Senator Lieberman Says NY Times Should Be Investigated For Publishing Wikileaks Documents

from the is-that-joe-mccarthy-or-joe-lieberman dept

Senator Joe Lieberman continues to expand his desire to piss all over the First Amendment and the very concept of a free press. He’s already been pressuring companies to stop working with Wikileaks and has already introduced an anti-Wikileaks bill that appears to be pure censorship, but he’s now extending his lack of understanding of the First Amendment to the press: stating that the NY Times should be investigated for criminal activity in publishing the Wikileaks documents.

Beyond the blatantly troubling statement that appears to go against the very principles of a free press (which we thought Lieberman was supposed to be upholding), it would appear that the bill Lieberman himself introduced shows that he already knows the NY Times did not, in fact, violate any laws in publishing that info. That’s because the bill would seek to add liability for such actions, and we all know that you can’t violate a law before it’s actually been turned into a law.

In the meantime, when did Joe Lieberman become the reincarnation of Joe McCarthy? It’s amazingly depressing to see a US Senator so blatantly in favor of direct censorship of the press.

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Comments on “Senator Lieberman Says NY Times Should Be Investigated For Publishing Wikileaks Documents”

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80 Comments
Dark Helmet (profile) says:

Re: Re:

Two things to note about Lieberman:

1st, grandstanding is his thing. Remember that he was the one that called out Marilyn Manson for being responsible for the Columbine Tragedy.

2nd, Joe is a hardliner for the War on Terror. One thing that folks like that are REALLY not going to want is openess regarding communication between us and our Middle East interests. He once advised a preemptive strike on Yemen because a terrorist was trained there.

In other words, he’s a psycho….

BearGriz72 (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: (Senator Joseph 'Palpatine' Lieberman)

“It is with great reluctance that I have agreed to this calling. I love democracy. I love the Republic. The powers you give me I will lay down when this crisis has been abated! My first act, with this new authority, is to create a Grand Army of the Republic, to counter the increasing threat of [Freedom of Speech & Freedom of The Press].”

Squid Lips says:

Re: lieberman for corruption?

The most that’s gonna happen to Lieberman is that he’s going to get re-elected the next time he runs, and eventually get the censorship he’s proposing passed.

Next thing to happen, will be a massive surge of government funds derived from extorting the US citizens for “infringing activity.”

Thirdly, the senators (and friends) will spend the funds on sweet houses, and more control of the internet; leading ultimately to another fully censored and regulated medium of communication, a sweet house for themselves, and a bunch of pissed off nerds.

It’s possible that within their brand new sweet houses, they will have a trap door of some sort, of which they can simply press a button, and the floor drops from beneath the feet of an unwanted guest. If I was Lieberman, I would probably install something like that in my house ASAP, right before I shot myself in the face with my…

Anonymous Coward says:

Donate to McCarthy... err.. Lieberman

Connecticut is home to a number of financial institutions, investment companies and hedgefunds. This is an industry whose job is increasingly to make money on speculation.

Wikileaks claims to have info on financial institutions. So he wants to make sure he’s on the record to ask for campaign contributions. ..

Hephaestus (profile) says:

This bill is actually a good thing ...

If Liebermans bill were to pass it will lead to a quicker demise of the NewsPapers. They will be unduely hampered by the law. Making them less competative and less relevant. The next time a WikiLeaks type organization dumps information they will not be able to publish. People will go to other sources for their news. Then they will fail financially.

Good day for us, bad day for hot news.

Michael (profile) says:

Re: Re: This bill is actually a good thing ...

The first amendment does not apply to online outlets outside of the US. A bill like this would, at best, make US news outlets (online and offline) less competitive.

Joe is no idiot, though. He grandstands on topics that are hard to disagree with. He is not about ‘censorship’, he is about ‘protecting US interests’ and against ‘cyber-terrorism’. Someone asked if he was going to be asked about being against the first amendment – he may, but his response is likely to ask why the questioner wants to allow terrorists the tools to aid in their attacks.

Gabriel Tane (profile) says:

Re: Re:

Did you mean “does not imply”?

And I’d argue that since most of the noise we hear about the war on terror is that our soldiers are fighting ‘for our freedom’, it would be pissing on all those dead bodies NOT to argue for the freedoms they’re ‘fighting and dying for’.

