If telling the truth changes people’s preferences, that doesn’t seem like the messenger’s fault. Whoever actually did/said the thing that people didn’t like is at fault.
There wasn't much truth in those e-mails that meant much. There were a lot of comments that could be interpreted out of context as a basis for extremely wild... I hesitate to even call them conspiracy theories as they're crazier than that. All that was launched literally a week or two from the election.
The people who found pizzagate codewords in the emails were never going to vote for her anyway, and you can’t possibly hold whoever released them at fault for some crazies coming up with their own fairy tales.
There were a few details that legitimately pissed people off though. I recall her being fed debate questions, as well as efforts to undermine Sanders. Those are Hillary’s fault for doing them, not WL or Putins fault for showing people.
Yes. That's the downside of the Peace Prize such that there are zero barriers to entry for the requirements and everyone qualifies, unless you continue attending paid talks and interviews around the world and this is repeated in the mainstream media.
This is far less apparent in Physics, Chemistry and Economics though.
We'll never know if the charges could be proven because Assange fled to an embassy for many years, denying us all the right to see what would happen at trial.
One of the accusers dropped her charges. She says she was pushed by the Swedish authorities to make a case. The other withdraws he consent after the facts as she says Assange didn't tell her that he was seeing other girls.
Scandalizing someone's vices to discredit their message is millenniums old. It's kinda disturbing that people weren't immediately on to it as a smear job.
While I agree that the behaviour of the UK and the USA is suspect, and also that the incredibly low prosecution rate for sexual assault[0] suggests that a guilty-but-not-infamous person otherwise identical to Assange would probably not have been charged, one of his accusers was trying to reopen the case and get him extradited to Sweden as soon as they found out he was no longer in the embassy, and this failed because the judge decided too much time has passed for a fair trial[1].
[0] assuming UK rates are similar to Swedish rates, given a quick google didn’t give me their stats
I feel like coronavirus has had the opposite effect. More tribalism than ever. "My country is doing better than your country", "Sweden is doing it wrong", "Chinese virus" and all that.
I did think of that before I posted. I think though long term (once we are out of this) we will now take threats to humanity much more seriously.
I can only speak for myself:
Personally I've always seen myself as an observer to humanity. I know what's right and I'd like to make it happen but there's so many people trying to get ahead there's no point. The cards are stacked against me and I was scared to fail.
Covid for all its badness has made me realise I can't just observe. Whilst there are people who don't want what's best in power we are in this precarious position where humanity could fail. My hope however optimistic it is, is that people who are good will also realise they have to act and they can't just watch.
As the old saying goes all it takes for evil to prevail is for good men to do nothing.
That saying has always meant a lot to me and I've always stood by the fact I would stand up and be counted when I was needed; this coronavirus made me realise I was needed right now.
I doubt that this pandemic will make the world take threats to humanity any more seriously than any of the other pandemics we’ve had. I can’t think of any reason why this one would be different.
If anything, we all lucked out with how mild it was, and people are going to be less cautious when a much deadlier virus makes the rounds next time.
The way I see it this kind of global threat has been unprecedented since ww2 and I am also of the belief ww2 did a lot for world peace. We are indeed lucky it's not been more serious.
I am not pertaining to know the future and I do admit there is a very high chance I'm being overly optimistic - basically I accept your appraisal of the situation is sadly more probable.
I don't know, that seems mostly limited to the U.S. who everyone else mostly just pities at this point. I'm in Canada and I wholeheartedly wish the U.S. was faring better. But unfortunately it just comes down to wishing they voted for leaders who exhibited a modicum of empathy instead of blaming it on external factors.
For most of the other areas it's a shared journey. Mourning with Italy because they were hit so early. Being scared for Sweden and the UK in their decisions to try to build up herd immunity. Tribalism is "us vs them", I don't think most people have that attitude for coronavirus. Everyone wants everyone to succeed so that we can all learn from it.
They are referring to Sweden's decision to pursue herd immunity instead of a lockdown. Most countries tried or pretended to try lockdowns. Only a handful of countries have opted for Herd Immunity, so it is a controversial decision (esp because it sacrifices some people (mostly the elderly) for the good of the whole)
Also a net loss of faith in scientists. After the pathetic failure of epidemic projection models, it’s natural to harbor atleast some doubt about the climate models, and think, “do these scientists really know what they’re doing?”
