The Wikileaks Question

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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby AhabsOtherLeg » Mon Dec 06, 2010 12:18 am

.
Just found this handy searching thing for the 933 cables that had been released at the time the search facility was launched. I don't know if it's shady or anything like that, but I'm using it anyway. It's endorsed by VVOJ, the Association of Investigative Journalists, who I'd never heard of before. Could be a front, might log your IP and search history or whatever - use at your own risk, and i take no responsibility.

It works, though. I just put in Ergenekon and got five results in an instant, which is a lot better than manually searching each document in turn. Oooh, two on Lockerbie so far as well. Neither are of much interest in regards to Lockerbie itself, but one of them goes into a little bit of detail on the Iraqui government's report into the Nisoor Square massacre, carried out by Blackwater employees. That doc can be found here: http://213.251.145.96/cable/2007/10/07BAGHDAD3504.html

Here's the search engine itself. Once again USE AT OWN RISK:

http://ht.ly/3kggO

BTW, has there been any discussion of the "hacktivist" Th3J3st3r, who claims to have been behind the DDOS attacks on Wikileaks? The thread's too long for me to check through right now, but in case he's not been discussed, here is his twitter page where he lays out his reasons for attacking Wikileaks. His reasons are those of a douchebag.

http://twitter.com/th3j35t3r
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby AhabsOtherLeg » Mon Dec 06, 2010 12:46 am

.
I think Julian Assange is a pretty cool guy. Eh posts laeks and doesnt afraid of anything.

Dear God, now that he's got Anonymous' backing, conservatives have their near-perfect hate-figure. All he has to do is convert to Islam.
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby seemslikeadream » Mon Dec 06, 2010 4:50 am

Mirror websites: WikiLeaks grows to 355 & counting

Washington, Dec 6: Amid heavy hacking attacks, the whistle-blowing website WikiLeaks has released more than 355 mirror websites of the original site.

WikiLeaks released the mirror websites, which are the exact copy of original site, to continue the release of the United States diplomatic cables. In case of hacking of the original website, these mirror websites will allow the users to access the site.

"Wikileaks is currently under heavy attack. In order to make it impossible to ever fully remove Wikileaks from the Internet, you will find below a list of mirrors of Wikileaks website and CableGate pages," said WikiLeaks in its website.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has tweeted in his Twitter account that, "now WikiLeaks has more than 355 websites".

WikiLeaks also asked users to create mirror sites using their hosting resources.

"In order to make it impossible to ever fully remove Wikileaks from the Internet, we need your help. If you have a unix-based server which is hosting a website on the Internet and you want to give wikileaks some of your hosting resources, you can help," said WikiLeaks.

WikiLeaks has given the form for creating the mirror site, where users have to submit their IP Address, Login Password, HTML path and Login Name.


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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby AlicetheKurious » Mon Dec 06, 2010 6:34 am

Just for the record, keep in mind that:

1) The narrative about Julian Assange successfully evading authorities in Europe, especially in the UK, "the surveillance society", is as credible as the now threadbare story of the 'elusive' bin Laden;

2) The 'explosive revelations' in WikiLeaks amount to little more than gossip that gives street cred to the WikiLeaks' true message:


And this is just a sample.


3) While Wikileaks has sowed tension and inhibited communication between the US and other countries, including its own allies, there are indications that Wikileaks is connected to the CIA, which incidentally is deeply infiltrated by the Mossad. According to one report, not verified but worth mentioning in case someone can prove or disprove it:

This is directly from the Wikipedia November 2007, since erased:

"There have been many allegations that Wikileaks is a CIA front (eg. by cryptome)...Arguments have centered around the location of Wikileaks-related matters and the source of its funding..."The contact number on Wikileaks.org has a D.C. area code and is a Verizon cell phone number registered in Adelphi, Maryland. "Intellus.com, a Web tracking service, connected the number to a 'Va Reston.' "Twenty miles down the road from Adelphi is Reston, Virginia, home to iDefense labs, whose Web site says it is 'a comprehensive provider of security intelligence to governments.' "The DC telephone number is also on the same telephone exchange as the newly created (2006) Iraq Study Group and the Afghanistan embassy of Washington."


@ Nathan28: It doesn't take a "conspiratard" to connect these dots. And it will take a lot more than rude and childish insults to prevent some of us from doing so.

Behind all the smoke and mirrors, this Wikileaks psyop is 2002 all over again:

But the more pressing issue to Netanyahu is Iran's neighbor, Iraq, which he said was dangerously close to developing weapons of mass destruction -- and would not be susceptible to subversion.

"We understand a nuclear armed Saddam places Israel at risk," he said. "But a nuclear armed Saddam also puts the entire world at risk."

