Chelsea Manning Begins Hunger Strike | Time.com

I need help. I am not getting any. I have asked for help time and time again for six years and through five separate confinement locations. My request has only been ignored, delayed, mocked, given trinkets and lip service by the prison, the military, and this administration.

I need help. I needed help earlier this year. I was driven to suicide by the lack of care for my gender dysphoria that I have been desperate for. I didn't get any. I still haven't gotten any.

I needed help. Yet, instead I am now being punished for surviving my attempt. When I was a child, my father would beat me repeatedly for simply not being masculine enough. I was told to stop cryingto "suck it up." But, I couldn't stop crying. The pain just got worse and worse. Until finally, I just couldn't take the pain anymore.

I needed help, but no one came then. No one is coming now.

Today, I have decided that I am no longer going to be bullied by this prisonor by anyone within the U.S. government. I have asked for nothing but the dignity and respectthat I once actually believed would be provided forafforded to any living human being.

I do not believe that this should be dependent on any arbitrary factorswhether you are cisgender or transgender; service member or civilian, citizen or non-citizen. In response to virtually every request, I have been granted limited, if any, dignity and respectjust more pain and anguish.

I am no longer asking. Now, I am demanding. As of 12:01 am Central Daylight Time on September 9, 2016, and until I am given minimum standards of dignity, respect, and humanity, I shallrefuse to voluntarily cut or shorten my hair in any way; consume any food or drink voluntarily, except for water and currently prescribed medications; and comply with all rules, regulations, laws, and orders that are not related to the two things I have mentioned.

This is a peaceful act. I intend to keep it as peaceful and non-violent, on my end, as possible. Any physical harm that should come to me at the hands of military or civilian staff will be unnecessary and vendictive. I will not physically resist or in any way harm another person. I have also submitted a "do not resuscitate" letter that is effective immediately. This shall include any attempts to forcibly cut or shorten my hair or to forcibly feed me by any medical or pseudomedical means.

Until I am shown dignity and respect as a human again, I shall endure this pain before me. I am prepared for this mentally and emotionally. I expect that this ordeal will last for a long time. Quite possibly until my permanent incapacitation or death. I am ready for this.

I need help. Please, give me help.

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Chelsea Manning Begins Hunger Strike | Time.com

How ‘The Source’ Makes a Musical Out of Chelsea Manning and WikiLeaks – Daily Beast

Composer and singer Ted Hearne isnt interested in audience members judging Manning for leaking information, so much as thinking about what they might do in her situation.

Probably the strongest response to the oratorio The Source, which deals with army private Chelsea Manning who gave hundreds of thousands of classified documents to WikiLeaks, says librettist Mark Doten, is complete silence.

I find it interesting how people react to the piece, he said. Sometimes at the conclusion they applaud, but other times theres silence for a minute or two minutes. Just sitting in that silence together like that is probably the most powerful for me in terms of audience response.

With a layered score influenced by jazz, pop, and electronica, video projections, and a libretto drawn from primary sources such as Twitter feeds, cable news interviews, personal chat transcripts, and declassified military reports from Manning, its no wonder some audience members arent sure how to react.

Composer and singer Ted Hearne, who recently collaborated with Erykah Badu and teaches composition at the University of Southern California, says though she is at the heart of The Source, its not about Manning, who was sentenced to 35 years in 2013 on counts of espionage, theft, and computer frauda sentence then-President Barack Obama commuted shortly before the end of his term.

Hearne says hes not interested in audience members judging Manning for leaking the information so much as thinking about what they might do in her situation. He has read good arguments both condemning and praising what she did, Hearne said. But hes not writing an op-ed.

I want to make art to ask those questions, he said. Music can help make the boundaries between right and wrong more porous.

Hearne used a type of vocal processing that mixes the human voice with a tuned voice, which he calls evocative and beautifully glitchy.

It felt like the best way to deal with texts coming from distant lands and a distant experience, he said. It was a way to set Chelseas words and give them a contemporary context and place us in America. For instance, we use a chunk of Smoke Gets In Your Eyes with text about an air evacuation happening, and the smoke is a signal flare. It doesnt mean anything super specific, but it evokes something.

The Source comes to the San Francisco Opera on Feb. 24, after performances in Brooklyn and Los Angeles. Matthew Shilvock, the director of the San Francisco Opera, calls mixing human voices with electronic ones ethereal, and he thinks the use of a collage style in the libretto and the music sampling tells the story in a powerful way.

