• @AllonzeeLV
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    10 months ago

    I’m a leftist, not a libertarian, but I always feel compelled to bring up a specific point in Snowden’s defense when he is mentioned to divisive opinions:

    He did speak up correctly, using the correct channels, and the proper channels told him to shut the fuck up.

    Then he again did what he did the rightest way he could, by giving the data to one of the oldest members of the fourth estate, the press, to decide proper course, ONLY AFTER the primary state failed him spectacularly.

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fourth_Estate

    • @madcaesar
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      1210 months ago

      Do you know why he had to out himself? Why didn’t he give stuff to the papers and stay hidden?

      • Franklin
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        1710 months ago

        They were state secrets with a very well documented list of individuals to which it had been disclosed and he was documented as having had taken issue with the program. It’s reasonable that it would be traced back to him and that he would not be given protections or a fair trial.

        • @Maggoty
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          -1210 months ago

          Which still would have given him more time to get to somewhere like Cambodia that doesn’t extradite. No this was an ego thing. Either that or he was already compromised by the Chinese and they demanded it to trap him.

          • @NightAuthor
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            510 months ago

            It seems more likely that he figured he’d be found out anyway, and decided there might be some safety in the light. Everyone knows him and what he did, instead of just some 3 letter agency that could suicide him without anyone ever noticing.

            • @Maggoty
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              10 months ago

              Oh you couldn’t find anyone could you? We haven’t even done that with guys who handed stuff straight to the Russians without any whistleblowing. Straight up honest to God espionage. They’re in prison still, but they aren’t dead.

              ETA, well that sucks. I posted this on the wrong comment chain. But I’m leaving it up because it’s true. We don’t kill our turncoats. We just put them in prison for around 20 years.

    • @Maggoty
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      -1710 months ago

      And had he stopped there it would be fine. He then went on to give secret documents to China and Russia.

  • @[email protected]
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    14410 months ago

    This work survey is anonymous and won’t be associated with any identifying information. Feel free to voice your authentic opinions.

    • @haulyard
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      6610 months ago

      Proceeds to login via OKTA to access survey.

    • @[email protected]
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      4310 months ago

      “I don’t feel strongly about anything” if it’s required, deleted email if it’s not

      • @[email protected]
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        3010 months ago

        At work, you keep your opinions to yourself.

        It doesn’t matter if you are asked for your opinion by your boss, in an “anonymous” survey, or by a co-worker at a seemingly innocuous kids birthday party. There are no friends in business. Stick to business. Anything you say can and will be used against you.

        I’m not a very political person. I don’t have strong feelings about it sir. Taking care of business is my priority.

        Stay safe out there folks.

    • @Malfeasant
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      410 months ago

      Lol that happened when I worked at Chase many years ago… I didn’t fall for it, but several of my colleagues did… As I recall, there were some legal issues that came out of it…

  • @[email protected]
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    11110 months ago

    He revealed massive warrantless domestic surveillance. The 1700s equivalent would be if the post office made copies of every single letter everyone sent and then promised not to read them unless the sender or recipient was one day subject to a valid warrant. Whoever revealed this info would’ve been a hero and a patriot back then, and it should be the same today.

    Snowden leaked his info about these programs more than a decade ago. If that is what the three-letter agencies and big tech were capable of doing in secret then, just imagine the shady shit they’re doing now.

    • @AdrianTheFrog
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      710 months ago

      If that is what the three-letter agencies and big tech were capable of doing in secret then, just imagine the shady shit they’re doing now.

      It’s publicly available information that almost all social media companies have all of your private posts and the ability to release them to anyone they desire. People just don’t care.

    • @Aux
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      610 months ago

      Do you know why mail seals existed back then?

      • @PrimeMinisterKeyes
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        1510 months ago

        They used seals for mail? No wonder delivery took so long.

        • @lanolinoil
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          310 months ago

          TIL a group of seals is called a ‘pony’

    • @lanolinoil
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      310 months ago

      I mean if they could have feasibly done that in 1700 they 100% would have and probably not even hid it in the courts like today

    • @[email protected]
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      -310 months ago

      Read the Cuckoo’s Egg from 1989. NSA were at the very least tapping all international calls in the 1980s.

