Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search
 

dkf

(37,305 posts)
209. Was that the Government who did that?
Sat Aug 10, 2013, 05:31 PM
Aug 2013

Or the lynch mob types? Mobs are monsters of course. The Government is supposed to be better than that.

What were the charges leveled? How long were the possible sentences? Or was the risk in what the crazies would do?

Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

Exactly. The downsides of the civil rights era can't compare. dkf Aug 2013 #1
Only because you did not face them. n/t 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2013 #134
+1 Egalitarian Thug Aug 2013 #143
The risks were higher from the public than from the government. dkf Aug 2013 #151
you have no fucking clue what you are talking about Californeeway Aug 2013 #208
Was that the Government who did that? dkf Aug 2013 #209
I disagree with the dismissive wording of the post you are responding to. antigone382 Aug 2013 #210
You're absolutely right. Th1onein Aug 2013 #2
Just since the NSA apologist Democrat occupying the WH took over from his criminal MotherPetrie Aug 2013 #3
Post removed Post removed Aug 2013 #5
I'm willing to believe agent46 Aug 2013 #23
Agree, we really IMO see so little of what is really going on behind the scenes, the pressures, the RKP5637 Aug 2013 #82
He is the head of the Democratic Party, so as a factual matter geek tragedy Aug 2013 #26
"The vast majority of Democratd" HangOnKids Aug 2013 #46
It's bad form to make fun of someone just because of a simple typo. n/t totodeinhere Aug 2013 #204
Yes, we do reject the fringe that has suddenly appeared over the past few years supporting sabrina 1 Aug 2013 #126
The Democrats have always had a Conservadem fringe. geek tragedy Aug 2013 #140
Yes, and they didn't control the party, otherwise we would never have had SS, Civil Rights sabrina 1 Aug 2013 #152
+ a gazillion. nt Mojorabbit Aug 2013 #170
President Obama is a Trojan Horse? Care to expand on that meme? nt msanthrope Aug 2013 #60
Please do at least consider the possibility that Cheney's NSA got the drop on him starting in, oh, HardTimes99 Aug 2013 #64
I'll say it again: Bill Hicks called it! backscatter712 Aug 2013 #166
Yup. progressoid Aug 2013 #27
Having the courage of your convictions. Furthermore, standing for trial would enable much more info KittyWampus Aug 2013 #4
"standing for trial would enable much more info to come out" cthulu2016 Aug 2013 #8
Plenty... KharmaTrain Aug 2013 #94
Yeah right! mazzarro Aug 2013 #144
Once Again... KharmaTrain Aug 2013 #150
Someone who did exactly as you are suggesting Snowden do, Drake, who went through sabrina 1 Aug 2013 #172
Then He Is And Will Remain A Fugitive... KharmaTrain Aug 2013 #175
BS MattSh Aug 2013 #43
Did Manning's trial enable much more info to come out? muriel_volestrangler Aug 2013 #50
Quite a bit. If you take a look at his sentencing hearing, Manning has benefitted msanthrope Aug 2013 #58
"Open testimony in court" didn't prevent Manning from being tortured while in pre-trial HardTimes99 Aug 2013 #66
Kindly show me where his lawyer claims 'torture?' nt msanthrope Aug 2013 #70
The Article 13 Motion filed in 2012 . . . markpkessinger Aug 2013 #110
So, his lawyer isn't using the word 'torture' in his legal filings? Being a lawyer myself, I know msanthrope Aug 2013 #119
Not a word of what you wrote is true. morningfog Aug 2013 #56
+1...nt SidDithers Aug 2013 #74
The man had courage of his convictions enough to be willing . . . markpkessinger Aug 2013 #103
I doubt it. The judge would probably agree to censoring what information comes out in the totodeinhere Aug 2013 #205
If a person decides to commit felonies they should man-up and take responsibility... Tx4obama Aug 2013 #6
Oh jezuz... Like draft dodging? Smoking pot? cthulu2016 Aug 2013 #9
Excellent response to this meme! nt Pholus Aug 2013 #52
+Infinity! - nt HardTimes99 Aug 2013 #67
+1000000 nt Tien1985 Aug 2013 #92
Letter from Birmingham Jail is pretty instructive-- msanthrope Aug 2013 #146
Prior to 1962, sodomy was a felony in every state, punished by a lengthy term of imprisonment Zorra Aug 2013 #16
"Man-up" Hissyspit Aug 2013 #18
