Cryptome founder:"Wikileaks is a fraud"

Moderators: Elvis, DrVolin, Jeff

Re: Cryptome founder/Wikileaks co-founder:"Wikileaks is a fr

Postby compared2what? » Wed Dec 15, 2010 10:10 pm

Ben D wrote:Just thinking out loud,.. given that all intelligence Agencies are very compartmentalized, if Wikileaks is an inter-Agency planned psyops (CIA,MI6, etc.), then imagine the potential for confusion and mistrust that would arise over the Wikileaks issue as it is unravelling, both between Agencies and among the departments not in the know and those that are within the respective Agencies? This in turn would create a full spectrum of opinions on the part of politicians/governments, journalists/media, etc.. depending on their respective sources. IOW, everyone thinks they are working in the best interests of their respective nations based on limited knowledge available to them, but the complexity of the inherent deceptive nature of whole structure has reached a point that no intrinsic truth can be found anywhere.

I know that I didn't convey that as well as I would have liked, but I hope you get the general picture.



:confused ...

...
...
... :idea: !

CAT OR TRIBBLE? You make the call!


Image

________________________________________________

Don't sell yourself short.
“If someone comes out of a liquor store with a weapon and 50 dollars in cash I don’t care if a Drone kills him or a policeman kills him.” -- Rand Paul
User avatar
compared2what?
 
Posts: 8383
Joined: Sun Oct 21, 2007 6:31 am
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Cryptome founder/Wikileaks co-founder:"Wikileaks is a fr

Postby compared2what? » Wed Dec 15, 2010 10:44 pm

nathan28 wrote:The last one is killing me. I thought you all gave a damn about this, but simply put you do not treat it seriously, which really helps to qualify the whining and doomsaying. Cables on Israeli organized crime go unnoticed. A cable on a Saudi drug trafficking jet goes unnoticed. The implicit admission to human rights violations in South America goes unnoticed. Cables showing corruption and infiltration by energy companies go unnoticed. Simply put, the people who keep decrying the contents of the cables have next to no actual familiarity with them.


As of this afternoon -- when I stumbled across Mossad and the U.S. in the library with a candlestick (actually, in the recent past, engaging in the kind of crime that stays with world leaders to the grave and beyond because it's just too big to leave out of the obituary and history books -- I can top that.

But you know what? If people want to know more than that, they're going to have to find it themselves. Because I'm not about to go throwing the sweat of my brow out there just so that I can watch the same people who insist that's the only possible thing that ever goes on beyond closed doors try to debunk hard evidence of it, just because it came from me.

And if there's one thing I know for sure in this world, it's this:

Just entering the search terms "Wikileaks" and "Mossad" is never going to reward a single person on earth who doesn't have the patience of Job already. And you wanna know why? Because when you do that, what you get is about one billion links that either lead to:

(a) Gordon Duff peddling his 100-percent information-free, utterly familiar and well-worn line rhetoric, lightly adapted for appliation to Wikileaks; or

(b) Someone else of no particular authority peddling a quasi-plagiarized version of Gordon Duff's 100-percent information-free, utterly familiar and well-worn line rhetoric, lightly adapted for appliation to Wikileaks.

And ordinarily, stuff like that other (real) thing that I mentioned wouldn't be that hard to find, it's not like it's all abstruse and wrapped in jargon, or anything like that. Anyone who's willing to idly but methodically read the cables and then search the unique, hard-data-point terms in their spare moments will hit it sooner or later.

But casual readers, or the world at large? Forget about it. So:

Way to go, everybody! You helped make the Google-ranking difference! And you sure can spot a psy-op!

OMG! We're ALL KEYWORD HIJACKING HEROES!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

__________________




I've never been prouder.
“If someone comes out of a liquor store with a weapon and 50 dollars in cash I don’t care if a Drone kills him or a policeman kills him.” -- Rand Paul
User avatar
compared2what?
 
Posts: 8383
Joined: Sun Oct 21, 2007 6:31 am
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Cryptome founder/Wikileaks co-founder:"Wikileaks is a fr

Postby vanlose kid » Wed Dec 15, 2010 10:49 pm

:rofl2


*
"Teach them to think. Work against the government." – Wittgenstein.
User avatar
vanlose kid
 
Posts: 3182
Joined: Wed Oct 17, 2007 7:44 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Cryptome founder/Wikileaks co-founder:"Wikileaks is a fr

Postby compared2what? » Wed Dec 15, 2010 10:51 pm

Sounder wrote:C2W?, its great to hear from you and be reminded of your wonderful facility with words.

Sounder wrote:
This psy-ops shit is so simple, just play to the targets pretenses and presto-chango, folk that are consciously anti-globalist get turned into globalist shills. Of course the potential dissonance and threat to the validity of ones personal identity will ensure that ideas like this ignored or failing that are shouted down by the righteous warriors for 'truth'.

Well its always worked before, so why not now?


