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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWhistleblowing Is the New Civil Disobedience: Why Edward Snowden Matters
Like many other civil liberties advocates, Ive been annoyed by how the media has spilled more ink talking about Edward Snowden than the issues that hes trying to raise. Ive grumbled at the Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego? reality show and the way in which TV news glosses over the complexities that investigative journalists have tried to publish as the story unfolded. But then a friend of mine computer scientist Nadia Heninger flipped my thinking upside down with a simple argument: Snowden is offering the public a template for how to whistleblow; leaking information is going to be the civil disobedience of our age.
In recent years, increasing numbers of concerned citizens have been coming forward as whistleblowers, pointing out questionable acts by the American government agencies and corporations. The current administration has responded to this practice by prosecuting more whistleblowers under the Espionage Act than all previous presidents combined. Most of what leakers share is barely heard by the public. For example, most people dont know who Mark Klein is even though he publicly shared information that showed that his former employer AT&T was working with the NSA to analyze Americans phone calls in violation of citizens privacy. The news coverage he got in 2006 was significant to advocates, but the public doesnt know his name or even realize that Verizon wasnt the first telecom to share extensively with the NSA.
The public is more likely to have heard of Bradley Manning, mostly because Julian Assange has managed to keep himself and, thus, the issues at hand in the news. Debates about WikiLeaks meant that the coverage of the diplomatic cable leaks were a story that journalists covered for more than a second. Julian Assanges questionable morality and arrogance complicated that story, allowing anti-leakers to undermine the credibility and intentions of all who were involved. At the same time, his antics enabled an ongoing media circus which has meant that people are at least aware of the frame of leaking, even if they think poorly of Assange and, by proxy, Manning. Manning may have been silenced but his decisions continue to be discussed, for better and for worse.
Snowden has presented the public with a different case study. Although many anti-leakers have worked hard to portray him as a dropout / misfit / uneducated fool, that hasnt stuck. At best, people have managed to tar him through his association with Wikileaks and his willingness to go to countries that are perceived as American foes (China, Russia, Venezuela, Ecuador, etc.). Not only does this narrative as well as the American governmental response suggest that Cold War attitudes are still ever-present, but it also puts American arrogance on display. Blocking the Bolivian presidents access to airspace and searching his plane didnt help.
As this drama has played out, Snowden has become a walking diplomatic incident. Even though he has been disciplined and thoughtful in what he has shared, revealing little more than advocacy organizations have suspected or known for a long time and sharing vague documents that dont fully make sense, every ounce of American political might has been operationalized to go after him as a serious threat, piquing curiosity about what else he knows and what he might do. Most likely, had he just revealed what he revealed and then disappeared, it wouldve been a news story for a week and then been quickly forgotten. But because the focus is on him, aspects of what hes tried to argue keep dripping through the salacious coverage of his whereabouts.
More importantly though, as Nadia pointed out to me, hes creating a template for how to share information. Hes clearly learned from previous whistleblowers and is using many of their tactics. But hes also forged his own path which has had its own follies. Regardless of whether he succeeds or fails in getting asylum somewhere, hes inspired others to think about how they can serve as a check to power. And this is terrifying for any government.
http://www.zephoria.org/thoughts/archives/2013/07/19/edward-snowden-whistleblower.html
99Forever
(14,524 posts)think
(11,641 posts)Hadn't thought about that angle...
morningfog
(18,115 posts)usGovOwesUs3Trillion
(2,022 posts)or at the very least SMEAR his name.
They are shitting all over themselves worrying about the next Edward Snowdens.
mick063
(2,424 posts)The tighter he grips, the more that oozes out between his fingers.
I can't get over that I donated a decent amount to his campaign.
Perhaps it entitles me to declare how disgusted I am with him. I'm well past the disappointment stage. I have grown to despise him.
kelliekat44
(7,759 posts)detained and released in the late 50's early 60's. In Snowden's case it may not even be whistleblowing but I will give him the benefit of the doubt about that.
forestpath
(3,102 posts)rhett o rick
(55,981 posts)marions ghost
(19,841 posts)The writer makes some interesting comments at the end about whistle blowing being what must happen--to counter the secrecy and lack of legal power that used to provide some degree of justice:
"And this is where I think that Nadias second point is of serious importance. People growing up with the internet understand that information is power. Those whove watched protests in recent years know that traditional physical civil disobedience doesnt create the iconic narratives and images that it once did. And thus, not surprisingly, what it means to protest is changing. This is further complicated by an increased obsession with secrecy secret courts, secret laws, secret practices that make using the rule of law to serve as a check to power ineffective. Thus, questioning authority by leaking information that shows that power is being abused becomes a more valuable and notable form of civil disobedience. As with all forms of civil disobedience, there are significant consequences. But when secrecy is whats being challenged, the biggest risk is not being beaten by a police officer for staging an event, but being disappeared or silenced by the institutions being challenged or embarrassed. And thus, as much as I hate to accept it, becoming a diplomatic incident is extraordinarily powerful not just for self-protection, but also as a way to make sure that the media doesnt lose interest in the issues at play."
---Right, what do you do when you have no other route? No check on power? It isn't the only way to protest, but I certainly do see what Snowden did as constituting a form of civil disobedience.
Information is Power--that's why they want it ALL.