If I didn't want to be roundly embarrassed by Russian intelligence services, I'd simply stop illegally spying on my citizens while claiming to be a liberal democratic republic.
Manning has done nothing to hold anyone accountable. She stole classified data, haphazardly, and did nothing to ensure its release wouldn't get people killed. Then, she dumped it all to WikiLeaks. She didn't do it to protect anyone or as a whistleblower.
Even if you hate what Snowden did, he is a whistleblower in the sense that he saw something he thought was wrong, and carefully pulled enough data to prove it without endangering anyone's lives or doing unnecessary damage to his country.
I could totally get behind Assange's and Snowden's nominations (but like others have said a nomination for this Prize is meaningless), but Manning's seems ridiculous.
>Manning has done nothing to hold anyone accountable. She stole classified data, haphazardly, and did nothing to ensure its release wouldn't get people killed. Then, she dumped it all to WikiLeaks. She didn't do it to protect anyone or as a whistleblower.
I'm unclear why the challenges with the Manning release begin with the 22yo w/o enough experience to make better judgments and not the scores of military and political careerists who created, enabled and hid the atrocities.
Transparency is the first step to accountability. Manning isn't a superhuman capable of bringing about justice directly - the failure shows that the system stops at nothing to shield the guilty and throws our heroes in jail.
My point is she's not a hero unless you consider people who recklessly commit federal crimes without even the slightest bit of forethought heroes. Snowden saw a massive problem and was methodical and diligent in his process. Even if you hate what you did, he went out of his way to protect innocent people while still exposing the wrongdoing. To use a military analogy, Snowden tried to snipe someone surrounded by hostages while Manning just tossed a grenade into the room.
That's a valid criticism though. They gave it to Obama, who then turned around and carried the Drone Assassinations Program to new heights. Kissinger or Arafat aren't obvious agents of peace either, so it's certainly not a mandatory requirement.
Indeed, its even more meaningless when you think about who is nominated. In this case, Russian trolls who release private diplomatic cables that fed into a massive disinformation campaign about western democracy.
The US lost so much credibility from the failed NK summit. Absolutely nothing came of it. NK is still launching missiles. Relations are what they were before the summit.
So you're ignoring the multi-nation denuclearization treaty with Iran that was working. The one that Trump unilaterally pulled the US out of, collapsing it and giving Iran the perfect excuse.
>>> So you're ignoring the multi-nation denuclearization treaty with Iran that was working. The one that Trump unilaterally pulled the US out of, collapsing it and giving Iran the perfect excuse.
The same Iran deal that was crafted to appease a tyrannical government? By your logic, Churchill should’ve got a peace prize for placating nazi Germany with appeasement.
There are constructive things coming out of the trump administration. Specifically in regards to Russia, China, and Iran. Tolerating their abuse of the western values is not one I’d call constructive.
Only 'alleged' because he's politically connected and aligned with America, and will therefore never go to trial.
Or do you also object with 'allegedly' when people call Bush the Younger a war criminal as well? He'll never see a trial either for the same reason, but he is nevertheless a war criminal.
A successful and accomplished diplomat who regularly called the folks he practised "diplomacy" with 4-letter words, racist slurs and shockingly demeaning insults. Look up his transcripts. His personal animus sabotaged so many things for the US. And then he had the gall to publish a book and boast about his "accomplishments". The type of guy who makes Trump look like a Saint.
The 17 people who sent this letter in Jan 2020 to the Nobel Committee of Oslo are all from the German Bundestag. I am not sure how these nominations work but I would hope to be positively surprised when more governments show support with their nominations to indirectly support transparency in governments.
They are members of parliament (legislative), but not of the government (executive). Their party is the merged & renamed descendant of the SED, East Germany's One-Party-State ruling party. For a variety of reasons, they look to be cast as opposition for the foreseeable future on the federal level, but are part of state governments in Germany's eastern states.
I see confusion crop up here around the term government every now and then. In America, we have our 3 branches (executive, legislative, and judicial) and we call the collection of all 3 the "government" whereas in general I think Europe uses the word "state" for that.
Yeah, for general use, EU "government" is best translated as US "administration", I believe.
A lot of people don't include the judiciary when they say "the state", I believe as the courts are independent and serve as a controlling instance that should (in theory) reign in the state when it oversteps.
Seems a bit funny for German politicians to be nominating US whistleblowers (and Assange). Shall we get some US Congressman to nominate those bloggers who investigated Wirecard?