"After Saddam gets a nuclear weapon, it is only a matter of time before the terror networks get nuclear weapons,' Netanyahu warned. "And they will use them if they get them."
...
Netanyahu's rhetoric, at least the military invasion portion of his testimony, found a warm reception from committee Chairman Dan Burton, R-Ind., who said that finishing the war on terror with the occupation of Afghanistan without attacking Iraq would leave the job half done.

"One of the unfinished pieces of business we have is Iraq," Burton said. "In my opinion, this is a problem we can't continue to ignore. Saddam Hussein is a menace. He has chemical weapons. He has biological weapons. He's working hard to acquire nuclear weapons. He's used chemical weapons in the past. We should have no doubt that he'll use them again. And if he succeeds in developing nuclear weapons, we could have a catastrophe on our hands."

But Ohio Democrat Dennis Kucinich was not as supportive of Netanyahu's calls for war. In a terse exchange that occurred before the former prime minister laid out his "Iran Strategy," Kucinich asked him for additional suggestions for places to invade.

"While you're here, Mr. Prime Minister, are there any other countries besides Iraq that you would suggest that we invade?" he asked. Link
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby 82_28 » Mon Dec 06, 2010 6:44 am

^^^Yup!
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby wintler2 » Mon Dec 06, 2010 8:22 am

Sorry Alice, i don't buy it. I cannot be certain you are wrong, but your evidence doesn't convince me i am.

Did you expect US State Dept memo's to be completely true and accurate?! Surely not - institutional communications are always tilted to tell management what they want to hear, which is 'bomb Iran' and 'our client states are obedient'. The lack of cables yet publicised pointing at Israel could have others causes apart from 'Wikileaks is Israel' (sic): State Dept bias's or subversion, Wikileaks corruption or strategising, or MSM filtering.

Thanks for the links to rightwing media pulling out what they want us to hear, but no way is that all that is in the cables. Are you surprised they only see/publish what they want to see? I wasn't.

Do you believe the cables are entirely fabricated, or true but incomplete?
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby nathan28 » Mon Dec 06, 2010 10:30 am

wintler2 wrote:Sorry Alice, i don't buy it. I cannot be certain you are wrong, but your evidence doesn't convince me i am.

Did you expect US State Dept memo's to be completely true and accurate?! Surely not - institutional communications are always tilted to tell management what they want to hear, which is 'bomb Iran' and 'our client states are obedient'. The lack of cables yet publicised pointing at Israel could have others causes apart from 'Wikileaks is Israel' (sic): State Dept bias's or subversion, Wikileaks corruption or strategising, or MSM filtering.

Thanks for the links to rightwing media pulling out what they want us to hear, but no way is that all that is in the cables. Are you surprised they only see/publish what they want to see? I wasn't.

Do you believe the cables are entirely fabricated, or true but incomplete?



Umberto Eco wrote:[A]s Georg Simmel once remarked, that a real secret is an empty secret (which can never be unearthed); it is also true that anything known about Berlusconi or Merkel’s character is essentially an empty secret, a secret without a secret, because it’s public domain. But to actually reveal, as WikiLeaks has done, that Hillary Clinton’s secrets were empty secrets amounts to taking away all her power.



Alice isn't providing "evidence." She's giving us insight into her own reading response. This was one of the only explanatory links in one of the links she posted:

One or two readers may recall Tim Lambert, the error-prone Sydney academic who became romantically attached to Lancet‘s absurd claim that some 655,000 Iraqis were killed during allied liberation of their country. According to shocking WikiLeaks data, however, the death count in Iraq over six years was closer to 100,000:
The Iraq documents gave “not just the aggregate, not just that, you know, ‘in Fallujah a lot of people died,’ but rather the deaths of each person, with precise geographic coordinates and the operation under which they died”, [WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange] said.

That is the big outcome for us, is that these people whose deaths were previously anonymous, they are no longer anonymous.

“We can see where they died and under what circumstances.”
Further from Slate‘s Fred Kaplan:
The WikiLeaks documents add further doubts to a controversial report in a 2006 issue of the medical journal the Lancet, claiming that, even that early in the war, 655,000 Iraqi civilians had been killed, most of them by U.S. air and artillery strikes.
Previous thoughts from Francis Sedgemore. And further still.

UPDATE. “I’m not sure it’s what WikiLeaks intended,” writes Andrew Bolt, “but its latest leaks reveal that the infamous Lancet paper which claimed the US-led liberation of Iraq cost the lives of 655,000 Iraqis in fact exaggerated the death toll by at least 600 per cent.”

http://blogs.news.com.au/dailytelegraph/timblair/index.php/dailytelegraph/comments/count_down/


That isn't WikiLeaks' doing--that is spin, pure and simple, and not even A-dawg Bolt can deny it. But what's more surprising is that the ~65,000 dead figure was published by another study somewhere around a year ago. That particular study contested the methodology of the 2006 Lancet study, particularly, in that the Lancet study made use of a poll that asked something to the extent of "do you know someone who has died..." I'm not a survey-authoring statician, but the simple fact is that the figures had already been contested by others in field before Assange leaked anything. IOW: WikiLeaks did not break that story. In fact, if I take the brief quote from Assange at face value, his interest was in pinning a name to a spot of the map, not in contradicting the Lancet study.

