Have you read the NSA thread?You're pretty naive if you don't think the most powerful nation in the world wouldn't kill one individual to keep a secret this big from coming to light.Of course. Because that's what happened to Daniel Ellsberg and because that's what happens to every other celebrity who defies the American government. They all mysteriously disappear.No offense, but this post represents the root of the problem IMO: many of you have an unreasoning fear of our government. We do not live in Orwell's world.I'm pretty confident, had he stayed in the US, he'd never see the inside of a prison. Some sort of "accident" would have occurred and we certainly wouldn't have gotten an accurate take on the information he has from our media. Not sure fearing for your life is "cowardly" though.How about coward?
I'm glad some of what he released is out in the open. I would feel better if it seemed like anyone with any real power in our government was doing something about it instead of just pumping out the daily rhetoric. But at least the average U.S. citizens now knows how far off the rails our government has gone, how healthy it is for us ALL to deeply mistrust them with our privacy and our Constitutional rights, and how dangerous the security for privacy swap is. The privacy "nuts" were vindicated I hope it wakes people up come election time. I also agree that there is no viable process for him to go through in order to blow the whistle on something this deep and harmful to so many in the higher echelons of government. I would fear for at least my livelihood and most likely my life.
Saying that, just because you want to expose some deep, dark secrets of the U.S. government that are harming your fellow citizens, you can't just indiscriminately grab every piece of Top Secret information you can get your hands on and then hold our government hostage with what you still have up your sleeve. He is basically bartering his own life and well being with the well being of our nation. That makes him a traitor. Whether we're happy with the ends, the means are not justified. We need security and the government does have to keep secrets, this is destructive to that entire process. Not to mention it has wreaked havoc with our foreign policy.
He had a third choice. He could have been a man and faced the music. The information could have been released through the U.S. media and gone through the media editing process. Even if he didn't go through the U.S. media and decided to send a drive off to Julian Assange, he still could have remained here and once the bomb dropped he could have stood up and faced the music. He could have walked into the NY times, the Fox Studios, or CNN and said "I'm here, I fear for my life, this is my story" and immediately gotten his story in front of the people. If Snowden stayed in the U.S. and went to prison here, he would have been a martyr. The international damage inflicted would have been minimized but the most important domestic revelations would have been released AND he would have garnered tons of support from privacy advocates on both the left and the right. He could have been a rallying point and hero to all pro-Constitution, privacy loving advocates. The fact that he is sitting under the protective shadow of Putin after passing through the protective embrace of China has killed any credibility he has. We have no way of knowing what he voluntarily or involuntarily has given away to our avowed enemies. We don't know what he still has yet to release, where it is, or whose hands have been on it.
While I agree he has helped our country in some ways I think he has harmed it as well. He had other options but he was too cowardly to take them.