Assange Amazing Adventures of Captain Neo in Blonde Land.

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Re: Assange Amazing Adventures of Captain Neo in Blonde Land

Postby seemslikeadream » Mon Dec 06, 2010 10:43 pm

Indecent Exposure: WikiLeaks Hounded for Showing Power Its True Face
WRITTEN BY CHRIS FLOYD
MONDAY, 06 DECEMBER 2010 23:30
Even as WikiLeaks fights for its life -- a phrase that becomes less metaphorical by the day, especially for Julian Assange, hounded and hunted by several governments -- its revelations continue to shake the world's power structures. Every day we are treated to the edifying spectacle of the most powerful and privileged people on earth scurrying around like panicked rats, trying to escape the streams of light pouring into their filthy backrooms, exposing their ruthless machtpolitik -- and their monumental incompetence at every level.

The trove of leaked diplomatic cables is too rich to encompass or fully process right away. Dip your hand into one batch and you come out with a whole handful of jewels, each one worthy of careful, in-depth analysis, buttressed with innumerable links to current events and detailed historical context. This is the work of months, even years. For now, we can only survey the highlights as they are released and draw some initial impressions.

Two things stand out immediately. First, the leaked cables reveal -- or rather, confirm -- that American "intelligence" on the activities of foreign nations is based almost totally on hearsay, rumor, gossip and fantasies brewed from a deadly mix of arrogance and ignorance. Second, they show that the overwhelming majority of the public statements made by top American officials about the nation's foreign policy are deliberate, knowing lies: the cheapest, most threadbare bromides about America's noble intentions coupled with cynical fear-mongering, which knowingly fans low-grade -- or non-existent -- threats into dire "emergencies" that somehow, always, fill the coffers of war-profiteers (and that new breed of gluttonous predator, the security-profiteers) and require ever-greater expansions of authoritarian power.

Or as Arthur Silber, who has explored these themes in depth for years, puts it: "They'll lie about everything."

Take for example a couple of the latest Guardian stories from the WikiLeaks trove: "Cables portray Saudi Arabia as cash machine for terrorists" and "Saudi Arabia rated a bigger threat to Iraqi stability than Iran." These are not particularly major revelations, but they are highly illustrative for our purposes. In them, we find American diplomats flinging accusations of extensive terrorist funding by powerful Saudis and, in particular, by Saudi-based charities which work around the world. Even as they report their assertions back to Washington, however, the diplomats admit that the "intelligence" they are relying upon is merely "suggestive," that it is based on "limited information," that confirmation of the charges and rumors is "hard to come by."

This is not to say that powerful Saudi interests -- that is, staunch political allies and business partners of the American elite -- are not helping finance extremist organisations around the world. This is hardly a secret: the Saudi Arabian monarchy itself is one of the most extremist organizations in the world, openly propagating a retrograde and repressive brand of Islam, even as its bloated ranks of royalty enjoy every possible secular indulgence in their Western pleasure palaces.

And the American government has often used the Saudis' extremist networks to advance its own agenda -- usually the undermining of any government or movement (secular or religious) that might offer a genuine alternative to thuggish American clients (such as the brutal dictatorship in Egypt) or simply to the general principle of rule by corrupt, rapacious elites (such as our own dear great and good in God's shining city on the hill). Must we bring up yet again the great US-Saudi alliance in building a worldwide network of armed Islamic extremists to fight the great Jesus-Mohammed-Allah-Jehovah crusade against the Commies in Afghanistan? (Well yes, we must, given the total amnesia that afflicts the American memory, where every new day is a fresh clean slate of goodness and righteousness.) And that, of course, just scratches the surface in the US-Saudi use of Sunni extremists over the years, in such places as Bosnia and more recently in Lebanon and Palestine, where, as Seymour Hersh reported, the Americans and Saudis were backing al Qaeda allies -- yes, yes, years after 9/11 -- to try to counteract Hizbollah and Hamas.

But are Saudi tycoons and Saudi charities specifically funding any extremist organizations that might not be serving American interests at this particular moment? No one knows -- certainly not American "intelligence," with its "limited information" and its boldly asserted unsupported suppositions. But what is interesting and revealing in this instance is that, in private, Washington evidently believes that powerful Saudis, with the knowledge if not the outright connivance of Saudi leaders, are financing America's enemies in the "War on Terror" -- but in public we hear nothing but high praise for our stalwart Saudi allies and their anti-terrorism efforts. Again, the Wikileaks revelations lay bare the ruthless power politics that actually govern world affairs, where murder, corruption, terror and war are simply the tools of the trade in a vicious, murky racket of ever-shifting alliances that have no rhyme or reason beyond a bestial urge for dominance.