Okay, so everyone who has a noteworthy amount of weed should turn themselves in? Scootaloo Aug 2013 #25
There is a huge difference between treestar Aug 2013 #59
Nope. Felony is felony. Scootaloo Aug 2013 #179
Why? dairydog91 Aug 2013 #79
Underground Railroad, big time illegal action. Fugitive Slave Act of 1850. Bluenorthwest Aug 2013 #81
I'm handling the amorality of what they are saying with the ignore function. Zorra Aug 2013 #124
Especially ... 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2013 #142
Well, ProSense Aug 2013 #7
My impression was that Snowden wasn't trying to be like MLK or Gandhi. gtar100 Aug 2013 #41
Whether or not John Lewis approves of Snowden's actions... ljm2002 Aug 2013 #130
Daniel Ellsberg seems to agree: backscatter712 Aug 2013 #10
"The country...was a different America". With far different Democrats. n/t jtuck004 Aug 2013 #11
Good point. nt MannyGoldstein Aug 2013 #12
I do believe it's part of what gives moral authority mythology Aug 2013 #13
Snowden is paying a price. backscatter712 Aug 2013 #15
Don't forget 'force feedings' (currently being used on Gitmo hunger strikers) - nt HardTimes99 Aug 2013 #69
Gandhi and King and Lewis had millions at their backs Scootaloo Aug 2013 #36
Indeed they did! And they also weren't facing the likelihood of spending . . . markpkessinger Aug 2013 #105
They were facing death. Snowden merely faces prison. He's a coward. nt msanthrope Aug 2013 #132
Ghandi, King, and Lewis faced death. Death. Snowden faces due process. He's a coward. nt msanthrope Aug 2013 #139
What an odd standard you hold Scootaloo Aug 2013 #178
I have no patience for cowards who flee the US legal system. And he is a coward. nt msanthrope Aug 2013 #180
I'm so glad for you that you're such a tough, principled person Scootaloo Aug 2013 #182
Likening an Obama supporter to a gorilla is principled? That's awesome. nt msanthrope Aug 2013 #184
Well, you're the one grunting and thumping your chest Scootaloo Aug 2013 #187
Okay--so now, you are telling a female Obama supporter she's acting like a gorilla? nt msanthrope Aug 2013 #188
You need to make up your mind exactly what it is you're trying so hard to be offended by Scootaloo Aug 2013 #189
Let me see if I have this correctly--I called Edward Snowden a coward, and you, who are not msanthrope Aug 2013 #190
I'm trying to figure out what your argument is Scootaloo Aug 2013 #198
Why are you so offended by my calling Snowden a coward, and why would you think to call another DUer msanthrope Aug 2013 #199
I'm not offended. Bemused, sure. Amused, definitely Scootaloo Aug 2013 #202
Now you've called me a 'penis.' What is up with you? In your lecture to us on porn, msanthrope Aug 2013 #203
Now you're just getting desperate Scootaloo Aug 2013 #206
I find people who flee lawful indictments to be cowards. He isn't facing death--he's facing msanthrope Aug 2013 #207
apartheid & segregation were things the majority initially *knew* were going on, but believed HiPointDem Aug 2013 #49
This ^^^^ treestar Aug 2013 #63
It's a possible choice. But it's not "civil disobedience" unless you subject yourself to the pnwmom Aug 2013 #14
Well what Snowden did was not civil disobedience. zeemike Aug 2013 #17
He didn't just blow the whistle on something that was unconstitutional. pnwmom Aug 2013 #19
Oh, no one is suppose to mention that.. that's not part of the St snowden bio.. Cha Aug 2013 #21
What information did he leak about Russia? muriel_volestrangler Aug 2013 #51
It is not his call treestar Aug 2013 #65
Yes it is his call. zeemike Aug 2013 #102
Snowden isn't in the military so he couldn't have been put in a military prison. pnwmom Aug 2013 #153
It is his call... ljm2002 Aug 2013 #135
The Whistleblower Protection Act doesn't cover national security contractors riderinthestorm Aug 2013 #141
Au contraire. "Policy-based" civil disobedience occurs when a person breaks the law in order to Zorra Aug 2013 #149
It's not a "meme".. it's the law.. if you commit a crime you're subject to the Cha Aug 2013 #20
"if you commit a crime you're subject to the punishment.." Apparently not war criminals. AnotherMcIntosh Aug 2013 #22
+1 Or banks. nt woo me with science Aug 2013 #29