C2W? wrote...
The kind of psy-ops shit that we're speculating that Assange could be engaged in is actually really, really hard. And equally so whether he's an agent provocateur or a freedom-fighter, really. To succeed in either role, you can't talk to practically anybody, you can't make mistakes about anything, and at least occasionally, it's possible, probable or certain that your opponents are trying to kill you.

It's very stressful. And difficult. People who are good at it just make it look simple. They kind of have to. Because they can't afford to give too many signs about what they're thinking and feeling to the general public, they have no way of knowing who's watching.

There's a lot of room for custom variation in performance style, though. Kind of like the different ways that umpires working for Major League Baseball call strikes.

I was having regrets and a re-think about what I wrote during the day and before reading the new posts. Thinking that I should worry about my own pretenses instead of those of others, given that I take nearly everything from the dominant culture as being psy-ops. So I’m going to retreat back to ‘possibility factors’ and save any opinions till some future time when I feel better informed. :partydance: :shrug:


Thank you for your sweet-natured and thoughtful words.

You wrote a post some little while back that absolutely blew me away, btw. And....Um....It'll come back to me soon and I'll PM you when it does. If I can manage to hold the same thought for the entire time it takes me to traverse the length of a sentence. On my honor, I do swear.

:oops: :oops: :oops:
User avatar
compared2what?
 
Posts: 8383
Joined: Sun Oct 21, 2007 6:31 am
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Cryptome founder/Wikileaks co-founder:"Wikileaks is a fr

Postby wintler2 » Wed Dec 15, 2010 11:14 pm

Kudo's to all who still having the energy to keep making the 'give WLs a go' argument, the read-no-evidence-cite-no-evidence WOO of the 'WLs=psyop/israel/toolz' posters did my head in days ago.
"Wintler2, you are a disgusting example of a human being, the worst kind in existence on God's Earth. This is not just my personal judgement.." BenD

Research question: are all god botherers authoritarians?
User avatar
wintler2
 
Posts: 2884
Joined: Sun Nov 12, 2006 3:43 am
Location: Inland SE Aus.
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Cryptome founder/Wikileaks co-founder:"Wikileaks is a fr

Postby compared2what? » Wed Dec 15, 2010 11:23 pm

lupercal wrote:
compared2what? wrote:
lupercal wrote:I imagine you're here to defend JA from the heartless philistines


Thanks. And nope, I see no Philistines. Or pharisees, as the case may be.

Just to clear up one urgent point, I said philistines, and that is what I meant.
:thumbsup



:shock:

I honestly and sincerely didn't intend to suggest anything to the contrary, so please forgive me if it seemed that I did.

I mean, obviously, I intended the connotation. But that was just my fancy-yet-lazy-ass way of using the word that was right in front of me to say: No, I'm not here to judge anyone's values based on their views of Julian Assange. Plus -- P.S., btw, also, and hidden, deluxe-holiday-edition-only track bonus, FREE! -- my own view of Julian Assange isn't based on that or any other extraneous political conflict.

But that wasn't any reflection on you. Or, for that matter, on anyone. I was just stating my position. So my apologies. For reals.
User avatar
compared2what?
 
Posts: 8383
Joined: Sun Oct 21, 2007 6:31 am
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Cryptome founder/Wikileaks co-founder:"Wikileaks is a fr

Postby JackRiddler » Thu Dec 16, 2010 1:06 am

AlicetheKurious wrote:The part of that story that I find totally impossible to believe, however, is the part where the frisky and fun-loving Assange playfully decides to go to the "lion's den" by himself, and, even though he's only the guest of an invitee, he is allowed in, and they had "no idea who he was". That is pure bullshit. The only reason I can think of for telling such a whopper is that ol'Birgitta, the Swedish "Leftist" MP, was tasked with telling a story that would neutralize in advance any witness who pops up with a recollection of Assange's presence at the embassy/residence and the fact that "he spent a long time talking" with a US intelligence official. And yes, this story does cast Ms. Jonsdottir as very probably "one of them".


If the point was to have a spook meeting, it could have been arranged at a different time and manner without need of any cover story.

Imagine applying your forensic approach to the following:

AlicetheKurious on Jan 27, 2008 wrote:The very next day, I was having tea at the house of a Western ambassador, along with a small group of women. As we were going inside, a funny little mutt came running towards us. "This is 'Yalla' (Arabic slang for 'hurry up!')," the ambassador told us. "I picked him up on a beach in Gaza."

I asked him if he'd been the ambassador to Israel, and he said yes.


viewtopic.php?f=8&t=15870&start=15

Which I certainly wouldn't, as it is in no way suspicious and offered freely by you as part of a beautiful story. (Those who haven't, should follow the link, which shows you also have a talent for hitting the more sublime extremes.) But still, imagine someone was going to do anything, anything, to construct a nasty narrative about you. Imagine if you'd read the above sentences, and the author was not you but Assange.

.
We meet at the borders of our being, we dream something of each others reality. - Harvey of R.I.

