Contribute to the Chelsea Manning Welcome Home Fund / Boing … – Boing Boing

Chelsea Manning's lawyer Chase Strangio has set up an official Chelsea Manning Welcome Home Fund. Please join those of us who have contributed to help with her living and healthcare expenses. As a reminder of what she's endured:

If you are interested in offering an in-kind donation or other support, please e-mail: CMreleaseneeds@gmail.com.

Chelsea Manning Welcome Home Fund (GoFundMe / Chase Strangio)

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The FBI has always been hostile to Freedom of Information Act requests: it habitually violates the law by allowing these requests to go more than 30 days without a response, and maintains a lab full of 1980s-vintage computers that it uses to (badly) fulfill public records request, so that it can reject requests on the []

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Contribute to the Chelsea Manning Welcome Home Fund / Boing ... - Boing Boing

Donations and Gratitude Pour In for Chelsea Manning’s Homecoming – Common Dreams


Common Dreams
Donations and Gratitude Pour In for Chelsea Manning's Homecoming
Common Dreams
These recent photos of Chelsea Manning "capture the reality of her prison life," according to her attorney Chase Strangio. "She is forced to keep her hair shorta source of pain and trauma that we have been fighting in court for years. But she wants ...

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Donations and Gratitude Pour In for Chelsea Manning's Homecoming - Common Dreams

Contribute to the Chelsea Manning Welcome Home Fund – Boing Boing

Chelsea Manning's lawyer Chase Strangio has set up an official Chelsea Manning Welcome Home Fund. Please join those of us who have contributed to help with her living and healthcare expenses. As a reminder of what she's endured:

If you are interested in offering an in-kind donation or other support, please e-mail: CMreleaseneeds@gmail.com.

Chelsea Manning Welcome Home Fund (GoFundMe / Chase Strangio)

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The FBI has always been hostile to Freedom of Information Act requests: it habitually violates the law by allowing these requests to go more than 30 days without a response, and maintains a lab full of 1980s-vintage computers that it uses to (badly) fulfill public records request, so that it can reject requests on the []

The World Wide Web Consortiums Encrypted Media Extensions (EME) is a DRM system for web video, being pushed by Netflix, movie studios, and a few broadcasters. Its been hugely controversial within the W3C and outside of it, but one argument that DRM defenders have made throughout the debate is that the DRM is optional, and []

In a new paper in Progress, Oxford economist Vuk Vukovic argues that the key to re-election in local politics is to be just corrupt enough: giving lucrative contracts and other benefits to special interests wholl fund your next campaign, but not so much that the people refuse to vote for you.

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Contribute to the Chelsea Manning Welcome Home Fund - Boing Boing

Chelsea Manning’s Supporters Are Coming Through for Her in a Big Way – ATTN

After seven years of imprisonment, Chelsea Manning is about to go free. But that doesn't mean her troubles are behind her.

She has endured unimaginable abuses for the seven years she has spent in custody, Chase Strangio, an ACLU staff attorney and Mannings lead counsel, told ATTN:, from severe conditions of solitary confinement to the repeated denial of her health care, to the ongoing pain and indignity of being held in a facility for men even though she is a woman. The effects of these experiences will be with Chelsea for the rest of her life.

Manning joined the military in 2007, deploying to Iraq where the Army private saw concealed evidence of wrongdoing U.S. soldiers killing unarmed civilians; detainees being tortured, raped, and murdered by the Iraqi state that she leaked to the public, an offense that got her sentenced to 35 years in a military prison. Ten years and a presidential pardon later and Manning is set to be freed in a matter of weeks.

Awww <3 Thank you all so very much for pitching in & helping me start my new life ^_^ https://t.co/LGSdkQDdvY #welcomehomefund

But shell be free to live in a country where the current president thinks her an ungrateful traitor who should still be behind bars. And shell be broke in a country where housing and health care are anything but free.

Strangio wants to make the rest of her life a little easier: Hes trying to raise $100,000 by the time Manning is released from military prison on May 17. Now 29, Manning is no longer the teenager her parents named Bradley, but a transgender woman named Chelsea with a column in The Guardian. The transition from incarceration to civilization is never easy, and it will be especially hard for someone living in a country that her critics charge she doesnt love.

President Barack Obama commuted Mannings sentence on Jan. 17, one of his last acts while in office. As soon as that happened, her supporters wanted to know how they could help.