The other story, about the jackal-fight over the carcass of Iraq after its American ravaging, is perhaps even more revealing -- and more sinister. Here we find American officials reporting back to the Potomac court that the imperial satraps in Baghdad are far more worried about meddling from the Saudis than from the Great Satanic Googily-Moogily of Iran. According to the dispatches, the Iraqi leaders are keen to assure their American patrons that they can easily "manage" the Iranians, who want stability; but the Saudis wanted a "weak and fractured" Iraq, and were even "fomenting terrorism that would destabilize the government."

Naturally, the 2009 report of the then US ambassador to Iraq, Christopher Hill, is riddled with arrogant dismissal of the Iraqis' own assessment of their situation, and parrots back to Team Obama some of the usual evidence-free mind-reading of what the Great Googily-Moogily is really up to in Iraq -- which, even in Hill's most malign construction, is a level of "interference" several orders of magnitude less than, oh, say, invading the country, killing a million of its people, driving four million more from their homes and unleashing endless sectarian war.

But after tossing his bosses the ritual red meat, Hill gets down to the reality which, as our better know full well, lies behind their never-ending warmongering against Iran. He writes that the relation between Iran and Iraq is based on natural, "longstanding historical realities" that "should not lead to alarmist tendencies or reactions on our part." Iran's influence, he says, "should not be overestimated," and that the two countries will find many "points of divergence" on various issues, such as borders, water rights and ordinary political jockeying.

Again, the bipartisan American power structure knows very well that there is no great existential threat -- or even a minor military threat -- emanating from Iran. Yes, the Iranian government is a nasty, corrupt, amoral enterprise, blatantly violating its professed ideals and generally stinking up the joint. (Why, do you know they even execute women, and that their president believes that some kind of long-dead religious figure is going to come again at the end of time and take over the universe? What primitive barbarians, eh?) But so what? As the WikiLeaks cables have confirmed once again, all governments fall somewhere along this same inhumane spectrum. Readers can perhaps decide for themselves just where on that spectrum a nation that has engaged in the above-noted act of mass-murdering aggressive war in Iraq might fall.

But whatever they say amongst themselves, in public our bipartisan elites are eager to stoke fear and hatred of Iran among the populace, with the ever-present threat of war against the Persian demons held out continuously as an imminent, desirable prospect -- yea, verily, a moral good, done in the service of all humankind. Just as they knew all along that Iraq posed no threat yet spent years -- years -- wearing away all resistance to the act of aggression they craved, so too with Iran. It may appear at times that these homicidal cravings for violent domination have been put on the back burner, as we sometimes saw with Iraq; but rest assured -- that back burner is itself kept on high heat, and the stew of war is always boiling.

One final observation: it is remarkable that the WikiLeaks release of diplomatic cables has provoked a far more virulent and draconian reaction from government officials -- and from their craven sycophants in the mainstream media -- than we ever saw after the earlier releases about Iraq and Afghanistan. Yet many of those Terror War releases provided detailed, eyewitness accounts of horrific acts of murder, brutality, and depraved indifference toward the slaughter of innocent people. It seems the American elite are more outraged at being caught in various diplomatic faux pas than being shown to be perpetrators and facilitators of murder, repression and state terror. That's because they know that their cowed and passive subjects -- continually stoked with the hatred and fear of foreign demons -- don't care how many darkies get killed on the other side of the world. And so the Terror War leaks occasioned no more than a few days of Beltway bluster.

But the new releases put a bit of a crimp in business as usual for our backroom operators, exposing some of the rank hypocrisy and all-pervasive corruption of our great and good -- and of their clients and partners around the world. All this might -- just might -- give the rabble unseemly notions ... such as the idea that their interests are perhaps not being served all that well by a system run by and for a handful of liars, tyrants, killers and thieves. We can't have that.

And so Julian Assange is now being hounded -- perhaps to his eventual death -- not for revealing war crimes and atrocities, but for showing us a glimpse of our leaders as they really are: stupid, vain, petty and savage.


Julian Assange's legal team will fight extradition
Once a European arrest warrant is validated, Assange's arrest would be inevitable and he be brought before a magistrate

Afua Hirsch
The Guardian, Tuesday 7 December 2010

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, who could be facing extradition to Sweden. Photograph: Valentin Flauraud/Reuters
Uncertainty surrounded Julian Assange's legal future last night as the WikiLeaks founder agreed to meet British police to discuss allegations of sexual assault against him in Sweden. Assange was not arrested last night, but that remains a possibility after the Serious Organised Crime Agency (Soca) received a European arrest warrant (EAW) from Sweden.

Assange's lawyers said he had not been formally charged in Sweden, where he faces the sex allegations. But under the EAW system, a warrant can only be issued once a charge has been made.

Assange is wanted for questioning by Swedish officials, and could consent to return there to co-operate with their investigation. While the EAW's legal status is uncertain, once validated by British authorities Assange's arrest would be inevitable and he would have to brought before a magistrate "as soon as practicable", or in most cases within 24 hours. If arrested Assange will appear before Westminster magistrates.