Germany is still very troubled from the Stasi times, I can see how this issue would receive a special place in the hearts and minds of the German people. Also, the US surveillance state is so overwhelming and oppressive, literally intended to collect all signal intel and store it for eternity for future decryption attempts, that they probably feel it is especially onerous and in violation of human rights. My 2 cents, but that's why I think they did this.
>Germany is still very troubled from the Stasi times, I can see how this issue would receive a special place in the hearts and minds of the German people.
Ironic that the Bundestag MPs who nominated them are from Die Linke, a successor to East Germany's ruling party that ran the Stasi.
Just a reminder: After fleeing the United States, supposed freedom-fighter Snowden took protection from a 'president' who just gave himself the option to remain president until 2036, and who appears to have just poisoned his chief political adversary by spiking his tea, Alexei Navalny (https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/aug/20/alexei-navalny...). Snowden is still under the 'protection' of this dictator today.
Another reminder: Julian Assange's skullduggery influenced the 2016 election in favor of Trump, in which he lied about receiving materials from Russia that were the product of an illegal hack into the DNC, and appears to have been taking cues from the Trump campaign, and in particular Roger Stone, to drop these materials at an opportune time to influence a presidential election.
I'm willing to get modded down infinitely to push back against the bonkers hero-worship of these three here on HN. Assange in particular bears direct responsibility for bringing the United States into the sorry state it is in today.
> Snowden is still under the 'protection' of this dictator today.
Honest question, what do you think would have been a better choice, besides "be a hero and go to Gitmo for your service"?
Obviously, all European states are out of the question, as they wouldn't have granted Snowden political asylum, and went so far to deny Bolivia's president safe travel through their airspace on the suspicion he might have Snowden on board and then went on to search the plane after they forced them to land. That whole affair really opened my eyes to the American empire and its European provinces.
Should he have stayed in Hong-Kong, or gone to Beijing? North Korea?
Why is "be a hero and go to a US prison" not an option? Civil disobedience always has a greater impact when you accept the consequences of your actions, or as Congressman John Lewis would call it, "good trouble."
The fact that we can only cite as governments possibly willing to grant asylum to Snowden non-democratic autocracies who have terrible records on surveillance, human rights and civil liberties should be a hint as to what their motives would be for giving him protection to begin with.
> Why is "be a hero and go to a US prison" not an option?
It is, but who wants that? When someone from a drug cartel becomes a witness, we don't say "okay, thanks, now go back there to get tortured & murdered, show that you accept the consequences of your actions", we say "thanks, now we make you disappear and get you a new identity so you can live a normal life".
The motives of Russia aren't my concern. My concern is that the governments who call themselves liberal democracies are not willing to stand up for somebody blowing the whistle on war crimes, dystopian hyper-authoritarian surveillance state programs etc.
"Snowden should have accepted being sent to Gitmo and be tortured for revealing that the US government routinely shits on the US constitution" is, to me, an infantile response. To keep at the line of "he shouldn't have gone to Russia", the question becomes: what's the alternative?
Why don't you just admit that you don't like what he did and want to see him punished for it? Pretending that you want him imprisoned to make his actions against the US government more effective/meaningful isn't fooling anybody.
Being nominated is essentially meaningless; it means you have the support of at least one person, other than themself, from this group:
---
Members of national assemblies and national governments (cabinet members/ministers) of sovereign states as well as current heads of states
Members of The International Court of Justice in The Hague and The Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague
Members of l’Institut de Droit International
Members of the international board of the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom
University professors, professors emeriti and associate professors of history, social sciences, law, philosophy, theology, and religion; university rectors and university directors (or their equivalents); directors of peace research institutes and foreign policy institutes
Persons who have been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize
Members of the main board of directors or its equivalent of organizations that have been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize
Current and former members of the Norwegian Nobel Committee
Former advisers to the Norwegian Nobel Committee
---
It's also prohibited to reveal nominations for 50 years; so if someone is trumpeting a nomination they are either lying for propaganda purposes or someone involved is breaking the rules for propaganda purposes, and the only thing it proves is that the people involved have no respect for the prize.
Although I'm outsider to US politics and I kind of liked Obama, Obama winning Nobel was an absurdity.
And Malala winning Nobel was also a joke. Don't get me wrong. I don't like Pakistan's regressive religion oriented politics and I actually hate Taliban. I concur that Malala might have done something courageous, but I always felt awarding her Nobel prize was mostly a propaganda. But now I kind of hate Malala.
