Taughannock Falls

Taughannock Falls
from: althouse.blogspot.com

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

An establishment voice in support of Snowden

Here's Richard Falk, the Albert G Milbank Professor Emeritus of International Law at Princeton University and Visiting Distinguished Professor in Global and International Studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara:

"Instead of seeking to prosecute and punish Snowden, the healthy national response would be to reestablish limits on governmental surveillance and extraterritorial security claims. At least, it is time for citizens not to be fooled by the politics of deflection by which the government and a pliant media avoid the message and obsess about the messenger, and discuss the substantive issues that prompted the disclosures rather than seek to punish an individual of conscience who chose bravely to risk the fury of a state because some of its unseemly secrets were being made public."
http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/2013/07/201371011618650821.html This, at a minimum, is the sort of reaction one would expect from any sane U.S. citizen, from across the political spectrum. Sadly, many folks have chosen to reveal themselves during this crisis as completely craven cowards, willing, even eager, to throw themselves on the mercies of the surveillance state. Why? This is a difficult question, but history offers many other examples of folks failing to stand up to bullies. Authoritarian regimes don't require enthusiastic support from subjects, frightened obedience will suit them just as well.

3 comments:

dbshotz said...

Good point, Ulysses! It does seem as if many of our elites are completely cool with the new corporate fascism emerging in Amerikkka :(

mlee33 said...

I am a bit frightened, I'll admit (look what happened to Michael Hastings!) but I sure as hell refuse to obey!! :)

squeezebox10 said...

Thanks for this, Ulysses... at least a few establishment types have the decency to be appalled at the Orwellian excesses revealed by Snowden! BTW, I discovered an interesting little blog the other day with some cool sketches and writings: http://blackswanmovement.blogspot.com/66