Originally posted by french frank
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Privacy and the State
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Beef Oven
Originally posted by scottycelt View PostCertainly in the modern global village the word 'traitor' has a somewhat old-fashioned ring to it. I've never really liked the word. Even that 'devout Catholic', Guy Fawkes, wasn't anything like a 'traitor', in the sense of betraying his country to an enemy, though nowadays he certainly would be recognised as a 'home-grown' religious terrorist. At least in those days such people tended to pick on their religious and political enemies and not massacre third-party innocents like non-aligned atheists (if such a curious breed even dared to exist in those far-off days).
However, in the furore over the 'revelations' themselves, one of the main points about Snowden's behaviour has been largely ignored by the media. That is the subsequent betrayal of his oath of secrecy into which he entered into freely and knowingly.
There is something about such behaviour which many will find distinctly unworthy, whatever our views of secret service practices.
In short, hardly a man to be readily trusted at his word ... ?
Such action must follow the harm principle, which rules, Snowdon in, and terrorists out.
Action by the individual would follow
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scottycelt
If I freely-entered into a vow of silence ... like a priest at Confession, for example ... I would like to think that vital commitment of trust would be kept (I certainly hope so). If there is no commitment to an oath of silence that. of course, is a quite different matter. Those who feel they cannot handle such a commitment to silence shouldn't freely enter into one.
Snowden appears to have little 'conscience' or any sort of regret in betraying an important trust, which is surely a significant issue here?
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Beef Oven
Originally posted by scottycelt View PostIf I freely-entered into a vow of silence ... like a priest at Confession, for example ... I would like to think that vital commitment of trust would be kept (I certainly hope so). If there is no commitment to an oath of silence that. of course, is a quite different matter. Those who feel they cannot handle such a commitment to silence shouldn't freely enter into one.
Snowden appears to have little 'conscience' or any sort of regret in betraying an important trust, which is surely a significant issue here?
What ever you enter into, must be a two-way deal and is not unconditional.
When an organisation is up to no good, especially a public body, the whistle must be blown, whether it's the NHS, American 'secret service' or whatever.
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Originally posted by scottycelt View PostIf I freely-entered into a vow of silence ... like a priest at Confession, for example ... I would like to think that vital commitment of trust would be kept (I certainly hope so). If there is no commitment to an oath of silence that. of course, is a quite different matter. Those who feel they cannot handle such a commitment to silence shouldn't freely enter into one.
Snowden appears to have little 'conscience' or any sort of regret in betraying an important trust, which is surely a significant issue here?
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Originally posted by Beef Oven View PostI beg to differ Scotty.
What ever you enter into, must be a two-way deal and is not unconditional.
When an organisation is up to no good, especially a public body, the whistle must be blown, whether it's the NHS, American 'secret service' or whatever.
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scottycelt
Originally posted by Beef Oven View PostI beg to differ Scotty.
What ever you enter into, must be a two-way deal and is not unconditional.
When an organisation is up to no good, especially a public body, the whistle must be blown, whether it's the NHS, American 'secret service' or whatever.
What person in their right mind would join any national secret service without knowing and accepting what the very strict terms would be?
I certainly don't believe Mr Snowden is an idiot. One might therefore easily come to the uncharitable conclusion that he wormed his way into the organisation for the very purpose of breaking that oath for political reasons.
Fancy me being a bit of an old cynic, eh ... ? :oh:
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"If I had to choose between betraying my friend and betraying my country, I hope I would have the guts to betray my country" (E.M.Forster).
Ed Snowden and Bradley Manning "betrayed their country" seeing the ordinary citizens of the wider world as their "friends", in the name of basic political principles of freedom, privacy, freedom from oppression or invasion. They have taken on a similar role to those dissidents in totalitarian regimes who self-sacrificially risked, in many cases suffered, imprisonment and torture to uphold the basic freedom of - thought and action, the right to be an individual. Totalitarian regimes, police states - these systems attempt to subjugate a people by creating a network of mutual suspicion, by severely punishing disobedience and rewarding informers. No, we do not live in such societies - yet, but if someone grows up in this atmosphere, knowing that someone is watching you, your communications, your deeds and thoughts - then no matter how honourable the stated intention of protection or pre-emption, the individual may feel rather less inclined to dissent, to think freely and critically, to disobey the state even at the level of communication. We've already seen brutal suppression of demonstration on the streets of Britain; how could it be anything but damaging to such freedom of thought, to extend that suppression to a "Total Surveillance" of telephones and the internet - co-opting telecoms and large, global retail companies to achieve it?
Governmental attempts to control individuals - at least in a nominal democracy - will never be rapid, immediate, nor (usually) overt. It will try to creep stealthily into place. These two young men have attempted to show what is happening, and the harm it has already done.
If you insist on always "honouring a contract" we would not have had those whistleblowers who have helped, by their unrewarded bravery, to improve public health systems in Britain. And if just one "insider" could have spoken out about Hillsborough all those years ago? The difference it would have made to suffering individuals.
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Originally posted by scottycelt View Post
Snowden appears to have little 'conscience' or any sort of regret in betraying an important trust, which is surely a significant issue here?
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Originally posted by scottycelt View PostI'm afraid Mr Snowden's oath of allegiance was unconditional, Beefy.
What person in their right mind would join any national secret service without knowing and accepting what the very strict terms would be?
I certainly don't believe Mr Snowden is an idiot. One might therefore easily come to the uncharitable conclusion that he wormed his way into the organisation for the very purpose of breaking that oath for political reasons.
Fancy me being a bit of an old cynic, eh ... ? :oh:
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scottycelt
Originally posted by Frances_iom View Postwasn't this decided at Nuremburg - one does not have a defence by claiming obedience to orders - I think even Newman made a relevant comment re supremacy of conscience- in ideal circumstances it would be possible to raise concerns with senior officials in the organisation - however the US has shown repeatedly over the last few years just how whistleblowers etc will be treated (eg nearly 3 years of solitary confinement pre trial for Manning).
French frank is correct that there can be huge moral dilemmas in extreme cases and I do not wish to make light of those. However, the issues we are talking about here can hardly be equated with Nazi atrocities. We are simply talking about the alleged 'snooping' of nominally 'private' messages by the security services in order to track down and foil suspected serial killers. I would imagine that Mr Snowden had some idea of what the job entailed and agreed to take that oath of confidentiality. If he was so naive that he didn't then surely he should simply have quit and found more suitable employment, though I doubt he would have found many alternative employers who would smile benignly each time he ran to the media to expose the latest 'bad practice' at work?
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by french frank View PostYou seem not to be at all bothered by the fact that what the government/state was doing was illegal?
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