewer of them.
Re: (Score:3)
If you are incapable of forming and maintaining your own moral compass independent of the law, you
Re: (Score:1)
I wasn't there so I can't judge them but I am sure many who fled had no conviction about Vietnam other than they didn't want to die in war over there, same as all the ones who did go.
They didn't flee from a war, they fled from a "police action". Since most of them weren't cops, that seems like a perfectly reasonable thing to do.
Arrange for a permanent installation (Score:1)
in front of the U.S embassy.
This is our time... (Score:5, Insightful)
Statues erected to promote freedom of speech and tell people they should not be afraid to say when there is something going wrong are considered "provocative".
beam in your own eye (Score:2, Insightful)
Germany should be more concerned about its own domestic spying programs, the massive data collection by the German government, and the widespread restrictions on free speech and free exercise of religion in Germany.
While you might say that perhaps putting up statues to US whistleblowers might encourage Germans to do the same thing, in reality, this is just an outgrowth from a widespread political effort in German (and similarly other European countries) to distract people from domestic problems by pretendin
Re: (Score:2)
Keep in mind that many Europeans consider themselves more free than US citizens. Laws against certain very specific things like holocaust denial in Germany are seen as necessary and for protecting freedom. It seems like Americans believe that as long as you have the right to freedom you will always be free, but in Europe we recognise that sometimes society has to say "no".
For example, religious icons are banned in French schools. In American schools children have to recite a pledge to l of allegiance to the
Re: (Score:2)
Yes, and German schools have government-sponsored religious instruction, and the German government pays the salaries of protestant ministers and Catholic priests, while Britain still gives special status to its state church and has had a deadly religious conflict with Ireland. The French, on the other hand, throughout history occasionally become violently anti-religious. What's your point?
Bold statements about other countries' politics (Score:2)
Dear Germany: you get no points for putting up statues to controversial dissidents from other peoples' countries. You're clearly trying to make a bold political statement here, but to do that you need to take a stand against members of your own nation. Put up a statue to the folks who prosecuted the Christian Democratic Union's campaign donations scandal in 1999, or Kathrin Oertel, the leader of an anti-islamic nationalist group who recently resigned and recanted, and *then* you can pat yourselves on the
Re: (Score:2)
Put up a statue to the folks who prosecuted the Christian Democratic Union's campaign donations scandal in 1999, or Kathrin Oertel, the leader of an anti-islamic nationalist group who recently resigned and recanted, and *then* you can pat yourselves on the back.
Have these people fled their country due to fear of unfair prosecution? Have they been prosecuted?
These cases are good example of people doing the right thing and being recognized for it... As oppose to facing unfair being persecuted.
Also don't compare a donation scandal or the onset of common sense in a racialist to the persistent violation of privacy (a human right) by the US. Note that the US haven't recognized wrong doing, despite violating human rights on a global scale (crossing borders, etc).
I'
Re: (Score:2)
You're missing the point. I'm not trying to defend what the US has done here, nor am I trying to equate German political scandals with American ones -- and the fact that I can't find an equivalent German scandal says a lot of good things about Germany. But celebrating the failures of somebody else's country is pretty close to what the Germans call schaedenfreude, and what Americans call "a dick move". Let Americans put up their own Snowden statues [animalnewyork.com].
Re: (Score:2)
But celebrating the failures of somebody else's country is pretty close to what the Germans call schaedenfreude, and what Americans call "a dick move".
So far the Americans haven't recognized their "failure", nobody have been persecuted for these transgressions, the only one anybody is talking about persecuting is Snowden.
So this is clearly a political provocation, aiming to signal that many Germans takes the transgressions committed by the US very serious, at lot more serious the than most Americans. It's not "a dick move" when the Americans aren't acknowledging their faults, and correcting their wrongs.
Note, I for one can't blame the Germans for being
how ironic (Score:1)
However, I take issues with both Manning and Snowden.
Manning's goal was NOT to release information because he opposed what was going on. His reason was because he was mad at the US because he was gay and was about to be booted out. With that said, the information that he release was about some of our illegal doings. As such, he should not be punished f
Tautology (Score:2)
'Platz' means square. It's just Alexanderplatz.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:3)
Tautology (grammar) [wikipedia.org]
Blow the whistle in other countries (Score:2, Interesting)
So, Germans defend the right of people to tell the world when things go wrong in other countries.
