lupercal wrote:Elvis wrote:I am certain of one thing: if I was working at CIA-DOD-State Dept-spook central, I'd be working my ass off to discredit and cast suspicion on Assange and Wikileaks in whatever way I could. Circumspection, in spades, seems in order.
In other words, you're sure that anyone who doesn't fall hook, line and sinker for every lousy southern-strategy psyop to come down the pike is working for that *ahem* in the White House. Thanks Elvis, I'll keep that in mind.
Well, that's not what I said, and putting words in my mouth is a little akin to putting thoughts and motives into Assanage's head when, to my mind, more caution is advised. Who's falling for what?---I really don't know, and if those who are certain beyond a shadow of a doubt that Wikileaks is a setup turn out to be right, I'll be the first to eat my dunce hat. But things are so murky it's difficult to ascertain much for sure.
So just by lumping the DOD-NSA with the state department, you're giving in to the propaganda
I included State since the cables originated there, and it is well known as a CIA colony, as has been mentioned, and I really doubt Madame Secretary is all that delighted with the cables' release. I think it's a minor point; feel free to substitute 'NSA' or 'shadow government' etc. for State Department, my larger point stands.
Anyway, "the diplomatists," as H.G. Wells quaintly called them, have always been a source of trouble and intrigue and maybe we ought to start throwing a little backscatter radiation on their privileged pouches.
I'm glad that yours and Montag's arguments, and even Alice's more narrow take, are represented here for a thorough examination of what's going on, but I see leaps in logic based on assumptions, models which may or may not reflect the reality. I could dig up a pithy quote about certainty but will once again just call for a little more rigor, or at least a healthy dose of doubt.