Sorry everyone, I had a coupon for troll food.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

Would be so kind as to point out which laws exactly were broken? Can you also please provide some quotes from the raw material that would put people in mortal peril?

I am going to assume that you are you are referring to soldiers in Iraq with your last sentence. Would you mind explaining to me how exactly Iraq is/was a threat to the constitution?

interval (profile) says:

Re: I'm torn

On one hand, I agree; if Wikileaks has published anything that puts US GIs in jeopardy that’s bad. But the US Government doesn’t seem to have any problems putting its own citizens under its microscope, its nice to see it getting some of that back. And Assange, as far as the leaked memos go, more power to him.

Anonymous Coward says:

Obviously this guy isn't getting paid enough.

The current salary (2010) for rank-and-file members of the House and Senate is $174,000 per year.

Maybe Congress critters should recieve 100% of their paycheck from campaign contributions by companies over the course of a year.

$174,000 in salary vs $20M in campaign contributions…. Kinda difficult to make a decision, huh Lieberman.

Think of all the money we could save.

http://www.opensecrets.org/politicians/summary.php?cid=N00000616&cycle=2008

Gabriel Tane (profile) says:

Re: Re:

I like the full quote:

“God forbid we should ever be twenty years without such a rebellion. The people cannot be all, and always, well informed. The part which is wrong will be discontented, in proportion to the importance of the facts they misconceive. If they remain quiet under such misconceptions, it is lethargy, the forerunner of death to the public liberty. …And what country can preserve its liberties, if its rulers are not warned from time to time, that this people preserve the spirit of resistance? Let them take arms. The remedy is to set them right as to the facts, pardon and pacify them. What signify a few lives lost in a century or two? The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time, with the blood of patriots and tyrants.
It is its natural manure.”

That first line is looking quite scary under these headlines, isn’t it? Sounds like Jefferson would say that we need to revolt… ’cause damn are we overdue!

Truthfully, when we look at the facts (as we have them) of the Wikileaks fiasco… it sounds like the government wants to keep more people misinformed… it’s almost like they WANT us to revolt.

Anonymous Coward says:

Hey, just thought I would put a different spin on things. Yes, we have the freedom of press, but that doesn’t mean all information is free to post at will. Would you like it if they posted all the detailed plans on how to make a nuclear bomb all around the world? For that matter, how about we just give everyone all of our military technology while we are at it? Freedom of press was created to make sure the gov is feeding us a bunch of bull, but that doesn’t mean it extends to the gov not having secrets.

The Invisible Hand (profile) says:

Re: Re:

“Would you like it if they posted all the detailed plans on how to make a nuclear bomb all around the world?”

Dude, the first Atomic bomb was a uranium core surrounded by TNT. Any dope with access to Uranium can make one. The problem is that NO SANE PERSON is going to give you weapons grade Uranium.

Also: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atomic_bomb

“For that matter, how about we just give everyone all of our military technology while we are at it”

What? Your guns, stealth fighters and cruise missiles? Heck, if I can’t get them HERE, I’ll gt them over there. You think you are so special or that your “military technology” is so advanced or secret? Most of your technology was developed in the 70s and hasn’t suffered a major upgrade since. Also, this isn’t Civilizations kid. You can’t have more “tech” that the guy next door.

“Freedom of press was created to make sure the gov is feeding us a bunch of bull, but that doesn’t mean it extends to the gov not having secrets.”

And why does a government need to have secrets? What is so important that the government must hide from the common man? The only reason I see is if it is something EXCEPTIONALLY critical, not some day-to-day diplomacy crap.

The only reason I see for a government to hide stuff and lie is if they are doing something terribly wrong, which, apparently, they were.

The Invisible Hand (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

What sleek designs? Those re-hashes/upgrades of old technology? Heck, your best fighter is still the F-15 (the F-22 was a total flop if you ask me). Your standard rifle is still the M4 and the M16. Your standard tank is still the M1.

Pay attention kid: your “new” technology is just an improvement on the old, with better guiding systems, bigger payloads or better performance.

Give me one example of something truly new your military have invented in the past decade.

The Invisible Hand (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

And besides, even if you do have “new” technology, how long do you think someone else skilled in the area would take to copy it, even if you just gave them a general description of what it is meant to do?

US: “Oh, we’ve invented this new shiny rifle that shoots missiles. It’s pretty high-tech”.

Someone else: “Dang…I’ve never though on that…gimme 10 minutes”.

