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Red_Dragon

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Location: Dumbf*ckistan


Posted: Nov 30, 2010 - 11:50am

 Beaker wrote:

Last time I looked, we were still fighting a war or two.  When Wikileaks puts out info that gets others killed, then yeah, summary execution seems quite appropriate.
 

And what sort of penalty should those who have involved us in these wars on false pretenses be afforded?
musik_knut

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Location: Third Stone From The Sun
Gender: Male


Posted: Nov 30, 2010 - 11:38am

 beamends wrote:

It would, I'm sure. If it was given the info and it was pertinent. Or even worth bothering with - for example what the UK thinks about such and such is pretty much irrelevant on a global scale. Wikileaks isn't about taking the piss, it's about wrongness. I'm also sure the every country spends quite a lot of time slagging off every other country too - just like neighbours in a street. Why is the US, seemingly, the main target? I'd go along with the Guardian article below - it's double standards - such as railing China for human rights abuses while denying the inmates of Guantanamo Bay the fundamental right of legal representation (never mind how they came to be there in the first place). It's evident from this forum that many (most?) US citizens don't see the contradiction, but many outside the US do.

If they were to post a load of stuff about China or Russia, both would just shrug and say "And?" - neither even pretends to hold the moral high ground.
 

The US offered 'fundamental right' of legal representation to Ahmed Ghailani, the mad bomber behind the simultaneous attacks on US Embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. Many of us, knowing how convoluted the US Justice system can be, how demanding it is of evidence and so forth, knew that removing a Gitmo detainee from Gitmo and not using a Military Tribunal, would result in Mr. Ghailani escaping the more damning charges. 291 innocent souls were lost due to his actions yet in a Federal Court, he was found guilty only of committing conspiracy to damage property. I don't think most of the world outside the US understands our system, yet they bray on as if they do and we don't.
Many of us in the US understand the mindset of Attorneys such as Lynne Stewart, defender of the blind Egyptian Sheik who orchestrated the first attacks on the Twin Towers: she passed on messages from the Sheik to his equally radical supporters and then committed perjury when denying those actions. Most of the lawyers in the US who foam on about how radicals held at Gitmo must have a day in Court, are of that same liberal mindset.
If Khalid Sheik Mohammed, self-confessed mastermind behind the 9/11 attacks *supported by data on his computers and other electronic means*, comes to a Federal Court, he will likely walk when the Court is fully instructed on interrogation methods used while being held at Gitmo. Wouldn't that be a fine day...he walks, 3,000 are dead due to his actions.
This administration, led by President Obama and the Attorney General, appear to want settings for radicals that will likely see a re-do of the nonsense findings in the case of Mr. Ghailani. Meanwhile, Team Obama promises that KSM will never be a free man. What if a Court says different? Working the system for the perpetrators of death and destruction invites such findings. Some of us, in the US, understand that. Many, outside the US, don't.
Red_Dragon

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Location: Dumbf*ckistan


Posted: Nov 30, 2010 - 11:35am

 Beaker wrote:

Wikileaks has nothing to do with freedom of speech.  The information it offers up is STOLEN.
 

So the penalty for theft should be summary execution?
Lazy8

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Posted: Nov 30, 2010 - 11:32am

 Beaker wrote:
What's your point?

Yes, Wikileaks is making powerful people angry. We knew that. Is there some secret Moscow is keeping that you think it would be bad for us to know?

peter_james_bond

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Location: West Of The Burg
Gender: Male


Posted: Nov 30, 2010 - 11:13am

 Beaker wrote: 
Yes, it's dangerous to be a journalist in Russia. This is from WikiPedia:

In its September 2009 report the Committee to Protect Journalists repeated its conclusion that Russia was one of the deadliest countries in the world for journalists and added that it remains among the worst at solving their murders. The Anatomy of Injustice<6> (Russian version: Анатомия безнаказанности<7>) offers an account of the deaths of 17 journalists in Russia since 2000. They died or were killed, the CPJ is convinced, because of the work they were doing and in only one case, it notes, has there been a partially successful prosecution.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_journalists_killed_in_Russia

Freedom of speech doesn't exist in Russia, and you're suggesting that the West should follow this horrendous example?

bokey

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Posted: Nov 30, 2010 - 11:04am

 Beaker wrote: 
Good call.
I'm still not sure what side of the fence I'm on though, I've been out of the news loop for a few days and have no clue what the facts are. (not that I think the news provides too many facts)

beamends

beamends Avatar



Posted: Nov 30, 2010 - 11:02am

 musik_knut wrote:


Interestingly, and I don't know the laundry list of wikileaks, but it seems ever pointed at the US. Can anyone doubt that behind closed doors, chatter in other countries often brings about derogatory comments about other countries, other leaders and other global events?
Would wikileaks spill that pillow talk?

