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In article ,
"Wayne Knight" wrote: "David Snedeker" wrote in message ... I am sick and tired of paying the mortgages of dumb**** spineless Government clerks without the gumption to say NO when they are told to violate the constitution Mr. Epps served in Navy for a period of time Dave. While not speaking for him, I think he comes at it from his military position and experience. They have things like firing squads or some such. from bloodsucking outfits like MITRE talking nonsense. All such assholes should note that their time is short and that WallMart is hiring. You've never met Mr. Epps nor Mr. Reid, I can speak for Mr. Reid who speaks nice of Mr. Epps and asshole is not the appropriate term. Sheesh. Thanks for the words Wayne. Snedecker has been plonked for so long I'd forgotten he existed ![]() Allen |
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On Tue, 25 Apr 2006 13:10:44 GMT, Ken Fortenberry
wrote: wrote: On Mon, 24 Apr 2006 13:16:30 GMT, Ken Fortenberry wrote: Allen wrote: The oath is not optional. If you do not like the oath and the lifelong commitment it entails you are in the wrong business and should leave. If this woman is found guilty she will be subject to penalties that she was made fully aware of when she signed the oath. She went into it with her eyes open and now there's a clear message for the rest of us that raised our right hands. Sometimes, such as in this case, the honorable thing to do is to violate your oath. The trouble with a lot of military types is they get real confused about things like honor and responsibility, preferring instead to wrap themselves in oaths and flags and turn a blind eye to torture, war crimes and murder. Mary O. McCarthy is a hero, she violated her oath and thank God she did. She realized that she has a higher responsibility to truth and humanity than to a CIA oath. We should have more like her. She'll be charged with a crime, and rightly so, but if I were on her jury she'd never be found guilty. Ken, your argument, if accepted, essentially violates the US Constitution. Here's why: The US is representative democracy, not an "actual" democracy, and as such, what the representatives do is "legal until found illegal" under the US Constitution. The "Nixon Defense" ? LOL, that's funny. No. Simply pointing out that a CIA officer turning foreign nationals over to other foreign nationals, as directed by representatives of the US government, isn't an issue of "rights" as contemplated under the US Constitution. The espionage statutes don't apply in this case because only the existence of secret prisons was revealed, not classified methods or personnel. Even if the espionage statutes did apply it would be unconstitutional according to the First Amendment to criminalize leaks of information which reveal illegal activities by the government. Today's story in the paper says that she wasn't fired for leaking the prisons story, in fact she couldn't have known about them, but for failing to report some contacts with reporters. Well, if that's the story in "the paper," then that must be the facts... ... There is simply no defense for violating oaths. There is no legal defense, but sometimes morality, honor and patriotism trump mere legalities. No, in this case, they are 4 separate and unrelated things. If anything, honor and patriotism suggest that the oath should be observed, and morality, being subjective, is not material to the observance of that oath. TC, R |
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Ken Fortenberry wrote in
et: Allen wrote: "riverman" wrote: Saw this today: http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060422/...urity_cia_dc_6 My question: how can the same country/people/nation award a journalist the Pulitzer Prize for exposing a story, and at the same time file charges against the CIA operative who exposed it? Aren't we on the same side here? Either the journalist recieved a prize for doing something wrong, or the operative is getting charged for doing something right. There seem to be two rules at play here, and no one seems to mind. The Pulitzers are not decided by the country/people/nation. They are decided by a committee. The people charging her are doing so because she took an oath not to divulge classified information and then allegedly did so. The oath is not optional. If you do not like the oath and the lifelong commitment it entails you are in the wrong business and should leave. If this woman is found guilty she will be subject to penalties that she was made fully aware of when she signed the oath. She went into it with her eyes open and now there's a clear message for the rest of us that raised our right hands. Sometimes, such as in this case, the honorable thing to do is to violate your oath. The trouble with a lot of military types is they get real confused about things like honor and responsibility, preferring instead to wrap themselves in oaths and flags and turn a blind eye to torture, war crimes and murder. Mary O. McCarthy is a hero, she violated her oath and thank God she did. She realized that she has a higher responsibility to truth and humanity than to a CIA oath. We should have more like her. She'll be charged with a crime, and rightly so, but if I were on her jury she'd never be found guilty. While I regard her as a hero, Ken, I wish one of these heros would take away this "leak" ammunition and become a whistleblower under the legal mechanisms that exist. In my understanding, a CIA whistleblower can take legally take concerns to the Senate Intelligence committee, at least as a first step. Then, if a committee member wants to release info to the press.... -- Scott Reverse name to reply |
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Scott Seidman wrote:
Ken Fortenberry wrote: Sometimes, such as in this case, the honorable thing to do is to violate your oath. The trouble with a lot of military types is they get real confused about things like honor and responsibility, preferring instead to wrap themselves in oaths and flags and turn a blind eye to torture, war crimes and murder. Mary O. McCarthy is a hero, she violated her oath and thank God she did. She realized that she has a higher responsibility to truth and humanity than to a CIA oath. We should have more like her. She'll be charged with a crime, and rightly so, but if I were on her jury she'd never be found guilty. While I regard her as a hero, Ken, I wish one of these heros would take away this "leak" ammunition and become a whistleblower under the legal mechanisms that exist. In my understanding, a CIA whistleblower can take legally take concerns to the Senate Intelligence committee, at least as a first step. Then, if a committee member wants to release info to the press.... That's probably exactly what happened, Scott. According to the story today Mary O. McCarthy couldn't have leaked the prisons story because she didn't know about them. She was fired for allegedly failing to report some contacts with the press including with the guy who wrote the prisons story. So she's no hero, just a sloppy record keeper, or that's what they're saying today at any rate. -- Ken Fortenberry |
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![]() Ken Fortenberry wrote: wrote: Ken Fortenberry wrote: Today's story in the paper says that she wasn't fired for leaking the prisons story, in fact she couldn't have known about them, but for failing to report some contacts with reporters. Well, if that's the story in "the paper," then that must be the facts... I share your cynicism, inasmuch as today's story contradicts yesterday's story in the same paper (_The Washington Post_ ). wrote: ... There is simply no defense for violating oaths. There is no legal defense, but sometimes morality, honor and patriotism trump mere legalities. No, in this case, they are 4 separate and unrelated things. If anything, honor and patriotism suggest that the oath should be observed, and morality, being subjective, is not material to the observance of that oath. We'll have to agree to disagree, in my world morality and responsibility are always material and in my opinion leaking the existence of torture prisons is more honorable and patriotic than keeping them a secret because of an oath. -- Ken Fortenberry If the oath and the "honor" are more important than morality we should retroactively pardon all the members of the SS and a few other groups in history. |
#18
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Ken Fortenberry wrote in
om: Scott Seidman wrote: Ken Fortenberry wrote: Sometimes, such as in this case, the honorable thing to do is to violate your oath. The trouble with a lot of military types is they get real confused about things like honor and responsibility, preferring instead to wrap themselves in oaths and flags and turn a blind eye to torture, war crimes and murder. Mary O. McCarthy is a hero, she violated her oath and thank God she did. She realized that she has a higher responsibility to truth and humanity than to a CIA oath. We should have more like her. She'll be charged with a crime, and rightly so, but if I were on her jury she'd never be found guilty. While I regard her as a hero, Ken, I wish one of these heros would take away this "leak" ammunition and become a whistleblower under the legal mechanisms that exist. In my understanding, a CIA whistleblower can take legally take concerns to the Senate Intelligence committee, at least as a first step. Then, if a committee member wants to release info to the press.... That's probably exactly what happened, Scott. According to the story today Mary O. McCarthy couldn't have leaked the prisons story because she didn't know about them. She was fired for allegedly failing to report some contacts with the press including with the guy who wrote the prisons story. So she's no hero, just a sloppy record keeper, or that's what they're saying today at any rate. Wow! Things certainly are getting interesting. -- Scott Reverse name to reply |
#19
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On Tue, 25 Apr 2006 14:20:46 GMT, Ken Fortenberry
wrote: We'll have to agree to disagree, in my world morality and responsibility are always material and in my opinion leaking the existence of torture prisons is more honorable and patriotic than keeping them a secret because of an oath. Hmm...OK. Now reverse it. Suppose the officer in question discovers that a foreign national, in the US, has a bomb and is planning to blow up a school, so they decide that honor, morality, and patriotism suggest that they kill this person immediately. And in doing so, they discover a co-conspirator on-scene, so they start questioning them. With no answers readily offered, they shoot them in the foot. In walks family members... In short, you are making the biggest mistake one can make with this type of thing. You are attempting to substitute _your_ judgment in place of the law for guidance as to what one should do. And that's real comforting and all...until the judgment made isn't one _you_ like. That's why things like personal judgment and "morality" have nothing to do with this and the law and lawful orders is and should be controlling. It's a whole lot easier on the soul and the psyche to lead men into the breach than to order them into it, and both are harder than following someone in, and until you've had to do all of it and understand why, it's pretty difficult to even comprehend any of it. HTH, R |
#20
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