WATCH: What Would Assange Face in the US? – Consortium News

The prospect of life imprisonment in the U.S. for a publisher who revealed high crimes by Washington is considered in this Courage Foundation discussion aired on Saturday.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange is imprisoned in the high-security HMP Belmarsh in London as he faces extradition to the United States, where he has been indicted on 18 counts for obtaining, possessing, conspiring to publish and for publishing classified information. With the first-ever use of the Espionage Act for a publisher, the indictment represents an unprecedented attack on press freedom around the world. For Julian Assange, who could face up to 175 years in prison, a conviction could be a death sentence.

The Courage Foundation convened a panel of experts to examine what Julian Assange would endure and be up against if the United Kingdom extradites him to the U.S., from pre- and potentially post-trial prison conditions, the lack of a public interest defense under the Espionage Act, and the extremely high rate of convictions in U.S. federal courts.

Barry Pollack, Julian Assanges attorney in the U.S.

Jeffrey Sterling, CIA whistleblower who was convicted under the Espionage Act

Lauri Love, U.K. activist who successfully defeated an extradition request from the United States

Moderated by Kevin Gosztola, independent U.S. journalist at Shadowproof.com who has covered Chelsea Mannings military court martial and Julian Assanges extradition proceedings thus far.

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WATCH: What Would Assange Face in the US? - Consortium News

WATCH: What Would Assange Face in the US? 1 pm EDT – Consortium News

The prospect of life imprisonment in the U.S. for a publisher who revealed high crimes by Washington is considered in this Courage Foundation live discussion beginning today at 1 pm U.S. Eastern time.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange is imprisoned in the high-security HMP Belmarsh in London as he faces extradition to the United States, where he has been indicted on 18 counts for obtaining, possessing, conspiring to publish and for publishing classified information. With the first-ever use of the Espionage Act for a publisher, the indictment represents an unprecedented attack on press freedom around the world. For Julian Assange, who could face up to 175 years in prison, a conviction could be a death sentence.

The Courage Foundation has convened a panel of experts to examine what Julian Assange would endure and be up against if the United Kingdom extradites him to the U.S., from pre- and potentially post-trial prison conditions, the lack of a public interest defense under the Espionage Act, and the extremely high rate of convictions in U.S. federal courts.

Barry Pollack, Julian Assanges attorney in the U.S.

Jeffrey Sterling, CIA whistleblower who was convicted under the Espionage Act

Lauri Love, U.K. activist who successfully defeated an extradition request from the United States

Moderated by Kevin Gosztola, independent U.S. journalist at Shadowproof.com who has covered Chelsea Mannings military court martial and Julian Assanges extradition proceedings thus far.

The rest is here:

WATCH: What Would Assange Face in the US? 1 pm EDT - Consortium News

Julian Assange Family: 5 Fast Facts You Need to Know …

GettyLearn about Julian Assange's family.

Julian Assange, the WikiLeaks co-founder who was arrested in London on April 11, 2019, is very secretive about his first significant relationship, which dates to his teens, and has at least one son.

Assange moved frequently with his mother as a child, and he didnt meet his dad until his 20s.

Assange is accused in a U.S. indictment of helping Chelsea Manning break a password to obtain classified U.S. documents.

That has some people wondering more about Julian Assanges family, including his ex-girlfriend and son. He was born Julian Paul Hawkins.

Heres what you need to know:

Julian Assange gestures to the media from a police vehicle on his arrival at Westminster Magistrates court on April 11, 2019 in London, England.

Julian Assange was born on July 3, 1971, in Townsville, Australia.

According to Biography.com, Assanges childhood was not a very stable one because his mother Christine and his stepfather, Brett Assange, traveled frequently to put on theatrical productions.

Brett Assange described Julian as a sharp kid who always fought for the underdog, the site said.

Biography.com reported that Brett and Christine broke up. Assange and his mother moved about 37 times, and Assange was frequently homeschooled. Brett Assange had adopted Julian Assange at age 1.