To Justice my maker from on high did incline:
I am by virtue of its might divine,
The highest Wisdom and the first Love.

TopSecret WallSt. Iraq & more
User avatar
JackRiddler
 
Posts: 16007
Joined: Wed Jan 02, 2008 2:59 pm
Location: New York City
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Cryptome founder/Wikileaks co-founder:"Wikileaks is a fr

Postby AlicetheKurious » Thu Dec 16, 2010 7:55 am

JackRiddler wrote:If the point was to have a spook meeting, it could have been arranged at a different time and manner without need of any cover story.


Not necessarily. Few places on earth are as secure as US embassies or ambassadors' residences, guaranteed to be bug-free and otherwise controlled environments in every way. It would have been far more suspicious for Assange to be seen sneaking furtively into the embassy or the ambassador's house or whatever. A cocktail party, with a suitable story from a "Leftist" activist, provides cover and at the same time is an ideal setting for this ultimately private conversation between Assange, who claims that the US was actively hostile to him at the time, and the CIA official.

JackRiddler wrote:Imagine applying your forensic approach to the following:

AlicetheKurious on Jan 27, 2008 wrote:The very next day, I was having tea at the house of a Western ambassador, along with a small group of women. As we were going inside, a funny little mutt came running towards us. "This is 'Yalla' (Arabic slang for 'hurry up!')," the ambassador told us. "I picked him up on a beach in Gaza."

I asked him if he'd been the ambassador to Israel, and he said yes.


The Canadian ambassador's gracious invitation to a small group of Canadian expat housewives, including me, who had been meeting once a month over coffee and cake for years, is hardly comparable. Unlike previous ambassadors, who had wives to do this kind of thing, he had kindly offered to give us a tour of his residence himself, which is a lovely 19th century villa, and which had just been painstakingly renovated (at Canadian taxpayer expense, natch) to preserve and highlight its historical elements. It was a small group tour and a group tea afterward, with no private conversations at all. Plus, I wasn't hiding out in some "bunker", engaging in secret activities and claiming that the Canadians are after me. Canada is my homeland no less than Egypt, and though, like many Egyptians and Canadians I have serious objections to the current governments in power, the only embassy "list" I'm on is the regular guest list for embassy events. Not much grist for the forensic mill, I'm afraid.


nathan28 wrote:So far, this is my understanding of the anti-WikiLeaks crowd.

Some of the people who are "questioning WikiLeaks" have every reason to engage in that questioning. What I see happening, however, is quite confusing.

One assertion is that WikiLeaks can't possibly have legit documents, or the documents it has are a limited hangout. This is a curious assertion, considering that so far less than 1/100 have seen print.


First, until the other 99/100 cables are released, those 1/100 are all we have to work with. Second, keep in mind that the leaked cables were all written by bureaucrats employed by the US State Dept. By definition, they are a biased and partisan source of "intelligence", much of it hearsay. The simple rule of thumb of dealing with known biased sources is this: if the "data" supports their propaganda line, it should be given low credibility. If it contains "data" that significantly counteracts their propaganda line, it should be given high credibility. The more damaging the information is to the source's core ideology, the more credible it is, especially when corroboration is unavailable or ambiguous. Needless to say, claims or allegations must be followed up with proper investigations in order to become established facts. But when investigations are blocked, that in itself can be considered supporting evidence; it's not proof, but it further bolsters the credibility of the allegations in the absence of proof.

In the case of Wikileaks, even assuming that the cables have not been seeded or filtered, the source is undeniably highly partisan and biased. Other than the gossip "noise", the so-called intelligence consists almost entirely of uncorroborated claims that amplify the zionist-dominated US State Dept.'s propaganda against its prime targets like Iran, Pakistan, North Korea, China and its newest target, Turkey, among others. Israel's gleeful reaction to the Wikileaks' "corroboration" of what Israel has been saying all along thus makes perfect sense in that context.

In other words, the revelation that US State Dept.'s own employees write cables that happen to echo the US State Dept.'s own propaganda is being described as "evidence", as in this typical piece by the rabid zionist David Frum, writing in CNN:

WikiLeaks builds case against Iran

That's like me accusing my neighbor, whom I've been harassing and threatening, of stealing my lawnmower, without any evidence, and then somebody using the same accusation written in a private letter I wrote to my mother as corroboration for my claim. In both cases, I am the only source, I am biased, and there is still no credible evidence.