A key issue will be whether Assange is released on bail during that period. His lawyers are reported to be putting together a generous package, including a security of at least £100,000 and a surety – where third parties guarantee to pay the court if he absconds. However, the allegations facing Assange are serious in Swedish law and it is often more difficult to secure bail for these.

Assange's lawyers are disputing the credibility of the allegations and the motive behind Sweden's decision to investigate the matter further, after prosecutors dropped it earlier this year, and are likely to challenge the grounds for extradition.

But if extradited to Sweden under the EAW, Assange will be vulnerable to other extradition requests from countries including the US. The US has an extradition treaty with Sweden dating back to 1960s, when the two countries agreed to "make more effective the cooperation of the two countries in the repression of crime." Extradition under the treaty is likely to face a number of obstacles, not least the fact that the likely charges facing Assange in the US – under the Espionage Act or other legislation protecting national security – are not included in the exhaustive list of offences set out in the law. There may also be issues of jurisdiction, since the offences which Assange is accused of did not take place in the US.Even if Assange's case falls outside the scope of Sweden's treaty with the US, there would still be scope for the country to agree to his extradition to the US.

Swedish law permits extradition more generally to countries outside Europe, although the process is subject to safeguards, including a ban on extradition for "political offences" or where the suspect has reason to fear persecution on account of their membership of a social group or political beliefs.

Any extradition from Sweden to the US could only take place after the current proceedings were concluded. With Assange's lawyers intending to dispute those proceedings on all grounds, it seems the prospect of any extradition to the US remains some way away.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Assange Amazing Adventures of Captain Neo in Blonde Land

Postby wintler2 » Tue Dec 07, 2010 12:13 am

http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2010/12/07/3086381.htm?section=justin

Swiss Post closes Assange's bank account

The Swiss Post Office bank closed an account set up by WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, saying he gave "false information" after claiming to have lost 100,000 euros in a financial clampdown this week.

The bank, PostFinance, said in a statement that it had "ended its business relationship with WikiLeaks founder Julian Paul Assange."

"The Australian citizen provided false information regarding his place of residence during the account-opening process."

Assange had given an address in the Swiss city of Geneva as his residence, it added.

Wikileaks retorted in a Twitter message that the Swiss bank had frozen 31,000 euros ($41,700) of "Julian Assange's defence fund and personal assets."

"The technicality used to seize the defence fund was that Mr Assange, as a homeless refugee attempting to gain residency in Switzerland, had used his lawyer's address in Geneva for the bank's correspondence," it added.

WikiLeaks advertised the PostFinance account details online to "donate directly to the Julian Assange and other WikiLeaks Staff Defence Fund," giving an account name of "Assange Julian Paul, Geneve."

The closure marked a new setback for the WikiLeaks frontman, amid intense pressure to close the whistleblowing website since it began releasing highly sensitive US state department cables.

US-based online payment service PayPal on Friday, blocked financial transfers to WikiLeaks after governments around the world initiated legal action against the website.

That froze 60,000 euros, according to the site.

"WikiLeaks and Julian have lost 100,000 euros in assets this week," it claimed. ..
"Wintler2, you are a disgusting example of a human being, the worst kind in existence on God's Earth. This is not just my personal judgement.." BenD

Research question: are all god botherers authoritarians?
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Re: Assange Amazing Adventures of Captain Neo in Blonde Land

Postby JackRiddler » Tue Dec 07, 2010 12:42 am

Interpol Warrant

http://www.interpol.int/public/data/wan ... 6.asp?HM=1

Image

Legal Status

Present family name: ASSANGE
Forename: JULIAN PAUL
Sex: MALE
Date of birth: 3 July 1971 (39 years old)
Place of birth: TOWNSVILLE, QUEENSLAND, Australia
Language spoken: English
Nationality: Australia


Offences

Categories of Offences: SEX CRIMES
Arrest Warrant Issued by: INTERNATIONAL PUBLIC PROSECUTION OFFICE IN GOTHENBURG / Sweden

IF YOU HAVE ANY INFORMATION CONTACT

YOUR NATIONAL OR LOCAL POLICE

GENERAL SECRETARIAT OF INTERPOL


Image

.
We meet at the borders of our being, we dream something of each others reality. - Harvey of R.I.

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I am by virtue of its might divine,
The highest Wisdom and the first Love.

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Re: Assange Amazing Adventures of Captain Neo in Blonde Land

Postby matrixdutch » Tue Dec 07, 2010 7:54 am

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange arrested in UK

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/wikileaks

4 mins ago

.LONDON – WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange surrendered to London police on Tuesday as part of a Swedish sex-crimes investigation, the latest blow to an organization that faces legal, financial and technological challenges after releasing hundreds of secret U.S. diplomatic cables.