Assange was married once before to ex wife Teresa Assange, according to some reports. According to AJC, he was 18-years-old when he married, but the marriage didnt last.

Daily Mail calls the relationship an unofficial marriage, however.

Assange has been very secretive about his past over the years, only once referring to this relationship by writing that he dated an intelligent but introverted 16-year-old. Its believed she now has a new name, according to Daily Mail.

She was 17 when they met, according to Daily Mail.

However, there are reports that Assange has distanced from his family. UK Telegraph reports Christine Assange told Australian media that her son distanced himself from the family for their own safety due to his growing notoriety.

Julian Assange had a son. Its believed that son is in his 20s and works as a software designer. Some reports say the sons mother is Assanges ex-girlfriend from Australia. However, Sydney Morning Herald reported that Daniel was born to a 17-year-old mother, who has never been identified.

Daily Mail alleged that Daniel Assange, Assanges son, lives in Melbourne. UK Telegraph reported in 2010 that Daniel Assange had used a pseudonym on Twitter to ask that his dad be treated fairly.

Let us do our best to ensure my father is treated fairly and apolitically, Daniel Assange said on Twitter. Im hoping this isnt just an intermediary step towards his extradition to the US.

The blog Crikey, to which Daniel Assange once gave an interview, says he was the subject of a bitter custody battle between his parents. Their contact diminished when Julian left Australia, Crikey reported, quoting Daniel as saying, It was just a general decline of relations. I was getting into my late teenage years, and single father and teenage son dont mix particularly well in one house.

Daniel spoke about his dad to the blog, saying, His actions as a personal individual and his actions in a grand political sense are completely disconnected things, and they should be considered in that sense.

Wikileaks founder Julian Assange speaks from the balcony of the Ecuadorian embassy where he continues to seek asylum following an extradition request from Sweden in 2012. The United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention has insisted that Assanges detention should be brought to an end. (Getty)

Assange credits his mother with inspiring a love of computers.

He was a teenager and his mother gave him a Commodore 64 computer, reports AJC, his first. According to Daily Mail, around that time, he, his mother and stepbrother were living in a tiny cement bungalow in the foothills of the Dandenong Ranges, east of Melbourne. Assange became increasingly fascinated with computers.

Assanges father was named John Shipton, per CNN.

The Australian has a lengthy story about Shipton that reports he was part of a WikiLeaks Party that wanted to see Julian Assange elected to the Senate in Australia. Shipton described himself to the news site as a doddery old goat. He didnt meet Julian until Julian was in his 20s, according to the site, but they look alike and share some of the same interests.

Shipton once told El Pais of finally meeting Julian: It was extraordinary. Certain of his thought-processes made it seem like I was staring into a mirror. I could barely believe it.

The Australian site reports that Julians mother said she met Shipton, who later worked as a builder, at a Vietnam War protest but married Brett Assange when she was eight weeks pregnant. I had a brief relationship with John which ended amicably shortly after I became pregnant, says Christine Assange to The Australian. But there was no animosity between us, and from time to time I would call him. When I got married in Sydney about two years later, John offered the use of his car for the wedding, and I did take Julian to see him around that time.

The exact number of Assanges children and their identities are not known. However, a friend wrote in a tell-all book the claim that Assange has fathered four love children over the years.

The friend, Daniel Domscheit-Berg, claimed, according to Daily Mail, Often I sat in large groups and listened to Julian boast about how many children he had fathered in various parts of the world.

He also said, Daily Mail reported: He seemed to enjoy the idea of lots and lots of Julians, one on every continent. Whether he took care of any of these alleged children, or whether they existed at all, was another question.

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Julian Assange Family: 5 Fast Facts You Need to Know ...