In fact:

Iraq war logs reveal 15,000 previously unlisted civilian deaths
Leaked Pentagon files contain records of more than 100,000 fatalities including 66,000 civilians
David Leigh
guardian.co.uk, Friday 22 October 2010 21.32 BST


Leaked Pentagon files obtained by the Guardian contain details of more than 100,000 people killed in Iraq following the US-led invasion, including more than 15,000 deaths that were previously unrecorded...

The logs record a total of 109,032 violent deaths between 2004 and 2009. It is claimed that 66,081 of these were civilians...

The data cannot be relied upon as a complete record of Iraqi deaths. IBC, for example, had previously calculated that up to 91,469 civilians were killed from various causes during the period covered by the leaked database. While detailing the 15,000 previously unknown deaths, it also omits many otherwise well-attested civilian fatalities caused by US troops themselves. Nor does the Pentagon data cover any of the initial invasion fighting throughout 2003; IBC has identified 12,080 purely civilian deaths in that year.


http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/oct/22/true-civilian-body-count-iraq?intcmp=239

So now the Guardian is a Mossad front, too, I guess.

Here's another story Alice links:

Hundreds of documents outline the intelligence, of variable quality, on which the Americans have based allegations of Iranian backing for the Shia militias which fought government and US troops.

They claim Iranian intelligence officers served inside Iraq, at one point manning checkpoints with local militias, and describe a firefight on the border in which American troops shot an Iranian border guard dead and then came under prolonged attack as they returned to base.

In one of the most tantalising documents, they also hint at Iranian involvement in al-Qaeda suicide bombing.

Whether the Shia Islamic Republic has offered support to the Sunni militant group has been one of the most controversial questions in the Middle East.

American leaders have both claimed the existence of such links and backed away from them.

But a threat report in the files dated Nov 17, 2006 claims that new techniques for suicide bombing, a favoured al-Qaeda and Sunni insurgent practice in Iraq, had "surfaced" in Iran and Syria.

Both involved the use of miniature cameras to allow remote monitoring of the attack.

"Al-Qaeda remains the strongest organisation among the insurgent groups in Iraq and directs the majority of attacks that take place in Iraq," says the assessment. "Instructors at the Islamic Jihad Center in Tehran are teaching a new tactic for SVIED (Suicide Vest Improvised Explosive Device) deployment."

It is not clear how credible the intelligence cited is considered, and there are no reports of camera-equipped suicide vests being found. Islamic Jihad is a militant Palestinian group that has been responsible for suicide bombings in the past and is backed by Syria and Iran...


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/iraq/8083016/Wikileaks-how-Iran-devised-new-suicide-vest-for-al-Qaeda-to-use-in-Iraq.html

How many hedged statements do you you see there? I can't help but notice the "of variable quality" and "not clear how credible".

Nearly three years later, American troops were still finding WMD in the region. An armored Buffalo vehicle unearthed a cache of artillery shells “that was covered by sacks and leaves under an Iraqi Community Watch checkpoint. “The 155mm rounds are filled with an unknown liquid, and several of which are leaking a black tar-like substance.” Initial tests were inconclusive. But later, “the rounds tested positive for mustard...”

The WMD diehards will likely find some comfort in these newly-WikiLeaked documents. Skeptics will note that these relatively small WMD stockpiles were hardly the kind of grave danger that the Bush administration presented in the run-up to the war.


http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2010/10/wikileaks-show-wmd-hunt-continued-in-iraq-with-surprising-results/

The artillery-shells-with-mustard-gas story is public domain, and has been for years, having run on the wires and FauxNews. The embarrassment there is calling mustard gas a "weapon of mass destruction," or suggesting that it requires anything more than two very common compounds (that most Americans probably have under their sinks) to manufacture. The fact that diplomats under Bush reported back material in a manner that would have confirmed Bush's justifications and the fact that authority-worshiping fucktard fanboys at Wired stopped looking at iPhone porn long enough to post a "Bush Wuz Rite" story isn't exactly an Israeli psyop. Or maybe it is, but I always thought that Wired was part of the Steve Jobs racket more than Israeli dope dealers...

WikiLeaks cable warns of 'widening crime war' in Israel

...Entitled "Israel, a promise land for organized crime?", the cable notes that while organized crime has "long-standing roots" in Israel, certain factors indicate that a "widening crime war" has begun to spiral.


http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/wikileaks-cable-warns-of-widening-crime-war-in-israel-1.328383

I'll note that next to nothing portrays Israel as "victim" of crime in that piece. The article lists the title of the cable not as "Evil Russians and Secular Israelis Aiding Global Muslim Threat By Having Established a Strong Drug-Trafficking Industry in Israel"--I'm going to kindly note that Soviet-era news services ran nearly identical stories back when there was a USSR.

And about the missile story, as soon as I slip out of the surly bonds of the New York Times, I find out that they don't even print the most exciting part.

At issue are 19 missiles that Iran allegedly bought from North Korea. It's hard to know how definitive this evidence might be. (There are likely many secret documents pertaining to Iraq's WMDs that proved to be entirely incorrect; because something is secret or confidential does not mean it's uniquely candid or truthful.) The Times does not seem at all skeptical about the story, but there's one thing they won't do: publish the actual cable:

At the request of the Obama administration, The New York Times has agreed not to publish the text of the cable.


So the paper will publish a story that reiterates the most explosive allegations in the cable, but not the cable itself. This is curious.

Luckily WikiLeaks did publish it. And the most interesting thing one learns is that the Russians were deeply skeptical of the U.S. allegations about these missiles [The actual cable says]:

Russia said that during its presentations in Moscow and its comments thus far during the current talks, the U.S. has discussed the BM-25 as an existing system. Russia questioned the basis for this assumption and asked for any facts the U.S. had to provide its existence such as launches, photos etc. For Russia, the BM-25 is a mysterious missile. North Korea has not conducted any tests of this missile, but the U.S. has said that North Korea transferred 19 of these missiles to Iran. It is hard for Russia to follow the logic trail on this. Since Russia has not seen any evidence of this missile being developed or tested, it is hard for Russia to imagine that Iran would buy an untested system. Russia does not understand how a deal would be made for an untested missile. References to the missile's existence are more in the domain of political literature than technical fact. In short, for Russia, there is a question about the existence of this system.


In other words, not only were the Russians not convinced that Iran had purchased these missiles, they weren't sure that these missiles even existed.


http://mrzine.monthlyreview.org/2010/hart291110.html


And Gawker's "whew, that's a relief":

Well, at least the logs don't show our own troops torturing anyone.


Gosh, sure is a good thing no one has leaked photographs of prisoners being held under severe movement-restriction and sensory deprivation, that would only make the Israeli cause even stronger. And man, it's a good thing that Iran was able to intercept the Mossad-CIA-Disney agent who was going to drop Lyddie England's camera on the press.

Image
http://www.smh.com.au/photogallery/2006/02/15/1139890768970.html?page=3 (WARNING--GRAPHIC)





2004 Taguba Report documenting torture by US forces at Abu Gharib AS PUBLICIZED BY THE PENTAGON--It definitely must be a psyop!



See, the funny thing is, you've already made up your mind. I'm not sure if it's just intellectual laziness or intellectual dishonesty or monomania or all of those. It doesn't matter that Gary McKinnon hasn't been extradited from the UK after almost a decade. It doesn't matter that released cables paint a different image when someone beside the NY Times and FauxNews write the commentary. It doesn't matter that pop-mind-control site Gawker is too amnesiac to remember gory pictures and a headlining story from five years ago that contradict what they say directly that dimes to donuts says that most people outside the US remember. If it's anything besides "The Mossad did it" or "it's a hoax by Republicans to unseat Obama" or "it's a plot to clamp down on the internet", it's impossible.


Besides, somebody's gotta play the heel.
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby Twyla LaSarc » Mon Dec 06, 2010 2:39 pm

Once again, pardon me if this has been posted. The number of voluminious threads on this subject make searches rather difficult:

FDL: Assange's "Sex By Surprise" Accuser Worked With US-Funded, CIA-Tied Anti-Castro Group
http://journals.democraticunderground.com/Turborama/369

http://my.firedoglake.com/kirkmurphy/20 ... -cia-ties/
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby nathan28 » Mon Dec 06, 2010 4:17 pm

No direct link or full text b/c I don't want to give the hosting site anymore linkjuiceness, but it's currently only hosted there b/c it looks like the radio host who aired the interview only writes for that site.




W-rldN-tD--ly: WikiLeaks sells classified data
http-colon-slashslash-www--wnd--com--slash--index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=236345

John Young at Cryptome was interviewed by some stooge for a major retardofascist news website with IIRC ties to [WRONG: Turkish organized crime and $cientology], if I can every pull up C2W's post. Anyway, Young said the following:

EDIT courtesy of one of my coworkers from DHS Disinfo/PsyOps Central, it's a Scaife op:

the always amazing and sorely missed compared2what? wrote:8bit, WND is a barely disguised Richard Mellon Scaife op.