Or banksters nxylas Aug 2013 #32
Hot Water Ichingcarpenter Aug 2013 #45
+Infinity! - nt HardTimes99 Aug 2013 #71
Right Cha treestar Aug 2013 #68
So true Cha. great white snark Aug 2013 #95
"Reporting his hacking through the proper channels"... ljm2002 Aug 2013 #137
More "proper channels" bullshit wtmusic Aug 2013 #154
I think the problem many people have ecstatic Aug 2013 #24
There's not agreement on that in the definition of civil disobedience. limpyhobbler Aug 2013 #28
It's a tactic developed by American civil rights activists. Deep13 Aug 2013 #30
It's about a century older than the Civil Rights Movement Recursion Aug 2013 #98
I see. nt Deep13 Aug 2013 #148
Henry David Thoreau jberryhill Aug 2013 #31
You know Mandela operated underground until he was captured, right? Scootaloo Aug 2013 #39
Mandela was also a violent militant at first Recursion Aug 2013 #120
Thoreau hedgehog Aug 2013 #131
You forgot the "ur" example: Jesus. baldguy Aug 2013 #211
You base your entire argument as if Snowden was military, like Manning. Amonester Aug 2013 #33
Really great post. And I'm glad woo me with science Aug 2013 #34
Depends upon what you're protesting. Fire Walk With Me Aug 2013 #35
Nice...............nt Enthusiast Aug 2013 #116
It came from people who have two issues.. PorridgeGun Aug 2013 #37
wow. limpyhobbler Aug 2013 #76
I see you are a relatively low-count poster here so far, but I do hope you will consider HardTimes99 Aug 2013 #77
Thank you. I attempted to report everything to anyone who would listen PorridgeGun Aug 2013 #183
Incredible post. Enthusiast Aug 2013 #117
Thanks a bunch! PorridgeGun Aug 2013 #185
Another +1 to this post. backscatter712 Aug 2013 #136
Indeed! Thanks for the bump :) PorridgeGun Aug 2013 #186
Facing the consequences of one's actions, Summer Hathaway Aug 2013 #38
Amen. I continue to be flabbergasted by how little so many people in this forum know about Number23 Aug 2013 #42
I share your astonishment Summer Hathaway Aug 2013 #44
You are deliberately misinterpreting the point about civil disobedience as a TACTIC chimpymustgo Aug 2013 #72
Pretending that this is all about civil disobedience is laughable. n/t ProSense Aug 2013 #85
Way to go! Burn that strawman! dairydog91 Aug 2013 #91
You suggest that we "Think about black men in the south"... ljm2002 Aug 2013 #157
The "Snowden's cowardice" cheap shot. Comrade Grumpy Aug 2013 #167
Value of publicity shanen Aug 2013 #40
Excellent points! n/t backscatter712 Aug 2013 #174
kr. and the us has a death penalty. HiPointDem Aug 2013 #47
du rec. xchrom Aug 2013 #48
Agreed JustAnotherGen Aug 2013 #53
I remeber that there were lots of people who agreed with Timothy McVeigh also. kelliekat44 Aug 2013 #54
Psst...it's been a secret truebluegreen Aug 2013 #86
The longer this drags on JustAnotherGen Aug 2013 #111
From the government, of course. nt bemildred Aug 2013 #55
I am sorry you missed this bit of seminal American History and a lesson on the law--- msanthrope Aug 2013 #57
Exactly. The 'civil' part of 'civil disobedience' versus 'anarchy'. randome Aug 2013 #88
This is how a Patriot acts. I lament that 'civics' is so little taught. Snowden is a coward, msanthrope Aug 2013 #89
He committed a crime treestar Aug 2013 #61
The government violated the Constitution... davidn3600 Aug 2013 #73
The government does not treestar Aug 2013 #80
The government cannot enforce laws that violate the constitution davidn3600 Aug 2013 #83
Classifying documents in order to conceal government misconduct is itself illegal n/t markpkessinger Aug 2013 #101
K&R - nt HardTimes99 Aug 2013 #62
As Snowden has made clear, you only have to go to jail if they catch you. bemildred Aug 2013 #75
Simply put... 99Forever Aug 2013 #78
+1. They're PO'ed he escaped, and that's why they engage in the petty smears and insults. reformist2 Aug 2013 #87
It's stomach-turning to watch them hide behind figures like MLK or Nelson Mandela Marr Aug 2013 #106
As someone who has been arrested for my civil disobedience, I don't hide behind msanthrope Aug 2013 #125
Well, congratulations. Marr Aug 2013 #127
Well, neither you nor I did anything that merits life in prison. The point is don't do the msanthrope Aug 2013 #128