So the problem with the contents of the Wikileaks is that where they echo the US/Israeli propaganda, they have low to no credibility, but they are hyped as "explosive", "corroboration", "proof", etc., something that has been pointed out by a great number of analysts but oddly enough, not Assange himself, who continues to insist that the leaks represent a blow against "American imperialism" and "the globalist agenda". Despite the fact that the leaks have on the contrary been used to promote both more war and more global intervention against the very targets that make up the neocons' wish-list, Assange has, tellingly, not made one peep of protest. The smoking gun here is NOT that the warmongering propaganda media has used the cables in that way, but that Assange has not seen fit to protest this AT ALL.

nathan28 wrote:The claim was made that Assange was travelling freely when he was not. The claim was made that he was "in the open" when he was staying somewhere in secret. The point was, essentially, that because he wasn't dead, he was one of "Them". Assange was then hit with some very questionably charges--not using a condom--and then the charges were elevated to rape, the second he faced potential charges for the same acts--one prosecutor IIRC having dismissed the first effort as bogus. The claim was made that this was nothing more than theater. I have no way of knowing whether it is, but you have no way of knowing whether it is not. Then Assange was arrested. Again, I am not particularly sure what the contention is here, save to say, it seems to be that the idea is that he was arrested, not assassinated by a drone with one of those fancy laser-guided 25mm RPGs in broad daylight, therefore, he must be one of them, or it is theater. Then Assange was put in solitary confinement with an elevated level of isolation. Again, the suggestion seems to be that it is all for show. Now Assange has had bail set, so that must prove it was all a show--never mind that he's still in the hole, that his bail has been challenged and that bail still entails a set of conditions designed to track all of his movements.


As you say, neither you nor I know for a fact whether all this is a show or not. All we can do is notice that Assange's treatment as the maverick star of a media circus simply does not fit the usual pattern of how whistle-blowers and other inconvenient people are treated, who are usually quietly kidnapped or suicided or have strange car or plane or home accidents under cover of media silence or terse media coverage. David Kelly, Gary Webb, Mordecai Vanunu and of course, William Colby come to mind. Neither do the charges against him fit the usual pattern of spurious associations with "al-Qaeda" or other "terrorist" groups or other accusations that specifically target his ideological motives and Wikileaks' credibility. None of this is conclusive in any way, but it's one among other factors that are worth keeping in mind.

nathan28 wrote:...*every* individual who has offered up that speculation has, in other venues, suggested that there is information being kept from us, that we just need to learn, that etc., etc., IOW: they are decrying ignorance and the lack of evidence.

Suddenly, handed evidence, they claim that nothing good can result from it.

That sort of sentiment borders on pathology. I consider the "everyone knows" theory exactly the same type of theory: it says that because "everyone knows" that, e.g., Shell Oil had penetrated every level of Nigeria's gov't, we don't need to get documentary evidence of that, so because WikiLeaks has created a furor and firestorm, it's worse to "know" without proof, than to know with proof, because now real interests are at stake.

There is arrogance in that attitude. It means that when you 'knew' something was the case, it was important; now that you and the rest of the world have proof, it's no longer special and no longer privileging to 'know' it. The moment it slipped the surly bonds of your imagination and entered into reality it lost its fun. Either that, or it was a stance of total pessimism, which like the agent theory is beyond being disputed. If you argued that things were bad and getting worse before, and you argue that things will be worse now after, it makes no sense to treat Assange as some demon on account of there suddenly being a really-existing material objective cause for whatever made things "worse", which previously you were content to attribute to some fantasy, some imaginary, 'spiritual' and illusory process at work in your mind.

That last suggestion, which is implicit in these arguments, is nothing more than an abrogation of responsibility. You claim to care about some issue, and you claim the issue is important, and you even claim that it threatens established authorities. But the moment those authorities themselves see that the issue is a threat, you shirk, you run. You are literally hoping to take something away from authority and entrenched interests and liars in high places.


Nathan, you are misrepresenting the argument. What I and others are saying is that the Wikileaks so far looks exactly like a textbook example of a limited hangout.

A limited hangout, or partial hangout, is a public relations or propaganda technique that involves the release of previously hidden information in order to prevent a greater exposure of more important details. It takes the form of deception, misdirection, or coverup often associated with intelligence agencies involving a release or "mea culpa" type of confession of only part of a set of previously hidden sensitive information, that establishes credibility for the one releasing the information who by the very act of confession appears to be "coming clean" and acting with integrity; but in actuality, by withholding key facts, is protecting a deeper operation and those who could be exposed if the whole truth came out. In effect, if an array of offenses or misdeeds is suspected, this confession admits to a lesser offense while covering up the greater ones.

A limited hangout typically is a response to lower the pressure felt from inquisitive investigators pursuing clues that threaten to expose everything, and the disclosure is often combined with red herrings or propaganda elements that lead to false trails, distractions, or ideological disinformation; thus allowing covert or criminal elements to continue in their improper activities.

Victor Marchetti wrote: "A 'limited hangout' is spy jargon for a favorite and frequently used gimmick of the clandestine professionals. When their veil of secrecy is shredded and they can no longer rely on a phony cover story to misinform the public, they resort to admitting - sometimes even volunteering - some of the truth while still managing to withhold the key and damaging facts in the case. The public, however, is usually so intrigued by the new information that it never thinks to pursue the matter further." Link


All the hype notwithstanding, the Wikileaks in effect provide very little or no actual information that damages the US or Israel's ability to pursue their violent hegemonic agenda -- on the contrary. The meager crumbs thrown to the anti-war camp appear perfectly calibrated to cause the least amount of damage to the empire and at the same time provide a phony aura of credibility to the really big lies that form the core of imperialist propaganda.

nathan28 wrote:Currently, as you read this, Bradley Manning is in solitary confinement. Julian Assange is in solitary confinement. No doubt SIRPNet admins have lost their jobs. You claim to care about freedom, you claim to 'know' that "They" seek to curtail it, but the moment something shifts there agenda, the moment something new burst forth and there is an opportunity to fight--you decry the circumstances, you blame those who did act and who did face repercussions.