Last Month in DiEM25: July 2020 – DiEM25

External Actions

This month:

Several DiEM25 National Collectives, including in France, Belgium, Germany, and Luxembourg, have worked towards a European Rent Action, preparing a set of EU-wide demands Free low-income Europeans from rent burden during COVID-19. The EU campaign includes a letter to the EU Parliament as well as national actions and demands. Coordinated demonstrations on the rent issue and its relevance during the COVID-19 crisis are expected to take place in September. Join the first wave of demonstrations!

Happening:

We celebrated the election of Moemo to the Croatian Parliament, the Left party that DiEM25 supported in the elections. They are committed to radical change in the political and economic system!

DiEM25 NC Greece, DiEM25 PNC Turkey and DiEM25 NC Germany released a joint statement on the Greek-Turkey tensions in the Aegean Sea.

DiEM25 condemned Aleksandar Vuis violent takedown of Serbian protesters.

Celebrated Julian Assanges birthday, and held the opening of the We Are Millions exhibition in Leipzig, which sheds light on the Julian Assange Case.

Highlighted the #GreekFiles that expose the weaponisation of the ECB against European democracy.

DiEM25s newly formed Turkish PNC launched the first issue of their monthly review on Turkeys social, economic, and cultural state of affairs.

The Progressive International (PI) emitted an urgent call to respond to the escalating assault on the democratic institutions of Ecuador. Read more about the unfolding situation in their statement.

This month we:

Received applications for the Coordinating Collective of DiEM25! We will be conducting interviews of candidates this month. If you would like to endorse candidates that you know and appreciate, you can do so in our members area!

Launched our citizen engagement campaign that sets out to build national programmes in collaboration with Europeans for DiEM25! Throughout July and August, DiEMers are asked to submit the questions they believe anyone should be able to answer in order to be politically relevant in their city, region and country. They will be the foundation for the questionnaire we will use to go out as of September and inspire citizens to engage with our project.

MeRA25s new statutes (which will act as the blueprint for all EW statutes) were voted through by DiEM25 members. The party is now taking the first steps to establish the governance structure outlined in the new statutes, starting with the creation of its first Central Committee!

Continued to hold transparent live-recorded CC meetings open to the public on YouTube.

Our movement will engage in the implementation of the results of the Prague Assembly (member proposals for actions and campaign, and the CC vision) based on the results of AMVs.

We will continue developing our citizen engagement campaign in line with our working plan. Get involved by submitting a response to this questionnaire!

Our National Collectives continue to work on a Rent Action campaign! If you wish to get involved, you can reach out to our volunteer coordinator johannes.fehr@diem25.org.

If you wish to send a point to be included in the next newsletter, or want to help to draft it, please contact us at axelle.van.wynsberghe@diem25.org.

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Last Month in DiEM25: July 2020 - DiEM25

War crimes – The News International

This week marks the 75th anniversary of the detonation of US nuclear bombs on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima (August 6, 1945) and Nagasaki (August 9) during World War II. The death toll of the two atomic assaults has been estimated at over 225,000 people, with many of them killed instantly, while others died later from radiation exposure.

In the aftermath of the bombing of Japan, and for decades afterward, US authorities suppressed the military footage shot in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. With government propaganda and censorship, the public was kept in dark about the scale of damage and human suffering inflicted. August's US nuclear strike turned Japanese soil into a toxic disarray where no life would grow for another 75 years. Contrary to their declared target (the Japanese Army headquarters), the bomb blast seared people to death: women, children and elderly, and those who werent in a uniform, indiscriminately causing long-term health effects in those who survived the blast.

British investigative journalist Robert Fisk once said, War is a total failure of the human spirit. The fallout of the atomic bomb represents the fall of humanity and loss of its dignity. It has not only taught people all over the world about the horrors of nuclear weapons, but also emphasized the crucial role of the media in preventing terrible human errors during a time of war.

In recent years, under the Trump administration, the free press has become severely threatened. On numerous occasions, President Trump has expressed outrage toward leakers, and media organizations using such leaks to disclose classified information. With the US governments prosecution of WikiLeaks publisher Julian Assange, the hostility of the Trump Administration toward the media has now escalated into criminalization of journalism.

Assange has been indicted on 17 counts under the Espionage Act of 1917 and one charge of conspiring with a source to violate the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act for his reporting on the US wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and the torture at Guantanamo Bay. Assange is being held on remand in Belmarsh Prison, solely on the basis of a US extradition request. He would face 175 years in prison if convicted.

Assanges extradition is recognized by free speech groups as the most important press freedom case of the 21st century. What is this prosecution of a publisher really about? Here, a story of an Australian journalist who exposed the brutal truth of war at the end of WWII can provide a historical context and help us better understand the significance of this case.

Wilfred Burchett has become known as the first Western journalist to enter Hiroshima after the city was bombed, where he reported from one of the few hospitals operating. In the story headlined The Atomic Plague, Burchett wrote, Hiroshima looks as if a monster steamroller had passed over it and squashed it out of existence. The Melbourne war correspondent indicated that civilians were suffering from more than big blisters with their hair falling out.

Burchetts dispatch often referred to as the Scoop of the Century was denied by the US administration.

Excerpted from: 'From Bombing of Hiroshima to Collateral Murder; War Crimes of Empire and Prosecution of Free Press'.

Commondreams.org

Link:

War crimes - The News International

Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals refuses to hear Socialist Equality Party candidates’ appeal in California voting rights case until after ballots are…

By Shuvu Batta 6 August 2020

A panel of three judges on the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals has denied a request by the Socialist Equality Partys candidates Joseph Kishore and Norissa Santa Cruz for their appeal to be heard before ballots are printed in California.

On July 27, a panel of three Ninth Circuit judges issued a decision that reads, in its entirety: In light of the late date of the appeal, it cannot be calendared for resolution prior to August 26, 2020. The previously established briefing schedule remains in effect. The "previously established briefing schedule" will result in the case being heard after ballots are already printed.

In response, candidates filed an emergency motion for reconsideration. This motion was denied yesterday, August 5, in a one-sentence decision that states only that the motion was "denied," without giving any reasons.

The decisions denying the candidates requests for an expedited schedule were made by Chief Judge Sidney R. Thomas (appointed by Democrat Bill Clinton) and Circuit Judges Mary M. Schroeder (appointed by Democrat Jimmy Carter) and Consuelo Callahan (appointed by Republican George W. Bush).

The ruling means that that the clock will effectively run out on the SEP candidates' case. The ballots will be printed without the SEP candidates' names on them before the Ninth Circuit judges will make any decision on the candidates' right to have their names printed on the ballots.

In the SEP candidates' lawsuit against California Governor Gavin Newsom and California Secretary of State Alex Padilla, the candidates challenged the states decision to enforce its ballot access requirements, which require independent candidates to collect nearly 200,000 physical signatures in order to appear on the ballot, in the middle of the raging pandemic.

In California, petitioning for ballot access opens up in April and closes by August, leaving independent candidates 15 weeks to accomplish this task15 weeks in 2020 that were marked by a state lockdown and a a deadly infection spreading out of control.

The SEP initially filed the lawsuit on June 30. On July 12, the Attorney General for California responded on behalf of Newsom and Padilla, arguing that if the Socialist Equality Party candidates won their lawsuit it would cause an unmanageable and overcrowded ballot for the November presidential general election that would cause voter confusion and frustration of the democratic process.

The SEP candidates replied to this argument three days later, pointing out that it was California state officials who are frustrating the democratic processby insisting on the enforcement of ballot access requirements that are effectively impossible for Plaintiffs to comply with without endangering the safety and lives of their supporters and the public at large.

On July 20, District Judge Dolly M. Gee, nominated by former president Barack Obama, ruled against Kishore and Santa Cruz. She claimed that the SEPs candidates could have avoided the understandable risks of the virus, among other methods, by simply using face coverings and social distancing and gathering signatures in front of grocery stores.

The attorneys for the SEP contested this decision, appealing to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. Alongside this appeal, a motion was made to expedite the case so that the appeal could be heard before the state of California printed its ballots on August 28.