Chelseas family and friends wanted to set up a fund that would transfer the money directly into Chelseas bank account, which is what this fundraiser will do, Strangio said. Money raised will go toward everything it takes to live in this free country: rent, health care, and clothes, among other things. It likely wont cover everything, Strangio noted, but we are hopeful that we can reach and exceed that goal.

Since the GoFundMe page was launched on Tuesday, supporters have donated over $47,000.

Another potential cost they might need to cover: protection. Though Manning's supports have hailed her as a whistleblower uncovering injustices perpetrated by the United States, both liberals and conservatives alike have deemed her a traitor.

It will be Chelseas decision to decide what safety and security mean to her and how to plan to meet those needs, Strangio told ATTN:. Hopefully the community of people who recognize Chelsea as a hero will help make sure that she has the financial, emotional and logistical tools to survive.

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Chelsea Manning's Supporters Are Coming Through for Her in a Big Way - ATTN

Chelsea Manning’s ‘Welcome Home Fund’ Raises $40K in First Day – Newsweek

A welcome home fund for incarcerated whistleblower Chelsea Manning has raised more than $40,000 in its first 24 hours.

The GoFundMe campaign was set up by friends and family of the 29-year-old transgender woman, who has spent the past seven years in prison for leaking classified military documents to WikiLeaks.

More than 900 people have donated to the fund, which will be deposited directly into Mannings bank account in time for her release from prison on May 17.

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People hold signs calling for the release of imprisoned wikileaks whistleblower Chelsea Manning while marching in a gay pride parade in San Francisco. She is now preparing to be released after Barack Obama commuted her prison sentence. REUTERS/Elijah Nouvelage/File Photo

Chelsea has been through so much, so we wanted to make sure she has her basic needs met while she transitions back into the free world, Evan Greer, a friend of Manning and an activist who helped set up the fund, tells Newsweek .

She has been such an inspiration to so many people, and has done so much to further human rights for all and increase visibility for transgender prisonersI think people are grateful for the opportunity to be able to give something back to her.

Greer was one of the leading campaigners calling for then president Barack Obama to commute Mannings sentence and called the decision a major victory for free speech and human rights. The former U.S. soldier has reportedly attempted suicide twice during her controversial incarceration.

Funds raised will be used to cover Mannings basic living expenses for the first year after she is released, including housing, food, clothing and healthcare.

Manning has said she plans to return to Maryland, where she lived before she was incarcerated, though has not stated publicly what she will do once she is free.

Only Chelsea can speak to her exact plans once she is freed, Greer says, but I know that she intends to continue doing what she has always done: using her voice to help others and try to make the world a better place.

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Chelsea Manning's 'Welcome Home Fund' Raises $40K in First Day - Newsweek

Chelsea Manning’s Attorney is Raising Funds for Her ‘Transition Into the Free World’ – Out Magazine

A GoFundMe page has been launched to support Chelsea Manning as she transitions to life at home after being in prison since 2010.

The 29-year-old former army intelligence analyst and transgender woman was sentenced to 35 years military prison after leaking sensitive, military and diplomatic documents regarding warfare in Iraq and Afghanistan. In the final days of his presidency, president Obama commuted her sentence to grant Manning her freedom.

Related |President Obama Commutes Chelsea Manning's Sentence

"The majority of Chelseas adult life has been spent under the control of powerful institutions," writes Chase Strangio, Mannings attorney and friend, on GoFundMe. "Upon her release she will need logistical, emotional and financial support to safely transition into the free world."

The fundraising campaign, created by Strangio, as well as Mannings family and friends, has raised more than $20,000 of their $100,000 goal in under a day. "Funds raised will be used to pay for Chelseas rent, utilities, health care, clothing and other living expenses for the first year after she is released."

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Chelsea Manning's Attorney is Raising Funds for Her 'Transition Into the Free World' - Out Magazine

Obama may have commuted Chelsea Manning’s sentence but his legacy on whistleblowers is not one of clemency – Open Democracy

Obama should be remembered for his persecution of whistleblowers and presiding over a culture of intimidation. Its a legacy that Trumps administration will happily build on in the years to come.

Xinhua/SIPA USA/PA Images. All rights reserved.In one of his final acts as president, Barack Obama appeared to show some mercy by commuting Chelsea Mannings sentence. The US army private turned whistleblower was responsible for leaking classified military and diplomatic material more than 700,000 documents and videos to WikiLeaks, who in turn worked with news organisations to coordinate widespread publication throughout 2010. But the fact remains thatObama has persecuted more whistleblowersunder the Espionage Act of 1917compared with allprevious administrations.