 
It would, I'm sure. If it was given the info and it was pertinent. Or even worth bothering with - for example what the UK thinks about such and such is pretty much irrelevant on a global scale. Wikileaks isn't about taking the piss, it's about wrongness. I'm also sure the every country spends quite a lot of time slagging off every other country too - just like neighbours in a street. Why is the US, seemingly, the main target? I'd go along with the Guardian article below - it's double standards - such as railing China for human rights abuses while denying the inmates of Guantanamo Bay the fundamental right of legal representation (never mind how they came to be there in the first place). It's evident from this forum that many (most?) US citizens don't see the contradiction, but many outside the US do.

If they were to post a load of stuff about China or Russia, both would just shrug and say "And?" - neither even pretends to hold the moral high ground.

musik_knut

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Location: Third Stone From The Sun
Gender: Male


Posted: Nov 30, 2010 - 10:28am

 beamends wrote:

but how many lives have already been lost due to the skulduggery and resulting cock-ups? How many will be saved now people, ordinary folk (none of this is news to governments), have a much better idea of where they stand and who their friends are? The 'it'll put people in danger' is just a smokescreen to hide embarrassment, not only of having true intentions exposed, but how dumb some of the assessments are - Angela Merkel being described, in a derogatory tone,  as 'unimaginative' completely misses the point that in troubled times that's exactly what the Germans want (and it has served them well over the years). Prince Andrew being 'rude'? Tough, don't listen into other people's conversations if you don't want to find out what people really think.

It would be great if Wikileaks revealed the other side of the coin too, mind. I suspect that Mrs. Clinton would have plenty to complain about then {#Wink}

 

Interestingly, and I don't know the laundry list of wikileaks, but it seems ever pointed at the US. Can anyone doubt that behind closed doors, chatter in other countries often brings about derogatory comments about other countries, other leaders and other global events?
Would wikileaks spill that pillow talk?
beamends

beamends Avatar



Posted: Nov 30, 2010 - 10:24am

 peter_james_bond wrote:
From The Guardian:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2010/nov/29/the-revolution-will-be-digitised?intcmp=239

WikiLeaks: the revolution has begun – and it will be digitised

The web is changing the way in which people relate to power, and politics will have no choice but to adapt too

.............


 
Damn it! An article in the Guardian I can't pick fault with - now that is annoying!

beamends

beamends Avatar



Posted: Nov 30, 2010 - 10:20am

 musik_knut wrote:
Many speak of seeing dark secrets come to light. But how many will be talking if innocent lives are lost as a result? It's always fun until someone loses an eye...

 
but how many lives have already been lost due to the skulduggery and resulting cock-ups? How many will be saved now people, ordinary folk (none of this is news to governments), have a much better idea of where they stand and who their friends are? The 'it'll put people in danger' is just a smokescreen to hide embarrassment, not only of having true intentions exposed, but how dumb some of the assessments are - Angela Merkel being described, in a derogatory tone,  as 'unimaginative' completely misses the point that in troubled times that's exactly what the Germans want (and it has served them well over the years). Prince Andrew being 'rude'? Tough, don't listen into other people's conversations if you don't want to find out what people really think.

It would be great if Wikileaks revealed the other side of the coin too, mind. I suspect that Mrs. Clinton would have plenty to complain about then {#Wink}
peter_james_bond

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Location: West Of The Burg
Gender: Male


Posted: Nov 30, 2010 - 10:03am

From The Guardian:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2010/nov/29/the-revolution-will-be-digitised?intcmp=239

WikiLeaks: the revolution has begun – and it will be digitised

The web is changing the way in which people relate to power, and politics will have no choice but to adapt too

Diplomacy has always involved dinners with ruling elites, backroom deals and clandestine meetings. Now, in the digital age, the reports of all those parties and patrician chats can be collected in one enormous database. And once collected in digital form, it becomes very easy for them to be shared.