And yeah, building statues is clearly the right thing to do, especially after Snowden clearly said that he didn't want the world to focus on his person but rather on what he revealed. How about actually helping these people instead? They aren't dead yet you know.
For me it is an empty political move.
Re:Blow the whistle in other countries (Score:5, Informative)
I guess you don't keep up with current events, but actually the people in Germany doing this have also been trying to get asylum for Snowden. It's not like they woke up one day and decided the best thing they could do is a statue, it's part of an ongoing effort to bring attention to the cause and put pressure on the government.
Note to submitters: People don't RTFA, so you can't expect them to be knowledgeable about our Google the subject either. It's worth including useful info like this in the (short) summary because otherwise half the comments will be like this.
Re: (Score:3)
And while we try to get him asylum, we also say that it would be the worst idea because we, with out current government, would not be able to guarantee safety.
I would also dare most to compare the media coverage between how Germans and the US treat the revelations on spying or the subject of whistle blowers or asylum for Snowden.
If only Snowden had outed a CIA operative ... he could be VP now.
Re: (Score:1)
So you don't believe the statues exist?
You ain't nothing but a despicable troll (Score:1)
Even if it's the RT which came out with that article no one can deny the goddamn ROT of the Western governments
If the Western, supposedly DEMOCRATIC GOVERNMENTS weren't doing so much rotting stuffs, you think Manning or Snowden or Assange would have anything to show us?
You are nothing but a pathetic troll!
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
US: Gawd damned Nazi's idolizing traitors!
Germany: Nazi's? Pot/Kettle?
I am sad to say that a look inside the US reveals that it has become some of the key elements in the monster it so vigilantly took down in WWII.
Re: (Score:1)
Why do people insist on conflating Snowden's patriotic actions with the well-meaning but naively harmful actions of Assange and [wo]Manning?!
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
These are monuments representing those who would SPEAK THE TRUTH. It doesn't matter what your opinions are regarding these truths. These men all did great services for people of the world. Their actions go well beyond US borders.
Re: (Score:1)
Their actions go well beyond US borders.
Yep, Assange and Manning put the lives of many activists and resisters at risk all around the world by outing them.
Re: (Score:1)
It's "resistors".
And they were already outed. You can easily tell what and how strong they are by their colored bands.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
All they have done is tell the truth, the truth does hurt when the government has done pretty much everything else but play it straight since the 50's. They still fail to realize the course that put this country on, and that only serves to prove the people are not being represented. Some blame US business for buying out the politicians, it however was the politicians that sold us out, sold out our jobs and eventually lead to selling themselves out with the government having to print money every six months
Re: (Score:2)
I'm not worried at all if Assange/Manning "hurt" governments. But I'm *outraged* that they put the lives of people resisting repressive and violent regimes at risk by publishing their names and actions. If all they had done was whistle blowing against governments I would laud them, as I do Snowden.
Re: (Score:2)
How many people actually died as a direct result of these disclosures? Numbers? Names?
If you shoot into a crowd, it isn't okay just because you failed to actually hit anyone.
How many people died as a result of liberating oil wells or looking for WMDs? Hmm...
That is irrelevant. You cannot justify doing something that is wrong or stupid, just by pointing out that someone else did something even dumber.
I personally believe that Snowden, and Manning both disclosed illegal activities that should have disclosed, and both are more hero than not. But I also believe that both could and should have used more discretion in releasing information that was harmful. Maybe someday, in a
Re: (Score:1)
Nobody was shooting.
Nobody was harmed or outed, even the DoD admits it. You're just lapping up foxpropaganda.
Then throwing it up on our shoes.
"That is irrelevant. "
That's not how you spell pertinent. It's a very relevant question. The answer to how many people were harmed by the disclosures of WL is zero. The number died liberating oil wells or not finding WMDs you sold them a decade or more before cost thousands of lives.
Given your whining about possible deaths, your refusal to admit any point is why their
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Sure, tell the truth:
The truth about innocent names and people trusting that they would have their confidentiality kept in dangerous parts of the world. Whose families got killed after the native governments found out who they are.