On July 31, the attorneys for Kishore and Santa Cruz also filed an opening brief outlining the history of the case, pointing to the fundamental democratic and constitutional rights involved, and arguing for the right to ballot access.

The brief explained that Kishore and Santa Cruz launched their campaign in January but were prevented from gathering signatures by the pandemic and the states measures to combat it. The brief detailed the SEP's long, rich political history in California, and argued that there are less-than-lethal ways of testing whether the candidates can establish enough support to merit ballot access. The SEPs past candidates in the state have won tens of thousands of votes, the brief explained.

In response to Judge Gees claims that wearing of masks and social distancing would suffice to protect signers and SEP volunteers from COVID-19, the SEP candidates highlighted the uncontradicted testimony of a veteran SEP campaigner, who explained that it is not possible to safely collect signatures under present conditions. Placing campaigners and supporters in this situation means in effect that the state is requiring the people to risk serious illness or death as a condition for exercising the basic right to vote and participate in elections.

Judge Gee had further claimed that social media could be used to gather the signatures, but the SEP candidates submitted uncontroverted evidence in court that the SEP has been struggling for years against censorship on these platforms.

"The private technology monopolies claim that. .. speech can be censored on these platforms without regard for First Amendment protections," the SEP candidates argued. "For this reason, the exercise of [the SEP candidates'] core democratic and constitutional rights cannot be outsourced to the private social media platforms and made subject to the whims and caprices of the private owners of these platforms."

Gathering signatures "remotely," as suggested by the state of California, would require each signer to be contacted by a stranger over the phone or internet, that a document be mailed or printed at home, that a mobile notary be hired, and that the document be mailed to the campaigner for submission to the state. In San Francisco, mobile notary fees range from $55 to $115 per signature. At a hypothetical average rate of $100 per notarized signature, the cost of notarizing nearly 200,000 signatures would be on the order of $20 million, not including postage to and from the person signing the petition.

Judge Gee had also accused the SEP candidates of unexplained delays in bringing the lawsuit. The candidates established that they had prosecuted the lawsuit with all possible diligence and speed, and if they had brought it any earlier, they would have confronted arguments that the state would soon re-open and plenty of time remained in the signature-gathering period.

Responding to the states arguments that adding socialist candidates will lead to voter confusion, the candidates appeal brief explained: Placing these socialist candidates with their distinct program on the ballot will inform rather than confuse voters as to important issues, including those who otherwise might not vote. The fact that sample ballots are mailed to voters prior to election day further diminishes any concern about voter confusion, since voters will have an opportunity to research the candidates and their platforms in advance. There is no realistic threat that these avowedly socialist candidates will be confused with the other party candidates.

The SEP candidates argued that by excluding them from the ballot, especially at a time when, according to a recent Gallup poll, over 49 percent of young voters have a positive view of socialism, the state is effectively placing burdens on two different, although overlapping, kinds of rightsthe right of individuals to associate for the advancement of political beliefs and the right of qualified voters, regardless of their political persuasion, to cast their votes effectively.

In their emergency motion for reconsideration, the SEP candidates responded to the Ninth Circuit judges' accusation that the appeal was filed on a "late date," pointing to the fact that the appeal was filed only one day after the decision by Judge Gee. The period within which to file an appeal is 30 days.

Also regarding the supposed "late date" of the appeal, the SEP pointed to a case in 2016, during the last presidential election cycle, where the Ninth Circuit had expedited an appeal in a voting rights case that was filed in mid-October. In contrast, the SEP's appeal was made in July.

According to the records of that case, the notice of appeal was filed on October 15, 2016, an emergency motion was filed on October 18, 2016 to expedite the appeal, and on October 19, 2016, the motion was granted. "The parties were directed to file simultaneous merits briefs by October 24, 2016, and the appeal was argued orally on October 26, 2016."

On this basis, the SEP candidates explained that "that there remains sufficient time to decide the relatively straightforward legal issue involved in this appeal no later than August 28, 2020."

