Chelsea Manning shared secrets with WikiLeaks. Now she opens up in …

Former U.S. Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning addresses reporters outside a U.S federal courthouse in Alexandria, Va., in 2019. Win McNamee/Getty Images hide caption

Former U.S. Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning addresses reporters outside a U.S federal courthouse in Alexandria, Va., in 2019.

In 2010, while working in Iraq, army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning provided hundreds of thousands of military and diplomatic records about the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan to WikiLeaks in what's regarded as the largest leak of classified records in U.S. history. To some, Manning is a heroic whistleblower; others, including the U.S. military, consider her a traitor.

Manning says that when she joined the military, she was committed to the Army's mission. But she became disillusioned while serving in Iraq, and regards her decision to leak classified documents as a matter of principle.

"What was bothering me was I [had] years of training and years of believing in something and then hitting the ground and then seeing it and feeling completely unprepared for how different [it was]," Manning says. "I wanted that discrepancy to be addressed somehow."

The leaked documents included a 2007 video in which a U.S. military crew aboard an Army Apache helicopter is shown shooting at Iraqi civilians and a Reuters journalist, after allegedly mistaking them for insurgents.

Manning expected to lose her job and maybe her career because of the leaks. Instead, in 2013, she was sentenced to 35 years in prison in a military court-martial a sentence President Obama later commuted to about seven years. She was imprisoned again in 2019 on a civil contempt charge for refusing to testify in a grand jury investigation of WikiLeaks, but was released the following year.

Manning chronicles her difficult childhood, her long struggle with gender dysphoria, her entry into the Army and the events that landed her in prison in the memoir, README.txt. She sees the book as a way to assume control over her own story.

"I really came to want to write my version of events, write my story, tell things from my perspective, because I think it's kind of gotten lost in a lot of people projecting their ideals or their fears or their anxieties onto me or whatever it is, whereas I'm just kind of me," she says.

On questioning her gender identity from an early age

I always figured that I was trans. I didn't have the language to describe my experience. I certainly knew something was different about me. In a very strict gender construct that exists in a place like central Oklahoma in the 1990s, there really wasn't an alternative. But I always knew that there was something different about me. My family noticed it too. It was just a very marked difference about me and my personality and my interests that was something that made me stand out. ...

[Gender dysphoria] is very similar to having a toothache that doesn't go away. If you don't do anything about it, if you don't go see a dentist, it just gets worse and worse and worse.

On her job as an analyst in Iraq

We would just be spinning our wheels more and more, like if you're stuck in a ditch and you run the engine and you try to go faster, but you end up digging deeper. ... It was very clear that the approaches of counterinsurgency warfare were extremely self-destructive.

Chelsea Manning

My job essentially ... was to do something called "predictive analysis." And one of the most troubling things that I encountered was this notion that it wasn't just the enemy that was predictable. Our actions, if you fed the data into the machine, you could predict our behavior. And then the reaction, the secondary reaction, the second and third order effects of that, and it painted this picture of a feedback loop where it was pretty clear that our reactions to the actions were causing things to get progressively worse. So we would just be spinning our wheels more and more, like if you're stuck in a ditch and you run the engine and you try to go faster, but you end up digging deeper. That was what was happening. And I kept seeing this again and again. And it was very clear that the approaches of counterinsurgency warfare were extremely self-destructive.

On being kept in solitary confinement in a cage in Kuwait for 59 days in 2010

It was a metal mesh box, a stainless steel container in a tent with very little lighting. There were two air conditioners, one was always broken. I remember very distinctly that there was this little sign inside of it that said, "built in Fort Wayne, Indiana." I'll never forget that. It was the only thing I could see every day.

I deteriorated very quickly. I don't actually remember a whole lot. I definitely don't remember a full 59 days. It's very vague. It's very fuzzy. I just remember it being hot, being sweaty, being very confused and really start[ing] to feel like I had lost touch with the rest of the world and that I had truly been forgotten about. At different points in that time period, I remember having the feeling like, "I am dead. I have already died."

On her frustrations with the plea agreement process

One of the most frustrating things of the plea agreement process was that they essentially wanted me to perjure myself. So the government kept on trying to get me to plead to things that I didn't do. Or more specifically, things that never happened. They wanted me to add these things that they call a "stipulation of facts," which is essentially a document that says that both parties agree that these are factual, that these were facts, and they wanted me to lie. And I just couldn't do that. I obviously did the disclosures and I wanted to take responsibility. And we wanted to narrow the scope of the damage, because I definitely never imagined I'd be facing life without parole as a possibility, and trying to negotiate with them is very difficult because they just would not give up on trying to get me to perjure myself.

