That
this is not even remotely true seems to matter not at all, as the White House
and Congress struggle to explain how surveillance works with safeguards of a
FISA court to limit intrusion on Americans who have not been in contact with
suspicious foreign sources. (If they had been aggressively bugging the Tsamaev
brothers, might we have been spared the Boston bombings?)
Now
in Hong Kong, Snowden has taken his conscience out of criminal reach, counting
on odds that the US will not try to extradite him to avoid prolonging debate on
the issue, but that does not make him a First Amendment hero. In times of moral
darkness, a one-eyed whistle blower is no king.
JeffreyToobin observes in the New Yorker: “The
American government, and its democracy, are flawed institutions. But our system
offers legal options to disgruntled government employees and contractors. They
can take advantage of federal whistle-blower laws; they can bring their
complaints to Congress; they can try to protest within the institutions where
they work. But Snowden did none of this. Instead, in an act that speaks more to
his ego than his conscience, he threw the secrets he knew up in the air—and trusted,
somehow, that good would come of it. We all now have to hope that he’s right.”
Now
we learn about ego-driven squabbles at the Guardian
over publishing Snowden’s scoop that tend to confirm the motivation of all involved.
Right
on cue, Daniel Ellsberg who made public the Pentagon Papers in 1971 shows up to
proclaim that the US has fallen into an "abyss" of total tyranny but
that Snowden's revelations offer "the unexpected possibility of a way up
and out of the abyss."
Those
of us who recall those days can testify to the legal process back then that the
New York Times and other publications
had to go through to publish details not about the government’s current
activities but a long retrospective about the Vietnam War that a
self-questioning government itself had conducted.
Ellsberg
himself was eventually justified for his whistle-blowing, but nostalgia should not
conflate his with Snowden’s.
After
a lifetime in journalism, I cherish the First Amendment but it does not come
with the right to what Oliver Wendell Holmes long ago called yelling fire in a
crowded theater.
Especially when the theater is full of those trying to prevent a fire.
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