There's nothing ambiguous about that. It's not good, it can't do good, and it doesn't intend to either be or do good.

It's the rare easy call, in that respect.

ON EDIT: And...I'm not positive, but I think Corsi might come from a Rev. Moon Washington Times background. Though that might be the other Swift Boat author. You know. What's-his-name. Starts with "S." I'll go check.

ON SECOND EDIT: Carlton Sherwood. And it is he, not Corsi, who has the Rev. Moon resume. He did the video. I always get those two guys and the tangled web of their ties to the vast right-wing funding machine mixed up.


Scaife is a far-right billionaire who once accused a WSJ reporter of being a socialist before saying something to the extent of "you better watch your back"
http://www.antifascistencyclopedia.com/allposts/worldnetdaily-and-the-cias-richard-mellon-scaife




[Selling classified information] "only came up in the topic of raising $5 million the first year. That was the first red flag that I heard about. I thought that they were actually a public interest group up until then, but as soon as I heard that, I know that they were a criminal organization."

"It follows the model of a number of other business intelligence operations. Selling intelligence information is a very lucrative field, and so they are following that model, usually cloaked in some kind of public benefit".

[He thinks that the rumor that George "I Financed the Nazis When I Was Nine Years Old" Soros's Open Society Institute was going to pour cash all over WikiLeaks was] "just a tease, a fundraising tease that Julian is known to use. He's a bragger and talks about these possibilities as though they are in the works, but I don't think there is much to it."

"..he's picking easy targets again for publicity purposes for maximum exposure."

"There are lots of other things that WikiLeaks is ignoring in favor of this high profile material they are putting out now. They pretty much abandoned putting out useful material to release bombshells and picking easy targets. Banks are an easy target. The U.S. is an easy target. So these are no-brainer targets."



I imagine this is RetardofascistNetDuhly's attempt to 'discredit' Assange by portraying him as a black hat who is only doing good *this week*, but I find that scenario plausible. I mean why not blackmail the some stooges at State and sell secrets to the CCP while doing some public service on the side, or vice versa?

None of that really reflects on whether Assange is a Progressive Beacon of Pwog Democracy, an MC'd Mossad-Disney Manchurian Candidate, a Reptilian Shapeshfiting Blueblood Baby-Eater from the Fourth Density, an AynRandroid Living out Atlas Shrugged Fantasies, a Sort-Of Anti-gov't Hacker with a Profit Motive, or just an Ego-driven Asshole, or something else or a combination of some or all of those, but there's this thing called "nuance," sometimes referred to as "shades of grey", it might be helpful to get some as opposed to binary-thinking the fuck out.

Image
hmm, what's on the agenda today? pursue human liberty, or blackmail the pentagon? hmm...



Because I am so awesome wrote:that's the first thing that stands out in my mind. WikiLeaks used to be "free as in freedom." Now it's "free as in free beer."

...

.... the very real possibility that WikiLeaks could be a self-interested, mercenary party, acting, like I suggested earlier, on something that resembles a corporate plan making use of a PR windfall. Hence the disappearing of all that 'everyday' data in very unexciting documents... Those early posts were just part of an effort to showcase Wikileaks ability to capture seeming obscure data--this recent round of leaks shows that WikiLeaks can capture high-value state-level secret targets as well. Some of the emails John Young posts indicate that WikiLeaks is just as mercenary as it is committed to an anarchist/libertarian world.

But even this is speculation. I have no idea WTF is going on there.





Like everything else "breaking" from the WikiLeaks story, this also isn't news. Young posted a WikiLeaks assocs. email that mentioned pursuing a strategy of "hosing" whoever they could if need be to Cryptome like three years ago, or something. Anyway, I'm sure that this actually won't change anyone's True and Final A Priori Fact-Finding Conclusion, so it's probably just more of a Jewish plot, using Cryptome, an obvious super-mega honeypot used to add names to the MAIN CORE rosters, posted to delude the Truthfinders over at W-rldN-tD--ly's Tardville.
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby Bruce Dazzling » Mon Dec 06, 2010 5:24 pm

Here's an interesting conversation between Dylan Ratigan and Glenn Greenwald about Wikileaks and other topics.
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby Bruce Dazzling » Mon Dec 06, 2010 5:33 pm

From NPR Check

Hatchet Job

Liane Hansen works hard to convey a friendly, down-to-earth, aunt-like persona as she reads her scripts for NPR. But like the gooey Scott Simon, she too knows how to carry a blade. Don't you ever wonder what kind of dysfunctional, warped childhood people like Liane Hansen had that would make them want to front for a journalistically bankrupt institution like NPR? No? Of course not. What in God's name, does someone's childhood have to do with reporting on the actual content and substance of that person's behavior? Everything - if your purpose is to smear and discredit them. Which brings us to Hansen's chat on Sunday morning with the sleazy, discredited New York Times reporter, John Burns. Hansen opens up her tabloid discussion with this:

"Before we get to his current troubles, can you give us just a little bit of biographical information on Mr. Assange, specifically, what was his childhood like in Australia?"