On so much of the court-martial being closed to the media

The government wanted the entire court-martial to be behind closed doors. They repeatedly argued that this needed to be an entirely secret court-martial. ... It was always funny because the things that ended up being brought up in court were always favorable to the government. And all of the things that were favorable to the defense were in closed court-martial. "You're only getting one side of a story here," essentially is how I felt. And yeah, I think that the world would greatly benefit from having access to the closed testimony. That's my opinion.

On her attorney urging her to read a statement apologizing for the damage she had done

I had wanted to write my own statement, which was a little bit more defiant because our entire argument was that we hadn't caused damage, which I feel was borne out in the evidence and in the testimony presented. It was a very strange thing. But my lawyers kept on reassuring me and they kept on saying, "Oh, well, this is pro forma. This is how it's supposed to be." It was a very strange part of the process because that was like the one point in which my lawyers and I had a very strong disagreement about the presentation of this. They told me that the judge would view me very harshly if I didn't go through this process and that it would risk me getting a longer sentence. And I didn't necessarily care all that much about the length of the sentence at that point, since it didn't seem to matter all that much. So it was a very uncomfortable and very frustrating part of the court-martial process.

I think [the statement] hurt our court-martial. I think it wasn't beneficial to us because it wasn't very human. It wasn't very passionate. It wasn't the way I felt.

Sam Briger and Seth Kelley produced and edited this interview for broadcast. Bridget Bentz, Molly Seavy-Nesper and Maureen Pao adapted it for the web.

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Chelsea Manning shared secrets with WikiLeaks. Now she opens up in ...

Chelsea Manning: I struggle with the so-called free world compared with life in prison – The Guardian US

  1. Chelsea Manning: I struggle with the so-called free world compared with life in prison  The Guardian US
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51% of Ethereum blocks are now compliant with OFAC standards, raising censorship concerns – Cointelegraph

One month after the Merge, 51% of Ethereum blocks were compliant with OFAC standards,according to blockchain development Labrys' data, as MEV-Boost relays take over market share.

On Twitter, users highlighted how the figures represent a milestone towards censorship, as more blocks are under surveillance:

OFAC stands for the Office of Foreign Assets Control, the entity in charge of enforcing United States economic sanctions, while MEV-Boost relays are centralized entities that act as trusted mediators between block producers and block builders. In this way, all Ethereum proof-of-stake (PoS) validators can outsource their block production to other builders.

This metric tracks how many blocks were built by OFAC-compliant MEV-Boost relays since the Merge. Due to Ethereum's upgrade to a PoS consensus, MEV-Boost has been enabled to a more representative distribution of block proposers, rather than a small group of miners under proof-of-work (PoW).

Speaking to Cointelegraph in September, Lachan Feeney, Labrys' CEO, noted that in the case of hard censorship, that would mean that no matter how long you waited, no matter how much you paid, you would never get to a point where those sanctioned transactions would get included in the blockchain.

Under a hard censorship scenario, nodes would be forced by regulation to basically discard any blocks with any of these transactions in them.

He also noted that even with soft censorship, when sanctioned transactions would eventually be validated, it would likely result in long waits and high-priority fees, making the user experience substandard.

According to Labrys' page, there are currently seven major MEV-oost relays including Flashbots, BloXroute Max Profit, BloXroute Ethical, BloXroute Regulated, BlockNative, Manifold and Eden. "Of the 7 available major relays, only 3 do not censor according to OFAC compliance requirements. OFAC compliant relays will not include any transactions that interact with the Tornado Cash smart contract or other sanctioned wallet addresses as designated by OFAC," stated the company.

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51% of Ethereum blocks are now compliant with OFAC standards, raising censorship concerns - Cointelegraph

Tulsi Gabbard blasts censorship, denial of ‘objective truth’ by the left: ‘It is conform or be canceled’ – Fox News

Former Rep. Tulsi Gabbard said people in the "highest positions of power" are denying objective truth and trying to bully people who disagree.

"It is conform or be canceled," Gabbard said Thursday night in an address to the Independent Women's Forum, calling the mindset "as un-American as it gets."

Gabbard spoke on the importance of defending what it means to be a woman as leaders in the Democratic Party refuse to define the term "woman" and slammed the left for embracing cancel culture and censorship.

