On 08-25-12 9:32 AM, Nigel Stapley wrote:
> Lesley Weston wrote:
>> On 08-24-12 8:29 AM, Nigel Stapley wrote:
>>> Lesley Weston wrote:
>>>> On 08-24-12 4:11 AM, larry wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> I think him trusting in the forbearance of the USA or the backbone of
>>>>> the Swedes would be foolish.
>>>
>>> Agreed. Especially given the Swedes' record of compliance with US wishes
>>> (1).
>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>> Anybody else charged with sexual assault would have to stand trial on
>>>> those charges. Maybe it is a ridiculous trumped-up charge because of
>>>> his political activities, as he claims, but maybe it's not and without
>>>> a proper trial nobody knows.
>>>
>>> If that is the sole reason why the Swedish authorities want to question
>>> him, then why have they refused Assange's offer for them to come to
>>> London to do it? The excuses offered by the Swedish prosecutor's office
>>> and their police ring somewhat hollow, as those same authorities have
>>> been willing to travel elsewhere to question 'persons of interest'.
>>
>> Why should they?
>
> To help get their job done?
Their job at this stage is to bring the accused to trial.
>
>> Would they do that for someone who was not in the public eye?
>
> Yes. They have done it.
I can see why they would go this far out of their way to question a
witness who is not accused of anything, but why would they when their
objective is to apprehend someone for whom there is already a warrant
and take him back to face trial?
>
>> And he's not a "person of interest" anyway, he's been charged with the
>> crimes and there is a warrant out for his arrest because of those
>> charges.
>
> No. No. No. He has *not* been charged with anything. He is under
> investigation, and the Swedish authorities want to question him.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julian_Assange#Allegations_of_sexual_assault
or
http://tinyurl.com/cbttfva
That's his own entry in Wikipedia.
> If they
> want it that badly, than they should take advantage of Assange's offer.
> If they won't, then we must conclude that there may be other motives
> behind the prosecutor's decision to reinstate the warrant.
You can conclude that if you like, and from experience of your previous
postings it's clear that you do like. The rest of us can wait for the
trial before drawing conclusions.
There's this, though:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/08/22/julian-assange-wikileaks-no-criminal-charges-in-us_n_1823159.html
or
http://tinyurl.com/8v8zhf8
and from Reuters themselves:
http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/08/22/us-wikileaks-assange-usa-idUSBRE87L12W20120822
or
http://tinyurl.com/bqomsj7
>
>> Which doesn't mean he did it of course, but until he is tried for it
>> nobody except he and the women involved knows whether or not he did,
>> and perhaps not then.
>>>
>>>> Rape is a crime in most countries, unlike whistle-blowing.
>>>>
>>>> Whistle-blowing is not a political act;
>>>
>>> Woo-whee! Where have you *been*? Exposing lies at the very heart of a
>>> country's governmental structure can be nothing other than political.
>>
>> Some e-mails about how the US ambassador found some other country's
>> ambassador boring? A political act is a direct attempt to overthrow
>> one's own government by legal or illegal means.
>
> Oh really, Lesley! I sometimes wonder about your powers of apprehension.
I'm fine, don't worry about /me/.
> A political act is one which is intended to - or has the capability to -
> affect the political situation in a given place.
Of which one is a citizen or at least a resident.
> The release of the
> cables illustrated in a way that not even the Pollyannas of the world
> could disregard that governments of the ever-so-moral West are bent like
> pretzels.
Which was hardly news.
>
>>>
>>>> he really can't claim to be persecuted for his politics. Especially in
>>>> Australia, his own country,
>>>
>>> With its own long history of kissing Pentagonal ass.
>>
>> That has nothing to do with Assange's politics or whether or not he is
>> persecuted for them.
>
> If he were to return to Oz,
I don't think he's considered going home. If he did, perhaps there's a
chance that the blokish culture of Oz might protect him on the rape
charges, though I have reliable reports that Australia entered the 21st
century when the rest of us did.
> pressure applied to the XXXX government from
> Washington would in all likelihood be acceeded to under some
> barely-plausible pretext.
Again:
http://tinyurl.com/bqomsj7
>>>
>>>> or Sweden, one of the most enlightened countries there is.
>>>
>>> Where they still openly practised eugenics until about 40 years ago, and
>>> (to bring it back to specifics) whose definition of what constitutes
>>> 'rape' seems to be remarkably widely drawn.
>>
>> Do be careful, Nigel! Perhaps it's actually a Good Thing from the
>> point of view of your safety that Esmeraldus is having trouble getting
>> back onto afp. Sweden's definition of rape may seem too wide to you,
>> but it doesn't to about half the world's population.
>
> The Swedish definition of what constitutes rape as 'half the world's
> population' would use the term seems to be far more broadly drawn than
> in most 'advanced' countries.
So it wasn't a legitimate rape? Seriously (and it is a very serious
subject) rape is non-consensual sex. Period [1]. "Consensual" means that
both (or all) parties freely gave their fully-informed consent /at that
time/, which is hard to do if you're asleep.
>
>>>
>>>> What he did (apart from raping people if he did) should not be a
>>>> crime, but it is a crime in the US and quite a few other countries,
>>>> not a political crime but a real crime, so it's quite reasonable that
>>>> the US should want him to stand trial for it. He claims that he faces
>>>> the death penalty in the US, but that seems seriously unlikely.