Burns is more than willing to supply irrelevant hearsay:

"He was brought up by his mother. It was a nomadic life. I think he had some troubles in school. In fact, he very often wasn't in school."

And that's the nice stuff these two jorno-assassins had to say about Assange. Here's Hansen at her reportorial best:

"People who know him have described him as imperious, a control freak, an ideologue, an egomaniac, a genius, and unique."

"His detractors say he's reckless; he puts lives at risk."

And so it goes, with Burns providing most of the smears and hits:

"...he struck me as being, yes, brilliant, capricious, arrogant, but not terribly self-knowing..."

"He is strange because, as you said in your introduction, he lives in the spotlight, occasionally popping up at news conferences and bathing in the celebrity. And then he disappears again."

"...his mobile phones, which he switches...like other men switch shirts."

"He's very concerned about his security. And, who knows, maybe he has reason to."

Who knows? Yes, you might think powerful figures were calling for his assassination [e.g. here, here, and here] or execution, or that the the world's most bloated and violent military institution had targeted his organization for destruction [pdf of leaked document here], or that the nation that runs that institution is in the habit of assassinating "high value targets" or kidnapping [with its allies] and torturing such people. You have to love that Mr. Uber journalist John Burns can only murmur "who knows" and yet say about Assange:

"And he struck me as...not gifted, I have to say, with much of a sense of irony."

Irony indeed...
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby AlicetheKurious » Mon Dec 06, 2010 6:23 pm

Interesting point, about that "Wiki-math":

    December 6, 2010

    ITS ALL IN THE WIKI-MATH

    By Gordon Duff STAFF WRITER/Senior Editor


    One out of seven news outlets have noticed, thus far, that Wikileaks seems to have a “soft heart” when it comes to Israel and India. Zbigniew Brzezinski caught on, finally, declaring that Wikileaks is an “intelligence operation” using “pointed” information carefully “seeded” into a combination of minor scandals and chickenfeed.
    ...
    Much of the press seems to have gotten “talking points” from somewhere, leading them to the material Brzezinski picked up when he “trashed” Wikileaks. We did the “math” on the Afghanistan leak. 80% of the stories to hit the media mentioned Pakistan aiding the Taliban. We did the actual count and found 38 reports out of 92,000 documents that were unsubstantiated reports of Pakistani activity in Afghanistan.

    Something about this had a terrible smell. It should have taken weeks to find the Pakistan stuff but the press had it all immediately. Brzezinski is right, Wikileaks is something very wrong packaged to look very innocent. We saw the same thing in the Iraq “dump,” all about imaginary secret agents from Iran.


    We are seeing it again, Israel the hero, sparkling clean, a land of angels and wizards, surrounded by dirty Arabs and Pakis and now, seemingly worst of all, the corrupt and inept Americans, exposed for what they are, OK, almost exposed except for one thing, everything Americans are accused of in Wikileaks was done in support of Israel, at the direction of their powerful AIPAC lobby. Nothing of this is mentioned nor the fact that the leaders in Washington who formulated the policies Wikileaks is trashing are, largely, Israeli citizens.

    Is Wikileaks planning, some day, to expose this gang, and show America to be the biggest victim of all?

    If it looks too good to be true, trust me on this, run like hell!

    REPORTER ANALOGY

    Put yourself in the place of a decent and honest reporter. You wait, your pulse pounding, [for] 92,000 documents. You have your entire staff, the obits guy, the restaurant critic, all sitting up at your house, pounding down tequila and espresso. Five of you and 92,000 documents, that’s 18,400 each. You can each scan only 500 documents an hour, that’s a day and a half, but you have a deadline and your Wikileaks lead story has to be in for the morning paper.

    You get a text message to check your email. You have a list of articles there, the real “gold” among the senseless time wasting “chaff.” You have one of those moments of moral dilemma. For a real reporter, in the real world, that moment came and went without notice.


    "YOU'VE BEEN WIKI-HAD!"

    You can now make the deadline, and you have the lead story, Pakistan is running the Taiban, murdering American troops, Iranians are swimming the Euphrates, bringing IED’s into Iraq and a 74 year old grandfather from Rawalpindi is managing world terrorism when he isn’t on CNN.

    GOLFING ANALOGY

    With reporters finding, just the right places in Wikileaks, we wanted to look at the odds. Golfing is a good comparison, so we checked the odds of someone getting a “hole in one” playing golf. Is finding the right articles in Wikileaks easier or harder than getting a “hole in one” playing golf?