TULSI GABBARD: US FACES DOMESTIC THREAT TO OUR DEMOCRACY FROM THE POWERFUL

"Those who deny the biological differences between a man and a woman are not only erasing women as a category of people, theyre denying the existence of objective reality, and the truth becomes whatever those in power want it to be," said

Gabbard pointed out that Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson could not define what a woman was during her Senate confirmation hearing.

Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson, accompanied by Vice President Kamala Harris, speaks during an event on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, Friday, April 8, 2022, celebrating the confirmation of Jackson as the first Black woman to reach the Supreme Court. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)

"We have an administration in the White House, and woke politicians in Washington, a Supreme Court justice, who are unable and unwilling to define what a woman is."

Gabbard pointed out the hypocrisy of the Democratic Party for claiming to be on the side of feminists but refusing to defend women's sports when female athletes object to competing against biological males

"How is it controversial to define what a woman is?" Gabbard asked. "It is the height of hypocrisy for those who claim to be feminists, who claim to be champions for women over decades to deny that there is such a thing as a woman."

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The former Democratic presidential candidate left the Democratic Party on Tuesday, denouncing the organization as an "elitist cabal."

Gabbard, who retired from the House of Representatives in 2021, attacked the institution in a nearly 30-minute video posted to her YouTube account. She did not announce plans to join the Republican Party or adopt any other political affiliation, however.

"I can no longer remain in todays Democratic Party that is now under the complete control of an elitist cabal of warmongers driven by cowardly wokeness, who divide us by racializing every issue & stoke anti-white racism," Gabbard said in an excerpt posted to Twitter.

Fox News' Andres Hagstrom contributed to this report

Elizabeth Heckman is a digital production assistant with Fox News.

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Tulsi Gabbard blasts censorship, denial of 'objective truth' by the left: 'It is conform or be canceled' - Fox News

How Chinese citizens use puns on Weibo to talk about #MeToo and zero-Covid without being censored – Rest of World

In 2018, #MeToo, the hashtag people around the world use to discuss sexual harassment, was blocked on social media in China.

Internet users in the country formed a new hashtag to keep raising awareness. They used the characters for rice (, pronounced m) and bunny (, pronounced t).

They even used emoji to represent the phrase a clever and more effective way to dodge the censors.

Here are some other ways people in China are tricking the censors to post on social media.

A few months ago, people were posting a lot about the Netherlands on Chinese social media platform Weibo. Wake up, sleeping people of the Netherlands! said one post. Others lamented that the people of Amsterdam wanted their tulips back.

These Chinese social media users arent expressing a nascent interest in all things Dutch. Theyre talking about recent protests over frozen bank deposits in the province of Henan. Ordinarily, discussions about a controversial topic like this would be censored on Chinese social media, and posts containing the word Henan could be blocked or deleted. But Henan () sounds a lot like Helan (), the Mandarin word for the Netherlands. By swapping the names around, people were able to get past the censors and keep the conversation going.

This particular approach to internet speak substituting words that sound like or are spelled like others has been an essential part of being online in China for decades, allowing netizens to use the humor and cleverness of spoken Mandarin to dodge censorship.

Criticism and discussion of Chinas zero-Covid policy is often suppressed on social media. When an outbreak occurs, people are forced to undergo endless rounds of mandatory testing. To talk about it, people used a phrase to represent the concept again and again visually, repeating the character for again (, pronounced yu) an escalating number of times.

In each successive character ( shung, then ru, then zhu), appears another time.

The word again is repeated ten times across the four characters, hiding the phrase again and again in plain sight.

In China, people have perfected this kind of language play online as a way to discuss an ever-lengthening list of banned or controversial topics, creating an eternally shifting lexicon of online slang. The play on puns and homophones has been a long existing literary and cultural tradition, Shaohua Guo, author of The Evolution of the Chinese Internet, told Rest of World. The prevalence of Internet use, particularly social media, further popularizes the practice.

In July, Chinese social media site Weibo announced an effort to clean up the use of intentionally misspelled words and homophones, following on the heels of one of the countrys main internet regulators prohibiting their use in usernames. Weibo said it would refine its keyword identification model to be able to filter this type of coded language, but experts wonder if the company can really keep pace with online slang in China.

Xuan Wang, a sociolinguist at Cardiff University, pointed to memes, GIFs, and even images of everyday household objects, like an empty chair, that have been layered with subtext and additional meaning to demonstrate the diversity of online language in China. There are so many examples, China Digital Times keeps a running catalog. Being able to fully ban language like this as it continues to evolve is not realistic or tenable, Wang told Rest of World. Wherever there is censorship and control, there is resistance. There is no end to it. Thats how social life is.

