Surely not. After all, Hillary wanted somebody to whack Assange; and Obama
used the Espionage Act, against whistle-blowers, more than all other US
presidents combined.

This Democratic Party is unrecognizable, even WITHOUT masks.

> https://dissenter.substack.com/p/the-freakout-over-trump-considering
> <https://dissenter.substack.com/p/the-freakout-over-trump-considering?token=eyJ1c2VyX2lkIjoyODc4MTksInBvc3RfaWQiOjg2Mjc1MywiXyI6IitBejY4IiwiaWF0IjoxNTk3ODg1NDI0LCJleHAiOjE1OTc4ODkwMjQsImlzcyI6InB1Yi05ODEiLCJzdWIiOiJwb3N0LXJlYWN0aW9uIn0.xvVNVl8jh1_YrWepYgBNuISjr-b1mKVb3SnXpZxxuag>
>
The Freakout Over Trump Considering A Pardon For NSA Whistleblower Edward
> Snowden Elites reacted in a way that reflects their deep-seated prejudice
> toward Snowden's whistleblowing, which exposed global mass surveillance
> *Kevin Gosztola
> <https://dissenter.substack.com/people/258217-kevin-gosztola>* Aug 17 2020
>
>
> <https://cdn.substack.com/image/fetch/c_limit,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fbucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F0ada54dc-ff9b-4963-bde4-f4567fdf5620_2020x1334.png>
>
> The bipartisan freakout over the mere possibility that President Donald
> Trump might pardon Edward Snowden is a reflection of the deep-seated
> prejudice that exists against the National Security Agency whistleblower.
>
> Prejudice formed among elites immediately after Snowden revealed he was
> behind disclosures that exposed the United States' global mass surveillance
> programs, which violated people's privacy both domestically and abroad. It
> intensified as he was trapped in a Moscow airport after the State
> Department revoked his passport and was forced to seek asylum from Russia.
>
> Yet, with Trump, the hostility has grown even more feverish
> because—although there is no proof whatsoever—this coalition of neoliberals
> and neoconservatives sees the hand of Russia President Vladimir Putin
> behind the sudden interest in Snowden's case.
>
> Days after an exclusive report
> <https://nypost.com/2020/08/13/trump-a-lot-of-people-think-edward-snowden-not-being-treated-fairly/>
> in the New York Post suggested Trump was considering a pardon, Trump was
> asked about Snowden.
>
> "Well, I'm gonna look at it. I mean, I'm not that aware of the Snowden
> situation, but I'm going to start looking at it," Trump replied. "There are
> many, many people—it seems to be a split decision. There are many people
> that think that he should be somehow treated differently and other people
> think he did very bad things."
>
> Trump added, "I've seen people that are very conservative and very
> liberal, and they agree on the same issue. They agree both ways. I'm going
> to take a look at that very strongly, Edward Snowden."
>
> In 2013, Trump fiercely objected
> <https://thehill.com/policy/national-security/512261-cheney-calls-pardoning-snowden-unconscionable-after-trump-says-hes>
> to Snowden's actions. "This guy is really doing damage to this country, and
> he’s also making us look like dopes. We can’t allow this guy to go out
> there and give out all our secrets and also embarrass us at every level. We
> should get him back and get him back now."
>
> But what Trump said suggests he never had a firmly held viewpoint on
> Snowden. It was all part of his vitriolic opposition to President Barack
> Obama's administration.
> 'Finding His Safe Refuge In Putin's Russia'
>
> Democratic Representative Adam Schiff appeared on CNN's "The Situation
> Room" with Wolf Blitzer and said, "Where is this coming from? You know, I
> have to say it makes you wonder because we know so little of what the
> president discusses when he talks to Putin, and Snowden is of course
> finding his safe refuge in Putin's Russia right now."
>
> Quite a few delusions related to Russia influence in the Trump
> administration have been perpetuated by Schiff, who is the chair of the
> House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence (HPSCI). In August, he
> also was responsible for ensuring dragnet internet surveillance was not
> eliminated from a bill for reauthorization of the PATRIOT Act.
>
> According to Demand Progress, a grassroots advocacy organization that
> fights to protect privacy and civil liberties, Schiff cut "Dreamers," young
> immigrants protected from deportation, and other immigrants from a proposed
> protection that apparently "served as a loophole to protect something else:
> potential undisclosed surveillance of Americans’ internet browsing and
> search histories."
>
> Snowden revealed
> <https://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/jul/31/nsa-top-secret-program-online-data>
> an NSA program called XKeyscore that collected "nearly everything a user
> does on the internet." It swept up a person's emails, social media
> activity, and browser history. And he also exposed PRISM, which allowed the
> NSA to access to the servers
> <http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/jun/06/us-tech-giants-nsa-data> of
> companies like Apple, Facebook, Google, Microsoft and other companies to
> “collect material including search history, the content of emails, file
> transfers, and live chats.”
>
> In other words, Schiff is a key defender of the very mass surveillance
> programs that systematically violate privacy, which Snowden exposed.
