Aaron Swartz, and the question that none dare ask Obama
Just last week, prosecutors offered Swartz a "deal" that still would have mandated at least six months in prison. A short time later. his body was found.
Aaron Swartz, and the question that none dare ask Obama

President Obama had a press conference earlier today -- billed as the last one of his first term. He was asked the predictable questions -- mainly about the debt-and-spending battle with Congress, with one off-speed pitch, a query about a lack of White House diversity and also why he doesn't socialize with Congress more. No one asked the president about Aaron Swartz, the 26-year-old Internet-freedom activist who, facing controversial federal criminal charges, committed suicide last week. That's not a surprise -- honestly, what might Obama say about the specifics, to the extent he may or may not have even followed the story. But what happened to this young crusader raises much deeper questions about our government, about transparency, secrecy, people's right to know, and the abuse of power. Questions that need to be answered for the American people.
Full disclosure: I'm not going to pretend that before this week that I know much about Swartz -- a computer prodigy who created a website that evolved into the popular Reddit site at age 14, and then campaigned for freedom of information over the Internet, fighting against the Internet-copyright bill known as SOPA through a group called Demand Progress. He was well-known to the community of activists seeking to reduce government restrictions on the flow of information, if not to the broader public. But the broader battles that he devoted his all-too-brief life to fighting -- against a government that is way too invested in conducting its business in secret and in limiting information to the select few -- are familiar to most of us.
Outside of the activisit community, there really wasn't much publicity about the 2011 federal charges lodged against Swartz -- the case that threatened to send him to prison and which family and friends say was closely linked to his death, by hanging himself in his Brooklyn apartment on Friday. It's a complicated case, but essentially the activist had used the computers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, or MIT, to download millions of documents -- academic and scholarly papers -- that were behind the wall for paying subscribers at the site JSTOR. There's no evidence that Swartz intended to enrich himself or others, but the act instead appears by all accounts to be a manifestation of his belief that knowledge -- especially research that in many cases is underwritten by our federal or state tax dollars -- is for the public.
When someone breaks a law not for personal gain but because he or she thinks the law is wrong, that's called civil disobedience -- the tactic used by famous people like Gandhi and Martin Luther King, whom the nation pauses to honor on Monday, and by millions of people who are not famous but are very brave. They are brave because they know they may and quite likely will be punished for what they do -- but Aaron Swartz had the misfortune of taking his civl action in a nation that seems to treat crimes committed with a computer more harshly than crimes committed with a gun.
Swartz was arrested on 13 federal felony charges that carried the possibility of millions of dollars in fines and a prison sentence of 35 years, and the U.S. Justice Department (encouraged, reportedly by MIT) did not back away from its over-the-top prosecution of Swartz -- even though JSTOR, the supposed aggrieved party, didn't want to press charges and in fact it announced just days ago that 4.5 million documents would be made available for free (with some limits.)
Just last week, prosecutors offered Swartz a "deal" that still would have mandated at least six months in prison. A short time later. his body was found. Of course, it's impossible to know everything that's on a person's mind, and while family members say he had his struggles with depression, there is little doubt that the prosecution is what was weighing most on Swartz in his final hours. His family released a statement that was unambiguous: “Aaron’s death is not simply a personal tragedy. It is the product of a criminal justice system rife with intimidation and prosecutorial overreach. Decisions made by officials in the Massachusetts U.S. attorney’s office and at M.I.T. contributed to his death.”
As news and shock over Schwartz' passing spread on the Internet this weekend, much of the focus of anger has been at MIT -- which is now conducting an internal investigation -- and at Massachusetts U.S. Attorney Carmen Ortiz. Her ouster has been called for though an ever-growing online petition while Harvard Law professor Lawrence Lessig has called for an investigation of the federal prosecutor. Those responses are all appropriate -- but people should use this occasion to look even deeper.
On one level, this might be a time for Americans to ask ourselves why the full hammer of the government was coming down on this brilliant young activist whose alleged crime was so dubious, when the same Justice Department has all but ignored the double dealing and financial chicanery that crashed the world economy that erased billions of dollars in 2008, and it has completely looked the other way when it comes to the torture practices that reversed decades of established law and which have been so harmful to America's reputation.
But let's look even beyond that. The persecution of Aaron Swartz can't be passed off as an isolated incident. Instead, with Swartz' suicide, it feels more like the exclamation point on an administration whose commitment to maintaining secrecy, blocking transparency, limiting the flow of information and squelching dissent has been both unexpected and rather shocking.
After all, it was four years this week that Barack Obama became the 44th president, bringing hopes not just that he would stem the economic bleeding and end two seemingly endless wars -- but that he would undo the broader expansion of power and secrecy that took place during the Bush-Cheney years. President Obama has proved -- for reasons that are in many cases not his doing -- to be a remarkably polarizing figure, still seen after four years as a savior by some, while to his enemies he is somewhere on the spectrum between a socialist and the Antichrist. The reality is that while he's a necessary counterweight to the radical extremism of ther Tea Party and has soke praiseworthy accomplishments on issues from health care to gays in the military, he's also expanded the power of the presidency at the expense of the public, just like every other modern chief executive before him. Sometimes alarmingly so.
The reality of the Obama administration so far is that the folks who promised in 2009 “most transparent administration in history” have instead turned down Freedom of Information requests at a much higher rate than the oft-criticized Bush administration, have continued to classify documents at an alarming level, and even made unsuccessful attempts to water down a key FOIA provision and to keep White House visitor logs a secret.
The administration that pledged to undo the excessive secrecy of the Bush years has seen its Justice Department prosecute six people under the Espionage Act who've tried to blow the whistle on government corruption, including unlawful torture -- which is double the number prosecuted under all past presidents put together. The presidency that surged into office four years ago promising to wipe away the moral stain of the Iraq War years has instead chosen to conduct the cornerstone of its anti-terrorism -- drone strikes against purported terrorists on a "kill list" -- in utter secrecy; it imposes a death penalty, even against an American citizen, in a program with zero oversight, whose very existence it refuses to confirm to the citizenry. And a relatively tame form of legal public dissent -- the Occupy Wall Street movement, which dared to ask some of these questions -- became the target of surveillance by the FBI and an umbrella of other federal agencies.
Taken together, this is the great failure of the Obama legacy, and the Aaron Swartz case is just one thread of this much, much larger and deeply troubling canvass. But if there is one thing to take from this tragedy, it is the knowledge that the current president has shown he can change course when the public outcry becomes great enough. Before Newtown, the Obama administration had an abysmal record on gun violence -- given an "F," in fact, by the Brady campaign, but the horrific events of Sandy Hook have forced the White House to focus on an issue it spent four years working to ignore.
Now, will the tragic death of Aaron Swartz, and the backwards-looking policies that surrounded his case, cause the president to re-examine his broken promises on transparency and openness? It's the question that should have been asked today at the president's press conference -- but wasn't. As with gun sanity (and also climate change, which is forcing the hand of policy makers), this weekend's second inauguration gives Obama a four-year do-over to finally keep his promises on transparency and the free flow of information. But it will never happen if no one asks the right questions.
I have anew respect for you, Will. I disagree with cybersport. The JSTOR downloads were research, mostly funded by the US taxpayers through NIH, etc. Schwartz wasn't downloading movies and music. JSTOR dropped all charges. He was an activist, not a criminal. In the class war that exists today, this is one of the many arenas where a huge percentage of our society is excluded. My condolences to his family, friends and colleagues. pell
Yes, I second that. Don't be a stranger, TPS. I enjoy your sense of humor.
wokmaster
===]]] He's signed legislation that allows him and those who preside after him to do even worst. That's why these guns are being will be seized. The law that will be passed eventually will lead us to total gov't control. Yelp our soldiers won't hv to fight for a freedom we may never see again in our lifetime. Wait and see. Oh but we're too busy remembering what happenend in Newtown to notice the ish that really took place in our gov't right beneath our noses! [[[===
Just had to repeat that post. An absolute classic.
And since bile.atkins and the rest of our much beloved Attytood Republican toadies have gone into hiding since the election - I'd like to nominate Lyrra as the leading candidate for the king of Attytood conservative lunatics.
Can I get a second? Talking point sleuth
What a great article. Thank you for explaining this situation and comparing it to other cases and putting it into perspective. I am not an activist for or against many things but this hit right on the money to me. Ballgame
Will, the current administration involved themselves in trafficking guns to criminals, resulting in the death of an American citizen. With an admin like that, we need the 2nd amendment. sadim- Reagan trafficked missiles to Iran to fund central American terrorists, resulting in the death of an American citizen. How helpful was your 2nd Amendment then?
This comment has been deleted. ComeAndTakeIt- ComeAndTakeIt = Wingnut
wokmaster - This comment has been deleted.
ComeAndTakeIt - You don't even understand what communism is.
Please share with the community what your last handle was. What was it before Nov 7th 2012? wokmaster - I guess you could say Obama is a welfare hero. Best compliment I've seen for him in a while.
After reading posts from some of our painfully conservative friends, it has become crystal clear that we need to address mental illness in this country. wokmaster- Wok, is there such a thing as a "painfully" liberal person?
If so, do ya think they also suffer a mental illness? michael_b - One can only be painfully conservative. I'm getting that trademarked.
wokmaster - Oh, I get it.
Extreme liberals do not exist - there are only extreme conservatives.... and they're mentally ill.
You might want to get that diagnosed, not trademarked. michael_b - I never said that EXTREME liberals don't exist. I said only conservatives can be described as "painfully" conservative.
wokmaster - Oh, good. So there IS such a thing as an EXTREME liberal.
That explains it. michael_b - The "Shutter Island" therapy takes time. Is it too soon to disclose it to them?
When his Excellancy, Premier Obama in his full glory, he rules with an iron hand and all who disagree or disobey or who ask questions will be silenced......and the sheep love it.....till it is their turn in prison or at the gullotine.....It is coming sheep, PC'ers, and media Ho's.....Until there is transparency and objectivity in the media (versus hero worship) It is coming and it will too late to stop it..... nuggett- "before he started sowing the seeds of racial and class division?" . . . . Obama began the African slave trade too? Dang, he's good.
So, Swartz helps himself to millions of DOCUMENTS
and Corzine helps himself to billions of DOLLARS...
and the DOJ does what?
this is why I cringe when I hear the president saying he's "taking steps to level the playing field, so everybody plays by the same rules"....
I think we're gonna find this president is cut from the same cloth as the previous president. michael_b- Cut from the same cloth. Had he been anything but of the same cloth he'd never be mentioned in the same breadth as president. This is old info. You don't elect someone named Obama in this country unless it's more to him than his name. He is definitely of the same cloth. Don't forget his mama isnt a mamie. She's has ties to the white house b4 barry was even born. Only Dem , Reps & Tea Partiers are silly enu to think there's really a difference. PPL wake up. There are no freedom of speech in this country anymore. You are free to do what this gov't dictates.
Lyrra
===]]] The governement is no longer working for us. [[===
Good point. I mean it's not like we elect them into office, or anything like that.
Nope. Talking point sleuth
===]]] The governement is no longer working for us. [[===Good point. I mean it's not like we elect them into office, or anything like that. Nope. (HTML deleted) Talking point sleuth
Obama is acting like a dictator more & more. Treating the constitution like TP and usurping power like his book club buddy Chavez. teardownthisfishwrap- He's signed legislation that allows him and those who preside after him to do even worst. That's why these guns are being will be seized. The law that will be passed eventually will lead us to total gov't control. Yelp our soldiers won't hv to fight for a freedom we may never see again in our lifetime. Wait and see. Oh but we're too busy remembering what happenend in Newtown to notice the ish that really took place in our gov't right beneath our noses!
Lyrra
I realize that folks are still mad about November 6, 2012, but why in the world should the president address the suicide of a young man who had committed criminal acts and openly discussed ending his own life for years? crosstown
Are some of the useful idiots realizing that Obama will tell you what he thinks you want to hear and then do the opposite? Remember when he was going to bring people together before he started sowing the seeds of racial and class division? Remember when his administration was going to be the most transparent in history before he started doing everything in secret behind closed doors while refusing any debate or time to read and review legislation? cujat13
"The reality is that while he's a necessary counterweight to the radical extremism of ther Tea Party..."
What exactly makes them radical or extreme? Asking the federal government to live within its means? Trying to reverse the course of an ever growing government that with every new rule and regulation further limits your freedoms?
I really can't wait until you "moderates" in the center (left and right) see what's is in store for you with ObamaCare...and it's cost. Remember...the Tea Party tried to save you. UKnowWho
You can't ask the President tough question....don't you know it's racist to do so!? cujat13
Hope and Change at its best!
More proof Obama is worse than Carter. Sportyrider71
What youa re seeing is the true attitude of the ruling class (currently headed by Obama) towards the peasents, aka the rest of us. This is the reality of the elitest snobbery that they learn in colege and other places to day. The governement is no longer working for us. The real question is how long before we work for them. Schwartz was like many active n the internet who just refuse to see things as having owners. Too many hackers and others feel that because they can breach a security system they have the right to take what is there. There is a very very thin line between what he did and what the identity theives do. There is a reason the government went after him and I doubt it really bears the light of day. To the government insiders, we are the sheep. Dutch-wayne
You're about the only one on this site who's asking any real questions at all. Thanks, Will. RickSchuBlues
Civil disobedience occasionally requires jail time. If this guy couldn't do 6 months for his cause,he should have considered the consequences before he acted. Or maybe stopped living in his mom's basement and gotten on with his life. diverjm
TPS doing a little sideline free lancing for the FBI.Who knew ? Yankee Air Pirate 12
Big Brother is alive and well. The Great Leader ensures your individual rights mean nothing. What constitution???? dogman5
He had a choice not to take his life, he had depression, whether he broke the law or not was up to the court system, I been through it and I did't commit suicide, stop blaming others for our own failure, the consequence of civil disobedience could lead to death, MLK. PHILLY76
===]]] We serve our family first and our community second. [[[===
Do you realize that a gun in a home is far more likely to be used against a family member than it is to be used in self-defense? Far more likely?
Talking point sleuth
===]]] We serve our family first and our community second. [[[===Do you realize that a gun in a home is far more likely to be used against a family member than it is to be used in self-defense? Far more likely? (HTML deleted) Talking point sleuth
===]]] tps, why is it that only the 2nd amendment needs to be interpreted exactly as written and other amendments are "living" and should be adjusted with the times? [[[===
That is a fair point - although the "originalist" argument is that a strict interpretation prevents gun control...
But it is a fair point. I do believe that the Constitution needs to be viewed in the appropriate context (and that interpretation of "original intent" is necessarily biased and anyone who claims to interpret "original intent" is blind to their own biases).
But even still - does modern context affect this issue? Back in the day, it made some sense to think that a "well-regulated militia" might be able to suppress an insurrection or defend against an invasion. In the modern context, that makes no sense. The point is that an armed citizenry was seen as promoting the power of the state, not protecting against the power of the state - although there are related issues w/r/t distinguishing the federal government from state governments. Talking point sleuth
I think Bunch's statement "I'm not going to pretend that before this week that I know much...." is accurate about almost every topic he writes on. Swartz decided on his own, before the fact, that the content of JSTOR belonged to the public and downloaded it. He (wrongly) believed that scientific information was being "locked up" by a small handful of corporations and he had the "moral imperative" to share it. After Reddit was sold/acquired, Swartz worked for Wired and was miserable there. As much as I sympathize with his depression, he had the opportunity to easily get another job. He apparently had the opportunity to plead out as well. He gambled that he would not get the sentence he received and as grossly unfair as that sentence was, he chose suicide rather than to continue to fight/appeal against it. The man who faced down a tank in Tiananmen square is a martyr. Swartz is not. wfs0868
===]]] With that said, resistance to Tyranny is obedience to God so bring on the drones.
— bgreen1617 [[[===
Just wanted to repeat that post in case the FBI missed it the first time.
Talking point sleuth
This dead kid did not "steal" anything. It was all available for free, but in limited quantities at any one time. He just made it available all at once. The "harmed" party JSTOR did not want to file charges and has since made this all more readily available. What he was in essence facing decades in prison for was checking out too many library books. Government is nothing but a bunch of thugs and goons. They always overcharge for the slightest crime to get a plea - which is why many innocent people end up in jail. Government agent commits crime like this? It gets ignored and he gets a promotion. kingnutter
Well the Big O was able to know about a black professor that got arrested and he inserted himself into that process, why shouldn't he have known about this. jcc1960
I wonder in 1933 if the German Media said "Hitler only acted as a dictator this one time, we are sure it will not happen again." CD75- *yawn*
wokmaster
Why does every argument here have to be reduced to "Liberal vs conservative"?
The guy was going to give the information to EVERYONE. j$
This young man was young and foolish. He may have been brilliant with computers but he failed to guage the magnitude of his actions. He stole intellectual property from a private site. A crime for sure. He got caught and was going to get prosecuted. Now, the papers want to make him a Hero. They want Obama to explain why he was prosecuting the kid? He wasn't --it was the Prosecutor Carmen Ortiz. It's her job. She does it well. She offered a deal to the kid and he turned it down because he had a sense of entitlement that is breed into rich and gifted kids. He couldn't handle the reality coming his way so he took the cowards way out. If, he was a real hero--he would have published everything and gone to jail. That would have shown what he was made of. Stay on point! A. Martinez
With a controlled corporate media, only corporate journalists were present during the news conference. MIT and the US Government killed Swartz. JoshuaFrySpeed
With a controlled corporate media, only corporate journalists were present during the news conference. MIT and the US Government killed Swartz. JoshuaFrySpeed
"and has soke praiseworthy accomplishments"
"soke" IS a word.
but it doesn't seem to be the word that fits in that sentence.
as far as the rest of your column goes:
so you are just now realizing that Obama has kept precious few of the promises he made during the 2008 campaign?
or did you figure it out before, but decide that re-electing him was still a good idea?
meet the new boss. same as the old boss. ekw555
an imperial president does not act just one time with regards to an internet activist. CD75
Hey Barry, why has Jon Corzine not been prosecuted yet? Oh, that's right...you were a big supporter of his re-election campaign, right? Typical liberal hypocrite. vdstrading- How about we first make his misfeasance a crime to prosecute? Too "liberal"? Too "unAmerican"?
"I voted for Obama because the alternative was obviously impossible. But I am full of consternation at the way his administration rough-rides over the American people's rights to freedom "
One of the sheeps speaketh. Baaaaaaaah. teardownthisfishwrap
"and the question that none dare ask Obama"
Yeah, there's alot of that going on you might say. The "Court eunuchs of the palace media" to quote mark steyn. Pravda asked tougher questions of Brezhnev. teardownthisfishwrap
I agreed until he brought Occupy Wall street into the mix. A ridiculous movement, a pointless waste of time and pubic attention. What did they prove? Nothing. Obama loves to slam investment bankers and Wall Street types, but the first thing he points to is the
"success of the stock market" to prove his economic recovery plan is working. Who is getting rich? The Wall Street "fat cats". The height of hypocrisy! Obama is a garden variety politician, nothing more, nothing less. And if you disagree with his policies? You are clearly a racist. jet2012
There are many questions the state run media should ask B Husein. This one ranks at the bottom of the list. fgomarty
What a surprise...the metrosexual geek-chic class thinks that the world revolves around them. Here is their "hero" doing everything that they claimed GWB was doing (but never did) and keeping silent about it. Can you spell schadenfreude? I knew you could! phillystarfish
I firmly believe government should be more transparent, with minimal secrets. However, Too few people actually listened to Obama's campaign positions for the 2008 election. In the campaign, Obama said he would expand the drone program targeting Al Qaeda as President. During one debate, he also said if they identified someone like Bin Laden in Pakistan and was afraid the Pakistani government would tip them off, he would order troops in without telling the Pakistan government (McCain disagreed). He followed through on both of those campaign statements. For some reason, rather than listen to Obama's words during the 2008 campaign, everyone chose to believe what Fox News said about him (socialist, etc.), and voted for him anyway. Obama was never that liberal; to the contrary, both Hillary Clinton and John Edwards were more liberal in the 2008 primary. plugh
Referring to oneself as an "activist" doesn't obviate theft. He stole; he got indicted; he killed himself. He's a coward, not a martyr. holmesburgexpat- No! U sir are the real coward because while u sit at your cozy computer and pass judgment on others,people who Act, and do while you sit and gossip. The fact that u can read is commendable in itself but because you are able to summarize the story in a 3rd grade fashion doesn't make this mans story as simple as your thought process. I'm sure your teacher told you the story of Robin-hood or another figure who did what they thought was right despite the consequences. Consequences like having feeble minded buffoons not active in there community babble hate about the work they did that many now benefit from.
bgreen1617
tps, why is it that only the 2nd amendment needs to be interpreted exactly as written and other amendments are "living" and should be adjusted with the times? And before you accuse me of being a right-wing, gun-loving, bible thumper, i do not like guns but the 2nd amendment hasn't been repealed. In any case, he committed a crime and he should do the time. It's unfortunate that no one could help him resolve his issues. Stealing isn't civil disobedience. palmyra21- You can make a stronger case for the right to have automatic weapons, heck, even bazookas, howitzers, missiles, M-1 tanks, etc, if you accept the framers' intent to ensure a well-regulated militia so that a massive standing army wasn't necessary. Alas, we failed Jefferson's vision by the War of 1812 (our losses proving the folly of depending on citizens to be well-regulated as militia), and our right to keep and bear arms is fairly meaningless in the face of the modern military-industrial complex. All we really have left from the 2nd Amendment is the right of personal defense from each other, a no-brainer in terms of natural rights which is promoted by limiting ill-advised access to guns as well as keeping them; and an esoteric form of recreation, hardly a fundamental civil liberty in itself. All TPS and I are really saying is put your guns where your mouth is. Serve.
- We do "Serve". We being gun owners of America. We serve our family first and our community second. Many who have already served in the military due so to better provide for our families and not to go to war on a mound of lies thats compounded daily from hypocrite politicians and there corporate masters.
In other words... We don't serve no stinking new world order agenda and never will. You are right about your "Founders" intent and the Military Industrial Complex's ability to devour us with or without guns though.
With that said, resistance to Tyranny is obedience to God so bring on the drones. bgreen1617 - "resistance to Tyranny is obedience to God so bring on the drones."
Such a breathtakingly misguided comment that it defies words. I won't even ask which "god" you speak of.
Please move to a compound in Idaho with others who share your paranoia. In the meantime, those of us on Planet Earth will work THROUGH government to help solve the problems facing this country. wokmaster - One day you'll realize that most of this countries problems exist by design my friend. Or one day you'll be crushed by that reality. You don't have to ask - I mean The Creator of existence, The Supreme Cosmic force. Not a religious deity. Working through Government will continue to get us to where we stand today. Continued compromise until there's nothing left to compromise for. Ask Greece, Portugal or Spain for current economic examples and ask much of The Middle East and Africa on iron fist tactics used.
bgreen1617 - Do you have one of those bumper stickers on the back of your truck that says "always question authority"?
wokmaster
Lets grow the federal government some more. Eventually, it will be big and unwieldy enough that it might help somebody by accident. Mr. Smith
Sorry but you don't create change by stealing other people's stuff. It has to be done the right way: by getting politicians to change the laws, which sometimes means protesting, creating organizations to get your views out to the public or simply writing your congressman. I know it sucks to do it that way, but it prevents us from having to worry about the government being overthrown like in other countries. Phils_World_Champs
===]]] ...the results of this example of big brother government scare me and offer evidence of why the 2nd Amendment is so important - not just for gun ownership but as an example (along with the 1st) of the vital protection it offers against a repressive/oppressive government. [[[===
So, have you signed up to be part of a "well-regulated militia" yet? 'Cause the 2nd amendment states that as the reason for guns. I mean you do realize that the point of the "militia" was to "SUPPRESS INSURRECTION and REPEL INVASIONS."