Assange was due at Westminster Magistrate's Court later Tuesday. If he challenges his extradition to Sweden, he will likely be remanded into custody or released on bail until another judge rules on whether to extradite him, a spokeswoman for the extradition department said on customary condition of anonymity.

Since beginning to release the cables last week, WikiLeaks has seen its bank accounts canceled, its web sites attacked and the U.S. government launch a criminal investigation, saying the group has jeopardized national security and diplomatic efforts around the world. It has also seen supporters come to its aid by setting up over 500 mirror sites around the world.

The legal troubles for Assange, a 39-year-old Australian, stem from allegations leveled against him by two women he met while in Sweden over the summer. Assange is accused of rape and sexual molestation in one case and of sexual molestation and unlawful coercion in another.

Assange denies the allegations, which his British attorney Mark Stephens says stem from a "dispute over consensual but unprotected sex." Assange and Stephens have suggested that the prosecution is being manipulated for political reasons.

A spokesman for WikiLeaks called Assange's arrest an attack on media freedom and said it won't prevent the organization from releasing more secret documents.

"This will not change our operation," Kristinn Hrafnsson told The Associated Press.

WikiLeaks has angered the U.S. government by releasing tens of thousands of secret U.S. military documents, followed by the ongoing release of what it says will eventually be a quarter-million cables from U.S. diplomatic posts around the world. It provided those documents to five newspapers, which have been working with WikiLeaks to edit the cables for publication.

The campaign against WikiLeaks began with an effort to jam the website as the cables were being released. U.S. Internet companies Amazon.com, Inc., EveryDNS and PayPal, Inc. then severed their links with WikiLeaks in quick succession, forcing it to jump to new servers and adopt a new primary Web address — wikileaks.ch — in Switzerland.

Swiss authorities closed Assange's bank account Monday, and MasterCard has pulled the plug on payments to WikiLeaks, according to technology news website CNET. A European representative for the credit card company didn't immediately return a call seeking comment.

The attacks appeared to have been at least partially successful in stanching the flow of secrets: WikiLeaks has not published any new cables in more than 24 hours, although stories about them have continued to appear in The New York Times and Britain's The Guardian, two of the newspapers given advance access to the cables.

WikiLeaks' Twitter feed, generally packed with updates, appeals, and pithy comments, has been silent since Monday night, when the group warned that Assange's arrest was imminent.
Our truth consists of illusions that we have forgotten are illusions - Nietzsche
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Re: Assange Amazing Adventures of Captain Neo in Blonde Land

Postby DoYouEverWonder » Tue Dec 07, 2010 8:17 am

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange arrested in UK

-----------

Well now the world is safe from one more man who doesn't like to wear a raincoat, but in the meantime we still can't find Osama.
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Re: Assange Amazing Adventures of Captain Neo in Blonde Land

Postby seemslikeadream » Tue Dec 07, 2010 11:13 am

Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Assange Amazing Adventures of Captain Neo in Blonde Land

Postby matrixdutch » Tue Dec 07, 2010 2:23 pm

DoYouEverWonder wrote:WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange arrested in UK


One word: Rendition :tear
Our truth consists of illusions that we have forgotten are illusions - Nietzsche
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Re: Assange Amazing Adventures of Captain Neo in Blonde Land

Postby matrixdutch » Tue Dec 07, 2010 2:31 pm

Judge denies WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange bail

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20101207/ap_on_hi_te/wikileaks

By CASSANDRA VINOGRAD and RAPHAEL G. SATTER, Associated Press Cassandra Vinograd And Raphael G. Satter, Associated Press
2 mins ago

.LONDON – A British judge sent Julian Assange to jail on Tuesday, denying bail to the WikiLeaks founder after Assange vowed to fight efforts to be extradited to Sweden in a sex-crimes investigation.

Despite Assange's legal troubles, a WikiLeaks spokesman insisted the flow of secret U.S. diplomatic cables would not be affected. He also downplayed efforts to constrict the group's finances after both Visa and MasterCard cut off key funding methods Tuesday.

"This will not change our operation," spokesman Kristinn Hrafnsson told The Associated Press. As if to underline the point, WikiLeaks released a dozen new diplomatic cables, its first publication in more than 24 hours, including the details of a NATO defense plan for Poland, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania that prompted an indignant response from the Russian envoy to the alliance.

Assange turned himself in to Scotland Yard on Tuesday morning, and was sent to the City of Westminster Magistrates' Court in the early afternoon. He showed no reaction as Judge Howard Riddle denied him bail and sent him to jail until his next extradition hearing on Dec. 14.

U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates, visiting with Afghan President Hamid Karzai and U.S. troops in Afghanistan, was pleased to hear that Assange had been arrested.

"That sounds like good news to me," he said Tuesday.

