Rants from a corporate IT drone, wannabe web designer/developer, and sometime blogger.
Because the future is NEVER now.
Droppin' knowledge bombs since 1973.
Here to chew bubblegum and kick ass.. just ran out of bubblegum.
I feel bad for all our friends at the State Department and USAID who have been “banned” by their employers from accessing the WikiLeaks site, both at work and on their own home computers.
Essentially, the Federal Government’s logic is that because these cables haven’t officially been declassified, reading them would be breaking the law.
OK
Well, I guess that’s that. I’m glad the Government is looking out for us. I especially appreciate the efforts by our leaders, like Senator Joseph Lieberman, who feel that the nations best interests are served by essentially covering our ears and singing the national anthem really loud so we can’t hear anything. Just pretend like it didn’t happen, that’ll work.
I appreciate Lieberman so much that I think he should have another go at running for the White House. In fact, I’d like to help him get started. So here you go Joe, see ya in 2012: http://liebermanforpresident.org
I wonder if the American government will ever be able to summon the courage to face the cablegate leaks with the same type of aplomb shown by nations that truly embrace free speech.
Nations like ..wait. What? Oh come on, really? Pakistan? You’ve got to be kidding me.
From Pakistan’s Lahore High Court ruling on whether or not to ban the Wikileaks site:
We must bear the truth, no matter how harmful it is.
When a country like Pakistan holds the moral high ground on America, you have to ask yourself: Just how far from our ideals have we strayed?
WikiLeaks has been taking a bit of a pounding from the right since it began the release of 250,000 U.S. diplomatic cables last week. Sarah Palin called for the organization’s founder Julian Assange to be treated as a terrorist and described him as an “anti-American operative with blood on his hands”. Mike Huckabee, and others in the right wing press, went further and suggested that those involved in the leak should be executed as spies.

From Red State:
..my preferred course of action would for Assange to find a small caliber round in the back of his head.
Meanwhile, Senator Liberman and members of the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee managed to bully Amazon into dropping WikiLeaks from it’s EC2 (Elastic Cloud Computing) service. The site had earlier moved to EC2 following several DDOS attacks on it’s servers in Sweden.
While the right indulges in its usual vim and verve about how far they’re willing to go to “protect” the American Way, far enough to trample all over it, I thought it might be helpful to keep in mind a few points about what WikiLeaks has really been trying to accomplish: