TheGoodEarth wrote:Agree MKG. He has decided to mess with the big boys and is now facing the consequences. Fortunately in my view he has some very wealthy people on his side who will help him keep these documents in the public eye. At the end of the day, what he is publishing is correspondence by officials appointed by the taxpayer (i.e us and US citizens). Why shouldn't we know about this? We elect and appoint these f*****s to represent us - of course they should be fully accountable.
It has turned into a them and us scenario, however we are all us because we pay for them through our taxes.
I would tend to disagree with this as "we", in my oppinion do not elect or appoint these people anymore than we elect or appoint civil servants or military generals etc. These documents were stolen from a computer system and given to a third party. My concern is that somewhere in the millions of documents, cables and emails etc there are some people, spys or "others" that we need to protect ther country getting named and thus are put at risk.
Why do we need to know if China doesn't like North Korea or that the saudi's wanted America to attack Iran. We as common folk have no power whatsoever to influence america and stop them attacking Iran or have China put pressure on North Korea to stop building a nuke etc. We certainly don't need to know what some ambasador thinks about what prince Andrew says over dinner. What we need to know is that the elected governments keep us safe, free and where possible healthy and free.
Julian Assange has bit off more than he can chew and will end up in a state pen somewhere in deepest Texas sometime in the next 10 years. If you stick your head over the parapet expect to get it shot at.