Riddle asked the 39-year-old Australian whether he understood that he could agree to be extradited to Sweden. Assange, dressed in a navy blue suit, cleared his throat and said: "I understand that and I do not consent."

The judge said he had grounds to believe that the former computer hacker — a self-described homeless refugee — might not show up to his next hearing if he were granted bail.

Arguments during the hour-long hearing detailed the sex accusations against Assange, all of which he has denied.

Attorney Gemma Lindfield, acting on behalf of the Swedish authorities, outlined one allegation of rape, two allegations of molestation and one of unlawful coercion stemming from Assange's separate sexual encounters in August with two women in Sweden.

Lindfield said one woman accused Assange of pinning her down and refusing to use a condom on the night of Aug. 14 in Stockholm. That woman also accused of Assange of molesting her in a way "designed to violate her sexual integrity" several days later.

A second woman accused Assange of having sex with her without a condom while she was asleep at her Stockholm home.

Assange's lawyers have claimed the accusations stem from a "dispute over consensual but unprotected sex" and say the women only made the claims after finding out about each other's relationships with Assange. WikiLeaks lawyer Mark Stephens says the case has taken on political overtones — a claim Swedish officials have rejected.

Legally, there is a good chance Assange will be heading to Sweden. Experts say European arrest warrants like the one issued by Sweden can be tough to beat, barring mental or physical incapacity. Even if the warrant were defeated on a technicality, Sweden could simply issue a new one.

Assange's Swedish lawyer Bjorn Hurtig said it was difficult to say how long the extradition process in Britain would take, but it could be anywhere from a week to two months.

It was not publicly known where Assange was being held, since British police never reveal that for privacy and security reasons. Some prisoners occasionally get Internet access, although only under close monitoring.

Meanwhile, Stephens said he would reapply for bail, noting that several prominent Britons — including socialite Jemima Khan and filmmaker Ken Loach — had each offered to pay 20,000 pounds ($31,500) as surety so Assange could go free.

WikiLeaks, meanwhile, came under increasing financial pressure Tuesday. Collecting individual donations — the mainstay of its operations — became more difficult after credit card companies said they would refuse to process donations to the site.

Visa Inc. said it would "suspend Visa payment acceptance on WikiLeaks' website pending further investigation into the nature of its business and whether it contravenes Visa operating rules." MasterCard said it would suspend payments "until the situation is resolved."

PayPal Inc., a popular online payment service, has already cut its links to the website, while Swiss authorities closed Assange's new Swiss bank account on Monday, freezing tens of thousands of euros, according to his lawyers.

WikiLeaks is still soliciting donations through bank transfers to affiliates in Iceland and Germany, as well as by mail to an address at University of Melbourne in Australia.

As WikiLeaks has come under legal, financial and technological attack, an online army of supporters has come to its aid, sending donations, fighting off computer attacks and setting up over 500 mirror sites around the world to make sure that the secret documents are published regardless of what happens to the organization.

Hrafnsson, the WikiLeaks spokesman, said the group had no plans yet to carry through on its threat to release the key to a heavily encrypted version of some of the most sensitive U.S. diplomatic cables — an "insurance" file that has been distributed to supporters and news media in case of an emergency.

Beginning in July, WikiLeaks angered the U.S. government by releasing tens of thousands of secret U.S. military documents on the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. Last week, it began a rolling release of what WikiLeaks says are a quarter-million cables from U.S. diplomatic posts around the world. The group provided those documents to five major newspapers, which have been working with WikiLeaks to edit the cables for publication, and has been sharing subsets of the cache with other publications in recent days.

The U.S. government has launched a criminal investigation, saying the group has jeopardized U.S. national security and diplomatic efforts around the world.

__

Associated Press Writer Gillian Smith contributed to this report.
Our truth consists of illusions that we have forgotten are illusions - Nietzsche
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Re: Assange Amazing Adventures of Captain Neo in Blonde Land

Postby crikkett » Tue Dec 07, 2010 6:52 pm



After weeks and weeks without Urban Survival even crossing my mind I suddenly wondered, how are these guys scoring themselves on all this 'release language' they happened to predict for November?

And then here you are with the answer. Thanks!

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Re: Assange Amazing Adventures of Captain Neo in Blonde Land

Postby vanlose kid » Tue Dec 07, 2010 7:09 pm

Julian Assange Captured by World's Dating Police

Dear Interpol:

As a longtime feminist activist, I have been overjoyed to discover your new commitment to engaging in global manhunts to arrest and prosecute men who behave like narcissistic jerks to women they are dating.

I see that Julian Assange is accused of having consensual sex with two women, in one case using a condom that broke. I understand, from the alleged victims' complaints to the media, that Assange is also accused of texting and tweeting in the taxi on the way to one of the women's apartments while on a date, and, disgustingly enough, 'reading stories about himself online' in the cab.

