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Government United States

Chelsea Manning Files to Run for U.S. Senate in Maryland (washingtonpost.com) 315

An anonymous reader quotes the Washington Post: Chelsea E. Manning, the transgender former Army private who was convicted of passing sensitive government documents to WikiLeaks, is seeking to run for the U.S. Senate in Maryland, according to federal election filings. Manning would be challenging Democrat Benjamin L. Cardin, who is in his second term in the Senate and is up for reelection in November. Cardin is Maryland's senior senator and is considered an overwhelming favorite to win a third term... However, a candidate with national name recognition, such as Manning, who comes in from the outside could tap a network of donors interested in elevating a progressive agenda...

Evan Greer, campaign director of the nonprofit organization Fight for the Future and a close supporter of Manning's while she was imprisoned, said the news is exciting. "Chelsea Manning has fought for freedom and sacrificed for it in ways that few others have," Greer wrote in an email. "The world is a better place with her as a free woman, and this latest news makes it clear she is only beginning to make her mark on it."

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Chelsea Manning Files to Run for U.S. Senate in Maryland

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  • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Sunday January 14, 2018 @10:43AM (#55926365)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Re: Mixed feelings (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Regardless of her other qualities, she damaged the security of the US by unilaterally dumping classified materials. She did not pick and chose messages or topics in a way that can be defended in an ethical argument. All other issues do not matter to me and I lean over to the left pretty far.

      • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

        Defend it, all too easy. Fact, government secrecy is an anathema to democracy. Every citizen has 100% right to all information about their government, that would affect the vote of that citizen. For the government to use the tax payers money, to keep secrets from the tax payer (keep in bloody mind who works for whom) that would affect the vote of the citizens is an electoral crime and a denial of the right of citizens to a fair vote. Democracy based upon lies is no Democracy, it is an autocracy controlled b

    • by Uberbah ( 647458 ) on Sunday January 14, 2018 @01:56PM (#55927237)

      I see you're keeping the streak alive. I have yet to see a person who casts judgment on Manning give one flying fuck about the massive corruption and war crimes she revealed, or want the people who committed those crimes to pay for their actions.

      But she's impulsive in a dangerous way

      Uh, NO. She tried the "chain of command" and was blown off, just as Snowden was. And she gave documents to a responsible organization, one with a 100% track record of authenticity, who vetted them before release. Do tell how she was going to uphold her Oath of Office to defend the Constitution (not neocon war criminals) without leaking to the press.

      politically inexperienced

      She has a whole lot of experience with the lawless authoritarian state and the torture the USG commits against people in detention (prolonged solitary confinement). Getting one advocate against those things into higher office is hardly unreasonable.

      and has proven herself a bad judge of character in terms of who she allies herself with

      She wasn't allied with the FBI stooge Lamo. You referring to Assange here? The same Julian Assange who has a 100% track record of authentic releases, and has been subject to more authoritarian character assassination?

      • It's been a while, but IIRC lots of her supporters don't really know what a war crime is. War is an ugly business, and there's a lot of horrible things that aren't war crimes, but rather are what war demands. (Obviously, there were war crimes in Iraq, possibly including waging aggressive war, but that's not what we're talking about.) We already knew about corruption.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      You just described the POTUS.

      Just needs a twitter account and she is headed for the top.

    • The U.S. simply elects politicians with name recognition.

      If Homer Simpson ran for office, he'd likely get elected.

    • Democrats are making the same mistake when they picked Obama and then Clinton: in the desperate grasp for their most strong argument: populism, they over rewarded minorities and alienated their other base: politically active working class, mostly white men.

  • listen fuckers (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Osgeld ( 1900440 )

    you have had CES running all week, and yet you shitpost from CNN, why is this news for nerds? People file to run for public office all the time.

    Fuck you Chinese Slashdot

    • by ELCouz ( 1338259 )
      Wow someone is salty today.
    • Re:listen fuckers (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Sunday January 14, 2018 @12:19PM (#55926765)

      and yet you shitpost from CNN,

      which part of "An anonymous reader quotes the Washington Post:" makes you think this is from CNN? was it the "(washingtonpost.com)" link?

      why is this news for nerds?

      i feel like you have discounted the slogan: "Slashdot: News for nerds, stuff that matters"

      People file to run for public office all the time.

      People that have been charged with literal treason for doing what they felt was right. This is a high profile individual.

      Fuck you Chinese Slashdot

      Fuck you, Slashdot doesn't even have basic UTF8 support much less any support of any Chinese character sets!

    • Has there even been one single "Announced at CES" post this week? I dont remember seeing any.

    • Can you post the link to your firehose submission for those CES stories?

    • a few refreshes from AMD/Intel/Nvidia. A bunch more talk about digital assistants which are just stand alone devices for things most of us already have on our phones. When the most 'exciting' thing that's making the rounds are small laptops with 4G radios built in you know you've got a dud.