Whilst Mannings release in 2017 is of course better than 2045, as her original sentence of 35 years demanded, she still served longer than most other whistleblowers. Indeed the average sentence for leaking classified material in the US is typically one to three years. In contrast, Manning spent more than three years behind bars just awaiting the start of her military trial, and then another four years after her conviction.

Manning has served in abhorrent conditions, including solitary confinement for 23 hours a day for a period of 11 months. Following a 14-month investigation into the treatment of Manning, UN special rapporteur, Juan Mendez,concluded the conditions she endured could have constituted torture. Imposing seriously punitive conditions of detention on someone who has not been found guilty of any crime, he asserted is a violation of his right to physical and psychological integrity as well as of his presumption of innocence.

The US military for a long time refused to accept Mannings gender dysphoria and request for gender realignment therapy. Being a transgender inmate held in the mens military prison at Fort Leavenworth, she attempted to take her own life on two occasions in 2016. In an interview published only days before the commuting of her sentence, shedescribed her current situation:

I need help. I am living through a cycle of anxiety, anger, hopelessness, loss, and depression. I cannot focus. I cannot sleep. I attempted to take my own life.

In an understatement unbecoming of the great orator,Obama proclaimed: "Chelsea Manning has served a tough prison sentence." Moreover, he felt very comfortable that justice has been served because Manning had indeed repented and served time.

Of course by commuting the sentence rather than pardoning her, Obama ensures Mannings conviction remains on record. She was also demoted and dishonourably discharged from the army, both of which also remain unchanged.

It is important to remember that those admissions, of course, came in a court where she faced an even harsher sentence: the Justice Department was seeking 60 years imprisonment. Because the case went to military tribunal, Manning was also unable to plead a public interest defence. That is, using the fact that her revelations uncovered actual wrongdoing as a mitigating factor in her trial or even sentencing. Eventually she wasacquitted of aiding the enemy, but convicted of espionage violations.

Far from signalling the end to an era of a vendetta against whistleblowers,as the Icelandic Pirate Party's Birgitta Jonsdottir hopes, US policy on whistleblowers is likely to persist. Firstly,Obama made a strong suggestion to this effectwhen he announced the commuting of Mannings sentence:

What I can say broadly is that, in this new cyber age, we're going to have to make sure that we continually work to find the right balance of accountability and openness and transparency that is the hallmark of our democracy, but also recognize that there are adversaries and bad actors out there who want to use that same openness in ways that hurt us whether that's in trying to commit financial crimes, or trying to commit acts of terrorism, or folks who want to interfere with our elections.

Secondly, the administration also sought to differentiate between the pleas of Manning and Snowden, arguing that Mannings self-reproach meant she should be treated differently. Only days before Obamas announcement, White House press secretary Josh Earnest claimed there was a stark difference between the cases of Manning and Snowden:

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. Mr Snowden 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.

Though of course the alleged fleeing into the arms of an adversary, was a direct consequence of the US withdrawing his passport, as Snowden was quick to point out:

The message from the US here is not that whistleblowing is a legitimate last resort, but that they will prosecute and punish.

Thirdly, we already have an indication that these policies against whistleblowers are likely to persist or even deteriorate under president Trump and a House/Senate dominated by the Republican Party. His spokesperson,Sean Spicer claimed Trump wastroubled by this action:

"It's disappointing and it sends a very troubling message when it comes to the handling of classified information and the consequences for those who leaked information that threatened the safety of our nation."

House Speaker Paul Ryan waseven more unequivocal:

"This is just outrageous. Chelsea Manning's treachery put American lives at risk and exposed some of our nation's most sensitive secrets. President Obama now leaves in place a dangerous precedent that those who compromise our national security won't be held accountable for their crimes."

RepublicanSenator John McCain also claimedObamas decision was "a grave mistake that I fear will encourage further acts of espionage and undermine military discipline."

When president Trump eventually commented on the case, he naturally did so via his personal Twitter account incorrectly labelling Manning a traitor, since she was found not guilty of aiding the enemy:

In the past Trump has expressed similar disdain for Edward Snowden, tweeting (of course) in 2014 that he should be executed:

The first victim of Trumps presidency is unlikely to be Snowden, however, as his Russian visa has recently been extended for three years. Instead we are likely to see a steady dismantling of rights and infrastructure designed to protect whistleblowers. One such mechanism was The Office of the Whistleblower which the Securities and Exchange Commission was forced to establish by the DoddFrank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act in 2010, following the financial crisis. The whistleblower who knows of possible securities law violations can be among the most powerful weapons in the law enforcement arsenal of the Securities and Exchange Commission, it proclaims on its website.

