geonuc wrote:As I've argued before, the damage done by Snowden's leaks due to exposure of NSA are unfortunate. But it's collateral damage, not intentional. How is that different than other types of collateral damage in a righteous cause?
I'll say again, the NSA's activities and the administration's (primarily the Bush administration) complicity in the extra-legal activities needed to be exposed.
And can we please stop conflating Snowden and Manning? Or Assange, for that matter.
In the December debate with Cassel, Yoo was asked: "If the president deems that he's got to torture somebody, including by crushing the testicles of the person's child, there is no law that can stop him?"
Yoo: "No treaty."
Cassel: "Also no law by Congress? That is what you wrote in the August 2002 memo [that went to the president]."
Yoo: "I think it depends on why the president thinks he needs to do that."
Gullible Jones wrote:@SFC, might it be possible that Snowden was under similar obligations due to working with the NSA? He was a contractor, but the NSA is a military organization...
He had an agenda. One he openly advertised for years before he did it.
vendic wrote:quote[fisher]
Snowden was exposing a crime so his crime is negated. Read that again. And really think about it. Key Bank illegally foreclosed on my home. It was worth $300,000. Key bank broke the law. No one will prosecute Key Bank. I drive to Key Bank and steal $3 million dollars. Want to guess who is going to jail?
SciFi Chick wrote:He had an agenda. One he openly advertised for years before he did it.
What was his agenda, and where did he openly advertise it? Sincere question, and since you already seem to know the answer, I'm gonna be lazy and not google it.
BTW, I'm very disappointed in the movie about him. I was really looking forward to watching it, because I like the actor playing Snowden, but I discovered that they're pretending he stole all those files in a spur of the moment, which is why your comment about his agenda really stood out to me.
The South China Morning Post reported Monday that Snowden told it in an interview that he sought a position as an analyst with the consulting firm Booz Allen Hamilton so he could collect proof about the NSA's secret surveillance program and make them public.
SciFiFisher wrote:But I was really trying to illustrate that you can't commit a crime to expose a crime and not suffer the consequences. You have to use legal or mostly legal channels to expose the crime.
geonuc wrote:There is actually a legal doctrine that states 'that which is necessary cannot be illegal'. It's usually meant to absolve behavior that in ordinary circumstances would be criminal but is necessary to prevent greater harm.
Gullible Jones wrote:Wait what? He went in looking for trouble? Eww.
SciFi Chick wrote:geonuc wrote:There is actually a legal doctrine that states 'that which is necessary cannot be illegal'. It's usually meant to absolve behavior that in ordinary circumstances would be criminal but is necessary to prevent greater harm.
Is this where self defense comes from?
Gullible Jones wrote:Wait what? He went in looking for trouble? Eww.
(I still think the NSA is full of shit though.)
SciFi Chick wrote:geonuc wrote:There is actually a legal doctrine that states 'that which is necessary cannot be illegal'. It's usually meant to absolve behavior that in ordinary circumstances would be criminal but is necessary to prevent greater harm.
Is this where self defense comes from?
SciFiFisher wrote:SciFi Chick wrote:geonuc wrote:There is actually a legal doctrine that states 'that which is necessary cannot be illegal'. It's usually meant to absolve behavior that in ordinary circumstances would be criminal but is necessary to prevent greater harm.
Is this where self defense comes from?
Based on my past experience as a military policeman it wasn't considered a crime per se to defend yourself in the past. It has only been a fairly recent development that any form of self defense up to and including lethal force was not considered OK as long as you had a pretty reasonable situation. I.e. Guy with a machete comes at you. You shoot him. There is an inquest. You would never be arrested or charged. You are at home watching Johnny Carson when you realize there is a guy in your window climbing in. You shoot him. There is an inquest. You are not arrested. In both cases the Grand Jury or possibly just a Magistrate would rule the shootings justified because you were defending yourself and/or your property.
Today it's a little more nuanced. (cue the British understatement). The statement Geonuc referenced IIRC refers to a scenario in which you know someone is breaking the law or committing grave harm. So, you break the law to stop them. I.e. Let's pretend that Snowden was actually a good guy. He is doing his usual BAH Contractor thing and playing Mahjong on the NSA computer while trolling the Alt-Right feed when he discovers a plot by the U.S. to infect a bunch of American Muslims with a genetically altered Super Flu that only targets people who say "Allah Akhbar!". Don't laugh I am sure someone has a grant right now to research something similar to this. He realizes the only way to stop the plot is to go the Washington Post and leak the story to them. It's a strict violation of the Security Oath he took as a contractor. But, in this scenario he would be able to get a judge or jury to consider his "treason" as justifiable in order to prevent a bigger crime.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests