This House Would Call Edward Snowden a Hero

georgephillip

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Dec 27, 2009
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"Last Thursday Chris Hedges opened a team debate at the Oxford Union at Oxford University with this speech arguing in favor of the proposition 'This house would call Edward Snowden a hero.'

"The others on the Hedges team, which won the debate by an audience vote of 212 to 171, were William E. Binney, a former National Security Agency official and a whistle-blower; Chris Huhne, a former member of the British Parliament; and Annie Machon, a former intelligence officer for the United Kingdom.

"The opposing team was made up of Philip J. Crowley, a former U.S. State Department officer; Stewart A. Baker, a former chief counsel for the National Security Agency; Jeffrey Toobin, an American television and print commentator; and Oxford student Charles Vaughn."

Hedges, who has worked as a war correspondent in conflicts ranging from Central America to the Balkans to Iraq, begins in opening remarks by contrasting combat courage with moral courage and linking Snowden's heroism with an a similar example from My Lai:

"I have been to war.

"I have seen physical courage.

"But this kind of courage is not moral courage.

"Very few of even the bravest warriors have moral courage.

"For moral courage means to defy the crowd, to stand up as a solitary individual, to shun the intoxicating embrace of comradeship, to be disobedient to authority, even at the risk of your life, for a higher principle.

"And with moral courage comes persecution.

"The American Army pilot Hugh Thompson had moral courage. He landed his helicopter between a platoon of U.S. soldiers and 10 terrified Vietnamese civilians during the My Lai massacre.

"He ordered his gunner to fire his M60 machine gun on the advancing U.S. soldiers if they began to shoot the villagers.

"And for this act of moral courage, Thompson, like Snowden, was hounded and reviled. Moral courage always looks like this. It is always defined by the state as treason—the Army attempted to cover up the massacre and court-martial Thompson.

"It is the courage to act and to speak the truth.

"Thompson had it.

"Daniel Ellsberg had it.

"Martin Luther King had it.

"What those in authority once said about them they say today about Snowden.

“'My country, right or wrong' is the moral equivalent of 'my mother, drunk or sober,' G.K. Chesterton reminded us."

Chris Hedges: Edward Snowden?s Moral Courage - Chris Hedges - Truthdig
 
Snowden is a Hero
Snowden has proven far more useful to the American people than James Clapper, for example:

"James Clapper, the director of national intelligence, had the audacity to lie under oath to Congress. This spectacle was a rare glimpse into the absurdist theater that now characterizes American political life. A congressional oversight committee holds public hearings. It is lied to. It knows it is being lied to. The person who lies knows the committee members know he is lying. And the committee, to protect their security clearances, says and does nothing."

We need more Snowdens and fewer Clappers, IMHO.

Chris Hedges: Edward Snowden?s Moral Courage - Chris Hedges - Truthdig
 
No doubt about it Snowden is a hero and if karma has its' way the next winner of the Nobel Peace Prize.
 
Snowden is a Hero

Snowden is a magnificent hero!
It's hard to argue against the claim that Snowden has enhanced meaningful debate over the government's infringements of Constitutional guarantees:

"It was only after Snowden methodically leaked documents that disclosed crimes committed by the state that genuine public debate began.

"Elected officials, for the first time, promised reform.

"The president, who had previously dismissed our questions about the extent of state surveillance by insisting there was strict congressional and judicial oversight, appointed a panel to review intelligence.

"Three judges have, since the Snowden revelations, ruled on the mass surveillance, with two saying the NSA spying was unconstitutional and the third backing it.

"None of this would have happened—none of it—without Snowden."

Chris Hedges: Edward Snowden?s Moral Courage - Chris Hedges - Truthdig
 
No doubt about it Snowden is a hero and if karma has its' way the next winner of the Nobel Peace Prize.
"Edward Snowden spent the last year revealing some of the government's most tightly held secrets, kicking off a massive debate about the proper role of America's intelligence services.

"Now, a pair of Norwegian politicians have nominated the NSA leaker for a Nobel Peace Prize.

"In their nomination letter, Baard Vegar Solhjell and Snorre Valen, who hail from the Socialist Left party, said Snowden's revelations 'contributed to a more stable and peaceful world order.'

"Nominations — which are generally secret but sometimes announced by those submitting the paperwork — must be filed by Feb. 1. Snowden likely has dozens of competitors, so there's no guarantee he'll get anywhere. Still, it'd be ironic if Snowden and Obama each wound up winning the same honor just a handful of years apart."

Should Snowden win this year's Peace Prize, imagine the ratings if Obama agreed to a one hour debate with Edward on the NSA's assault on the First and Fourth Amendments of the US Constiution?

'Seem like a former Constitutional Law professor would have a big advantage?


Edward Snowden has been nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize
 
Snowden is young.

In time he'll achieve sufficient age to run for President and will be elected unless a drone gets him first.
"It was an innocuous e-mail, one of millions sent every day by spouses with updates on the situation at home.

"But this one was of particular interest to the National Security Agency and contained clues that put the sender’s husband in the crosshairs of a CIA drone.

"Days later, Hassan Ghul — an associate of Osama bin Laden who provided a critical piece of intelligence that helped the CIA find the al-Qaeda leader — was killed by a drone strike in Pakistan’s tribal belt.

"The U.S. government has never publicly acknowledged killing Ghul. But documents provided to The Washington Post by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden confirm his demise in October 2012 and reveal the agency’s extensive involvement in the targeted killing program that has served as a centerpiece of President Obama’s counterterrorism strategy."

http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/documents-reveal-nsas-extensive-involvement-in-targeted-killing-program/2013/10/16/29775278-3674-11e3-8a0e-4e2cf80831fc_story.html

Maybe drones will put Snowden in the White House?
 

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