SVreX wrote:
By definition, due process is a limitation on government. It is completely meaningless in the above context.
No business, individual, or other entity can offer due process to anyone. Only government can.
Let me apologize to you directly. My tone in my last post was confrontational. Speaking in that fashion will only incite. You're a reasonable guy, there is no reason to be confrontational.
My point is that Wikileaks has already been punished by the government. I firmly believe that Visa, Mastercard, et al acted as spear carriers for the U.S. government. Wikileaks was tried, convicted, and punished via Visa/Mastercard by the U.S. government. Chances are the only people who can prove it would be Wikileaks because the U.S. and those corporations will never admit to this nor allow any documents to see the light of day to prove it.
You might not agree but does that clarify my point?
Also, I'm not saying what Assange is doing is right. I just wonder if the way it's being handled is right as well. What if brute force diplomacy is not the answer? Is the hammer the only tool America has? What if the cables were published and American diplomats said "Hey, this is what we do. We try to help our side and keep everyone from killing each other." Do you think that might defuse the situation?
HiTempguy wrote:
Why this worries me is it shows how easily (in public spotlight!) the government can come after you. How businesses will disassociate with you if the government could cause them "trouble". And then you get hit with dubious "rape" charges I don't believe that is what government is for, nor should it hold the power to hold information "secret" which shouldn't be "secret" but is just embarrassing.
This is absolutely disturbing but we have lived with this for awhile. When the government can label anyone they want as a terrorist. Then, they can treat that terrorist in any way they like - say like sending them to black ops prisons overseas, indefinite detention like Quantanamo, or freezing every penny they own via Mastercard/Visa or - in the case of normal Americans - freeze their assets at a bank by declaring the funds in use for domestic terrorism. The courts will not protect you until after the fact.
HiTempguy wrote:
We need more people like him, if anything. Sort of like a revolutionary leader for more transparency. Its not really possible to overthrow the gov of any developed nation nowadays is it? So the least we can do is make them as transparent as possible. I mean, they asked the US gov to go through the material they had and redact anything they thought shouldn't be released. That is one co-operative bad guy!
I was thinking about this today. We do need someone to educate us. We as citizen's are expected, and have a duty, to be educated about what we vote on. How can we vote intelligently if we don't know what the other hand of our government is doing. Even voting can be suspect...check out the fraud possible via electronic voting. This stuff is truly a rabbit hole like in Alice In Wonderland.
Also, while some of this data released is sensitive I can't help but feel that a lot of it is just petty. One diplomat calling another worthless. Another diplomat saying what everyone is thinking about Iran. Is it really so bad to have this stuff out in the open? The list of sites to be protected from terrorists...I can think of 10 sites in my city alone that should qualify for protection if you want zero problems with domestic terrorism. To say those are state secrets when divulged really is a stretch.
I also think the real threat here is that the average person will start acting like a soviet citizen. Be honest. How many of you think about what you say in public, on the phone, on email now? We all joke about how we are under surveillance. I know I feel like I am. I don't joke about bombs, terrorism, etc unless I'm with people I implicitly trust. I won't discuss such subjects in public either. It's not worth the risk. Do you guys notice the same thing?
I voted for candidate Obama's open government. Where is that? I know at least some of you are nodding your heads in agreement. The one's who aren't, I like hearing your opinions. Please bring up other viewpoints than my own.