Again, you are misrepresenting the argument. Nobody here has justified any abuse of anybody's legal and human rights including Assange's, let alone Manning's. Regardless of whether I believe that Wikileaks or Assange are part of a psyop or not, it is the global imperialist bullies who give themselves the exclusive license to define freedom in order to justify enslaving others, and to define rights in order to deprive others of theirs. The fact that I believe Assange and Wikileaks to be a psyop is TOTALLY IRRELEVANT to my deep conviction that the denial of even one person's freedom and human rights effectively denies all of ours, by making them not rights at all, but privileges selectively granted. So there is no contradiction in my deep suspicion of what Mr. Assange and Wikileaks really are, and at the same time my fear and loathing of those who support this kind of abuse against anybody.
"If you're not careful the newspapers will have you hating the oppressed and loving the people doing the oppressing." - Malcolm X
User avatar
AlicetheKurious
 
Posts: 5348
Joined: Thu Nov 30, 2006 11:20 am
Location: Egypt
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Cryptome founder/Wikileaks co-founder:"Wikileaks is a fr

Postby hanshan » Thu Dec 16, 2010 8:41 am

compared2what? wrote:
nathan28 wrote:The last one is killing me. I thought you all gave a damn about this, but simply put you do not treat it seriously, which really helps to qualify the whining and doomsaying. Cables on Israeli organized crime go unnoticed. A cable on a Saudi drug trafficking jet goes unnoticed. The implicit admission to human rights violations in South America goes unnoticed. Cables showing corruption and infiltration by energy companies go unnoticed. Simply put, the people who keep decrying the contents of the cables have next to no actual familiarity with them.


As of this afternoon -- when I stumbled across Mossad and the U.S. in the library with a candlestick (actually, in the recent past, engaging in the kind of crime that stays with world leaders to the grave and beyond because it's just too big to leave out of the obituary and history books -- I can top that.

But you know what? If people want to know more than that, they're going to have to find it themselves. Because I'm not about to go throwing the sweat of my brow out there just so that I can watch the same people who insist that's the only possible thing that ever goes on beyond closed doors try to debunk hard evidence of it, just because it came from me.

And if there's one thing I know for sure in this world, it's this:

Just entering the search terms "Wikileaks" and "Mossad" is never going to reward a single person on earth who doesn't have the patience of Job already. And you wanna know why? Because when you do that, what you get is about one billion links that either lead to:

(a) Gordon Duff peddling his 100-percent information-free, utterly familiar and well-worn line rhetoric, lightly adapted for appliation to Wikileaks; or

(b) Someone else of no particular authority peddling a quasi-plagiarized version of Gordon Duff's 100-percent information-free, utterly familiar and well-worn line rhetoric, lightly adapted for appliation to Wikileaks.

And ordinarily, stuff like that other (real) thing that I mentioned wouldn't be that hard to find, it's not like it's all abstruse and wrapped in jargon, or anything like that. Anyone who's willing to idly but methodically read the cables and then search the unique, hard-data-point terms in their spare moments will hit it sooner or later.

But casual readers, or the world at large? Forget about it. So:

Way to go, everybody! You helped make the Google-ranking difference! And you sure can spot a psy-op!

OMG! We're ALL KEYWORD HIJACKING HEROES!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

__________________
I've never been prouder.


Image

some emphasis & bolding not in the original
I added selectively & edited after the fact, shamelessly, I might add. :mrgreen:


AlicetheKurious wrote:

Few places on earth are as secure as US embassies or ambassadors' residences, guaranteed to be bug-free and otherwise controlled environments in every way[/quote]


haha : Moscow Embassy:http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,918076,00.html

AlicetheKurious wrote:
That sort of sentiment borders on pathology. I consider the "everyone knows" theory exactly the same type of theory: it says that because "everyone knows" that, e.g., Shell Oil had penetrated every level of Nigeria's gov't, we don't need to get documentary evidence of that, so because WikiLeaks has created a furor and firestorm, it's worse to "know" without proof, than to know with proof, because now real interests are at stake.

There is arrogance in that attitude. It means that when you 'knew' something was the case, it was important; now that you and the rest of the world have proof, it's no longer special and no longer privileging to 'know' it. The moment it slipped the surly bonds of your imagination and entered into reality it lost its fun. Either that, or it was a stance of total pessimism, which like the agent theory is beyond being disputed. If you argued that things were bad and getting worse before, and you argue that things will be worse now after, it makes no sense to treat Assange as some demon on account of there suddenly being a really-existing material objective cause for whatever made things "worse", which previously you were content to attribute to some fantasy, some imaginary, 'spiritual' and illusory process at work in your mind.

That last suggestion, which is implicit in these arguments, is nothing more than an abrogation of responsibility. You claim to care about some issue, and you claim the issue is important, and you even claim that it threatens established authorities. But the moment those authorities themselves see that the issue is a threat, you shirk, you run. You are literally hoping to take something away from authority and entrenched interests and liars in high places.




Astute analysis & spot-on

AlicetK:

Nathan, you are misrepresenting the argument. What I and others are saying is that the Wikileaks so far looks exactly like a textbook example of a limited hangout.


Keyword:Appears



compared2what? wrote:
No, I'm not here to judge anyone's values based on their views of Julian Assange. Plus -- P.S., btw, also, and hidden, deluxe-holiday-edition-only track bonus, FREE! -- my own view of Julian Assange isn't based on that or any other extraneous political conflict.


'you're so cute - kisses'

/xxx/ooo


Image

edited once for... clarity?
....
hanshan
 
Posts: 1673
Joined: Fri Apr 22, 2005 5:04 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Cryptome founder/Wikileaks co-founder:"Wikileaks is a fr

Postby lupercal » Thu Dec 16, 2010 10:06 am

... and he's out:

Britain's high court today decided to grant bail to Julian Assange, the WikiLeaks founder who is wanted in Sweden for questioning over allegations of rape.

Justice Duncan Ouseley agreed with a decision by the City of Westminister earlier in the week to release Assange on strict conditions: £200,000 cash deposit, with a further £40,000 guaranteed in two sureties of £20,000 and strict conditions on his movement.

Assange stood in a dark grey suit in the courtroom dock as Ouseley began hearing an appeal by British prosecutors acting on behalf of Sweden.

There was an early sign that the day would go in Assange's favour when Ouseley said: "The history of the way it [the case] has been dealt with by the Swedish prosecutors would give Mr Assange some basis that he might be acquitted following a trial."

http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2010/de ... -wikileaks


Next court appointment is apparently for Jan 11. Until then it's happy holidays for A-boy. Now where's the passionate intensity for Tariq Aziz for example, who will not be so lucky?

p.s. Alice that was not just brilliant as usual but unusually brilliant, particularly the part about limited hangouts, IMHO!
:wowsign:
User avatar
lupercal
 
Posts: 1439
Joined: Tue Jun 02, 2009 8:06 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Cryptome founder/Wikileaks co-founder:"Wikileaks is a fr

Postby JackRiddler » Thu Dec 16, 2010 2:19 pm

AlicetheKurious wrote:A cocktail party, with a suitable story from a "Leftist" activist


You have zero basis for extending the smearage to Birgitta Jonsdottir. At this point, you're convicting anyone for having associated with Assange, or as fits your campaign.
We meet at the borders of our being, we dream something of each others reality. - Harvey of R.I.

To Justice my maker from on high did incline:
I am by virtue of its might divine,
The highest Wisdom and the first Love.

TopSecret WallSt. Iraq & more
User avatar
JackRiddler
 
Posts: 16007
Joined: Wed Jan 02, 2008 2:59 pm
Location: New York City
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Cryptome founder/Wikileaks co-founder:"Wikileaks is a fr

Postby nathan28 » Thu Dec 16, 2010 3:18 pm

JackRiddler wrote:
AlicetheKurious wrote:A cocktail party, with a suitable story from a "Leftist" activist


You have zero basis for extending the smearage to Birgitta Jonsdottir. At this point, you're convicting anyone for having associated with Assange, or as fits your campaign.


But she can't be a real anarchist--she's in the MOSSAD gov't, right? OBVIOUSLY planted there to give surface-level impressions of far-left credibility. The MOSSAD question MOSSAD is MOSSAD who MOSSAD planted MOSSAD her MOSSAD there MOSSAD.

:hamster:
„MAN MUSS BEFUERCHTEN, DASS DAS GANZE IN GOTTES HAND IST"

THE JEERLEADER
User avatar
nathan28
 
Posts: 2957
Joined: Fri Feb 01, 2008 6:48 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Cryptome founder/Wikileaks co-founder:"Wikileaks is a fr

Postby barracuda » Thu Dec 16, 2010 3:45 pm

AlicetheKurious wrote:Canada is my homeland no less than Egypt, and though, like many Egyptians and Canadians I have serious objections to the current governments in power, the only embassy "list" I'm on is the regular guest list for embassy events. Not much grist for the forensic mill, I'm afraid.


Nonetheless, acceptance of your explanation for cordial visiting with an agent of a fascist government rests solely upon our a priori disposition of you as a friend and comrade.

quote wrote: The more damaging the information is to the source's core ideology, the more credible it is, especially when corroboration is unavailable or ambiguous.