      Tech just isn't moving like it used to. Computers have reached 'good enough' territory and cell phones brought so many devices together (phone, mini-tablet, GPS, music player, radio, digital camera/low end camcorder,
  • Criminal? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by thegarbz ( 1787294 )

    Doesn't the USA have laws against convicted criminals being elected for public office? Regardless of what you think about her, she still was convicted of a serious crime. How is she fit to serve?

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      There are some basic rules for running for the Senate, but criminal offenses are covered by state laws. In this case Maryland has chosen to allow felons to represent them. I have no idea how we have gotten to this point but I sure wish we could do take backs...

      • Re:Criminal? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward on Sunday January 14, 2018 @01:09PM (#55926985)

        That's a wise rule of Maryland, because it is a standard tactic of fascist regimes and dictators to make sure that political opponents get convicted as felons. It's a good safeguard, take a look at Russia to see what happens if you don't have it.

        • That's a big problem if you have fascist regimes and dictators. But there are many countries which have laws like this and didn't turn into Russia.

          Your example is like saying that everyone who sneezes will die of ebola.

      • Maybe Manning is just trying to balance things out? I mean, right now the Republicans have four convicted criminals running for Congress in 2018 and the Democrats only have one. If Manning runs and the Dems can drum up two more, they'll have achieved parity.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        Do those laws include pardoned felons though? Is a pardon in the US only a get out of jail card, not forgiveness for the crime?

      • by Greyfox ( 87712 )
        Seems to me a lot of the things that can make a senator very wealthy and influential can also kind of accidentally make you a felon if you happen to get caught at it. The senators are probably aware of that and would rather not risk their shiny income in the event they do accidentally get caught at it. Felons in general probably have a better approval rating than Congress, anyway.
      • To be completely fair, the will of the people should almost always override government mandated qualifications.
    • Depends on the state:
      http://www.newsweek.com/chelse... [newsweek.com]

    • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

      by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Sunday January 14, 2018 @11:11AM (#55926483)
      Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by mellon ( 7048 )

        Her prefrontal cortex has grown quite a bit since then...

      • by arth1 ( 260657 )

        If you block people from being elected (or people from voting) who have committed crimes, you allow unjust laws to ferment unchallenged, and you encourage politicians to pass laws that disproportionately affect their opponents.

        Very true. Unfortunately, the US has not taken the full steps needed to avoid this, due to disenfranchisement of felons. In a two-party system, this invites those in charge to make and enact laws that hit the other side harder than theirs.
        Most democracies have safeguards to prevent this, most notably by making voting an inalienable right. You then can't silence opponents by creating unfair laws, and then take away people's right to vote when they break them.

      • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

        Impulsivity is common in the young. When he leaked those documents, Bradley Manning still had a couple of years to go before he could legally rent a car in many parts of the US.

        • What our government was doing is not right. Both her and Julian just supplied the news and blew the whistle on them FYI ARE OR SHOULD be protected under law. But nope patriotism comes first.

          • Giving people free license to release and distribute classified materials because they think it's the right thing to release some of it is not a good idea.

      • > the fact she technically violated the law

        This was no trifling technicality.

        If wasn't for the sex change, and our laughably PC culture, Manning would be in prison until the day she died.

      • you allow unjust laws to ferment unchallenged

        If out of the many millions of people in your country you can't find someone to represent you view against unjust laws who isn't a convicted felon then there is something very wrong with your country.

        The main problem here is the public will stand behind anyone or anything (as evident from the monkeys currently in power capable of only throwing feces at each other while grabbing people by their pussies). The public is a crap judge of character. Past actions however is a pretty good judge.

        I also call bullshit

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by mapkinase ( 958129 )

        >The fitness of someone to serve is ultimately determined by the public.

        You are saying like this is something even remotely intelligent.

    • No joke The GOP has 4 of them running [youtube.com]. You can get your rights back in a lot of places. We mostly use denying political rights to keep the 'wrong' (read:poor and minorities) sort from voting. If you've got the money, the time and maybe a few of the right friends it's not hard to get the rights back.
    • SHe is a hero.

      She did nothing wrong under whistle blower laws at the illegal and unconstitutional roles of the NSA and their acts of espionage agaisn't American companies.

      We all go all crazy about how evil the NSA is for asking for private keys, monitoring cell phones without taping warrants, killing Iraqi civilians, and other illicit activities we are protected under with a national whistleblower laws. BUT... but ... we all go how evil and unamerican and traterious she is and go on about USA USA we are the

    • Why should the US have such laws? Let the voters decide. I'd be dubious of voting for someone convicted of a serious crime, personally, but I wouldn't rule it out entirely. It would be a significant campaign issue.

      I don't think I ever said she was fit to serve. Fitness for service is not a requirement to run in an election (or be elected, for that matter).