President Trump has surrounded himself with elite bankers, including Jamie Dimon (the CEO of JPMorgan) and Gary Cohn (former Goldman Sachs president). It should come as no surprise then that one of the many executive orders he has signed in the first weeks of his presidency, is to review the Dodd-Frank Act by instigating a review of how financial markets are regulated. Whilst there is little detail about how this will be achieved, The Office of the Whistleblower will likely be on a target list of regulations to be abolished.

Obamas legacy on whistleblowers is not one of clemency, compassion, leniency or even mercy. Rather president Obama should be remembered for his persecution of whistleblowers and presiding over a culture of intimidation against those who seek to uncover wrongdoing and to hold power to account. If their current rhetoric and early actions is anything to go by, president Trump and his administration will happily build on Obamas legacy to continue persecution of whistleblowers for years to come.

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Obama may have commuted Chelsea Manning's sentence but his legacy on whistleblowers is not one of clemency - Open Democracy

McCain says Taliban ‘murdered’ people because of Chelsea Manning and WikiLeaks – PolitiFact

President Donald Trump tweeted on Jan. 26 that Chelsea Manning is an an ungrateful traitor for calling former President Barack Obama a weak leader. (Inform video)

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., opposes former President Barack Obamas decision to shorten Chelsea Mannings prison sentence  in part, he says, because her decision to release a large cache of government documents to WikiLeaks resulted in unnecessary deaths.

In 2013, a judge sentenced Manning, a private in the U.S. Army, to 35 years in prison, an unprecedentedly long sentence for a leak of government information, according to the American Civil Liberties Union. In January 2017, Obama decided to commute her sentence. She will leave prison in May.

In a Jan. 18, 2017, interview, Fox News Host Bill OReilly asked McCain for his reaction to Obamas decision.

McCain said he felt "sorrow for the families of those individuals who identified in these leaks in Afghanistan that the Taliban went after and murdered. And rage because this president is basically endorsing a proposal that allows someone to go free who is responsible for the needless deaths of those people who are allies."

OReilly pushed back on McCains assertion that individuals identified in the leaks were killed by the Taliban.

"I just wanted to know if it was specific leaks that came to you as a Senator which showed what WikiLeaks did with Manning's help killed people that were helping the U.S.A.," OReilly said.

McCain replied: "Let me be specific. The information I received when I was there was that the Taliban went after these people. I assume, killed them."

The interview left us still wondering if people were killed because their names appeared in the documents that Manning leaked, so we decided to put McCains claim on the Truth-O-Meter.

McCain spokeswoman Julie Tarallo said the Taliban has a history of retaliating against people who cooperate with United States forces. She pointed to a 2010 interview by British television station Channel 4 with a Taliban spokesman, who said the group would "punish" Afghan nationals working for the United States named in the WikiLeaks logs.

"If they are U.S. spies, then we know how to punish them," said the spokesman,Zabihullah Mujahid.

But we could find no evidence the Taliban acted on these threats. We scoured court documents, congressional hearing transcripts and media reports, and we found that the government has not named a single individual who was killed because he or she was named in the leaked files.

Not in public record

In 2010, Manning then known as Bradley Manning was an Army analyst in Iraq. She downloaded about 700,000 government files and gave many of them to WikiLeaks, who made the files public. The records included diplomatic cables, reports about the U.S. detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and notably a video of a 2007 American helicopter attack in Baghdad that killed civilians.

The government was concerned that the Taliban or other adversaries might retaliate against foreign nationals named in the documents because the individuals cooperated with the United States. However, officials have never pointed to an example of someone actually getting killed because of the leaks.

The closest call came in August 2013, during the sentencing phase of Mannings trial, when the government tried to make the case that Mannings leaks caused harm. Robert Carr, a retired U.S. Army brigadier general who led an investigation into the leak, testified that he knew of "one individual that was killed" by the Taliban as a result of the leaks.

However, Carr conceded that the person killed hadnt actually been named in the documents Manning gave to WikiLeaks. As a result, the judge decided to strike that testimony from the record. Heres the relevant exchange (from an unofficial transcript provided by the Freedom of the Press Foundation):

Carr: "As a result of the Afghan logs, I only know of one individual that was killed. The individual was an Afghan national. The Afghan national had a relationship with the United States government and the Taliban came out publicly and said that they killed him as a result of him being associated with the information in these logs."

