- Aug 20, 2000
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The people filing the cables (US diplomats) are in no danger of being killed. The local informants who discussed potentially sensitive information with the US diplomats are in danger.
Yeah... No kidding. I take it that part of the problem here is that you don't "get" things very quickly.
He is endangering people around the world from many different countries, not US diplomats. These people range from earnest informants disenfranchised with their corrupt governments, to obvious panderers seeking status or money.
Then if the various government(s) affected care about those people's lives, they'll be extra careful to ensure he's not subject to any extralegal retaliation.
yllus, unfortunately the average citizen of these countries are blinded by idealism and stupidity, much like yourself. The fact is that Iran is a dangerous country that could easily destabilize world peace, and that the terrorist sites in their respective countries do the world no good. While the governments have to please simpleton citizens, they also live in the real world and are intelligent enough to recognize evil and confront it, albeit discretely.
This is the crux of your argument: You see clearly and are intelligent, they are not - thus things should happen the way you want them to.
You know what? Policy wise, I agree with you - I want those drone attacks and special forces raids to continue. Unlike you, however, I am not blind to my own motives - I want these things to stay secret because they benefit me, not because they are right. It's an amazingly ignorant thing to claim that you have the moral high ground over Yemenis when it's they who are faced with the spectre of drone attacks in the middle of the night.
*edit* I forgot about one thing. I directly confronted your discussion of what you deem as illicit means to apprehend Mr. Assange. I said paypal was perfectly within their right, that Post Finance seemed to provide a reasonable explanation, and that the Swedish government seems to have created trumped up charges. How would you like me to further address this?
Also about the head in the sand comment. While it would be easy to google ways to finance criminal & terrorist groups it doesn't mean Anandtech should have a how to thread regarding such methods. I personally think Wikileaks is as dangerous as any criminal group, even if they aren't exactly breaking laws.
You idea of confrontation apparently involves regurgitating the party line. And nowhere did I deem what PayPal or Amazon or others did as illicit. They are well within their rights to refuse service to anyone. That's not in question. Whether or not congressional pressure was applied on those companies to make them take that action - that's the question, and it's already been answered.
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