But WikiLeaks has been damaging and embarrassing to a variety of targets: the mulitnational oil companies, the Lebanese Minister of Defense, the US Secretary of State, the state department itself, the installed and corrupt quislings in Afghanistan, the Saudi royals, the banks of Iceland, the "Collateral Damage" video, Hosni Mubarak, etc. It is the responsibility of the citizenry to use that information to create change, no one else's.

The reality of the popular mindset here in the states is that illegal wars are now considered a patriotic duty, the renditioning and torture of detained individuals proceeds without trial and is loudly applauded by huge segments of the population, the slaughter of civilians by robot planes is seen as an admirable advancement of US goals and abilities, the support of the government of Israel is seen as our religious duty, fair trials are impeded routinely by the agency of state secret doctrines... of course I could go on, but you get what I mean. These ideas have blossomed not entirely from the barrage of ceaseless propaganda, but almost organically as the result of the terms of American exceptionalism which has been evident since the second world war, and the inexorable economic decline occassioned by the vast corruption of the milcorp state. The combination has produced utterly jingoistic xenophobia amongst an entire political caste constituting half or more our people. When both the government and the population accepts and supports such horrors as progress, the level and quality of information which can be used to "damage" the ongoing military imperialism of the corporate state is largely nullified. David Frum can and has spun genocide into a positive, not because his rhetoric is particularly compelling, but because there is a huge segment of the population here for whom his arguments reflect rather directly their own politics.

Perhaps the more important aspect of the WikiLeaks firestorm has been the exposure of various elements within world governments as perfectly willing to demand the stifling of the information at any cost, evben that of assassination or the invention of a legal argument for extradition and proisecution where none existed before. These actions in and of themselves are telling, and this, rather than a specific ideological outcome, is the goal of WikiLeaks.

That's like me accusing my neighbor, whom I've been harassing and threatening, of stealing my lawnmower, without any evidence, and then somebody using the same accusation written in a private letter I wrote to my mother as corroboration for my claim. In both cases, I am the only source, I am biased, and there is still no credible evidence.


And yet you'd be hard pressed to consider this example as a limited hangout. It is not one. The same letter could be used as evidence of the harrassment, when presented in the proper context. It is the context which controls just how that missive is viewed in the absence of any counterpoint.

Despite the fact that the leaks have on the contrary been used to promote both more war and more global intervention against the very targets that make up the neocons' wish-list, Assange has, tellingly, not made one peep of protest. The smoking gun here is NOT that the warmongering propaganda media has used the cables in that way, but that Assange has not seen fit to protest this AT ALL.


The very raison d'être of WikiLeaks, though, is to provide the counterpoint which is lacking in the presentation of propaganda by the corporate state and their journalistic lackeys. Assange has made many, many statements to that effect over the last several years, all of which constitute the very protest you seem to desire here. For example, regarding the Afghan war documents:

Assange's statement Friday was harshly critical of Gates, particularly over deaths in Afghanistan.

"Secretary Gates could have used his time, as other nations have done, to announce a broad inquiry into these killings," the statement said. "He could have announced specific criminal investigations into the deaths we have exposed. He could have announced a panel to hear the heartfelt dissent of U.S. soldiers, who know this war from the ground. He could have apologized to the Afghani people.

"But he did none of these things. He decided to treat these issues and the countries affected by them with contempt. Instead of explaining how he would address these issues, he decided to announce how he would suppress them.


That sounds to me like exactly the type of statement you seek. A direct confrontation with the spin of his documents versus the widely reported accusations of the US Secretary of Defense. It is one example of many.

The fact that WikiLeaks has essentially indemnified themselves by causing the guardians of that state propaganda to collude with them on the release of the cables may also be seen as part of the strategy of exposing these journalists and publishers as frauds.

All the hype notwithstanding, the Wikileaks in effect provide very little or no actual information that damages the US or Israel's ability to pursue their violent hegemonic agenda -- on the contrary. The meager crumbs thrown to the anti-war camp appear perfectly calibrated to cause the least amount of damage to the empire and at the same time provide a phony aura of credibility to the really big lies that form the core of imperialist propaganda.


At some point it has to be recognised that information on it own seldom results in cessation of hostilities by entrenched fascist actors. Historically, it is the actions of the citizenry, or economic exigencies, or the actions of other militaries with their own agendas which creates the setting - usually a violent one - for the ouster of these actors. Information on it's own can create understanding, but it is ideology and action which moves that information in the direction you want it to go.

Again, you are misrepresenting the argument. Nobody here has justified any abuse of anybody's legal and human rights including Assange's, let alone Manning's.


You may wish to re-read the OP here, in which lupercal states rather explicitly:

    ...we'll soon see a quiet release or disappearance or maybe "suicide" or "murder by deranged illegal alien" or Ken Lay attack and our brave little albino will disappear into an Afghan cave to await his next cue.