Indeed, that is why the Siprnet database – from which these US embassy cables are drawn – was created in the first place. The 9/11 commission had made the remarkable discovery that it wasn't sharing information that had put the nation's security at risk; it was not sharing information that was the problem. The lack of co-operation between government agencies, and the hoarding of information by bureaucrats, led to numerous "lost opportunities" to stop the 9/11 attacks. As a result, the commission ordered a restructuring of government and intelligence services to better mimic the web itself. Collaboration and information-sharing was the new ethos. But while millions of government officials and contractors had access to Siprnet, the public did not.

But data has a habit of spreading. It slips past military security and it can also leak from WikiLeaks, which is how I came to obtain the data. It even slipped past the embargoes of the Guardian and other media organisations involved in this story when a rogue copy of Der Spiegel accidentally went on sale in Basle, Switzerland, on Sunday. Someone bought it, realised what they had, and began scanning the pages, translating them from German to English and posting updates on Twitter. It would seem digital data respects no authority, be it the Pentagon, WikiLeaks or a newspaper editor.

Individually, we have all already experienced the massive changes resulting from digitisation. Events or information that we once considered ephemeral and private are now aggregated, permanent, public. If these cables seem large, think about the 500 million users of Facebook or the millions of records kept by Google. Governments hold our personal data in huge databases. It used to cost money to disclose and distribute information. In the digital age it costs money not to.

But when data breaches happen to the public, politicians don't care much. Our privacy is expendable. It is no surprise that the reaction to these leaks is different. What has changed the dynamic of power in a revolutionary way isn't just the scale of the databases being kept, but that individuals can upload a copy and present it to the world. In paper form, these cables amount to some 13,969 pages, which would stack about 25m high – not something that one could have easily slipped past security in the paper age.

To some this marks a crisis, to others an opportunity. Technology is breaking down traditional social barriers of status, class, power, wealth and geography – replacing them with an ethos of collaboration and transparency.

The former US ambassador to Russia James Collins told CNN the disclosure of the cables, "will impede doing things in a normal, civilised way". Too often what is normal and civilised in diplomacy means turning a blind eye to large-scale social injustices, corruption and abuse of power. Having read through several hundred cables, much of the "harm" is embarrassment and the highlighting of inconvenient truths. For the sake of a military base in a country, our leaders accept a brutal dictator who oppresses his population. This may be convenient in the short term for politicians, but the long-term consequences for the world's citizens can be catastrophic.

Leaks are not the problem; they are the symptom. They reveal a disconnect between what people want and need to know and what they actually do know. The greater the secrecy, the more likely a leak. The way to move beyond leaks is to ensure a robust regime for the public to access important information.

Thanks to the internet, we have come to expect a greater level of knowledge and participation in most areas of our lives. Politics, however, has remained resolutely unreconstructed. Politicians, see themselves as parents to a public they view as children – a public that cannot be trusted with the truth, nor with the real power that knowledge brings.

Much of the outrage about WikiLeaks is not over the content of the leaks but from the audacity of breaching previously inviable strongholds of authority. In the past, we deferred to authority and if an official told us something would damage national security we took that as true. Now the raw data behind these claims is increasingly getting into the public domain. What we have seen from disclosures like MPs' expenses or revelations about the complicity of government in torture is that when politicians speak of a threat to "national security", often what they mean is that the security of their own position is threatened.

We are at a pivotal moment where the visionaries at the vanguard of a global digital age are clashing with those who are desperate to control what we know. WikiLeaks is the guerrilla front in a global movement for greater transparency and participation. There are projects like Ushahidi that use social networking to create maps where locals can report incidents of violence that challenge the official version of events. There are activists seeking to free official data so that citizens can see, for example, government spending in detail.

Ironically, the US state department has been one of the biggest cheerleaders for technical innovation as a means of bringing democracy to places like Iran and China. President Obama has urged repressive regimes to stop censoring the internet, yet a bill before Congress would allow the attorney general to create a blacklist of websites. Is robust democracy only good when it's not at home?

It used to be that a leader controlled citizens by controlling information. Now it's harder than ever for the powerful to control what people read, see and hear. Technology gives people the ability to band together and challenge authority. The powerful have long spied on citizens (surveillance) as a means of control, now citizens are turning their collected eyes back upon the powerful (sousveillance).