      The people that cared knew about this for a long time.

      All Snowden did was give up sensitive intel to foreign adversaries and got NSA capabilities that anyone that cared already knew about talked about more in the media.

      And nothing has really changed. There’s no international law against this so there’s nothing preventing Russia and China from looking at your data. There’s also nothing prevent five eyes countries from spying on each other’s citizens and sharing it back with the country whose citizens they spied on. Do you feel better that the NSA is spying on Canadians while Canadians spy on US citizens and the two countries exchange what they have on each other’s citizens?

      If that is what the three-letter agencies and big tech were capable of doing in secret then, just imagine the shady shit they’re doing now.

      They would have all data that any company has about you that has been sold to a marketing company. It’s trivial to create a shell company posing as a ad agency and legally buy all that data. And given the enshittification of everything there is data on basically everything you do. You buy groceries with a loyalty card? It’s on an NSA database being analyzed by an AI for suspicious activity. You didn’t read the fine print when you got that loyalty card that said they would share the data to third parties? It means the data will be shared to anyone that’s willing to pay them for it, and that includes the NSA. Why do you think they were giving you that discount? Because they’re nice? Nope, it’s because they can sell your data.

      This is happening because it’s the job of the NSA to gather data for intelligence purposes. They will sponge up any data they can legally obtain. And if you agree to data being shared with third parties, you’ve agreed that the data can be shared with the NSA. So it is.

      So now you understand that the NSA is likely doing these things because they can, do we need another traitor to hand over classified data to foreign adversaries to make you aware of it?

      • @[email protected]
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        10 months ago

        Do you feel better that the NSA is spying on Canadians while Canadians spy on US citizens and the two countries exchange what they have on each other’s citizens?

        but then,

        do we need another traitor to hand over classified data to foreign adversaries to make you aware of it?

        Government doing it in secret vs a citizen exposing it? I’m going to back my fellow citizen in this one.

        This is happening because it’s the job of the NSA to gather data for intelligence purposes. They will sponge up any data they can legally obtain. And if you agree to data being shared with third parties, you’ve agreed that the data can be shared with the NSA. So it is.

        That’s some serious bootlicking there, you think they’re only collecting “legally” obtained information? Let’s also gloss over the anti-consumer practices that companies employ to obtain that sweet third party data on you.

        “you’ve agreed that the data can be shared with the NSA. So it is.” - JFC you have some weird logic going on in your head. Let’s just forget what’s required in today’s society, the data that has to be shared to perform basic functions like employment now adays. The average citizen is not a privacy expert and no one is educated in K-12 to be consensual informed.

        • @[email protected]
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          010 months ago

          I’m going to back my fellow citizen in this one.

          Your “fellow citizen” is a citizen of Russia. Ya think he’s going to expose all the data collection Russia is doing? LOL

          Let’s also gloss over the anti-consumer practices that companies employ to obtain that sweet third party data on you.

          Indeed. Everyone glosses that over because it’s considered acceptable for every scumbag marketing person to know everything about you so they can manipulate you into buying shit you don’t need. That’s fine as long because you’re too paranoid over the NSA to give a shit about the fact that privacy doesn’t even exist anymore. You’re data is so boring to the NSA it gets filtered out with one pass of an algorithm. The marketing companies are data mining the shit out of your data.

          There’s no such thing as privacy now, the only thing Snowden accomplished was compromising intel which Russia rewarded him for. Dude is a straight up traitor.

      • the post of tom joad
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        710 months ago

        I just spent the entire time reading this just aghast at the audacity for you to voice an opinion like this in 2024, with rising fascism throughout the world.

        How deeply under a rock must your mole-hill have been built, how jingoistic and nationalistic must one become to have such… such a collosally naive take? I am so angry with you right now.

        • @[email protected]
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          210 months ago

          Yeah and where is a lot of the propaganda promoting fascism coming from? The country where your hero Edward Snowden lives and is now a citizen of?