>>>
>>> What a mess of a statement that is! Prosecuting Assange (and there is a
>>> sealed grand-jury indictment waiting for him if Uncle Joe - sorry, I
>>> mean Uncle Sam - ever gets his hand on him) would be naked political.
>>
>> He's not American and doesn't live there, so whatever he does has no
>> connection with American politics.
>
> Absolutely breathtaking statement, that! Hardly anyone locked up without
> trial in Guantánamo for the last ten years has been American or has
> lived there,
Those are not in prison because of political action, but because they
took part in a war against the US. Which is not to say that they should
still be there: they should have been released with all the other
prisoners of war.
> but that did not stop, has not stopped and will not stop
> the US régime from assuming some gahd-given extraterritorial powers to
> grab whoever they want. As I said, US pols have given every indication
> of what they would/will do to Assange if they can get hold of him.
http://tinyurl.com/bqomsj7
>
>> I agree that what happens outside the US stays outside the US, but I
>> can see why the US (or any other country) gets alarmed when someone,
>> their own citizen or not, reveals their secrets. Even such innocuous
>> ones. It might be an act of war, I guess, an attack from outside, but
>> it's not political.
>
> How can it *not* be political? I mean, really?
Because he is not a US citizen and doesn't live there. It could be
considered an act of war, as I said yesterday, but such an ineffective
one that it really doesn't count.
>
>>
>>> He
>>> has helped expose how US rhetoric has once again been contradicted by US
>>> *actions*.
>>
>> Shock Horror! The US behaves like every other country, and we never
>> knew it!
>
> And the US behaves as if it were the moral superior to every other
> nation on the planet (with the possible exception of dear, beleaguered
> little Israel, of course). If they would come clean about their
> hypocrisy then there would be less cause to complain about it.
Again: Shock Horror! The US behaves like every other country, and we
never knew it! God is on both sides in every war.
>
>>
>>> A fair trial would be impossible because of the ranting and
>>> screaming already done against him by senior politicians right up to La
>>> Clinton herself. And there are more ways of killing a prisoner than
>>> strapping him to a gurney and injecting him.
>>
>> A fair trial is always impossible once the media get hold of
>> something. Which doesn't mean that Sweden shouldn't keep on attempting
>> it.
>
> I wasn't talking about Sweden, I was talking about the US, for the
> reasons I stated.
I was talking about both.
>
>>>
>>> Bear in mind that President Obysmal
>>
>> You would rather have Romney?
>
> I'd rather have someone who didn't abandon whatever progressive
> intentions he might have in order to create a fake 'bipartisanship' with
> some of the most regressive people on the planet, i.e. the Congressional
> GOP.
>
> Perhaps Romney and his thinking-brain dog Ryan would be better, if only
> on the grounds that it is better to have to face a candid enemy than a
> false friend.
Your choice [2] is between Obama and Romney. Someone who has tried to do
the right thing in the face of unprecedented opposition, or someone who
hates women, sick people and poor people [3] and keeps his dog in a cage
on top of his car, hosing it down whenever it fouls itself.
>
>>
>>> - having promised protection for
>>> whistleblowers *before* he was inaugurated - has gone in exactly the
>>> opposite direction in office; even to the point of not only his
>>> officials but His Hopeness himself pronouncing Bradley Manning (2)
>>> guilty before that unfortunate young man has even faced the most sham of
>>> trials before a military court with a judge who is trying her best to
>>> give sufficient impression of being impartial so as to fool the public,
>>> but not convincing anyone whose brain-cells don't have to use semaphore
>>> to communicate with one another.
>>>
>>> Manning is the US gummint's way of getting to Wikileaks without having
>>> to grab Assange. But having clear designs on putting Manning in the brig
>>> for the next fifty years will not preclude them from getting Assange if
>>> any way presents itself.
>>
>> Bradley is a soldier, subject to rather different rules from those
>> demanded of civilians. He is charged with what amounts to treason
>> because of this difference, but until he has been tried nobody knows
>> whether he did what he is accused of. If he did, then he is guilty of
>> treason as defined by his own government and by the chain of command
>> that he willingly joined.
>
> So that when he signed up for the military, he signed away his right to
> a conscience as well?
He signed an undertaking that he would not reveal his country's secrets.
He then did what he had legally sworn not to do.
> I think a set of tribunals held in a famous city
> in Germany sixty-odd years ago would grant that he did not, nor should
> it have been assumed that he did.
Already? It's only been a few days. Rats, I was enjoying this one.
>
> What Manning allegedly did was as a result of his being sickened by the
> knowledge that not only were his 'comrades-in-arms' being allowed - if
> not encouraged - to kill unarmed civilians and get away with it, but
> that the Great American Public (TM) were being systematically lied to by
> the entire military and political structure.
Then he should have left the army at the first opportunity (I don't know
how long a hitch lasts in the US), after which he could have gone
public. That's what Dallaire did, and it wasn't even his own government
that he was criticising.
>
> Manning is a prisoner of conscience.
>
Manning is accused of treason (I don't know the exact legal charge), and
there is very strong evidence against him.
>
[1] Including then.
[2] Actually not yours of course, nor mine, since neither of us can vote
in US elections.
[3] So presumably a triple dose of hatred for anyone who is all three.