This is a revolution, and all revolutions create fear and uncertainty. Will we move to a New Information Enlightenment or will the backlash from those who seek to maintain control no matter the cost lead us to a new totalitarianism? What happens in the next five years will define the future of democracy for the next century, so it would be well if our leaders responded to the current challenge with an eye on the future.


musik_knut

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Posted: Nov 30, 2010 - 9:54am

Many speak of seeing dark secrets come to light. But how many will be talking if innocent lives are lost as a result? It's always fun until someone loses an eye...
HazzeSwede

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Location: Hammerdal
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Posted: Nov 30, 2010 - 8:45am

 Beaker wrote:

fvck Assange.  I'll bet Putin gets to him first.  Wikileaks needs to be blown off the Innerweb.
 
The servers are 5 clicks from my place,just saying ! {#Whistle}
Red_Dragon

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Location: Dumbf*ckistan


Posted: Nov 30, 2010 - 8:21am

 Beaker wrote:

A message needs to be sent.  And the way to do that is take out Assange and his followers by any means necessary.  If the current US administration is too chickenshit to do that, then I'm sure there's plenty of others who have little concern about removing Assange and his enterprise from among the living.
 

wow.  just wow.
Mugro

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Location: Grand Duchy of Luxembourg


Posted: Nov 30, 2010 - 8:17am

 Beaker wrote:



Though some heads need to roll too —- allowing that kind of unrestricted access to a relatively low level civilian means there's more to be fixed than one detail.  Of course the apparent fact that this tool smuggled it all out over 8 months on a CDRW also gives an IT security guy quite a bit of pause.

A message needs to be sent.  And the way to do that is take out Assange and his followers by any means necessary.  If the current US administration is too chickenshit to do that, then I'm sure there's plenty of others who have little concern about removing Assange and his enterprise from among the living.
 
There will be a LOT of changes. There have been some already. You can be sure that there will be increased security involved in cable traffic and less sharing of information between State and DoD. These leaks were sourced in the Department of Defense, not State. Until now, there had been sharing of information between State and Defense — the "One Team" approach. Now, not so much. 
Mugro

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Location: Grand Duchy of Luxembourg


Posted: Nov 30, 2010 - 8:15am

 rosedraws wrote:

cable dump?

and, I assume you mean the ramifications will be negative? 
 

Some ramifications positive (like perhaps finally the fall of the N. Korean regime now that the world knows that China no longer supports them), and some negative (Diplomacy is better than war, if no one can trust diplomacy, there will be more war). 
rosedraws

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Posted: Nov 30, 2010 - 8:04am

 Mugro wrote:
The Wikileaks cable dump will have a game-changing, long term impact on not only U.S. Foreign Policy but that of every country's. There will be ramifications from this act that will be far reaching, many of which are impossible to predict today. 

 
 
cable dump?

and, I assume you mean the ramifications will be negative? 
Mugro

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Location: Grand Duchy of Luxembourg


Posted: Nov 30, 2010 - 7:59am

The Wikileaks cable dump will have a game-changing, long term impact on not only U.S. Foreign Policy but that of every country's. There will be ramifications from this act that will be far reaching, many of which are impossible to predict today. 

 
peter_james_bond

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Posted: Nov 30, 2010 - 6:18am

WikiLeaks is doing us all a favor. Secrecy is a cancer; governments must be held accountable for their actions, but if the public is kept in the dark by those very same governments then democracy suffers. We, the tax payers, pay for these government clowns, we deserve to know what they are up to. Does what they say in public match what they say in private? Governments talk about transparency but it seems to be all talk and no action.

I'm not as articulate as I'd like to be. Bill Moyers, on the other hand has a wonderful way with words. Here is a speech he gave concerning government secrecy. IN THE KINGDOM OF THE HALF-BLIND


HazzeSwede

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Posted: Nov 30, 2010 - 6:10am

 beamends wrote:
I don't think anyone is really surprised, such is the US's reputation around the world. Still, Hillary Clinton jumping up and down like a spoilt brat who's had her ball taken away is fun.

 
{#Yes}  {#Lol}...here,we are mostly concerned about future"diplomatic talks" as in, will there be such a thing and who to trust, if anyone.

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