10 Minutes later:

Someone else: “Here, I’ve made one that shoots bullets, missiles, grenades, kittens and peas. What to look at it?”

Homer: “Doh”

Jay says:

Re: Re:

Invisible Hand pulls up some great points and I’ll expand a little.

” Would you like it if they posted all the detailed plans on how to make a nuclear bomb all around the world?”

There’s ways to make “dirty bombs” that are home engineered. But the hazards of the radiation going through your body make it a really, REALLY bad idea.

Remember what happened to Marie Curie as a result of her experiments.

“For that matter, how about we just give everyone all of our military technology while we are at it?”

HAHAHAH! Do you realize the surplus of AK-47s all over the world (except the US) is because of the fall of communism? Are you really going to try to blame the fact that someone can get a gun from me or Joe Schmo of the Czech Repub. because I don’t want to give up my “military secrets?” Quite frankly, if it’s used against someone else, it’s no longer a secret. While the US blows up downed drones among other things, I’m sure that a few have been reverse engineered to have Iran, Iraq or other places capable of building them, if they had the resources to do so.

But there is more to it than JUST giving someone knowledge of a technology.

Gabriel Tane (profile) says:

Re: Where is the first amendment at here?

Yeah… remember that award Wikileaks earned for outing the Kenya assasinations? If that was us doing that (and don’t be naive and say ‘we’d never do that!’), those actions would be classified. So… that’s the classified documents you’d want to protect?

http://blog.marsgroupkenya.org/?p=870

nasch (profile) says:

Re: Re: Where is the first amendment at here?

While it’s true that publishing a classified leak is protected (though actually leaking the information is not), the government defines what is classified and what is not. And by their definition, it’s still classified even after it’s been published. You may think this is stupid, but that’s how the rules are currently.

Anonymous Coward says:

So if it's classified, does that mean that someone just had to open their yapper?

After reading some of these so called “secrets” I have to say I was quite bummed. It was mostly similar to things you’d hear on elementary school playgrounds.

It’s just interesting to see that a lot of decisions made at the political level are based on a sort of cargo cult science without much regard for scientific inquiry. It shows a gaping hole of academic research made and disregard for downstream implications. Perhaps there needs to be a requirement from the Congressional Research Service, who would study implications of moronic bills, and a requirement of a bill prior to voting, similar to a Congressional Budget Office request.

Anonymous Coward says:

for the millionth time, leaking classified documents is illegal, but publishing classified documents IS NOT illegal and is very much protected by the first amendment. you boob.

also:

“But the way to make a government responsible is not simply to enlist the services of responsible men and women, or to sign laws that ensure that they never stray. The way to make government responsible is to hold it accountable. And the way to make government accountable is make it transparent so that the American people can know exactly what decisions are being made, how they’re being made, and whether their interests are being well served.”
-Pres. Obama

http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/remarks-president-welcoming-senior-staff-and-cabinet-secretaries-white-house

LTs (profile) says:

Re: Re:

no the publishing of classified doc’s is not protected thats just insane. So your saying that if a report gets a copy of say the names of all of our spies and publishes this list its legal are you insane and stupid? apparently so. Just because you think you can read does not mean that you know what your reading. Take a logic pill at sometime don’t just drink the cool aid and assume you know because your educated in the public schools and some professor said its true.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

no the publishing of classified doc’s is not protected thats just insane. So your saying that if a report gets a copy of say the names of all of our spies and publishes this list its legal are you insane and stupid? apparently so. Just because you think you can read does not mean that you know what your reading. Take a logic pill at sometime don’t just drink the cool aid and assume you know because your educated in the public schools and some professor said its true.

So, to you, there is no difference between whistle-blowing and spying? We should just trust our government to do what is right, with no public oversight? With no real incentive to do the right thing? They’re just doing what’s right for all of us because they’re the government and that’s what they do? Or is it possible that our government is actually made up of individual persons who can make mistakes, bad decisions, or even selfish decisions?

tracker1 (profile) says:

Just left amazon, going to work on aborting Visa/MC

Well, when it was just Amazon, I could accept it *might* be a business decision. Now, I’ve let Amazon know they won’t be a customer of me personally (https://www.amazon.com/gp/help/contact-us/general-questions.html) and I’ll be working to rework all client applications I have running on their servers. I would encourage others to do the same… I’d been a happy “Prime” customer for several years. Goodbye amazon.

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