I'm sure everyone has an opinion regarding those people who leak
government secrets. Edward Snowden, Julian Assange and Bradley Manning
are the latest. We held Manning for three years without charge while he
was kept in a small cell, most of the time he was naked, the lights were
on 24/7 and he was provided no blankets. This "torture" was for his
own safety.
Manning leaked a video to Assange who then posted
it on Wikileaks. The government said that the video put American lives
at risk. I provided a link to the video so you may see our national
security being compromised. The two murdered men which the video
highlights are Reuters News Services photographers each carrying
cameras. After the massacre, a van pulls up to help the wounded. In
the van was a father who was bringing his two children to school or to
visit a relative. While driving by, he saw one of the wounded men and
stopped to help him. No good deed goes unpunished. The video is
located here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yw442y2fTeU
You can read about the video here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/July_12,_2007_Baghdad_airstrike
Manning
is just now, three years later, being formally charged for treason
because he leaked that video. There are legal avenues to blow the
whistle on the government but, there is no way the government would
release this video on its own merit had Manning even pursued those
avenues.
The soldiers' demeanor in the video raises other
issues. There are many people who harshly judged them although no
charges or punishment was lodged against them. I admit I wouldn't want
any of them as neighbors but this sort of activity and behavior is what
they are trained to do. They are trained, rewarded and some would even
go so far as to say "brainwashed," into taking joy in what they do:
Killing. The alternative is PTSD or not being able to do their job when
it most counts. They are like police dogs who are trained to attack.
Police dogs are not being vicious, they are having fun when they attack,
it is mostly play for them. That's how they are trained. That is why
they are effective at fighting crime. If a dog didn't like what he was
doing, he probably wouldn't do it, at least not effectively.
Military
training is one reason why there are so many unemployed veterans.
Employers know the type of training military soldiers go through and
don't want to take a chance on one of them going "postal." An
interesting movie on the topic is "Jack Reacher." It is about a
military homicide investigator who digs deeper into a case involving a
trained military sniper who shot five random victims because he was
trained to kill and was never afforded the opportunity to do it.
The
other bane veterans have lurking in their corner is that many of them
entered the military fresh out of high school and despite having some of
the best training in the world, they don't have college degrees. So a
nurse, trained in battlefield triage, who has amputated limbs, stitched
gaping wounds, stabilized traumatized bodies, set broken bones and even
performed her job while under enemy fire, is not qualified to take your
child's temperature in your local school. Given the rise in school
shooting incidents, I think I'd rather have her at my school than
someone with text book training in boo-boo management.
So,
Manning, Assange, Snowden - are they patriots like so many of our
national heroes who came before them by doing much the same and made
this country what it is today or are they enemies of the state? Sure,
Snowden just informed every terrorist in the world that we are reading
their emails and listening in on their phone calls (like we didn't know
this ten years ago when Bush signed the Patriot Act) but don't you think
that that too is a deterrent? How many armchair terrorists have second
thoughts because they now realize that trying to pull something off is
too risky or difficult with the government listening in on their calls?
We were warned after the Tsarnaev brothers pulled off the
Boston bombings that there would be copycat bombings. Well, after
learning that there is a camera on every corner, in many cars, in every
shirt pocket, in most stores, how many would-be-bombers decided not to
do anything because they now know they can't pull it off? I don't think
Snowden put as many American lives at risk as we think. He may have
actually saved some.
Isn't that the reason our country
criminalizes honesty? If someone admits to completing a crime we send
them to prison. Not because they are necessarily a threat to society,
but the punishment is designed to serve as a warning to others not to
commit the same crime. In reality, if someone has designs to commit a
crime, they're going to do it anyway because they are not thinking of
the consequences, they are thinking about the immediate payoff. They
all think they can get away with it, that's why they do it and that is
why deterrence sentencing doesn't work.
Reading peoples'
emails, Facebook accounts and cell phone records is a good way to stop
crime as it is happening. Knowing that the government is reading
emails, Facebook accounts and cell phone records can also deter crime so
it doesn't happen. Knowing there are cameras in stores prevents
shoplifting although, everyone knows that most store theft occurs by the
employees in the back rooms. You know - the people who passed the
background and drug checks.
I'm not sure how I feel about
entrapment. Should we turn the lights out and leave our doors unlocked
so we can entrap criminals and burglars or should we warn them that
there is a pit bull inside and and out of fear, they don't do the crime
in the first place? Currently the government is the biggest distributor
of child pornography. They distribute it so they can catch people
downloading it. If the government didn't distribute it, would the
criminals exist? Is it a wise investment to spend $30,000 per year to
incarcerate someone who would otherwise be a taxpayer had we not
entrapped him? We then put them on the sex offender registry where they
will be unemployable and a drain on the largess of the social service
department. Although, the new Farm Bill denies people convicted of
violent crimes, such as downloading child pornography, of food stamps
and other benefits afforded to people who can't find jobs or housing.
Contrary
to what everyone opines, Manning, Assange and Snowden were not thinking
about an immediate payoff, fame or fortune, they were thinking about
the consequences and the actions by our government. They knew they were
sacrificing everything for what they thought to be the greater good:
Knowledge and transparency.
One thing these
patriots/whistleblowers/traitors/snitches do reveal to us is why so many
other countries in the world view America as the terrorists.
Musician Malcolm Kogut has been tickling the ivories since he was 14 and won the NPM DMMD Musician of the Year award in 99. He has CDs along with many published books. Malcolm played in the pit for many Broadway touring shows. When away from the keyboard, he loves exploring the nooks, crannies and arresting beauty of the Adirondack Mountains, battling gravity on the ski slopes and roller coasters.
Showing posts with label traitor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label traitor. Show all posts
Tuesday, June 25, 2013
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