Glenn Greenwald | Watch How Casually False Claims are Published: New York Times and Nicholas Lemann Edition
...it was the press, not Snowden, which decided what stayed secret and what was reported.
...it was the press, not Snowden, which decided what stayed secret and what was reported.
...it was the press, not Snowden, which decided what stayed secret and what was reported.
So, at this late date, what might a president frightened by his successor actually do...
...three major events prove how widespread, and dangerous, mass surveillance has become in the West.
Snowden expressed concern about the global erosion of privacy.
WikiLeaks has always been somewhat controversial but reaction has greatly intensified this year because many of their most significant leaks have had an impact on the U.S. presidential election.
“Unfortunately, many candidates in the political mainstream today, even pundits and commentators who aren’t running for office, believe we have to be able to do anything, no matter what, as long as there is some benefit to be had in doing so. But that is the logic of a police state.”
Edward Snowden discusses our choices for the future.
Before he leaked the documents, Snowden said, he had repeatedly attempted to raise his concerns inside the NSA about its surveillance of US citizens — and the agency had done nothing.
Most senior Democrats—all of whom were silent as the Obama administration waged war on whistleblowers—have sought either to defend Clinton or downplay the importance of what she did.
Snowden: "Chelsea Manning is the first American to be sentenced to decades of prison for revealing truthful information to the press. Her conviction — under a law even the ACLU says violates the constitution — is not just an injustice, it’s a threat to journalism." Courage Foundation May 27, 2016 Six years ago today, WikiLeaks whistleblower More
SIDtoday was launched just 11 days into the U.S. invasion of Iraq by a team within the NSA’s Signals Intelligence Directorate. SID is arguably the NSA’s most important division, responsible for spying on the agency’s targets