Defense attorney Major Thomas Hurley: "Ma'am, we may object again as to relevance. General Carr is going to going to talk about how this person wasn't listed in the WikiLeaks disclosures. This individual's name wasn't listed among those names, among the hundreds of names he talked about."

Judge Denise Lind: "Is this, what you're testifying to, tied to the information in the disclosures in any way?"

Carr: "The Taliban killed him and tied him to the disclosures. We went back and searched for this individual's name in all of the disclosures. The name was not there. It was a terrorist act on behalf of the Taliban threatening all of the others out there. But the name of the individual that was killed was not in the disclosures."

So the Taliban said they killed an individual because of the WikiLeaks logs, but the logs didnt actually mention this individual. Carr said that he only knew of that example.

In his closing argument at Mannings sentencing trial, lead attorney for the government Ashden Fein only said the leaks put hundreds of people "at risk of injury, incarceration or death as a result of the release of their names." He didnt argue that anyone actually died.

We should note that part of Mannings trial took place in a closed hearing in order to discuss classified information. So its possible that deaths caused directly by Mannings leaks could have happened, and we cant know unless that information was declassified.

David Coombs, Mannings lawyer, attended the classified hearings. He told us that the government didnt present any evidence that showed individuals were killed as a direct result of the leaks.

"That information was never brought out because it doesnt exist," Coombs said, calling McCains claim "completely false."

Fein, the lead attorney for the government on the case,declined to talk to us on the record.

If not deaths, what damage did Mannings leaks do to national security? The government has repeatedly said the main impact is a "chilling effect" meaning foreign officials and citizens are less likely to speak and cooperate with American soldiers and diplomats.

But Obama administration officials have indicated the leaks didnt actually cause a lot of harm.

"Ive heard the impact of these releases on our foreign policy described as a meltdown, as a game-changer, and so on. I think those descriptions are fairly significantly overwrought," said former Defense Secretary Robert Gates in 2010, adding later, "Is this embarrassing? Yes. Is it awkward? Yes. Consequences for U.S. foreign policy? I think fairly modest.

In a December 2010 interview on NBC, former Vice President Joe Biden said about WikiLeaks, "I don't think there's any substantive damage, no. Look, some of the cables that are coming out here and around the world are embarrassing."

Our ruling

McCain said, "The Taliban went after and murdered" people identified in the Chelsea Manning leaks.

In the several years since WikiLeaks released hundreds of thousands of government documents leaked by Manning, the government has not publicly identified a single example of the Taliban killing someone because that person was named in the leaks. If someone had died as a result, it seems logical that the incident would have become public knowledge, either through Manning's trial or in media reports.

At Mannings sentencing trial, one Army witness said he knew the Taliban killed one person and blamed it on the WikiLeaks revelations. However, that persons name doesnt appear in the files, and the military has provided no additional information.

We rate McCains claim Mostly False.

Update: This article has been updated to include more information from McCain's staff.

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McCain says Taliban 'murdered' people because of Chelsea Manning and WikiLeaks - PolitiFact

Chelsea Manning Is Exactly the Kind of Advocate We Need in 2017 … – Broadly

As someone who risked her life and freedom to inform and empower the public, Manning's advocacy for transparency is a counter to the opaque practices of President Donald Trump.

In the years since her arrest, Chelsea Manning has been called a hero, the biggest whistleblower in US history, and, recently, an "ungrateful TRAITOR." In a few months, for the first time, she will be able to call herself a free woman.

The former military intelligence analyst was arrested in 2010 for leaking hundreds of thousands of classified documents, exposing the true, human cost of the United States' overseas operations. She has been incarcerated for six years now, and subjected to "cruel and inhuman" conditions during this time, according to a United Nations investigation.

On January 17, President Obama granted Manning clemency, conceding that she has "served a tough prison sentence." Thanks to Obama's action, which occurred during his last week in office, Manning will be released from prison on May 17, 2017seven years from the day she was first taken into custody, and just three months from now. According to her lawyer Chase Strangio, Obama saved her life.