          How much data do you think Russia is collecting about you? How much data are they collecting on their own citizens? Do you think Snowden is brave enough to blow the whistle on that kind of activity happening in the country he’s currently a citizen of?

          Who is the one really living under a rock here?

          • the post of tom joad
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            110 months ago

            I thought i had blocked you? I’ve already looked thru your history you fuckin venal little turd. Don’t ever conflate the fact we accidentally spoke with thinking you ever deserved my attention.

      • @[email protected]
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        610 months ago

        I don’t think it was feasible at the time (2013) for the average American to know and understand the concept that their government was capturing essentially all mobile cellular and internet communications for storage and analysis in giant fusion centers.

        The real tragedy is that many people now know and still don’t care, or have given into this bizarre cynical defeatism that we might as well just accept it. Hard disagree on those points.

      • @pigup
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        310 months ago

        yup

      • @postmateDumbass
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        310 months ago

        Any US intelligence agency or military unit operating on US soil against US citizens is supposed to be illegal.

        That is law enforcement’s territory.

    • @Maggoty
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      -1710 months ago

      He would have been a hero if he had just stayed in place or gone directly to a non-extradition country without a ton of secrets. Instead this dumbass ends up in China with several laptops and hard drives.

  • the post of tom joad
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    10110 months ago

    I still remember when everything came out and so much FUD was out there calling him a traitor.

    I think to this day a large chunk of folks have no idea the breadth of what he told us and what he gave up to do so.

    I couldn’t do it, i don’t think

    • @[email protected]
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      10 months ago

      I remember a lot of it was weird. It’s was like he “only” had a high school diploma and his ex-girlfriend was a model. Like the most pointless crap you’ve heard of. He’s a patriot, he saw a lot of bad crap going on. He tried to report it and then he gave up his freedom to let us know. I’m not sure I could do it either.

      • @aidan
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        810 months ago

        Yeah, and any programmer knows how much important software is written by people with “only” a highschool diploma

        • @[email protected]
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          110 months ago

          I mean the Zuck dropped out of Harvard. That counts right? I really don’t want to argue the importance of Facebook and co tho. Kindly direct your critique to > /dev/null

    • @LemmyKnowsBest
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      1210 months ago

      I still don’t understand why he had to leave the country and can never come back,

      and where is he anyway? Who is taking care of him? How does he earn money to survive? What is he doing?

      • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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        3110 months ago

        Last I heard he’s in Russia because everywhere else was going to extradite him, and Russia was stoked to have him in the country as a big FU to the USA.

        • @LemmyKnowsBest
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          -1410 months ago

          I thought Russia and the USA stopped animosity with each other after the Cold War was over.

          • @SeabassDan
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            2510 months ago

            On the surface, but then you see how little actually gets done in the summits that you realize it’s all for show. Or there are deals being made behind the scenes that we’ll never know about.

          • Ignisnex
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            310 months ago

            There’s a very good reason why the US was absolutely jazzed to start sending resources and weapons to Ukraine when Russia started shit. They are not friendly, and never have been.

      • @__dev
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        2010 months ago

        He immediately got charged under the Espionage Act. If he didn’t leave or if he came back he’d be tried, without a jury, and get either life in prison or the death penalty.

        • @Maggoty
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          10 months ago

          Lol no. He got charged and had his passport suspended a month after he left. He was in Hong Kong on May 20th and they charged him/suspended his passport on June 21st. After he’d been in Hong Kong with top secret documents for a month. He had plenty of time to fly to any of several non extradition countries.

          Furthermore he would certainly have a jury and the federal government hasn’t handed down a death sentence for anything less than murder since the Rosenbergs.

    • @Maggoty
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      10 months ago

      Yeah that’ll happen when you go on the run to China and Russia with classified laptops full of shit you downloaded from the top secret Internet.

      Had he stayed or simply gone to a non extradition country without the laptops he would be a hero. Hell he’d have been out of prison by now. The longest sentence anyone’s ever gotten for whistle blowing in the modern era is 5 years.