Its taking the fragmentation of contemporary life, he said. The sound bites of the news cycle and social media create a tapestry that delves into something as contemporary as Chelsea Manning and WikiLeaks.

It can make people uncomfortable, Hearne says, to think about Manning and war.

Our country has been engaging in these wars for a long time, and our taxes pay for them, he said. Some information Chelsea Manning leaked was about actual war crimes covered up by the government, but its not like every document is about a murder or an act of violence. Its a record of war day to day. So asking people to look at content of the leaks is asking them to look at war and what it makes them feel about the war.

Hearne says he was originally interested in Julian Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks. But when Manning, who announced she was transgender after her sentencing, emerged as a public figure, he switched his focus to her.

In her online chats with Adrian Lamo, the hacker who later turned her in, Hearne saw authentic reactions in the midst of an identity crisis.

She was feeling so frustrated, and no one was taking her concern seriously. She felt there were ethical and moral dilemmas in our actions in Iraq and Afghanistan, Hearne said. Its pretty clear from reading the chat logs that her actions were very close to the heart, and she was experiencing a crisis. It felt very real and not distanced, and she seemed to hold herself responsible and to connect her work and personal life. It made me think about what my role is in war when living my bougie artist life in Brooklyn and able to feel distance from it.

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Hearne met Doten, author of the novel, The Infernal, at the MacDowell Colony, an artists retreat. Ted came to me with the idea for project in part because I hadnt written a libretto before, Doten said. He didnt want a traditional approach, so we tried to push on the form.

Doten says some of the language about war, which made its way into the libretto, he found poetic.

They describe for example, a young boy released several pigeons, which can be a signaling device, he said. Its incredibly full of meaning and its a beautiful image, or it could be seen as a potential threat by the people who created that report.

Doten also says he didnt want to judge Manning, but hopes people seeing it will ask themselves questionsabout war and the military and information.

We hope the piece does capture the scope of the leaks and people try and grapple with how our current system of media and technology shapes our lives and the way we interact in the world, he said. Our ability to create these massive documents and the ways we use them shapes the wars themselves, and we wanted to explore what these vast amounts of information mean and what they have to say about wars in Middle East.

The Source is tonight (Weds), Thurs, and Fri at San Francisco Opera. Book tickets here.

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How 'The Source' Makes a Musical Out of Chelsea Manning and WikiLeaks - Daily Beast

Donation drive to aid Chelsea Manning after release hits $100k – RT

Published time: 28 Feb, 2017 10:19Edited time: 1 Mar, 2017 12:28

A fundraising page set up to help Chelsea Manning upon her release from prison later this year has reached its target of $100,000, just three weeks after the donation drive was started.

Over 2,300 people from around the world have contributed to the fundraiser drive, set up by friends and family with the aim of helping Manning start a new life outside prison.

Money raised will be deposited into Mannings bank account.

The 29-year-old transgender former US military intelligence analyst, born Bradley Manning, was jailed for leaking American military and diplomatic correspondence across the world in a cache of more than 700,000 classified files given to WikiLeaks in 2010.

Before leaving office this year, Barack Obama commuted the whistleblowers sentence. Manning, who has served seven years of a 35-year jail term, will now be freed on May 17 instead of her scheduled 2045 release.

READ MORE: Obama commutes much of Chelsea Manning's sentence

For the past seven years, Chelsea has been incarcerated, text from the fundraiser page reads. She survived solitary confinement, systemic denial of health care and years of being separated from her friends and community.

Through it all she has remained a steadfast voice for liberty and justice and an inspiration to so many. We now have a chance to show our appreciation for all that she has given us, the page reads.

READ MORE: Whatevs: Manning responds to Trumps ungrateful traitor tweet

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Donation drive to aid Chelsea Manning after release hits $100k - RT

President Obama Commutes Chelsea Manning’s Sentence – The Pacific Tribune

Shaving nearly 28 years off of her sentence, President Obama on Tuesday largely commuted the remaining jail time of Chelsea Manning, the army intelligence analyst convicted of the 2010 leak that exposed American military and diplomatic activities across the world, disrupted the administration, and boosted WikiLeaks to stardom.

Mr. Obamas merciful gesture rescued Ms. Manning from an uncertain future as a transgender woman in a mens military prison, Fort Leavenworth Kansas, in the age of Donald Trump. Over the past seven years of her imprisonment shes twice attempted to commit suicide while serving a 35 year sentence by far the longest of any leaker of classified government documents. There have only been a handful of leak cases, and the average sentence is between two and three years.

Under the terms of Mr. Obamas commutation, Ms. Manning is scheduled for release on May 17th 2017 instead of 2045.

