- cross-posted to:
- world@lemmy.world
- news@beehaw.org
- cross-posted to:
- world@lemmy.world
- news@beehaw.org
A decade after Snowden exposed NSA’s mass surveillance in cooperation with the British GCHQ, only about 1 percent of the documents have been published, but three major facts can finally be revealed thanks to a doctoral thesis in applied cryptography by Jacob Appelbaum.
I don’t think that whistleblowing is a crime.
There are rules to being designated a whistle-blower and he didn’t follow them.
He did actually try to go through those channels, unsuccessfully, so he was left with no other choice.
That’s a far cry from storming the capitol after losing the election to build an even further right state.
What matters to me is the morality of a rule (unreasonable searches, accepting loss), not the fact that a rule was broken.
He didn’t get what he wanted so decided to brake the law. Does sound like Trump.
What matters to me is the morality of a rule (unreasonable searches, accepting loss), not the fact that a rule was broken.
You are not in charge of deciding the morality of law. We have courts that decide such matters. What you’re really saying is that your feelings about a law is more important than the law itself.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/An_unjust_law_is_no_law_at_all
This guy: “Psshhhhh whatever, if it’s not a Robocop-like fanaticism for the law, then it’s feelings. I am very rational.”
@explodicle yeah, @Rapidcreek’s argument here hasn’t really flown since before Nuremburg.
We are a nation of laws or we are not.