      • the post of tom joad
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        10 months ago

        Listen. How the fuck it it possible that people understand:

        • propaganda exists, and

        • that it is in a government’s interest to keep an unpopular project secret from its citizens

        and not even think to question the narrative that comes out of the media?

        Do you mean to tell me you uncritically believe the notion that there is some way Snowden could have exposed government secrets and the government would be like: “whoa kay, ya got me, its true, and go ahead and listen to what he has to say?”

        or do you suppose that maybe the government would still put a bit of FUD out to minimize the damage, keep its citizenry from wanting to look too deeply? I mean, wouldn’t that just be a smart decision? We aren’t talking about bastions of transparency right? we’re talking about the same govt that just got caught wiretapping its citizens.

        Rant over, lemme boil down what i’m looking for here:

        Which of the many negative things that came out about Snowden do you believe was the truth vs FUD?

        What are your feelings on how the media focused on Snowden himself rather than the content of the leaks?

        Who do you suppose benefitted from that choice in focus?

        • @Maggoty
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          -410 months ago

          That’s funny from the crowd that routinely says he’d have been renditioned and tortured when there are multiple cases of actual whistle blowers getting a 3-5 year prison term and being treated completely normally in the system.

          Why is he special?

          He was in Hong Kong for a month. Why couldn’t he fly to a non extradition country in the month before they stopped his passport?

          You’re right that the story doesn’t add up but it’s not the governments story.

    • @4lan
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      5210 months ago

      his persecution is the distraction from the crimes he exposed.

      They tell us he endangered our operatives, yet not one example has surfaced in over a decade. You know they would be shouting that shit from every rooftop if it happened.

      This is how the USA treats heroes. We persecute them for exposing our evil.

      • @ExfilBravo
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        810 months ago

        What’s funny about this picture is Obama was seeking his extradition for the leaks. I’d still vote for him again though.

    • @Iceman
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      1110 months ago

      It’s a contious effort to distract from the leaks. Same tactic was used for Chelsea Manning and Julian Assange.

  • @[email protected]
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    5110 months ago

    This guy is the definition of a modern day hero. If you haven’t read his book “permenant record”, get on it

    • @LemmyKnowsBest
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      -4410 months ago

      Everything he says is a rambling monotonous bag of nothing. I, for one, could not bear to read any book he wrote.

      • @mlg
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        3510 months ago

        I mean he literally just doc dropped a crap ton of classified files that he didn’t even need to explain lol. You could always go read those and learn how much the NSA spies on the american public.

      • @[email protected]
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        2210 months ago

        Could you link an example of the rambling? One persons view of monotanous rambling is another persons fascinating dialogue lolol

        • @LemmyKnowsBest
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          10 months ago

          A few years ago I was fascinated with him for understandable reasons, but every video I clicked on, he was just “blah blah blah blah blah blah,” and try as I might, I could comprehend absolutely none of it. Maybe it’s a “me” problem. But I’m sure we’ve all known the type of narcissistic people who can talk for hours without saying anything of substance, their intentness & confidence draws people in, that’s how he rubs me. That kind of person. Narcissistic person who can talk for hours without saying anything of substance.

          • @[email protected]
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            510 months ago

            Yeah, no, I have seen his interviews, he goes very well for the points, makes a lot of sense, he only stops when asked for solutions, as he does not see himself as the one who should choose for others.

            He talks a lot about things non-IT people understand very little, which I understand goes far against him, but usually he does not have two hours to explain everything to the laymen.

            But he says a lot of substance, and it had me worried from the start that people will reject his message. And we all will pay for it.

            • @LemmyKnowsBest
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              -110 months ago

              well that is reassuring to hear. I will take your word for it that every time Snowden opens his mouth he is saying valuable things, although I can’t comprehend any of it.

              We already know the gist of everything he has said. We are being spied on. What can we do about it? I’m addicted to my smartphone. But I am nobody and nothing so… I carry on

              • @[email protected]
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                210 months ago

                You can try to avoid making calls and send SMS, instead use Signal or Matrix for contacting people.