    In 1999, Golf Digest reported, “One insurance company puts a PGA Tour pro’s chances at 1 in 3,756 and an amateur’s at 1 in 12,750.”

    That same issue reported that the “odds of an amateur making two holes-in-one in a round are 9,222,500 to 1.”

    Ireland’s National Hole in One Club puts the odds a little lower for one ace: “The estimated odds of acing a hole with any given swing are one in 33,000.”

    And an article in the magazine Navy Newsstand, citing Sports Illustrated as its source, put the odds at 45,000 to 1 for “scoring a hole-in-one on a typical par-3 golf hole.”

    This is the comparison we came up with. With our odds, were there only one Wikileak, at 4,130 compared to “hole in one” odds for a golfing pro at 3,756, the analogy works. Thus, 38 out of 92,000 articles is about the same as getting a hole in one. However, when you consider this is the 3rd straight hole in one for Wikileaks, the odds figure to be well over 20 million to one against. Wikileaks beats the odds bigtime.

    We call this “the luck of the press.”

    I am a member of the press, maybe, if I am lucky, I can find a $50,000 check and first class air to Israel in my mailbox. Any bets on my chances?

    RIGGING THE GAME, BUYING THE UMPIRE, COOKING THE BOOKS..WIKIMATH

    Image
    NO WIKILEAK FOR DR. AAFIA? TIME TO ASK WHY

    Oh, you didn’t know we “farmed out” our intelligence? This is illegal, of course. Did America have private companies, some owned by Israelis, operating in Afghanistan, companies tied directly to the Mossad, producing intelligence reports that were then picked out by Wikileaks then hand fed to the press. Let’s do the math.

    This is the kind of thing former National Security Advisor Brzezinski is talking about. It is also what others in the media are talking about. Today, Wayne Madsen on Russia Today spoke of the same thing, how Wikileaks seems aimed directly at the enemies of Israel. Madsen, as with so many others, makes the point that Wikileaks is, as he says it, “cherrypicking” intelligence that seems to make Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu very happy.



    IS THERE A LESSON?

    The last few days, Paul Craig Roberts and I have been trading emails, a three way debate with Robbie the Pict (actual name), a well known UK activist. Paul wrote this today:

    “For example, the US print and TV media and the US government have made it completely clear that they have no regard for the First Amendment. Consider CNN’s Wolf Blitzer’s reaction to the leaked diplomatic cables that reveal how the US government uses deceptions, bribes, and threats to control other governments and to deceive the American and other publics. Blitzer is outraged that information revealing the US government’s improprieties reached the people, or some of them. As Alexander Cockburn wrote, Blitzer demanded that the US government take the necessary steps to make certain that journalists and the American people never again find out what their government is up to.”


    So many honorable people who have “fought the good fight” so long, like Roberts, have been hungry for something to hold on to that Wikileaks is defended to the last without the objectivity such things require. I was someone who, on 9/11, never imagined Osama bin Laden. My first words, “Oh g-d, I didn’t think they would do it.”

    I meant Bush and Cheney. This is how I think; after all, I grew up “bad,” a Detroit kid. Now, finally, Geraldo Rivera tells me I was right all along. I never had doubts, I only wondered how long it would take, not for the truth to come out, nobody wants the truth, but for it to become profitable to exploit the conspiracy. Welcome to that one.

    Now we have divisions, those I call “Israeli shills” teamed with those who see the extremely flawed and even diseased Wikileaks as a big win because it supports the fight they have had against American duplicity. When is a “big win” a big loss?

    My good friend, Paul Andrew Mitchell, had to remind me, Assange is an “odd duck” as a “whistleblower.” He supports war, any war, anytime, anywhere. Assange may be the last man alive to support, without question, the 9/11 Commission but is planning to reveal the truth about space aliens and UFO’s. In fact, as Mitchell points out, there isn’t a hair’s difference between the Mossad and CIA agenda and Wikileaks.

    Even better, the Neocons are using Wikileaks as an excuse to censor the internet, multiple bills are in the works already, all conveniently timed to control the explosive 9/11 and AIPAC scandals that are the only real threats to Israel.

    No wonder Assange is able to hide in plain site.

    Those of us who know the real power in America, how Israeli “firsters” managed the Bush administration, always under AIPAC’s thumb, not just into two wars but financial disaster. It is in the news now, every day and has for years, for those who care to read it. People like Roberts and Cockburn are right, America has been a nightmare. What they seem to be hiding from, that infamous “third rail” in American journalism, the one that took down Helen Thomas and so many others, they are hiding from the obvious truth that the corrupt government they are trying to unmask doesn’t have an American face underneath.