>
> Republican Representative Liz Cheney, the daughter of former Vice
> President Dick Cheney, declared, "Edward Snowden is a traitor. He is
> responsible for the largest and most damaging release of classified info in
> US history. He handed over U.S. secrets to Russian and Chinese intelligence
> putting our troops and our nation at risk. Pardoning him would be
> unconscionable."
>
> There is zero evidence
> <https://twitter.com/dnvolz/status/1295189571190378496> that China or
> Russia ever obtained access to documents. In fact, Snowden did not take
> copies <https://apnews.com/c3d5e1c858db48dbaba6349456a6dde1> of the
> documents with him when he left Hong Kong because he did not think it would
> be in the "public interest."
>
> Nonetheless, this notion from "former spies" that Russia tried to "get
> their hands" on "intelligence" from Snowden—and that China "may have
> already had their turn"—was first laundered by Blitzer on CNN and by other
> news media outlets in late June 2013. It gradually became part of the
> shared perspective among elites.
>
> In 2014, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton accused
> <https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2014/04/hillary-clinton-snowden-nsa-russia-china/>
> Snowden of effectively colluding with China and Russia.
>
> "It struck me as—I just have to be honest with you—as sort of odd that he
> would flee to China, because Hong Kong is controlled by China, and that he
> would then go to Russia, two countries with which we have very difficult
> cyber-relationships, to put it mildly," Clinton stated.
> Pardoning Snowden Would 'Mock' The 'National Security Workforce'
>
> A bipartisan statement from Democratic Representative Adam Smith, chair of
> the House Armed Services Committee, and Republican Representative, the
> committee's Ranking Member, condemned Trump for teasing that he would
> reconsider his position on Snowden.
>
> “Edward Snowden did enormous harm to our national security and he must
> stand trial for his actions," they proclaimed. "President Trump and
> [Defense] Secretary [Mark] Esper have both decried harmful leaks from the
> Department of Defense and elsewhere in the federal government. To pardon
> Snowden now would completely undermine this administration’s position and
> mock our national security workforce who take immense caution in their work
> to keep us safe.”
>
> They added, “It would be a serious mistake to pardon anyone who is charged
> under the Espionage Act, who admits to leaking sensitive information, and
> who has spent years since then as a guest of the Putin regime. Not only
> would it mean that Snowden cannot be held accountable for his crimes, but
> it would send a dangerous message to others who are contemplating espionage
> and the adversaries who would support them."
>
> The statement was a full-throated defense of the Insider Threat Program in
> the U.S. government that has further entrenched a two-tiered justice system
> for leaks, where lower level employees or contractors like Snowden are
> punished for exposing abuses and high-ranking officials like former CIA
> Director David Petraeus are allowed to leak intelligence with impunity.
>
> Former Obama national security adviser Susan Rice glibly responded, "I.
> Just. Can’t. Congratulations GOP. This is who you are now."
>
> Rice suggested Russia could be behind
> <https://shadowproof.com/2020/06/04/attempts-by-officials-to-blame-outside-agitators-for-george-floyd-protests-failed/>
> the uprising in Minneapolis and other cities after George Floyd was
> murdered by police. Fortunately, that conspiracy theory was too kooky for
> the mass media and never gained traction.
> 'So Putin Wants Snowden Pardoned'
> <https://cdn.substack.com/image/fetch/c_limit,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fbucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F6e42b618-6553-467d-a65b-a6272a417bab_954x500.png>
>
>
> Barry R. McCaffrey, a U.S. Army general who was part of President Bill
> Clinton's administration, reacted, "So Putin wants Snowden pardoned. The
> world turned upside down. What do the Russians have on Trump?"
>
> As the New York Times reported in 2008, McCaffrey is a military
> propagandist who was "at the heart of a scandal" during the Iraq War that
> involved <https://www.salon.com/2009/04/21/pulitzer/> retired generals
> hired by ABC, CBS, and NBC, who were recruited by the Pentagon to make
> their case for war. He had "undisclosed ties to companies that benefited"
> from the invasion and occupation.
>
> "Just noting that Trump seems a lot more concerned for Edward Snowden,
> whom Putin is harboring, than American troops whom Putin is targeting,"
> neoconservative pundit Bill Kristol remarked.
>
> Kristol was the co-founder of the Project for a New American Century, who
> led the charge in President George W. Bush's administration for the Iraq
> War. As late as 2015, he was still defending the decimation of an entire
> country that resulted in hundreds of thousands of dead Iraqis and thousands
> of dead U.S. soldiers.
>
> "Even with the absence of caches of weapons of mass destruction, and the
> mistakes we made in failing to send enough troops at first and to provide
> security from the beginning for the Iraqi people, we were right to
> persevere through several difficult years. We were able to bring the war to
> a reasonably successful conclusion in 2008," Kristol declared.
>
> The "reasonably successful conclusion" led to the birth of ISIS, which
> terrorized Iraq, Libya, and Syria throughout the past decade.
>
> Furthermore, as Gareth Porter documented
> <https://thegrayzone.com/2020/07/07/pentagon-afghan-bountygate-us-intelligence-agencies/>,
> the “Bountygate” story was a scandalous effort by Afghan intelligence that
> the Pentagon exploited to prolong the Afghanistan War.