To illustrate just how difficult this might be, weve collected some popular examples of censor-dodging online slang most of which were eventually banned, too.

If you want to: insult someones intelligenceyou call them: a paratrooperThe word for paratrooper (, pronounced snbng) sounds similar to a popular insult that Chinese internet company Baidu banned from its message forums in 2021. After people started calling each other paratroopers instead, state media published stories defending Chinas airborne forces. It forced Baidu into an awkward spot: the company knew what people were really using the word for, but it couldnt ban a word that honored Chinas military, and left the posts up.

If you want to talk about: censorshipyou mention: seafoodThe reference originated with the word for river crab (, pronounced hxi), which sounds nearly the same as the word for harmony (, pronounced hxi) if something had been censored, it had been harmonized.Once the characters for river crab were themselves banned, internet users subbed in other seafood. Now people say fish, anything you catch in the sea, said Wang. Not using the direct homophone, but words that refer in a zigzag way back to the censored word.

If you want another way to talk about: censorshipyou can invoke: a grass mud horsePerhaps the most widely known of the code words referencing online censorship, the meaningless phrase grass mud horse (, pronounced co n m) sounds nearly the same as a common insult to someones mother and was popularized in response to attempts to scrub vulgar content from the internet.

If you want to talk about: feeling burned outyou can say youre: lying flatSome young people in China have turned to lying flat (, pronounced tngpng), which refers to opting out of participation in the hypercompetitive cultures of work and school. This trend has been in response to intense working hours, a widening wealth gap, and what The New Yorker described in 2021 as a Sisyphean experience of being locked in competition that one ultimately knows is meaningless.

If you want to talk about: social distancingyou can say youre: sittingThe character for seat (, pronounced zu), contains two components representing people. During the Covid-19 pandemic, the winner of a creative character contest in Japan reinvented it, moving one of the people to the line below the other, to look like theyre socially distancing. The example was picked up online in China.Its pictorial, but its not part of the official corpus of characters, so how does anyone pick that up? said Wang, the Wales-based sociolinguist.

If you want to: quiet quityou can: touch fishA tactic thats essential for surviving any workplace with 996 hours, the phrase touching fish (, pronounced m y) means pretending to work appearing busy, while really just passing the time at the office. It comes from the idiom fishing in troubled waters, which refers to the idea that rough seas are easier to catch fish in, allowing a lazy angler to get a big haul.

If you want to talk about: Googleyou can say: valley doveThe word valley dove () is pronounced just like Google. The term became popular after Google relocated its servers from China to Hong Kong in 2010.Some users said that valley doves could not survive in China, referencing the fantastical creature to mock censorship.

If you want to talk about: your Covid-19 health codeyou can refer to: the green horseThese days, in China, being in possession of a green health code (, pronounced l m) means youre Covid-free and can move freely in public. This code is required for everything from entering a movie theater to boarding a flight. People have started talking about holding onto their green horse, pronounced the same way, in order to preserve their freedom. In April, a giant inflatable green horse was put up in a public square in Wuhan, making it an instant social media sensation.

If you want to: defy the censorsyou can write in: chrysanthemum scriptChrysanthemum script (, pronounced jhu wn) overlays the symbol for multiplying a number by one million in Cyrillic between characters.It obscures the characters, visually and in writing, hoping to confuse automated censorship tools while still remaining easily readable by a human. The Cyrillic character is no longer banned, leading some users to believe it is no longer an effective method.

If you want to: stop trying to make something betteryou can: let it rotAn approach that has become particularly popular with the lying-flat crowd, letting it rot (, pronounced bi ln) means to sit back and let a bad situation get worse.

If you want to talk about: government corruptionyou can say theres: govern-rotThis pun (, pronounced zhngf) sounds the same as government (, zhngf), but means totally rotten or completely corrupt.This homophone was used to discuss corrupt government officials online until it was banned.

If you want to: get away from it allyou can: runAs people get tired of economic challenges and Covid-19 lockdowns, those who have the means have been spreading the message: run. The Chinese words for profit and enjoyment both include the character , which is pronounced like the English word run. Through using it as slang, people have been daydreaming, and sharing tips online about getting visas or studying abroad.

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How Chinese citizens use puns on Weibo to talk about #MeToo and zero-Covid without being censored - Rest of World