Both alleged victims are also upset that he began dating a second woman while still being in a relationship with the first. (Of course, as a feminist, I am also pleased that the alleged victims are using feminist-inspired rhetoric and law to assuage what appears to be personal injured feelings. That's what our brave suffragette foremothers intended!).

Thank you again, Interpol. I know you will now prioritize the global manhunt for 1.3 million guys I have heard similar complaints about personally in the US alone -- there is an entire fraternity at the University of Texas you need to arrest immediately. I also have firsthand information that John Smith in Providence, Rhode Island, went to a stag party -- with strippers! -- that his girlfriend wanted him to skip, and that Mark Levinson in Corvallis, Oregon, did not notice that his girlfriend got a really cute new haircut -- even though it was THREE INCHES SHORTER.

Terrorists. Go get 'em, Interpol!

Yours gratefully,

Naomi Wolf

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/naomi-wol ... =fb&src=sp

*
"Teach them to think. Work against the government." – Wittgenstein.
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Re: Assange Amazing Adventures of Captain Neo in Blonde Land

Postby seemslikeadream » Wed Dec 08, 2010 7:07 pm

Howzzat! Assange leads online poll for 'Person of the Year'


Read more: Howzzat! Assange leads online poll for 'Person of the Year' - The Times of India http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/worl ... z17Z3buL2e
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Assange Amazing Adventures of Captain Neo in Blonde Land

Postby seemslikeadream » Thu Dec 09, 2010 3:38 pm

The U.S.'s Weak Legal Case Against WikiLeaks
http://www.time.com/time/nation/article ... ostpopular
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Assange Amazing Adventures of Captain Neo in Blonde Land

Postby seemslikeadream » Thu Dec 09, 2010 5:16 pm

Assange's hiding place: U.K. club for journalists
'He's not some kind of evil plotter in a bunker,' says the founder of the Frontline Club
Julian Assange hid from public view at the Frontline Club in London, a gathering place for journalists.

By Ian Johnston

The Frontline Club in London is the kind of place where war correspondents and investigative reporters mingle with admirers and wannabes, fired by a shared passion for exposing government spin, revealing the truth — and fine dining.

So when WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange found himself at the center of an international firestorm over the website's publication of leaked U.S. diplomatic cables, he knew where he would be well-fed and, more importantly, safe.

Amid calls for Assange's assassination or prosecution under espionage laws and condemnation from U.S. commentators like Sarah Palin — who dubbed him "an anti-American operative with blood on his hands" — the Frontline Club closed ranks and kept his whereabouts to themselves.

Vaughan Smith, a former television cameraman who founded Frontline, said Assange had previously held talks and other events at the club and they "quite liked having him here because he's made us a more interesting venue."

Assange lived in rented rooms at the club for about three weeks until he surrendered to British police on Tuesday. Until then, no one at the club, members or employees, spilled the news of his presence.

"It's very curious. While all this was happening, the media has been presenting him as on the run and all these things. I've always been rather amused by that," Smith told msnbc.com.

"He's always worried some nut will come and hurt him, so he's quite discreet. I haven't felt it was my job to announce where he's been. I feel if journalists or the security services want to find him, they can do the work," he added.

.Smith, who was an officer in the prestigious Grenadier Guards regiment and was shot twice during his journalistic career, believes Assange is "a hero."

"The guy has incredible courage. He is one of the few people prepared to do what they believe in ... He's not some kind of evil plotter in a bunker," Smith said.

Despite his personal admiration, Smith said he is still making up his mind about what Assange has done: "You can have heroes on winning and losing sides of conflict and you can have heroes fighting for the wrong cause."

Smith said Assange believes the Swedish prosecution of him is "really an attempt to get hold" of him so he can eventually be sent to the U.S. He said Assange seems "terrified" of this prospect.

"He thinks he will be strung up and bullied" in America.

Assange is accused of sexual misconduct with two Swedish women and is being jailed in the U.K. while he awaits an extradition hearing next week. At this point, there are no charges in the U.S., and there is no effort to bring him there.

"I love America. I think America is a fantastic place. I'm very, very concerned about the way the authorities are reacting against this," Smith said. "The odd thing is it's liberal democracies that seem to be reacting so badly to all this."

People should consider whether they want to live in "a world with less secrecy" and recognize that "some of what we (Western countries) say isn't entirely true."

Among U.K. journalists, Smith is hardly alone in sharing some sympathies with Assange.

Freedom at stake
Jeremy Dear, general-secretary of the U.K.'s National Union of Journalists, said in an email to msnbc.com that WikiLeaks had been the target of "unwarranted attacks" and described it as "a vital source of information for journalists."

"The issue is bigger than one individual," he said. "Many will be inspired by the way in which WikiLeaks has been able to lift the veil of secrecy under which too many governments and corporations seek to operate."