"Expediting appeals in ballot access and voting rights cases is necessary to secure the fundamental democratic and constitutional rights involved, since the elections timetable will early always be faster than the ordinary speed with which appeals are resolved," the candidates stated.

"If this case is decided after ballots are printed on August 28, 2020," then the SEP candidates "will be left without a remedy for violations of those rights."

Read the rest here:

Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals refuses to hear Socialist Equality Party candidates' appeal in California voting rights case until after ballots are...

Against the extradition of Julian Assange to the United States: Our right to know is his right to publish – DiEM25

On the 1st of August at 6pm, the Courage Foundation in cooperation with DiEM25 continue the Europe-wide exhibition We Are Millions in Leipzig to draw attention to the possible extradition of Julian Assange to the USA.

On the 7th of August, it will host a speaker, as well as performances and video installations in order to shed light on Assanges case. He is current suffering of psychological torture contrary to human rights and the charges against this journalist are a threat to and restriction of freedom of the press.

Famous representatives from politics and the arts (Ai Weiwei, Sreko Horvat, Yanis Varoufakis, Pamela Anderson, Vivienne Westwood, M.I.A. etc.) have repeatedly offered support to Julian Assange.

The journalist, activist and founder of WikiLeaks is currently serving time in Londons high security Belmarsh prison. After the first hearings on February 24, the exhibition is drawing the publics attention in Leipzig to the continued violation of the human rights of Assange.

The exhibition shows supporters holding signs that express simply and clearly why they are standing up for Julian Assange, who the United States wants to punish for publishing hundreds of thousands of diplomatic and military documents in 2010.

These publications have exposed war crimes against countless civilian victims, rampant corruption and abuse. The Trump administration has brought 17 espionage charges against Assange, the first ever such charge against a journalist threatening life imprisonment.

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Against the extradition of Julian Assange to the United States: Our right to know is his right to publish - DiEM25

Oliver Stone Insists Putin Did Not Interfere in the 2016 U.S. Presidential Election – Hollywood Reporter

"I'm not a liar and I can't go along with what the vast majority believe on so much of this history," the three-time Oscar winner told The Hollywood Reporter's 'Awards Chatter' podcast.

Ever since his film JFK was released nearly 30 years ago, questioning the official story of the assassination of John F. Kennedy and making famous the skeptical phrase "back and to the left," Oliver Stone has been dismissed by some as a conspiracy nut. In a new interview with The Hollywood Reporter's 'Awards Chatter' podcast tied to the publication of his acclaimed new memoir Chasing the Light: Writing, Directing, and Surviving Platoon, Midnight Express, Scarface, Salvador, and the Movie Game, the three-time Oscar winner acknowledges that the label hurts if not him, then his films.

"It's not that easy to brush off," Stone, 73, says. "It happens all the time. Politics overshadows the filmmaking, and I realize that, but what am I gonna do? My opinions, when asked, are given. Sometimes I try to be political about it and diplomatic, but I'm not a liar and I can't go along with what the vast majority believe on so much of this history." He adds of the JFK assassination, "You had to have at least two shooters, and [Lee Harvey] Oswald was not one of them."

Lest anyone think Stone has not been driven into conformity, though, he insisted during the podcast that Russian president Vladimir Putin with whom he spent time making the 2017 Showtime docuseries The Putin Interviews did not interfere with America's 2016 presidential election to help advance the cause of Donald Trump, which is the opposite of what numerous U.S. intelligence agencies have concluded.

"Jesus Christ, do you think everybody in the country has to believe this Russian election stuff?" Stone asked. "Do you think we all have to agree? Does anybody have any ability to dissent from an opinion? Is it a fact that that happened? I mean, if you talk to a lot of the intelligent people in the cyber community and I have because I did a film about Edward Snowden [2016's Snowden] they will tell you that it was not a hack, it was a steal, it was an inside job [referring to the hack of Democratic National Committee emails which were then leaked ahead of the 2016 Democratic National Convention]."