The truth about how ISIS was being monitored, which allowed then to now conduct operations without worry... had that "truth" not be out, the guys at Charlie Hebdo would still be alive.
The truth about US counter-espionage, which now gives hostile powers like China a greater hand.
I don't get why these guys are given any treatment other than contempt. They have helped greatly to empower repressive, brutal regimes, while damaging open governments. As for a higher standard? The offering of asylum and money is not exactly a higher cause. That is just plain treason.
I hope the Triad of Treason faces justice and responsibility for the people they killed. They did no honorable or valorous acts, except sell their government out.
What about Dave Patreus, why aren't you calling for his head? He leaked classified docs but rather than face prison he got a slap on the wrist, and the prosecutors didn't even want to do that.
Re: (Score:1)
Sure, tell the truth:
The truth about innocent names and people trusting that they would have their confidentiality kept in dangerous parts of the world. Whose families got killed after the native governments found out who they are.
The truth about how ISIS was being monitored, which allowed then to now conduct operations without worry... had that "truth" not be out, the guys at Charlie Hebdo would still be alive.
The truth about US counter-espionage, which now gives hostile powers like China a greater hand.
I
Re: (Score:1)
Why do people insist on conflating Snowden's patriotic actions with the well-meaning but naively harmful actions of Assange and [wo]Manning?!
This.
TFS even states:
"the statue pays homage to three who said no to war, to the lies that lead to war"
What about the lie that Assange AND Manning both told to jump-start their egos? That is, the "collateral murder" video which was anything but murder. Assange himself later even admitted that they essentially lied about it. For those who don't know, it was the first piece released to wikileaks, and it was attempting to paint a narrative that US soldiers just casually and routinely openly fire on unarmed civ
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Do you have a reference for : "Assange himself later even admitted that they essentially lied about it
For those who don't know, it was the first piece released to wikileaks, and it was attempting to paint a narrative that US soldiers just casually and routinely openly fire on unarmed civilians.
Wrong and misleading
Wikileaks was in operation for years before this.
The full video was released alongside the edited one so people could judge that for themselves.
Re:Seriously?! (Score:5, Insightful)
Slashdot's feeding the Russian propaganda sites now?
Why not, most newspapers here in the US feed US propaganda. They don't report the true news or else they omit what is really going on. Just look at the NY Times in the leadup to the Iraq war, they help Cheny/Bush go to war for non-existent weapons of mass destruction. Look at the mess we're in now. We're recruiting terrorists like mad now. We're really hated by lots of folks. Just because of our wanting to take Iraq oil.
Re: (Score:1)
Russia Today is quite literally government controlled and run propaganda. Can you honestly make that claim about the US media?
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
At the very least there are a large number of different media sites and the US government is not legislating to massively curtail and control the media. Russia, however, is.
Re: (Score:2)
You will be modded into oblivion for pointing out the inconvenient truth here on slashdot.
Snowden demonstrated his naivety when he willingly went on the Putin propaganda hour and asked softball questions. Remember that?
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Seriously?! (Score:4, Insightful)
Russia Today is quite literally government controlled and run propaganda. Can you honestly make that claim about the US media?
Yes, the US media are propaganda mouthpieces of their own recognizance.
At least the Russian propaganda is honest about being propaganda.
Every Eastern European I've met has told me this, "the difference between American propaganda and Russian propaganda is that we [Russians] didn't beleive our propaganda".
Re: (Score:2)
Except the polls in Russia show the Russian people swallowing the crap Russia Today spews forth. A majority of Russians now have a positive view on Stalin, possibly because all negative aspects of his reign are being denied and suppressed by Putin and his bum chums.
Re: (Score:2)
Do you really think there is no difference in terms of freedom of the press in Russia and the US?
Re: (Score:2)
Slashdot's feeding the Russian propaganda sites now?
The source is questionable in many ways, and well known to be a Russian government mouthpiece.
But the same material was available elsewhere in German and international media with all the same opinion slants.
Re: Seriously?! (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
And! And: it says Snowden is "trapped" in Moscow, which is not very agitprop-friendly.
Snowden *is* trapped in Russia unless he wants to cell-mate with Bradley Manning.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Dude, think again. Kissinger has one. Obama has one. The EU has one. Giving one to Assange, Manning and Snowden sends the wrong signal, they're not crooks.