"Their strong defense of sources and the impact their work has had will also encourage more whistleblowers to come forward," Dear said.

.He had little doubt that the conflict would lead to "a further crackdown on freedom of expression" but said that the censors wouldn't win.

"Governments spend a great deal of time, money and technology in seeking to control the message," Dear said. "This will give those authoritarian tendencies the excuse to further seek to exert their control. What WikiLeaks and many other people all over the world prove though is that there are many ways to beat the censors."

Heather Blake, the U.K. representative of Reporters Without Borders, stressed WikiLeaks was a journalistic enterprise.

.."Julian Assange founded WikiLeaks, which as an organization is no different than the other press organizations (The New York Times and other newspapers) who also were given the information and printed it," she told msnbc.com.

"We support WikiLeaks and what they are doing. It's about press freedom and transparency," she added.

However, Blake said, Reporters Without Borders had criticized WikiLeaks over the release of information that may have put people working for coalition forces in Afghanistan at risk.

"We want a strong, free press, but we want a responsible press as well, we don't want to endanger anybody's' lives," she said.

'Less flattering' reality
Despite the strong support these organizations show for Assange, Will Heaven, of the Telegraph newspaper, believes the WikiLeaks founder is less a champion for transparency than he is an anti-American activist.

"Julian Assange likes to portray himself as a champion of truth," Heaven wrote in an email to msnbc.com. "But the reality is much less flattering. Look at the Afghanistan 'war logs,' for example: WikiLeaks plainly wanted to cause maximum damage to the coalition's war effort, but nothing was done to hide the identities of Afghan informants – so the Taliban duly promisedto 'punish them.'"

"Mr. Assange claims to have pure motives, but he hasn't shown a shred of remorse about this," Heaven added.

"It seems that as long as the United States and the West is embarrassed on the world stage, the founder of WikiLeaks is a happy man," he said.

"If he's really opposed to corruption and human rights abuses, why hasn't he turned his special talents to countries like Iran, China or Russia? The answer is simple — there is anti-American agenda behind much of Julian Assange's work."

The public supports Assange: time for Gillard to join

Jeff Sparrow and Elizabeth O'Shea

There has been an astonishing response to the open letter on Drum to Prime Minister Gillard about Julian Assange and WikiLeaks. In essence, that letter called on the Prime Minister to do the following:

[T]o confirm publicly Australia’s commitment to freedom of political communication; to refrain from cancelling Mr Assange's passport, in the absence of clear proof that such a step is warranted; to provide assistance and advocacy to Mr Assange; and do everything in your power to ensure that any legal proceedings taken against him comply fully with the principles of law and procedural fairness.

The Drum has now posted more than 4,500 comments, more than on any other story in its history. Many people have been unable to respond, because the page collapsed under the sheer quantity of traffic. (A similar petition is being hosted here).

We have also been privately receiving a huge number of endorsements, both from high-profile and ordinary Australians, which we have been unable to add.

For instance, Daniel Ellsberg is perhaps the most important whistleblower of the 20th century. In 1971, he leaked what became known as the Pentagon Papers, a series of documents proving that the US government had systematically lied about the Vietnam.

This morning, Daniel Ellsberg voiced his support for the letter to Gillard.

The WikiLeaks story is moving quickly. Assange is now in custody. He has been refused bail, and is contesting his extradition to Sweden. Rumours circulate of a plan afoot to eventually send him to the US, even though it is far from clear what laws he has broken.

After all, the leaked cables have been published in some of the world’s most prestigious newspapers, often featuring there before appearing on WikiLeaks. As Assange pointed out in The Australian yesterday, there seems no reason why the editors of these publications should escape whatever sanctions are levelled at the WikiLeaks team. John Howard, of all people, has made the same point, noting that Assange has merely behaved as any journalist would by publishing documents that came into his possession.

The implications of charges against Assange are thus profound. The Age, for instance, boasts of its exclusive access to ‘hundreds of US State Department cables relating to Australia’. In other words, it is The Age, not WikiLeaks, that is releasing the material. Is anyone going to suggest that The Age editor should be prosecuted?

Well, perhaps they are. In the US, the powerful Senator Joe Lieberman wants the Justice Department to investigate the New York Times, on precisely that basis.

This is dangerous territory that we are entering, and it is no wonder that so many people are concerned. WikiLeaks continues to publish. It is clear that any attempts to prosecute Assange will not solve the much larger problem facing many governments around the world. What is at stake now is more than just the fate of one person. We are talking about a fundamental threat to the whole notion of investigative journalism.

The Australian Government does seem to be softening its position on WikiLeaks. That is to be welcomed. But we remain concerned about Mr Assange’s well-being, both physically and in terms of his ability to receive anything approaching justice.

