bks » Fri Jan 24, 2014 1:20 am wrote:Alexander isn't asking any question about ownership. He wants the documents for himself and the NSA, so he can continue to exert illegitimate power and spread fear and distrust.
Yes, of course, but he's inserting himself into this as though he's making the same point, with the clear intent of stirring the pot. In fact, how interesting that he started stirring this pot before Ames and "the other substantive left critics" came along with their version of this point.
Ames, and the other substantive left critics of Snowden want the information shared more widely and more quickly with concerned parties than it's presently being shared, because no one should own it. Ideally
Yes. But you know we're not in the world described by ideally. This information was generated by an unaccountable deep state agency that claims hegemony over the entire world of information and tries to define what the people should fear and how their accumulated tax-power should be spent (ultimately, in the service of an empire).
Out of all the thousands of people working in the bowels of that machine who had access and could expose the wrongdoing, it was Snowden and Snowden alone, so far, who decided to take the risk and do something approximating the right thing (or who was set up as the actor pretending to do the right thing, according to the insinuations of some). Sort of like with Manning -- out of hundreds of thousands of people who could have exposed the things he found out, sadly only he seems to have acted. That's why we're talking about Snowden, and Manning, and the quality of their non-conformist courage and actions, instead of the thousands of proverbial Little Eichmanns who continue to faithfully carry out their jobs without meriting any big debates or critiques from Ames.
Out of all the options available to Snowden, he decided not to publish his cache wholesale online, but to take it to Greenwald, presumably having weighed these options as to their strategic impact. In the real world, that no one should "own" the cache doesn't alone tell us what the best thing to do is when one suddenly gets such a cache as a windfall. This is not an enviable position, necessarily - given that they are going to come after you, and that there will also be some professional dissidents attacking you with utter nonsense, like Edmonds; though of course the vast majority of whistleblowers and dissidents have lined up in support of Snowden and Greenwald.
Would we even be talking about this if the documents had been released in toto once, most likely to be quoted for a time within the critical blogosphere with minimal attention otherwise, rather than according to the brilliant and obviously effective PR plan that has been employed so far?
I think, faced with the kind of tyrannical totalitarian state that the NSA represents, the duty of responsible whistleblowers and journalists who get such a windfall is not to follow some simplistic rule of what Ames would do (if Snowden had gone to him) but
to find ways that do the most damage to the beast. Seriously. It is a beast, it is already at war with the world and with us. It is evil, and it is a matter of self-defense and self-respect if given the kind of opportunity that Snowden's cache represents to find ways to damage the surveillance and control beast, and to limit its ability to do harm to the world, rather than to make oneself feel good about how an immediate release of everything might satisfy the high standards of Ames. Which would have to be a secondary factor. I'm sorry for Ames, that he didn't get the same opportunity Greenwald did.
the next best thing to do would be
What we're talking about, and not at all as clear-cut as you're making it out to be.
make it available for review to as many concerned and competent parties as possible.
Different from full release. Who's on your list of that?
This way, the power of the NSA to make use of it for its own ends will be severely diminished, as will their credibility.
Ideally. We'd all like to see that. I'd say how it's gone so far exceeds reasonable expectations, whether or not it serves to the ideal but remote goal of just toppling the bastards down from their throne. (And so you've got people here arguing in this reality-distant fashion that the lack of a throne-toppling indicates Snowden-Greenwald must be working for it.)
And there's a reason why Ellsberg, Drake, Wikileaks, McGovern et al. are lining up in support of Snowden and Greenwald and Poitras rather than throwing a kitchen sink's worth of illogic at them. (Since the tendency in the crop of your legitimate left dissident critics seems to be to carpet bomb and insinuate bad actors, rather than to bring up a couple of valid concerns and go about this like civilized interlocutors, etc. etc.)
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