Obama and Malala cases made me think that Nobel peace prizes are joke.
Lol I mean, they gave it to Obama.... which irregardless of political affiliation = eyeroll with those confirmed drone kill stats... was Assange ever acquitted of those rape charges? I’m pretty sure he just fled.
Why don’t we nominate Putin? I hear everyone who disagrees has become sick with poison.
Uhhh... last time I checked, Assange colluded with Russia to give us Trump. Whoever nominated him, probably himself, is a deranged motherfucker. They actually think his actions resulted in peace?!?
We are wildly less safe worldwide in every possible way. Climate change was neglected. All environmental standards became toilet paper. Iran now has nukes. North Korea has nukes. Russia is seizing neighboring countries with the blessing of Trump. China has gone rogue. And the US is locking up children in cages. Which part of that sounds like resounding peace?
If Assange were American, I’d nominate him for treason.
99 comments
[ 3.2 ms ] story [ 133 ms ] threadNot that you're wrong, just pointing out who this nomination comes from.
There were a few details that legitimately pissed people off though. I recall her being fed debate questions, as well as efforts to undermine Sanders. Those are Hillary’s fault for doing them, not WL or Putins fault for showing people.
This community's depth of political reading is super disappointing.
This is far less apparent in Physics, Chemistry and Economics though.
"accusation on the front page, acquittal on page 13"
[0] assuming UK rates are similar to Swedish rates, given a quick google didn’t give me their stats
[1] https://www.thelocal.se/20191119/swedish-prosecutor-holds-pr...
Sure, the attention they got where overblown.
But let's not act like assange wasn't acting like an asshole... Or that the charges where dropped because of reasons related to if he's guilty or not.
Heavier crimes demand heavier evidence. Suspects if major crime are frequently locked up on smaller sometimes entirely unrelated charges.
https://www.theguardian.com/media/2019/nov/19/sweden-drops-j...
I can only speak for myself:
Personally I've always seen myself as an observer to humanity. I know what's right and I'd like to make it happen but there's so many people trying to get ahead there's no point. The cards are stacked against me and I was scared to fail.
Covid for all its badness has made me realise I can't just observe. Whilst there are people who don't want what's best in power we are in this precarious position where humanity could fail. My hope however optimistic it is, is that people who are good will also realise they have to act and they can't just watch.
As the old saying goes all it takes for evil to prevail is for good men to do nothing.
That saying has always meant a lot to me and I've always stood by the fact I would stand up and be counted when I was needed; this coronavirus made me realise I was needed right now.
If anything, we all lucked out with how mild it was, and people are going to be less cautious when a much deadlier virus makes the rounds next time.
I am not pertaining to know the future and I do admit there is a very high chance I'm being overly optimistic - basically I accept your appraisal of the situation is sadly more probable.
For most of the other areas it's a shared journey. Mourning with Italy because they were hit so early. Being scared for Sweden and the UK in their decisions to try to build up herd immunity. Tribalism is "us vs them", I don't think most people have that attitude for coronavirus. Everyone wants everyone to succeed so that we can all learn from it.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herd_immunity
Even if you hate what Snowden did, he is a whistleblower in the sense that he saw something he thought was wrong, and carefully pulled enough data to prove it without endangering anyone's lives or doing unnecessary damage to his country.
I could totally get behind Assange's and Snowden's nominations (but like others have said a nomination for this Prize is meaningless), but Manning's seems ridiculous.
I'm unclear why the challenges with the Manning release begin with the 22yo w/o enough experience to make better judgments and not the scores of military and political careerists who created, enabled and hid the atrocities.
https://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2007/02/02/nobel-nominatio...
A nomination is meaningless.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2018_North_Korea%E2%80%93Unite...
[2] https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-53770859
For clarity: I think neither deserves it. Just that obama deserves it even less.
Or the Israel-Palestinian peace talks during his first term (https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/2010%E2%80%9311_Israeli%E2%8...). Unlike the Trump adminstration's current one, he didn't completely sideline Palestine.
There's nothing constructive that will last from the Trump administration.
The same Iran deal that was crafted to appease a tyrannical government? By your logic, Churchill should’ve got a peace prize for placating nazi Germany with appeasement.
There are constructive things coming out of the trump administration. Specifically in regards to Russia, China, and Iran. Tolerating their abuse of the western values is not one I’d call constructive.