Stone continued, "And [the now incarcerated WikiLeaks founder] Julian Assange has been good on his word ever since he started; he's been an authentic person. I admire him deeply. To say that he was in collusion with the Russians and all this is part of some kind of crazy fiction that has happened to this country. You probably believe it. You have no choice but to believe it."

When, in response, it was stated that the U.S. intelligence community has uniformly concluded that Putin interfered in the election, Stone protested, "Not uniformly, no! Their original statement was 'a high degree of confidence' or something like that, and it was taken from three agencies, not from the 17 that they claim. In fact, you could go back into the intelligence community and you will find dissenters if they're honest. This has been misrepresented. I've talked to a lot of experts on this."

His theory regarding the DNC hack: "The FBI did not do its job. They should have gotten the original system got back into the DNC computer but they didn't give it. They gave it to a private company, CrowdStrike, that was on their payroll. So the whole thing is crooked from the inside. It feels like the JFK case again. It wasn't planned, it was developed that way. But it certainly was developed from inside. Sore losers, I would call it. And, by the way, I don't have any Trump has done things that are horrifying to me." (The CrowdStrike theory has been discredited.)

Stone explained, "I'm trying to understand both sides, trying to understand the mind of Julian Assange, the mind of whoever hacked the DNC what did he hack and what was on his mind? Maybe it bothered him that the Democratic Party was selling out the way it did; maybe it bothered him Hillary Clinton's Wall Street speeches or the DNC undermining of Bernie Sanders. Maybe it bothered him and maybe he did take things out to give them to Assange, which is what a lot of people say happened. But that story has been 'discredited'; I don't know why. Because it doesn't fit the present agenda for a Cold War against Russia, which is basically for more money for the military, when we're spending a fortune already, and now it's for China, too."

He added, "You're gonna regret this kind of thinking. This kind of thinking leads to conventional war. The Cold War grows and grows and grows, and then we take it to the edge because we have to, because 'We're Americans and we're top of the world' we think we're top of the world. We're gonna take things to a place that is very dangerous for our people. That's why I'm dissenting from this, you understand? And it's important we have dissenters."

Asked who he would encourage Americans to vote for in the 2020 presidential election, Trump or former vice president Joe Biden, Stone demurred, "It's up to them. I'm not gonna jump into that one. Biden has his problems, too."

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Oliver Stone Insists Putin Did Not Interfere in the 2016 U.S. Presidential Election - Hollywood Reporter

Department of Homeland Security assembles intelligence reports on US journalists covering Portland protests – WSWS

By Jacob Crosse 1 August 2020

In a chilling attack on journalism and the First Amendment, the Washington Post reported on Thursday that two US journalists, New York Times correspondent Mike Baker and editor in chief of the blog Lawfare, Benjamin Wittes, were the subject of three Open Source Intelligence Reports created by the Office of Intelligence and Analysis (I&A) within the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).

The reports summarized the recent social media activity of the establishment journalists including the fact that both had published leaked, unclassified documents regarding the ongoing federal occupation of Portland, Oregon by DHS paramilitary forces. The reports included descriptions and photos of the journalists Twitter profiles. The intelligence products also incorporated screengrabs of Bakers and Wittes Twitter posts that featured DHS internal documents, including how many times the posts were liked, commented on, or shared by users.

Included in the reports were public tweets from Wittes in which he revealed internal DHS memos. The memos exposed that DHS intelligence operatives, known as collectors had collated intelligence reports on arrested protesters which included FINTEL, or financial intelligence. Collectors had also created baseball cards of arrested protesters with their faces and personal information included.

Baseball card dossiers have been used by the US military and intelligence agencies for decades as a way to familiarize soldiers, drone operators and spies with US imperialisms most wanted targets. During the 2003 invasion of Iraq, the US Defense Intelligence Agency developed a set of 52 playing cards made up of high-ranking members of the Iraqi government, including Saddam Hussein and his family members. By 2018, all but 6 of Iraqs most wanted had been either killed or captured.