    It is Israel behind that mask and Wikileaks is simply a mask beneath a mask, or as Jeff Gates puts it, “psyops and game theory.”

    When are we going to read a Wikileak about organ theft rings or white phosphorous and American cluster bombs used against civilians in Gaza? Instead, we get “chickenfeed” about a politician?

    Where are the Wikileaks on torture, rendition, Dr. Aafia or the phony intelligence on Iraq that led to the invasion in 2003? We are still waiting for a Wikileak on Israel’s friend, Chalabi, the wanted criminal America made Prime Minister of Iraq, a decision that led to a full scale civil war.

    Wikileaks is like mother’s milk to people who have starved for openness and justice.

    Wikileaks is mother’s milk laced with arsenic. Link
Last edited by AlicetheKurious on Mon Dec 06, 2010 7:55 pm, edited 1 time in total.
"If you're not careful the newspapers will have you hating the oppressed and loving the people doing the oppressing." - Malcolm X
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby 82_28 » Mon Dec 06, 2010 7:17 pm

Another thing about wikileaks is this. I could type out a whole believable scenario and it would be based around what happened to my character and interaction with NPCs. It would be the same. The scenario for "war", espionage, diplomacy, double-dealing, whatever, is always the same. People die, are forced into misery, psychological breakdowns, period. This is what war fucking does. The wikileaks are immaterial to the truth, which was always knowable.

A non-player character (NPC) is a character that is controlled by the gamemaster in tabletop role-playing games. In video games and other scenarios with character representations an NPC is controlled by a program, not by a human.


We haven't found one fucking thing that our imaginations, in other words, couldn't have supplied on its own. It's not going to change a goddamn thing other than give pretext to the true threat. And that is, people such as us who aren't buying a damn word of any of it and we have the power to create and also pass on the memes. If I were a betting man, this whole wikileaks bullshit is because they are shoring things up for the next false flag -- they need to set a precedent. I said it almost 10 years ago and I shall say it again, the Internet was a variable this whole "plan" didn't take totally into account for. If I were 35 back in 1990 and I felt things about the state of existence as I do now, where the fuck would I go to type what I happen to be typing right now?

Exactly! Nowhere. And likely, nobody would be reading it either. The net ain't all that now either -- to us. But it is to them and all the people who "use" it for porn, shopping and "piracy". Wikileaks is a volley unto the unforeseeable consequences that open media represents. It's so goddamn transparent that I just bet there is some dystopian sci-fi book out there already which predicts scenarios such as this. A man of mystery, an all enveloping worldwide network of smart devices, thousands of channels of bilge, an illegal war, laws which are being rewritten, wholesale looting and then to make it sci-fi, add some crazy not-thought-of-yet tech! Holla. That's all this is. They're attempting some kind of a drama to drown out the freedom on the 'net. Iran's "twitter revolution" was likely a test run on how worldwide memes propagate. I'm not fucking around.

There is no me. There is no you. There is all. There is no you. There is no me. And that is all. A profound acceptance of an enormous pageantry. A haunting certainty that the unifying principle of this universe is love. -- Propagandhi
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby nathan28 » Mon Dec 06, 2010 7:47 pm

82_28 wrote: If I were 35 back in 1990 and I felt things about the state of existence as I do now, where the fuck would I go to type what I happen to be typing right now?

Exactly! Nowhere. And likely, nobody would be reading it either.



Aren't you a linux dude? You'd dial a BBS or get on the usenet. Duh. Come on, even public libraries in impoverished cities had them running in 1990.
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby AlicetheKurious » Mon Dec 06, 2010 7:53 pm

...the Internet was a variable this whole "plan" didn't take totally into account for. If I were 35 back in 1990 and I felt things about the state of existence as I do now, where the fuck would I go to type what I happen to be typing right now?

Exactly! Nowhere. And likely, nobody would be reading it either. The net ain't all that now either -- to us. But it is to them and all the people who "use" it for porn, shopping and "piracy". Wikileaks is a volley unto the unforeseeable consequences that open media represents. It's so goddamn transparent that I just bet there is some dystopian sci-fi book out there already which predicts scenarios such as this. A man of mystery, an all enveloping worldwide network of smart devices, thousands of channels of bilge, an illegal war, laws which are being rewritten, wholesale looting and then to make it sci-fi, add some crazy not-thought-of-yet tech! Holla. That's all this is. They're attempting some kind of a drama to drown out the freedom on the 'net. Iran's "twitter revolution" was likely a test run on how worldwide memes propagate. I'm not fucking around.


No, you're not. "They" simply could not have foreseen the impact of the internet. It's being dealt with now: Wikileaks is to internet freedom what 9/11 was to constitutional freedoms in the US.

"If you're not careful the newspapers will have you hating the oppressed and loving the people doing the oppressing." - Malcolm X
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