> 'Hard To Put Into Words How Fucking Batshit Crazy This Is'
>
> Simon Rosenberg, the founder of the centrist New Democrat Network,
> reacted, "Hard to put into words how fucking batshit crazy this is. For all
> not up to speed, this is an admission that our President is owned by Putin."
>
> Attorney Mark Zaid, a pseudo-advocate for whistleblowers who represented
> the Ukraine call whistleblower, unintelligibly commented, "Neither
> Snowden's life nor his limbs were ever at risk except in conspiracy devoted
> minds. Oh, and likely in Russia where he now lives voluntarily since that
> country has a history of [government] assassination of rogue officials."
>
> Zaid frequently spends his time on Twitter justifying prosecutions of
> whistleblowers under the Espionage Act because they did not go through the
> "proper channels" and blow the whistle *the right way*.
>
> Finally, Joshua Geltzer is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations
> and former Justice Department official. He put together a thread that went
> viral, which is everything wrong about the conversation on pardoning
> Snowden.
>
> "First, Trump simply wants to distract by changing the subject, as he so
> often does. COVID deaths, voter suppression—there's so much bad for Trump
> that he wants a topic change to Snowden," Geltzer argued. "We shouldn't let
> him. But we should understand that his motivation goes deeper."
>
> "Snowden's narrative is Trump's in a sense: it's all about distrusting
> U.S. intelligence & law enforcement and portraying them as the enemy. This
> is Trump's whole obsession with 2016 counterintelligence work, Flynn, etc.
> Snowden's story thus aligns with Trump's."
>
> Geltzer continued, "Snowden divides and polarizes Americans, and Trump
> loves any topic that does so. Trump thrives on a America split, and what's
> more, disagreeing on basic facts. Snowden is deeply divisive, even on the
> facts of what he did, & so he's a useful foil for Trump to polarize us."
>
> "Trump is using Snowden to attack the idea of truth itself, as Trump does
> relentlessly (learning from Putin). That's why Trump is emphasizing that
> some people love and some hate Snowden. Trump wants you to believe that
> there's NO right answer—to Snowden and so much more."
>
> Geltzer concluded, "So let's deny Trump the distraction he seeks. Let's
> stay focused on the deaths and authoritarianism and various Trump misdeeds
> that must stay front & center. But let's also understand what Trump's doing
> so we can thwart it and get ahead of him. Or he'll just do it again."
>
> This is not three-dimensional chess. It is possible to support a pardon
> for Snowden and *still *defeat Trump, especially since Snowden is not
> some unabashed Trump supporter.
>
> The American Civil Liberties Union supported
> <https://www.aclu.org/blog/free-speech/why-president-obama-should-pardon-edward-snowden>
> a pardon for Snowden because he sparked an "unprecedented global debate
> about the proper limits of government spying." His whistleblowing
> transformed privacy laws and standards, the security of the devices we use
> and how we communicate, and our understanding of how institutions govern
> citizens.
>
> Snowden is not as divisive as elites want the public to believe. A 2017
> poll
> <https://www.ibtimes.com/should-edward-snowden-be-pardoned-poll-finds-29-percent-americans-favor-prosecution-2469895>
> by The Economist only found 29 percent of Americans supported prosecution.
>
> Geltzer dismisses "Snowden's narrative" as one that inappropriately sows
> distrust in U.S. intelligence and law enforcement. But once again, Snowden
> was vindicated
> <https://www.aclu.org/blog/privacy-technology/internet-privacy/obama-should-pardon-edward-snowden-today-were-launching>
> when an Obama-appointed panel recommended several reforms and a federal
> appeals court concluded the NSA's bulk collection of call records was
> unconstitutional.
>
> The problem for elites is that they have staked their opposition to
> defending national security institutions, and Snowden showed they were
> complicit or involved in systematically violating the privacy of Americans,
> which forces them to excuse the indefensible.
>
> In their defense of intelligence industrial-complex, they promoted a
> theory that the Trump campaign engaged in a conspiracy or coordinated with
> the Russian government to beat Hillary Clinton. Special Counsel Robert
> Mueller's investigation was unable to substantiate this theory to fully
> discredit and remove Trump from office.
>
> But Trump can point to abuses
> <https://www.cnn.com/2019/12/17/politics/fisa-court-slams-fbi-conduct/index.html>
> in how the FBI applied for a Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA)
> warrant for surveillance against Carter Page, who was a Trump campaign
> foreign policy adviser. He can point to the fact that FBI lawyer Kevin
> Clinesmith pled
> <https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/fbi-clinesmith-russia-trump-1.5686616>
> guilty to "altering an email about Page to say that he was 'not a source'
> for another government agency." (Page was working for the CIA.)
>
> Trump may connect the abuse of FISA warrants to a pardon for Snowden, and
> if he does, those opposed to Trump should not respond feverishly as
> neoliberal and neoconservative elites have. They should recognize how awful
> it is that Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden and the Democratic
> Party establishment have totally abandoned the protection of civil
> liberties and ceded so much ground to right-wing politicians.
>

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