  • I suppose being convicted and imprisoned will at least make Manning unfriendly to the government - although then: why become part of it?

    Being transgender will automatically win over some of the more extreme progs, but beyond that: exactly why would voters want Manning in the government, representing them? Poor education, no professional experience to speak of, shaky mental health from all that time in solitary confinement. Why would Manning (or whoever is really behind the senate run) think that voters woul

    • What makes her a better choice than giving the current Democrat a third term? Seriously, she'd be taking the place of a well-liked, well-supported Democrat because...

      I think democrats will be torn between their current Senator and this 'flavor of the month' candidate Manning.

      • by DanielRavenNest ( 107550 ) on Sunday January 14, 2018 @12:12PM (#55926735)

        Manning is the 4th Democrat to file for this office so far. The primary in May will weed out which one will end up in the general election, and it probably won't be her. Given the office is held by a well-respected two time Democratic senator, she probably doesn't have the traction to replace him, even with major name recognition.

        If her ultimate goal is book sales for her life story, running for office is a great way to keep her name in the news. Otherwise, being released, she's yesterday's news.

    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

      "I suppose being convicted and imprisoned will at least make Manning unfriendly to the government - although then: why become part of it?"

      In a democracy, when you disagree with the government and there isn't anyone you want to vote for, you're supposed to run for office to effect change.

  • by ArtemaOne ( 1300025 ) on Sunday January 14, 2018 @11:55AM (#55926669)

    When Bradley (active duty) released the stuff to wikileaks he did it in mass. He did not discriminate well on what he released. The video of killing the people, and then killing of the people coming to rescue the injured, is one thing. I wouldn't have ever done it, but I get what he was going for. Releasing tons of unrelated stuff that can hurt our objectives and server members is unforgivable. Now that Chelsea is released from prison she is using her trans status as a vehicle to jump on the progressive train for her own benefit. I heard that while in the Army he was a terrible private, and that gives me no confidence in him that could help recover his betrayal of the country he wants to represent. I say no, never. And it has nothing to do with her transition. (Gender applied chronologically)

    • "while in the Army he was a terrible private"

      I heard that too: refused to target civilians with bombs, drones and trigger-happy military convoys, didn't take part in torturing or degrading prisoners, wouldn't cover up war crimes, a total disgrace to the US military.

      • And had no opportunities to do any of that. So if you're listing things he couldn't have done as things he didn't do, then he didn't go to the moon or dive to the bottom of the ocean.

      • I heard that too: refused to target civilians with bombs, drones and trigger-happy military convoys, didn't take part in torturing or degrading prisoners, wouldn't cover up war crimes, a total disgrace to the US military.

        Not sure why you think you're scoring some sort of only-in-your-own-echo-chamber rhetorical points when trotting out stuff that Manning had, literally, nothing to do with. He was simply being a drama queen and looking for attention, and indiscriminately dumped a mountain of sensitive information out there for consumption by - among other people - those who would be very happy to kill people just like him on religious grounds, and kill our military and intelligence people for working to defend against just

  • ... if she is qualified according to the Constitution, then she can run. Whether or not she gets the support required to be successful in her endeavour is up to the people in her state and, unfortunately, outside money donors. I mean, what's the worst that could happen?
  • So sick of this little shit. Can't believe Manning is running for office and Snowden is still living in fear of his life.
    • Can't believe Manning is running for office and Snowden is still living in fear of his life.

      So, blame Obama. Manning should still be serving, and Snowden should have been procured and doing the same. Then we'd have similar treatment for people playing fast and loose with classified information ... oh, except for Hillary Clinton, of course. She's special and gets a pass, and all of her staff get immunity deals before talking about her.

  • Why does Manning get so much public attention, and why do we allow Manning to personally profit from this stupid war? IMHO, what Manning did, did not shorten the war in Iraq by one single day, nor did he save one single Iraqi life. All that Manning did do was to disobey a lawful order that he personally disagreed with.

    Why do we continue to elevate Manning above other Iraq- Vets who in many cases were wounded or died actually trying to help the Iraqi people or save Iraqi lives? Why is Manning any better tha

  • GOP ran traitors for the WH. Now, the dems run a traitor for the senate.
    When will we stop backing criminals and start supporting honest leaders.
  • . . .with an existing organization, links into the party structure at pretty much all levels, and all the advantages of being the sitting Democrat incumbent with a long record in a deep-blue state.

    And Manning brings what, exactly, to the table ???

  • It got of Manning out of a life sentence, now it might get her in congress.

    How else would a criminal, convicted of espionage, with zero political credentials, even be considered?

    Caitlyn Jenner has not done anything since she was Bruce Jenner in 1976. Yet she is considered a major celebrity.

    For a while, it seemed to work for Michael Jackson as well.

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