                Remove Google from your life - gmail is tricky, most use protonmail, search with duckduckgo or searxng or kagi, youtube is basically without 100% replacement, but there is still vimeo and peertube.

                Drop Windows, everyone will help you with Linux on PC.

                Phones go very tricky, iOS has no alternative that I know of, Androids have degoogled versions.

                • @LemmyKnowsBest
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                  110 months ago

                  I’ve been TRYING to do the right things!

                  ✅ Protonmail

                  ✅ Linux

                  ✅ Android


                  1. In 2019 I tried to switch to protonmail but I was apparently too hypervigilant about it because I didn’t provide a backup email because I was trying to de-google, well my lack of a backup bit me in the behind when protonmail wouldn’t let me get in with my password, they told me my password was wrong, but I swear it was right, and they wouldn’t let me back in ever again.

                  2. And last time I bought a laptop I took it to a computer repair place and told them to take off windows and put on Linux. They did it. I didn’t know how to use Linux, anyway that laptop which was supposed to be native with Windows, constantly glitched and rejected every attempt I made at using Linux.

                  3. And I exclusively use Android, I have no Apple products whatsoever.

                  In summary, as you can see I’ve been TRYING to do the right thing!

                  ✅ Protonmail

                  ✅ Linux

                  ✅ Android

        • @hydrospanner
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          -1210 months ago

          Well it’s not really dialogue if it’s just one person’s words…

  • @distantsounds
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    4510 months ago

    IDK what this has to do with Libertarianism, but I agree with the meme

    • PropaGandalfM
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      1910 months ago

      Free speech isn’t exclusive to libertarianism but it is truly a core value of that philosophy

  • @Suavevillain
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    4510 months ago

    I have nothing but respect for Edward Snowden.

  • @SeabassDan
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    3110 months ago

    “No, we mean stuff about the bad guys. Not us.”

    • @[email protected]
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      710 months ago

      This sounds awesome, but what authorities exactly are the correct ones? What happens when I want to report THE authorities?

      • @[email protected]
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        110 months ago

        Actually, there are multiple instances one can use to whitleblow. Any company above 50 employees should host such an instance as well. Therefore you can chose where to whistleblow.

        After whistleblowing you get an acknowledgement within seven days. After three months they have to report back what actions have been started about the topic.

        The instances of the state have to additionally share all recieved tips to the public annually. There is another instance for the EU hosted.

        The exact national law may differ within EU countries. And I am not a law expert as well.

        Anyhow you therefore have a channel to report any authority.

  • @hobsbawm_goblin
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    1310 months ago

    Luckily he was able to escape Russia safely. If he stayed in the US he would’ve been tortured just like Chelsea Manning and Assange.

    • @aidan
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      510 months ago

      Did Manning allege torture?

      • @[email protected]
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        10 months ago

        From what I remember in her memoir, she said she pent about 2 months in what was essentially a holding cell in Kuait after she was arrested, with little to no stimulation, and limited human interaction.

        • @Maggoty
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          -410 months ago

          I’m sorry did she allege she was held in an empty area of the detainment center or that they kept her hooded, gagged, and under loud music? One is sensory deprivation torture and the other is normal military detainee transport.

      • @4lan
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        10 months ago

        our re-definition of ‘torture’ excludes waterboarding, hog-tying, force-feeding, and sexual assault.

        According to the federal government even the people at Guantanamo weren’t tortured.

        We literally torture people who have never been seen by a judge. This country is fucking evil

        • @aidan
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          210 months ago

          That’s not what I asked though.

    • @Maggoty
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      410 months ago

      The US hasn’t had Assange to be able to torture him and I’m not aware of any allegations of Manning being tortured.

  • @postmateDumbass
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    10 months ago

    A group of ex Intelligence community and State Department people destroyed my life when i refused to facilitate their ability to do war crimes.

    Druged, kidnapped, raped, tortured, electrocuted, etc.

    The USA has become a nation built with lies, oppression, and extra judicial deadly force.