[identity profile] evildevil.livejournal.com posting in [community profile] talkpolitics
Over the days there has been a lot of outcry against Julian Assange and Wikileaks. Many are calling him a traitor that should be prosecuted or executed. The problem with this issue is that Julian Assange cannot be considered a traitor if he is not an US citizen. That would be like North Korea calling President Obama a traitor for releasing nude pictures of Kim Jon Il on the internet (great, now I am going to have nightmares).

The problem is that there are issues regarding the prosecution of Julian Assange for his actions and he is outside the reach of US law. Even if we wanted him dead (and I do not support this idea) it would only result in an International backlash. After all who wants to read "US Government Authorizes Assassination of Foreign Citizen on Foreign Soil" on the headlines? (Besides the fact that it will probably violate international treaties, lets face it, he will become a martyr) Not to mention the last thing President Obama wants is to be tied to an Assassination Squad (probably inherited it from Dick Cheney) that can kill anyone who disrespects him; the last thing he needs is to add more fuel to the fire of conspiracy theories against him. Of course, I am taking these cries of Julian Assange's assassination as more bark than bite.

Joe Lieberman is attempting to introduce a new legislation to be used against Wikileaks, the problem with this move is that it wont punish Wikileaks' past crimes, to do so would be unconstitutional. New laws cant penalize past criminal conducts, the Constitution clearly bans ex post facto laws. This move is either a political attempt to look good (after looking at his poll numbers this shouldnt be a surprise) or an attempt to prevent future "cyber crimes" against individuals who release sensitive information that is harming to the safety of the public (must be nice for Scooter Libby and company to live in the land of hypocrisy, where the real criminals are anyone but the government).

Even if this law were to pass, I just dont see how can they stop Wikileaks:

It is not clear whether WikiLeaks — a confederation of open-government advocates who solicit secret documents for publication — could be subject to a federal subpoena. Federal courts most likely do not have jurisdiction over it or a means to serve it with such a subpoena.


But leaving that issue aside, what is there to stop the government from prosecuting the New York Times or any media organization that "conspired" to release the leaked documents? After all, they also helped Wikileaks in spreading the information to the masses, making them no less different than Wikileaks on their part. And what about bloggers and online media outlets or social networks like facebook? Would they also be prosecuted for spreading the information? Will the government shut down the internet just so they can stop the spread of electronic information? It soon becomes an issue of Freedom of Speech.

The only law that the US can use against Julian Assange is the World War I-era spy law, the Espionage Act of 1917, and this is a law that was created before the internet and the electronic age. The law has several holes that would make it difficult to successfully use against Julian Assange. The Espionage Act of 1917 would successfully prosecute Bradley Manning, the 22 year old private in the US army. Since the law makes it clear regarding the issue of those responsible for providing leaked information. But it becomes murky on Assange's case. It will be the burden of the government to prove that Assange encouraged and conspired with Bradley Manning to produce and pass the documents to Wikileaks.

The fact that the government is more concerned with prosecuting whistle-blowers releasing their dirty secrets for the world to see over the issue that the government has no problem in violating our civil liberties to learn our own private secrets in the name of National Security says a lot about their view of the world and their priorities.

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(no subject)

Date: 5/12/10 02:19 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] enders-shadow.livejournal.com
You don't think that Assange's actions might cost him his life?

I'd bet plenty some of the people mentioned in the leak would like to silence Assange permanently.

(no subject)

Date: 5/12/10 02:23 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] underlankers.livejournal.com
Might is a useless word. After all, it might be one day that pigs develop wings and start flying in formation to crap on Congress (not that that would change much there as it is). It won't threaten his life so long as he challenges one of the democracies. They're klutzy and incompetent at putting hits on other people.

He tries this shit with Putin or Jintao and he'll die a slow and lingering death from poisoning. Of course that's because those two are evil people who are effective at evil where the USA seldom, if ever is very good at being evil.

(no subject)

Date: 5/12/10 02:26 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] enders-shadow.livejournal.com
A) You were the one who used the word "might"--I was merely using your language
B) The USA seems to have been good at being evil, at least a few times:

e.g. slavery, tuskegee, MK-ultra, Japanese internment camps, Dresden, re-electing George W. Bush

(no subject)

Date: 5/12/10 02:36 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] underlankers.livejournal.com
A) I was using it to ridicule the people who create phantom hits on Afghan informants in the delusion that in a civil war of the sort the USA's blundered into trying to end those informants are unknown to those who'd want to kill with or without Assange.

B) Actually the main instance the USA was good at being evil with was behaving in a means rather like that of 20th Century Germany and ensuring that a record of treachery, genocide, and armed repression of any and all opposition, be it by reactionary slaveholders or striking members of the working class was met by a whiff of grapeshot. It hasn't been quite as good at that in the 20th and 21st Centuries because its rise was due to luck, not anything inherent in its system and it's deluded itself into thinking it was due to the system, hence attempts to address the real problem would never happen.

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