The state of Manning's mental health first began deteriorating during her service in the armed forcesbefore her arrestand her feelings of gender dysphoria were ignored by the army. She could have been given transgender medical care then, or early on in state custody. Instead, the ACLU had to sue in order for Manning to even receive hormone replacement therapy, which was finally administered in 2015. However, other treatment, like gender confirmation surgery, remained out of reach, and Manning's hair was still forcibly cut every two weeks. In 2016, Manning attempted suicide twice.

Despite the fact that Donald Trump recently criticized Manning on Twitter, writing that President Obama was wrong to commute her sentence, Strangio says there is no legal way for him to undo Obama's actions; the pardon power of the presidency is expansive and binding. Nonetheless, the Trump administration is unpredictable and brazen, and less than two weeks into his presidency, Trump has already been accused of creating a constitutional crisis. The ACLU will remain vigilant, monitoring Manning's conditions behind bars and working to ensure her safe passage from state custody to freedom.

Clearly, Americans are living in the shadow of a new political authority. Donald Trump has thrown the country into chaos and upset sensitive international relationships, subsequently causing millions to storm the streets day after day to reject his actions and attempt to reclaim America. Manning's release is one of Obama's last acts of reason and justice as president. While he may well have saved her life, he has also set free one of our generation's most important advocates for government transparency and public empowerment, and that is precisely the sort of activist that we need working with us today.

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Chelsea Manning Is Exactly the Kind of Advocate We Need in 2017 ... - Broadly

OPINION: Chelsea Manning is no hero – Out & About Nashville

Chelsea Manning voluntarily took an oath, broke it and endangered lives as a result. There is no excuse for that.

Im sorry, but I am an Army brat who takes a rather dim view of traitors, no matter their background or intentions.

Ms. Manning was an enlisted soldier serving as a low-level intelligence analyst for the United States Army in a combat zone when she downloaded tens of thousands of classified documents and forwarded them to the international whistleblowing group, Wikileaks. She was caught, court-martialed, and sentenced to 35 years in prison for her actions.

What Ms. Manning did was dead wrong. She put lives in danger worldwide by her actions and got put into a steel cage as a result. At best, she was misguided in her reasoning. At the very least, she did something dumb enough to warrant long spell in Fort Leavenworth. Either way this young lady has a lot of atoning to do outside of a military prison.

Her recent pardon by President Obama and scheduled release by late spring was likely an act of compassion for her current mental state. It was the correct decision to make, but it does not excuse her crimes. I am well familiar with the majority of Ms. Mannings personal problems related to being transgender. Been there, done most of that...bought the ugly t-shirt. She has real health problems, and I do feel sympathy for her backstory, but she gets short shrift from me for knowingly endangering lives.

Gender dysphoria and its horrible effects on your daily life is no excuse for criminally negligent manslaughter if someone was killed as a result of your actions. If you willingly endanger the life of someone who is defending your freedom to be yourself someday, I'm going to have a problem with you no matter who you are or what noble feat you claim to have been trying to accomplish.

I have problems with the current secrecy culture, tooand military culture in general. The latter cost me a childhood spent in military school as a direct result of perceived homosexual inclinations and a lot of young adult pain. But I never ever thought about doing something to potentially endanger someones life just because I was upset with the system or how it treated LGBTQI people.

Her crimes are comparable to others who needlessly endangered American citizens in the name of sacred causes. I am a loud and proud Jewish trans woman, but there is no excuse for what Jonathan Pollard or the Rosenbergs did either. If you leak critical government secrets because you think your agenda is more important, I am not going to cut you a break just because you are a fellow member of either tribe.

We keep most secrets secret for a good reason. In the wrong hands, a military-grade secret can kill people very quickly. Secrecy is not always about covering up and screwing people over. That does happen and is to our nations shame. But military secrets especially are more often used as a tool to help keep people alive, especially those who defend our freedom. The enforcement of many of them kept my own dad safe while working in hostile lands to defend my right to be a open trans woman in a free country. The X-Files was great television...that's all.

Ms. Mannings actions have needlessly called into question the loyalty and stability of transgender people, at the very least, to serve in this nations armed forces in any capacity. Her damage to our full communitys hard won reputation for reliable service in employment requiring access to classified knowledge will take a long time to repair and give ammo to bigots.

I very much hope she gets the help she needs and finds her peace as a fellow transgender woman in this sometimes unforgiving heterosexual world. But she is not a hero. Her disloyalty to those whom she served with and helped protect her freedom to be Chelsea Manning will take forever and a day for her to apologize for.

Julie Chase

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OPINION: Chelsea Manning is no hero - Out & About Nashville