The move by the outgoing President also relieves the military of obligation for treating her gender dysphoria including things such as continued gender therapy hormones and sex reassignment operations of which the military has no experience administering.

In announcing the Presidents commutation, Press Secretary Josh Earnest said Chelsea Manning is somebody who went through the military criminal justice process, was exposed to due process, was found guilty, was sentenced for her crimes, and she acknowledged wrongdoing, in comparison to NSA leaker Edward Snowden who he said fled into the arms of an adversary, and has sought refuge in a country that most recently made a concerted effort to undermine confidence in our democracy.

In her application for commutation, Ms. Manning said that she never imagined that she would be sentenced to the extreme term of 35 years, a term for which there was no historical precedent.

I take full and complete responsibility for my decision to disclose these materials to the public, she wrote. I have never made any excuses for what I did. I plead guilty without the protection of a plea agreement because I believed the military justice system would understand my motivation for the disclosure and sentence me fairly. I was wrong.

Prior to June of last year, the militarys policy was to discharge transgender service members immediately upon discovery of their gender identity. Secretary of Defense Ashton B. Carter changed that policy in June and said the military would instead provide treatment for them, eventually including sex reassignment surgery if doctors said it was necessary.

President-elect Donald Trump mocked that change as excessively politically correct, raising the possibility that he will rescind it.

Regardless, Ms. Manning has been spared the hand of the next commander in chief and will be released per Mr. Obamas commutation on May 17th, 2017.

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President Obama Commutes Chelsea Manning's Sentence - The Pacific Tribune

A Chelsea Manning-WikiLeaks Opera, Seen in a New Light – The … – New York Times


New York Times
A Chelsea Manning-WikiLeaks Opera, Seen in a New Light - The ...
New York Times
The composer Ted Hearne talks about how this work has held up as its subject matter has continued to evolve as a news event.
'Source' takes on Chelsea Manning controversySan Francisco Examiner

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A Chelsea Manning-WikiLeaks Opera, Seen in a New Light - The ... - New York Times

‘Source’ takes on Chelsea Manning controversy – San Francisco Examiner


San Francisco Examiner
'Source' takes on Chelsea Manning controversy
San Francisco Examiner
Composer Ted Hearne picked a bold, complicated, newsworthy topic for his 2014 oratorio The Source the Chelsea Manning WikiLeaks case. There's something about the way we wage war now that people don't have to deal with it at all if they don't want ...

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'Source' takes on Chelsea Manning controversy - San Francisco Examiner

Composer Ted Hearne sets Chelsea Manning’s leaks to music – SFGate

By Ryan Kost, San Francisco Chronicle

Ted Hearne composed The Source, a combination of opera and music theater that draws its materials from Chelsea Manning, who leaked government data.

Ted Hearne composed The Source, a combination of opera and music theater that draws its materials from Chelsea Manning, who leaked government data.

Chelsea Mannings struggles with gender identity and her role in a war she wanted no part of are explored in The Source, a combination of opera and musical theater by Ted Hearne.

Chelsea Mannings struggles with gender identity and her role in a war she wanted no part of are explored in The Source, a combination of opera and musical theater by Ted Hearne.

Composer Ted Hearne sets Chelsea Mannings leaks to music

Ever since WikiLeaks profile began to blow up internationally, composer Ted Hearne had been considering how he might create some art with it. He was interested in the way the organization had situated itself around the very basic concept of freedom of information and the potential parallels around the digitization of music and peer-to-peer sharing.

Then, news about the arrest of Chelsea Manning, one of the biggest leakers of government data in U.S. history, broke, his frame shifted, and near the end of 2011, Hearne and librettist Mark Doten took a trip to Maryland to attend Mannings pretrial hearing.

That was sort of the moment we realized the piece was about her, Hearne says over the phone from Los Angeles. The way in which she held herself was totally different than the way shed been portrayed in the media up until that point.

What the two came up with was a piece that samples from the Department of Defense cables Manning was ultimately convicted of leaking as well as the chat logs, published on Wired.com, between her and the man that would go on to turn her in.

The piece explores not just the leaks, then, but the struggle Manning was going through with her own identity both as it related to her gender shes a transgender woman and her role in a war that she seemed to want no part of, all of which came up in those chats.

This material which asks the audience to consider their own complicity in what was leaked and the ensuing fallout is presented by four singers (their voices heavily modified, at times, by auto-tune) as projections of some of the leaked footage runs in the background.

As the San Francisco Opera prepares to present the piece beginning Friday, Feb. 24, the work seems as timely as ever. In one of his final acts as president, Barack Obama commuted Mannings sentence, one decried by many as overly long. (I think its incredible that Obama commuted her sentence. Its so amazing, Hearne says. An act of mercy, a real act of mercy.) And now leaks, even if of a somewhat different nature, are taking their toll on the Trump administrations early efforts. This month, they lead to the resignation of Trumps national security adviser.

That Hearne would find space for music in all of the political fallout, hearings and court proceedings that swirled around the Manning leaks may initially feel surprising, but, for him, it was an easy fit.

Hearnes political awakening came about a decade ago, at the age of 22. George W. Bush was waging war and consolidating power, dismantling the rule of law all over the place. At the same time, Hearne was coming into his own as a composer. The two are linked for me.

Indeed, very early on, Hearne won critical acclaim for his oratorio Katrina Ballads, which set primary sources, including television interviews of storm victims, to music. The Source, then, comes from this same place. I think if the questions are honest, then I think it makes a lot of sense to deal with politicized topics, he says.

The Source itself deals mostly with questions more so than answers; the gray areas seem to interest Hearne more than the black or the white. He sees ambiguity in the value of leaks. Thats why I write the piece because I had a lot of questions. And I still have a lot of questions, he says. Its both clear that we over-classify information and clear that WikiLeaks is a political organization with its own goals.

Theres also, Hearne says, an interesting distinction the public likes to make between the sorts of leaks Edward Snowden made leaks that show our privacy is being violated, and by the government no less and was largely celebrated for, and the sorts of leaks Manning was responsible for the kind we might try to ignore because they show us parts of ourselves that are hard to confront and was largely ridiculed for.

Hearne tries to break down dichotomies in the compositions themselves, too, eschewing any genre even if the piece is being presented by the citys Opera. Its more like a video installation, he says at one point. And that is by design. Ive started to think about the distinctions that separate our conceptions of musical genre and the binaries that are tyrannical when we think about style.

You can unspool that even further, of course, and bring it back to Manning, who was breaking her own binaries even as she broke the law. And like that, the music becomes a metaphor, Hearne says, for both gender and right and wrong.

Ryan Kost is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: rkost@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @RyanKost

The Source: Friday, Feb. 24, through March 3. $35. Taube Atrium Theater, 401 Van Ness Ave., S.F.

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Composer Ted Hearne sets Chelsea Manning's leaks to music - SFGate

Chelsea Manning Fundraiser Garners More Than $83000 in One Week – NBCNews.com

People hold signs calling for the release of imprisoned wikileaks whistleblower Chelsea Manning while marching in a gay pride parade in San Francisco, California June 28, 2015. Elijah Nouvelage / Reuters

A fundraiser to welcome home former Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning has raised more than $83,000 in just one week. Nearly 2,000 individuals from across the globe have contributed to the

"It's amazing to see so much support for Chelsea, but it's not really a surprise," Evan Greer, a friend and supporter of Manning, told NBC Out. "She has done so much to fight for all of our basic human rights. I think people are grateful for the opportunity to give back by supporting her."

On January 17,

"Chelsea Manning has served a tough prison sentence," President Obama said in his final news conference. "It has been my view that given she went to trial, that due process was carried out, that she took responsibility for her crime, that the sentence that she received was very disproportionate relative to what other leakers had received and that she had served a significant amount of time, that it made sense to commute and not pardon her sentence."

Related:

The commutation was lauded by several human rights and civil liberties organizations, including the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and Amnesty International, which called the commutation a "

Chase Strangio, one of Manning's ACLU attorneys, said the commutation "likely saved her life." While being incarcerated at a men's military prison at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas,

There was also expected criticism from conservatives, including House Speaker Paul Ryan, who called the commutation "outrageous" and said it set "a dangerous precedent that those who compromise our national security won't be held accountable for their crimes."

Regardless of what one thinks of Manning's actions and her punishment, once she's released from prison on May 17 -- after serving a seven-year sentence -- adjusting to her new life will likely be a challenge.

"Upon her release she will need logistical, emotional, and financial support to safely transition into the free world," her GoFundMe page states. "For the first time in her life, Chelsea will have the opportunity to live freely as her authentic self, to grow her hair, engage with her friends, and build her own networks of love and support. We want her to have the tools to do that and to overcome the years of abuse she has experienced in custody."

Manning, who came out as transgender woman after her arrest, will be dishonorably discharged from the Army and as a result

A number of those who donated to the "Chelsea Manning Welcome Home Fund" stated they were inspired to do, because they admired her "courage," "bravery" and "patriotism," and credited the leaks with exposing abuses.

"Thank you for your courage in trying to make our country better for all of us," wrote donor Dennis Peterson. Tristan Townsend, another donor, wrote, "You are such a courageous person who has endured so much for the benefit of others. Thank you so much."

While in prison Manning wrote about whistleblowing, national security, LGBTQ rights, health care and a number of other issues. She has not stated publicly exactly what she will do once she is free, but according to Strangio, she will not cease to be vocal on such issues.

"Finally she will have the opportunity to chart her own path, and only she can say what that will look like. I know from my experience with her that her commitment to fighting injustice is unwavering, and I am confident that she will continue to fight for government transparency, trans justice and the many other fights ahead," Strangio said.

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Chelsea Manning Fundraiser Garners More Than $83000 in One Week - NBCNews.com

Chelsea Manning Writes Heartfelt Letter Thanking Fellow Inmates – Papermag

Chelsea Manning just released an evocative open letter in The Guardian thanking her fellow prison inmates for their friendship and support. Manning was seven years into a 35-year sentence for leaking classified government documents to Wikileaks when Obama commuted her sentence as one of his last acts as president in January. She will be set free on May 17.

Manning has undergone an intense, traumatic experience while incarcerated, including multiple suicide attempts, solitary confinement, a hunger strike, and mistreatment of her gender dysphoria.

In the letter she just released, she states that her fellow inmates taught her strength, perseverance, and compassion during these difficult times.

"Those outside of prison may not believe that we act like human beings under these conditions. But of course we do. And we build our own networks of survival," Manning wrote. She continued, "I never would have made it without you. Not only did you teach me these important lessons, but you made sure I felt cared for."

She also urges inmates who are incarcerated to know that this network of friends remembers and cares for them. While it is impossible to know the extent of what she has experienced, it is moving to read that Chelsea Manning has built such strong, caring relationships while incarcerated.

Read her full letter here.

[h/t The Guardian]

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Chelsea Manning Writes Heartfelt Letter Thanking Fellow Inmates - Papermag

Chelsea Manning: to those who kept me alive all these years, thank … – The Guardian

When the prison tried to break one of us, we all stood up. Photograph: Elijah Nouvelage / Reuters/Reuters

To those who have kept me alive for the past six years: minutes after President Obama announced the commutation of my sentence, the prison quickly moved me out of general population and into the restrictive housing unit where I am now held. I know that we are now physically separated, but we will never be apart and we are not alone. Recently, one of you asked me Will you remember me? I will remember you. How could I possibly forget? You taught me lessons I would have never learned otherwise.

When I was afraid, you taught me how to keep going. When I was lost, you showed me the way. When I was numb, you taught me how to feel. When I was angry, you taught me how to chill out. When I was hateful, you taught me how to be compassionate. When I was distant, you taught me how to be close. When I was selfish, you taught me how to share.

Sometimes, it took me a while to learn many things. Other times, I would forget, and you would remind me.

We were friends in a way few will ever understand. There was no room to be superficial. Instead, we bared it all. We could hide from our families and from the world outside, but we could never hide from each other.

We argued, we bickered and we fought with each other. Sometimes, over absolutely nothing. But, we were always a family. We were always united.

When the prison tried to break one of us, we all stood up. We looked out for each other. When they tried to divide us, and systematically discriminated against us, we embraced our diversity and pushed back. But, I also learned from all of you when to pick my battles. I grew up and grew connected because of the community you provided.

Those outside of prison may not believe that we act like human beings under these conditions. But of course we do. And we build our own networks of survival.

I never would have made it without you. Not only did you teach me these important lessons, but you made sure I felt cared for. You were the people who helped me to deal with the trauma of my regular haircuts. You were the people who checked on me after I tried to end my life. You were the people that played fun games with me. Who wished me a Happy Birthday. We shared the holidays together. You were and will always be family.

For many of you, you are already free and living outside of the prison walls. Many of you will come home soon. Some of you still have many years to go.

The most important thing that you taught me was how to write and how to speak in my own voice. I used to only know how to write memos. Now, I write like a human being, with dreams, desires and connections. I could not have done it without you.

From where I am now, I still think of all of you. When I leave this place in May, I will still think of all of you. And to anyone who finds themselves feeling alone behind bars, know that there is a network of us who are thinking of you. You will never be forgotten.

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Chelsea Manning: to those who kept me alive all these years, thank ... - The Guardian