That's awfully glib. Marr Aug 2013 #138
I don't think that's an apt comparison because the degree of potential harm to an individual msanthrope Aug 2013 #145
The next time there are ProSense Aug 2013 #84
Civil disobediance does require courage though. hack89 Aug 2013 #90
It's a silly idea that comes from nowhere, simply made up Waiting For Everyman Aug 2013 #93
Except for, you know, Thoreau, who coined the term (nt) Recursion Aug 2013 #97
So what? Waiting For Everyman Aug 2013 #99
Just to answer your direct question: Thoreau is where it comes from Recursion Aug 2013 #96
This really, really needed to be said -- thank you! markpkessinger Aug 2013 #100
Anyone else find it interesting that the people who say Snowden needs to Marr Aug 2013 #104
I have been detecting this weird undercurrent of sado-masochism in the posts of those HardTimes99 Aug 2013 #108
I've noticed the same thing. Marr Aug 2013 #113
Very interesting indeed. backscatter712 Aug 2013 #147
he still wouldn't get their 'respect' KG Aug 2013 #158
Exactly. It's their talking point... backscatter712 Aug 2013 #161
From people that are opposed to the goals of civil disobedience. JoeyT Aug 2013 #107
No kidding. These are the same people who so assiduously told everyone that OWS Marr Aug 2013 #114
I remember that. backscatter712 Aug 2013 #159
It came from Henry David Thoreau's 1849 Essay, MineralMan Aug 2013 #109
Interestingly, though, Thoreau also highly approved of John Brown who HardTimes99 Aug 2013 #115
He did, yes. He also wrote the essay in question. MineralMan Aug 2013 #118
Oh, I know. I mentioned Brown only b/c Gandhi and MLK, Jr. are synonymous HardTimes99 Aug 2013 #121
Yes, the concept of non-violence came much later. MineralMan Aug 2013 #122
Not sure Brown would have agreed with Gandhi or MLK, Jr. But I think your HardTimes99 Aug 2013 #123
To clarify: that is only Thoreau's opinion, not the commonly accepted modern definition. Zorra Aug 2013 #160
Kicked and Recommended. Enthusiast Aug 2013 #112
Probably the private prison corporations. malthaussen Aug 2013 #129
From the folks that actually practiced ... 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2013 #133
Ouch Recursion Aug 2013 #155
Sorry, that is absolutely subjective, illogical, and ludicrous. Zorra Aug 2013 #164
Okay ... 1StrongBlackMan Aug 2013 #212
awesome post Vattel Aug 2013 #156
Espionage becomes civil disobedience so Progressive dog Aug 2013 #162
It came from a system that would prefer that dissidents turn themselves in cthulu2016 Aug 2013 #163
I think you're right! "You must submit as you disobey!" backscatter712 Aug 2013 #165
as if civil disobedience should be codified. like the Marquise of Queensbury. KG Aug 2013 #168
I couldn't have said it better myself. n/t backscatter712 Aug 2013 #169
Especially inapplicable where laws (like the Espionage Act) are being abused. DirkGently Aug 2013 #171
Where did it come from?? Probably from a contract issued to one of our Private Security sabrina 1 Aug 2013 #173
Good possibility. And how could any reasonable person buy into this irrational meme Zorra Aug 2013 #176
Well, when the obvious sacrifices required when you decide that you will have to sabrina 1 Aug 2013 #177
But here's what I find really puzzling: People cite MLK as an example of a perpetrator Zorra Aug 2013 #191
Yep. Stratfor, or Booz Allen. backscatter712 Aug 2013 #194
You're looking for logic where there is none. You are correct though, it is insane to sabrina 1 Aug 2013 #200
Yep, back in the sixties we were struggling to bring in the dawning of the Age of Aquarius. Cleita Aug 2013 #181
Gandhi, MLK - but what do they know? They aren't Edward The Great Man Snowden arely staircase Aug 2013 #192
So the tens of thousands who acted with King and Gandhi who weren't jailed for it Zorra Aug 2013 #195
just the ones who ran off to russia nt arely staircase Aug 2013 #196
Like many bad ideas, it originated with Henry David Thoreau Tom Ripley Aug 2013 #193
I didn't say it was a bad idea. backscatter712 Aug 2013 #197
K & R !!! WillyT Aug 2013 #201
Latest Discussions»General Discussion»Where did the meme come f...»Reply #209