General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: I'm getting really sick of the whole "Comrade Eddie" BS from some [View all]erronis
(22,650 posts)From what I've read, Mr. Snowden had jobs that allowed him to see a large amount of (semi)classified information. It was seeing this information that made him realize that it demonstrated a violation of the US laws and the information should be disseminated. There were (and I'm sure this is still true) no avenues for Mr. Snowden to bring his understanding of the problem up the chain of command without him risking personal harm. He couldn't be a government whistleblower - for what protection that's worth - since he was a private contractor.
There are a lot of conflicting laws that deal with secrecy and upholding the laws of the US. Which ones are you talking about? Are you willing to have most of the Bush2 administration go before a court to explain their selective airing of TS info?
I also believe that he did not act alone. We already understand that many news organizations have willingly helped Mr. Snowden get this information into the public view. Many other individuals with conscience have put themselves in harms way to disclose the crimes of government. I hope more of us can do this. And I hope that our new media (not MSM) can keep on letting us know about these crimes.