And most importantly produce no sustainable outcomes on any issue whatsoever. "He tried" is not what Leaders are remembered for.
In 2013 the Obama administration actively tried to negotiate peace with the Taliban:
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/jun/18/us-peace-talks...
Hacker news becoming same shithole reddit is.
Or do you also object with 'allegedly' when people call Bush the Younger a war criminal as well? He'll never see a trial either for the same reason, but he is nevertheless a war criminal.
Besides that, it's somewhat insulting to group assange with snowden and manning.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Binney_%28U.S._intelli...
A lot of people don't include the judiciary when they say "the state", I believe as the courts are independent and serve as a controlling instance that should (in theory) reign in the state when it oversteps.
Ironic that the Bundestag MPs who nominated them are from Die Linke, a successor to East Germany's ruling party that ran the Stasi.
Sure, go for it. You're welcome to call for such a thing. Or do you think zee germans would try to stop you?
Another reminder: Julian Assange's skullduggery influenced the 2016 election in favor of Trump, in which he lied about receiving materials from Russia that were the product of an illegal hack into the DNC, and appears to have been taking cues from the Trump campaign, and in particular Roger Stone, to drop these materials at an opportune time to influence a presidential election.
I'm willing to get modded down infinitely to push back against the bonkers hero-worship of these three here on HN. Assange in particular bears direct responsibility for bringing the United States into the sorry state it is in today.
Honest question, what do you think would have been a better choice, besides "be a hero and go to Gitmo for your service"?
Obviously, all European states are out of the question, as they wouldn't have granted Snowden political asylum, and went so far to deny Bolivia's president safe travel through their airspace on the suspicion he might have Snowden on board and then went on to search the plane after they forced them to land. That whole affair really opened my eyes to the American empire and its European provinces.
Should he have stayed in Hong-Kong, or gone to Beijing? North Korea?
The fact that we can only cite as governments possibly willing to grant asylum to Snowden non-democratic autocracies who have terrible records on surveillance, human rights and civil liberties should be a hint as to what their motives would be for giving him protection to begin with.
It is, but who wants that? When someone from a drug cartel becomes a witness, we don't say "okay, thanks, now go back there to get tortured & murdered, show that you accept the consequences of your actions", we say "thanks, now we make you disappear and get you a new identity so you can live a normal life".
The motives of Russia aren't my concern. My concern is that the governments who call themselves liberal democracies are not willing to stand up for somebody blowing the whistle on war crimes, dystopian hyper-authoritarian surveillance state programs etc.
"Snowden should have accepted being sent to Gitmo and be tortured for revealing that the US government routinely shits on the US constitution" is, to me, an infantile response. To keep at the line of "he shouldn't have gone to Russia", the question becomes: what's the alternative?
---
Members of national assemblies and national governments (cabinet members/ministers) of sovereign states as well as current heads of states
Members of The International Court of Justice in The Hague and The Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague
Members of l’Institut de Droit International
Members of the international board of the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom
University professors, professors emeriti and associate professors of history, social sciences, law, philosophy, theology, and religion; university rectors and university directors (or their equivalents); directors of peace research institutes and foreign policy institutes
Persons who have been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize
Members of the main board of directors or its equivalent of organizations that have been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize
Current and former members of the Norwegian Nobel Committee
Former advisers to the Norwegian Nobel Committee
---
It's also prohibited to reveal nominations for 50 years; so if someone is trumpeting a nomination they are either lying for propaganda purposes or someone involved is breaking the rules for propaganda purposes, and the only thing it proves is that the people involved have no respect for the prize.
And Malala winning Nobel was also a joke. Don't get me wrong. I don't like Pakistan's regressive religion oriented politics and I actually hate Taliban. I concur that Malala might have done something courageous, but I always felt awarding her Nobel prize was mostly a propaganda. But now I kind of hate Malala.
Obama and Malala cases made me think that Nobel peace prizes are joke.
Assange can go to Sweden and except for a swift plane to the US there is nothing he need to fear.
Why don’t we nominate Putin? I hear everyone who disagrees has become sick with poison.
We are wildly less safe worldwide in every possible way. Climate change was neglected. All environmental standards became toilet paper. Iran now has nukes. North Korea has nukes. Russia is seizing neighboring countries with the blessing of Trump. China has gone rogue. And the US is locking up children in cages. Which part of that sounds like resounding peace?
If Assange were American, I’d nominate him for treason.