The same types of dossiers, baseball card or yearbook style, were popularized by President Barack Obama during his terror Tuesday sessions which he conducted throughout his presidency. After pouring over the kill lists prepared by the intelligence agencies, Obama would personally sign off on the drone assassinations, which included American citizens and 90 percent of the time killed someone else besides the intended target.

The DHS I&A is a domestic intelligence agency aimed squarely at the US population. According to the agencys own operating principles, the I&As mission is to integrate intelligence operations across all agencies within the DHS, including Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Customs and Border Protection, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, US Marshals as well as the private sector to identify, mitigate and respond to threats.

It is not known exactly to how many private, local, state and federal agencies the reports were disseminated, or if the I&A has compiled reports on other US journalists, civilians or, as the agency describes them, threats. It is also unknown if or how many I&A collectors are currently operating in other US cities besides Portland, and with what agencies, public or private, they are currently working.

Illustrating the global nature of the attack on journalism, the unclassified/for official use only reports carried a warning that the information contained therein was only releasable to the governments of Australia, Canada, United Kingdom and New Zealand, that is the government's composed of the Five Eyes US-led surveillance network. This means that intel reports created by I&A have likely been disseminated to fascist sympathizers within the police agencies in each of these countries.

After the Post published its initial story online Thursday night, DHS spokesman Alexei Woltornist released a memo dated July 31 which tried to distance the agency's leadership from the actions of those directly under his charge. The memo reads in part: Upon learning about the practice, Acting Secretary [Chad] Wolf directed the DHS Intelligence & Analysis Directorate to immediately discontinue collection information involving members of the press. In no way does the Acting Secretary condone this practice and he has immediately ordered an inquiry into the matter.

The memo ended, implausibly, with Wolf professing his commitment to, ensuring that all DHS personnel...respect...civil rights and civil liberties, particular as it relates to the exercise of First Amendment rights. Journalists have been specifically targeted by police and paramilitaries for assault and arrest since the beginning of the nationwide protests following the police murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis on May 25.

The US Press Freedom Tracker, which catalogs various assaults on the press including arrests, physical attacks, equipment damage and teargassing noted that in the US, as of Thursday, there had been over 612 reported cases of press freedom incidents this year. Portland accounts for over one sixth of the nation's total incidents with 106 violations. Minneapolis/St. Paul follows with 99 incidents while New York and Washington, D.C. are nearly tied in third, with 41 and 40 incidents, respectively.

The revelation that the US government is developing intelligence reports on US journalists prompted a letter of concern from Democratic senators on the Senate Intelligence Committee. In a letter signed by senators Martin Heinrich (New Mexico), Mark Warner (Virginia), Dianne Feinstein (California), Ron Wyden (Oregon), Kamala Harris (California), Michael Bennet (Colorado) and independent Angus King (Maine), the senators demanded that the I&A maintain its statute obligations by keeping the, congressional intelligence committees fully and currently informed of its operations.

As is the case with the hundreds of federal agents now being deployed to Democratic controlled cities such as Chicago, Detroit, Milwaukee, Seattle and Portland, the Democratic party does not actually oppose the deployment of federal goon squads or construction of intelligence dossiers of US citizens as long as they are included in the decision making process.

There is no constituency within the US ruling class, or any other capitalist government, for the defense of democratic rights, including a free press. While Julian Assange is being silenced and jailed for exposing the crimes of US imperialism abroad, US journalists, the vast majority of whom have kept silent or encouraged Assanges ongoing persecution, now find themselves targets for exposing US police terror at home.

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Department of Homeland Security assembles intelligence reports on US journalists covering Portland protests - WSWS

Geoffrey Robertson QC: The US is trying to CRUSH Julian Assange to deter future whistleblowers (E911) – RT

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Geoffrey Robertson QC: The US is trying to CRUSH Julian Assange to deter future whistleblowers (E911) - RT