by broken robot » Sat Feb 01, 2014 1:53 pm
Whether or not Snowden is a "hero", he's done long-term damage to the national security state and opened up debates on transparency, which is almost always a good thing in my opinion. The US state in particular has an overwhelming concentration of power and there are few forces that can question it and spark major reforms. Snowden's pretty much left his entire normal life behind to continue this work, and since we can't get inside the man's head and address his motives, I'll just see it for what it appears to be: a commitment to changing society for the better.
I don't know all the facts of the case but I'd like to see evidence if there is any of where he put American lives at risk. Moreover, the argument that he went to Russia and therefore is a "hypocrite" isn't actually reflective of his political loyalties, it's just him pragmatically manipulating the geopolitical balance of power. Any dissident is going to go to a place at least slightly hostile to their home country, which is why Eastern European dissidents during the Cold War would come to the US. Nothing inherent about "freedom" as a political principle in their decisions, it's a basic question of who's going to extradite you.
The Subversives
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