I can't read this as anything but a preemptive justification of some future harm which might befall Assange. The unavoidable implication is that the confinement, disappearance or death of Assange is all part of the psyop anyway, and should be regarded as faked or arranged.
The most dangerous traps are the ones you set for yourself. - Phillip Marlowe
User avatar
barracuda
 
Posts: 12890
Joined: Thu Sep 06, 2007 5:58 pm
Location: Niles, California
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Cryptome founder/Wikileaks co-founder:"Wikileaks is a fr

Postby nathan28 » Thu Dec 16, 2010 5:35 pm

At some point it has to be recognised that information on it own seldom results in cessation of hostilities by entrenched fascist actors. Historically, it is the actions of the citizenry, or economic exigencies, or the actions of other militaries with their own agendas which creates the setting - usually a violent one - for the ouster of these actors. Information on it's own can create understanding, but it is ideology and action which moves that information in the direction you want it to go.



This.

I had written a long, drawn-out post about this. I just deleted all of it. I do this a lot. Regardless, it seems that what we really want is some Information Of Which There Is No Greater to manifest and free us.

As barracuda points out, 'information' has rarely been the cause of global uprising or revolution. There's plenty of information here at RI if you look, and the closest to coordinated DDOS efforts that happen are s-ck p-pp-t infestations that seem largely to have been eradicated. In fact, much of the information in the cables so far released isn't really surprising at all. Confirming suspicions, certainly, but surprising? Doubtful. We'll have to see, of course. But it was free for anyone with time to look to learn that, e.g., organized crime in Israel has high-level political advocates.

I can imagine at least two reasons, not exclusive, that the firestorm and calls for execution have occured:

1. There's much uglier stuff to come forward
2. They really do fear transparency
3. It's part of a bigger plan

1 is speculation, and 3 is also speculation that seems suspect to me for many reasons I've already outlined. Again, I have to point out that while Prison Planet and Cryptogon and Cryptome remain up (though Cryptome gets hit with SLAPP suits and takedowns from the corporate sector), WikiLeaks was targeted. The idea seems to be to quash high-level, accessible and topical transparency. The idea seems to be that it is somehow threatening. (this is the only difference I can see b/w Cryptome and WikiLeaks, really--Cryptome isn't always topical or relevant to the current news cycle, and uses a drip rather than dump approach).

The only thing I can think of is that "They" really consider the cables to be a stab at their legitimacy, or that they consider, somehow, their own products as legitimating. That is, if you form an opinion based on what you read in the cables, it matters more than if you formed an opinion based in what you read in the Times or al- Jazeera. Never mind that if you came to the same conclusion you would have in some other way--having access to the cables is dangerous because they are more 'true', they rank higher in the scale of respectability, than an opinion based on regular journalism. Keep in mind that the same people who are decrying the cable leak seem to have no regard for the fact that some people have come out sympathetic to the State Dep't: it's read as a direct challenge.
„MAN MUSS BEFUERCHTEN, DASS DAS GANZE IN GOTTES HAND IST"

THE JEERLEADER
User avatar
nathan28
 
Posts: 2957
Joined: Fri Feb 01, 2008 6:48 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Cryptome founder/Wikileaks co-founder:"Wikileaks is a fr

Postby lupercal » Thu Dec 16, 2010 5:41 pm

barracuda, I know you have only the best intentions, but I see in your comments on Alice's brilliant analysis the familiar collection of willful misreadings and dubious assumptions leading to the unsupported conclusion that you've exposed some error of thinking that make me skip over much of what you post on this as not worth niggling over. Which is to say if Alice doesn't do the boring job of patiently unpacking and correcting your every slip I'll understand why.

Anyway, having heard a little of Assange's statement upon release today, which was full of fine sentiments he's never bothered to act on, and then hearing John Conyers of all people quote DoD secretary and longtime Bushbot Robert Gates in defense of the noble leaker, I'm beginning to understand how deceptive it's all been made to appear, so I can't be too hard on you barracuda for being so, ahem, stubborn in your mistaken convictions. Mistaken they are, I have no doubt of that, but this story is playing out like that Buñuel movie where the characters keep waking up from dreams they thought were real only to realize they're in somebody else's dream etc.

Anyhow I think Ben D captured that surreal quality in this post:

Ben D wrote:if Wikileaks is an inter-Agency planned psyops (CIA,MI6, etc.), then imagine the potential for confusion and mistrust that would arise over the Wikileaks issue as it is unravelling, both between Agencies and among the departments not in the know and those that are within the respective Agencies? This in turn would create a full spectrum of opinions on the part of politicians/governments, journalists/media, etc.. depending on their respective sources. IOW, everyone thinks they are working in the best interests of their respective nations based on limited knowledge available to them, but the complexity of the inherent deceptive nature of whole structure has reached a point that no intrinsic truth can be found anywhere.

I don't agree that the truth can't be found, but I'll concede that it's been pretty effectively hidden.
User avatar
lupercal
 
Posts: 1439
Joined: Tue Jun 02, 2009 8:06 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

PreviousNext

Return to General Discussion

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 4 guests