Naturally, there will be differences of opinion about WikiLeaks’ activities and philosophies. But it should not be controversial to assert that Mr Assange is entitled to procedural fairness and that the Australian Government should do everything to ensure he receives it. It is inspiring to see that so many everyday people agree with this conclusion. As well as the many who are signing petitions, in recent days, thousands of mirror sites have sprung up to protect the site from attack. The insurance file has been widely downloaded.

This support, both politically and practically, provides robust protection to the rule of law and democratic principles.

Julia Gillard should take note. The whole world is watching.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Assange Amazing Adventures of Captain Neo in Blonde Land

Postby undead » Thu Dec 09, 2010 6:19 pm

An Exclusive Interview with Julian Assange on the Eve of His Arrest

WikiLeaks Founder Denies Accusations, Says It’s Fascinating to See the Tentacles of the Corrupt American Elite

By Natalia Viana
Opera Mundi, translated by Narco News

December 7, 2010

The founder of WikiLeaks, Julian Assange, gave an exclusive interview to Brazilian journalist Natalia Viana of the online publication Opera Mundi on Monday. (Viana, 2004 graduate of Narco News’ School of Authentic Journalism, now is co-chair, with Bill Conroy, of its investigative journalism program.) Assange didn’t hide his irritation at the freezing of his Swiss bank account (on the pretext of his having registered it at a local address while he does not reside in a European country) and with other actions taken against his organization since it published embarrassing documents from US Embassies.

Assange was preparing to turn himself in to British police, who arrested him in London this morning. Assange is accused of sexual crimes in Sweden. The accusation isn’t very clear and includes charges of having unprotected sex with two women while he was in Stockholm giving a speech. On November 18 Swedish authorities issued an arrest warrant with the objective of interrogating him for “reasonable suspicion of rape, sexual and coercive aggression.” The WikiLeaks founder faces a hearing in the Westminster court in the central region of London, where it will be decided if he will be extradited to Sweden.

Natalia Viana: What is the accusation against you and how do you feel about your imminent arrest?

Julian Assange: There are many accusations. The most serious is that I and our people have committed espionage against the United States. This is false. There is also a so-called “rape” investigation from Sweden. This is false and will go away once the facts come out, but is being used to attack our reputation in the meantime.

Viana: Regarding the accusation of espionage, have there been any legal charges filed?

Assange: It is a formal investigation involving the heads of the FBI, CIA, and the US Attorney General and so on. Australia is also conducting a similar “whole of government” investigation and assisting the United States. One of the alleged sources, Bradley Manning (US soldier accused of being WikiLeaks’ source), sits in solitary confinement in a prison cell in Virginia. He faces 52 years if convicted on all charges.

Viana: What is the difference between what WikiLeaks does and espionage?

Assange: WikiLeaks receives material from whistleblowers (persons who denounce wrongdoing in the organizations in which they work) and journalists and makes it public. Espionage would require us to actively take material and give it deliberately to a foreign power.

Viana: In the Sweden case, what do the women allege?

Assange: They say that I had consensual sex. The case was dropped within 12 hours when the chief prosecutor, Eva Finne, read the interviews. Then it was picked back up again after political involvements. The whole thing is very disturbing. They just froze my Swiss bank account, my defense fund.

Viana: On what basis?

Assange: They do claim I was putting them in danger. But there is nothing to suggest that. And, in any case, it’s false.

Viana: What is your opinion about the freezing of your money transfers by the business PayPal, and that Amazon removed your site? How do you see those acts?

Assange: It is fascinating to see the tentacles of the corrupt American elite. In some ways, seeing the reaction is as important as the material we have released. PayPal and Amazon froze our accounts for political reasons. With PayPal, 70,000 euros were frozen. With our defense fund, that was 31,000 euros.

Viana: What do they allege?

Assange: They say that we were conducting “illegal activities,” and that clearly is untrue. More, they are echoing the accusations of (US Secretary of State) Hillary Clinton about publishing embarrassing US government documents. However, the head of the Senate Committee for Homeland Security bragged to the press about how he had called Amazon and demanded they shut us down.

Assange: What is WikiLeaks doing to defend itself from the freezing of its donations?

Assange: We have lost 100,000 euros this week alone as a result of the freezing of our assets. We have accounts in other banks – in Iceland and Germany, for example, that the public can still use. We have a website. We also accept credit card donations.

Viana: What more is WikiLeaks doing to defend itself?

Assange: We are counting on a diversity of support from good people. We have more than 350 websites in the world that are reproducing our content. We value that more than anything.

http://narconews.com/Issue67/article4273.html
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Re: Assange Amazing Adventures of Captain Neo in Blonde Land

Postby seemslikeadream » Thu Dec 09, 2010 8:38 pm

Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
User avatar
seemslikeadream
 
Posts: 32090
Joined: Wed Apr 27, 2005 11:28 pm
Location: into the black
Blog: View Blog (83)

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