For me it’s a matter of conscience. Weigh the good (the exposure of war crimes, transparency, knowledge of how the govt. spends our money, election meddling) with the bad (not sure what the bad is). If I ask myself if Assange deserves this treatment the answer is clearly “no”. — NOS4A2
Teaching is a collaborative, not a combative activity. — Isaac
How does it 'seem like...' they're telling the truth? Do their words come out with glitter on? — Isaac
as a result of low public confidence in the government. The report stresses that this was strongly in evidence prior to the presidential election that saw Donald Trump become president. — https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2017/02/which-are-the-worlds-strongest-democracies/
By any moral measure, not only did Assange do nothing wrong, he was doing good. The United States government, it’s allies in Europe, are the bad guys in this affair. — NOS4A2
The Espionage Act, it is no joke. — NOS4A2
OK, I'll be more blunt. The answer is it doesn't matter one jot. Your government, their government...what does it matter? You owe your government nothing, you owe no enmity to the other. that's the us vs them to which I was referring. — Isaac
and I'm the one who's comments are apparently suffused with pretensions to expertise! — Isaac
You can't. — Isaac
You've already ruled out 'doing your own research', you've ruled out listening to dissenting voice in any areas other than those in which you are an expert. You've blindfolded and gagged yourself, so do whatever your government says, it's the only option you've got left. — Isaac
Perhaps human animals are more needy than animal animals. — TiredThinker
Can we only assume fair or deserving exists objectively if our destiny is determined by a god? — TiredThinker
If our fortunes far differ that of an apparent equal, perhaps we can only assume things will equalize after life somehow? Or in non-Christian religions a karma judgement that somehow spans between lives? — TiredThinker
Yes. Your mistake is treating people's lives as if they're the plot of 'Top Gun'. There's no 'your house'/'my house'. America is made mostly of people (who suffer from the oppression of their government), Australia likewise is populated by human beings who suffer at the hands of a disgraceful government and its corporate sponsors. The rest of the world's people suffer likewise (though often at the hands of the US than their own governments). People. All the same people. Not Russians vs Americans. Not your house vs my house.
Whatever his personal motives, Assange highlighted actions which, if allowed to continue, would harm people. Sending the message that such actions will be severely punished by governments the world over will harm people. There's no us vs. them except in the storyline they want you to swallow. But then your proclivity for swallowing simplistic us vs. them narratives you're fed so that you can play out your John Wayne fantasy has been noted before. — Isaac
Empathy can't be taught. I'll read that last post of yours as being about you, and leave you to your own devices. — Banno
No, not a liar. I think you are kidding yourself. — Banno
Your argument is not against Wikileaks, but in favour of a better Wikileaks. Yep. — Banno
Given how Assange has been treated by those nations that supposedly defend and foster open discussion, do you think it likely that there will be folk willing to stand up against Russia or China? — Banno
Do you think prosecuting Assange in this way encourages such reporting? — Banno
Disappointing; disingenuous. — Banno
You would charge Assange with "not reporting on China and Russia". — Banno
I wonder why titles of court cases read like that? — L'éléphant
I will do no such thing. — L'éléphant
I know exactly what I'm doing. — L'éléphant
I ask you again, why do court cases have titles like People versus John Doe? Or The United States versus John Doe? Or Alabama versus John Doe? — L'éléphant
What's wrong with pointing out that all parties involved in an abortion deserves mention in morality. — L'éléphant
Again, a democracy needs to know when it has gone wrong. — Banno
Like a school kid yelling "We hit me back first!" — Banno
None of this is relevant. A Democracy needs to know what it is doing. Assange did the USA a favour. — Banno
Lol — StreetlightX
if you count the years of effective imprisonment without trial — StreetlightX
Yes, indeed. Likewise one would need to actually be eaten before one could really predict the outcome of jumping into the lion enclosure. So hard to tell...it's 50/50 between a powerless journalist being imprisoned for literally anything they can pin on him or the most powerful government in the world conceding to an open and frank discussion of their war crimes...a real tough call...all to play for! — Isaac
If you can't tell the difference between an effort to bring someone to justice and a farcical showtrial to gloss over attempts to silence journalism then you disqualify yourself from reasonable discussion. — Isaac
The morality of any group of individuals in society is the morality of any group of individuals in society, but not of society itself. By stating the obvious we make clear that we are not talking about society’s right to defend itself, but of a group of people’s right to enforce their morality on others, thereby fracturing society and putting it against itself. — NOS4A2
I’m not fond of speaking in such groups and groupthink, but I am capable of it. At any rate, I do not believe such groups have moralities or a collective conscience and are nothing more than loose aggregates of individuals. — NOS4A2
The morality of any group of individuals in society is the morality of any group of individuals in society, but not of society itself. By stating the obvious we make clear that we are not talking about society’s right to defend itself, but of a group of people’s right to enforce their morality on others, thereby fracturing society and putting it against itself. — NOS4A2
This topic is not about the ontological nature of morality. So Kant's metaphysics of morals, for example, has nothing to do with this. This is not about the objective or subjective nature of moral principles. Any argument or reasoning that cites this notion is irrelevant here. It is also irrelevant whether you use logic, math, symbols, or rational argument in whatever you want to say here. As I will explain below, it is about society, the majority, and the individual (the private individual) components of morality. — L'éléphant
What holds together a society is the enforcement of morality through the use of force (the law). — L'éléphant
That's immoral. — L'éléphant
To be able to marry, and to be able to sleep with who they want without risk of criminal prosecution. — Philosophim
A society is itself as good as the individuals it's composed of, no? It doesn't seem possible to look at society as distinct from its members, especially when it's mighty convenient to do so? In other words, you can't say that all that's good about America is America (society) and all that's bad about America is Americans (individuals). That doesn't sound fair or even rational. If you claim the beauty of the rose, you must also accept the pain of its thorns.
It makes zero sense, causally. — Agent Smith
The fact that the state had to put a condition for a legal abortion means it is still restrictive. — L'éléphant
I don't gain anything by pretending to be right. That's bullshit. — L'éléphant
News to me. — L'éléphant
You are conflating society with culture. Culture is language, tradition, religion, shared experience, etc. Society is glued together by laws.
— James Riley
No I'm not. Unless you mean humans are automatons glued together by laws. Apply culture to these automatons and you get society. — L'éléphant
Well we aren't Gods. We barely have the capacity to consider human predicaments let alone all life. — TiredThinker
I consider the deserving of the suffering of one and the lack of suffering of the other. — TiredThinker
Damnation on conservative religious doctrine!!! — Bitter Crank