Talking point sleuth
I don't think any questions were asked about Schwartz because the press room was in amazement at all the lies Ozero spewed out during his presser. keapitreal- The Obama Media was told not to ask about it because the answer wasn't on the teleprompter.
- Still with the teleprompter thing? This is why the GOP is going extinct.
wokmaster
Nice balanced article! While not a gun activist myself (more of a collector), the results of this example of big brother government scare me and offer evidence of why the 2nd Amendment is so important - not just for gun ownership but as an example (along with the 1st) of the vital protection it offers against a repressive/oppressive government. My heart goes out to the Swartz family, and I pray the citizenry find a way to establish a federal government that complies with the original intent. stb710- Alas, the government isn't intimidated by your guns. It's "weapons" are way beyond the citizen's reach. Don't let firearms give you some false sense of 18th century security, especially when those who most vocally advocate for them are really more concerned about preserving the present "tyranny" from real agents of change. It's your god-given freedom to keep and bear ideas that scares the powers-that-be. Use them wisely.
- "When someone breaks a law not for personal gain but because he or she thinks the law is wrong, that's called civil disobedience" . . . . Absolutely, but he also has the willingness to face the consequences openly to impress the public that the legal consequences are well worth the act of disobedience, and that change is therefore warranted. From all I read, Swartz was seeking not an open trial to raise his "necessity" defense to the world, but a plea bargain to evade any jail time. He could've used the advance counsel of a lawyer, a la William Kunstler, before acting so naively, assuming civil disobedience for a nobler cause, and not just his ego, was truly his motivation.
I agree with much of what Bunch wrote. The drone program being a major exception. In my view, certainly better than sending soldiers into harms way or allowing terrorism to breed along the Pakistan/Afghanistan border. It's still the best of a bunch of some lousy options.
As for Obama's biggest failure, don't forget that NONE of the bankers or Wall Street crooks have been brought to justice for their roles in the finiancial collapse. We were teetering on the knife's edge of a Second Depression, yet this Administration has spent more resources on fighting the failed War On Drugs than prosecuting these white collar criminals. The AIG bonuses just added insult to injury. I have yet to see leadership from the White House that might galvanize public opinion into enacting tighter regulations so that the same exact sh*t doesn't happen again.
The President has done an extraordinary job given the daunting task of cleaning up the mess George W Bush left. Not bad for a "community organizer".
However, I rarely get a chance to criticize him from the left because of the nonstop lunacy and hatred from the far right - led primarily by Fox "News". It began in '09 with the socialist/Kenyan/Muslim nonsense and has only grown longer tentacles. The irony being that wingnuts have turned those of us who were once skeptics and/or critics of Obama into some of his staunchest defenders. In doing so, they've disbanded his opposition from the left. I think the majority of Americans realize that Barack Obama, warts and all, is still better than any of the GOP alternatives. wokmaster- Obama isn't the anti-Christ, he's the anti-Bush the establishment needed to purge itself of the stench of mediocrity and ineptitude. FDR-lite, if you will, or Reagan, but from the other direction of the superficial ideological spectrum. In the end, the system must be preserved.
Comment removed.
I voted for Obama because the alternative was obviously impossible. But I am full of consternation at the way his administration rough-rides over the American people's rights to freedom of information, in cases ranging from this one to the Assange-Manning case. I would welcome any and all crusades against Obama's information policies in the name of Aaron Swartz -- even, just this once, if they were mounted by Fox News. Dave Clemens- Your consternation is irrelevent, because Obamao knew people like you were going to vote for him anyway, so he could do whatever he wanted.
Will, you're spot on about Obama and government secrecy, but your segue from the Swartz/JSTOR matter is disturbingly naive, especially for a journalist whose paycheck requires that somebody, somewhere has to pay the piper. JSTOR isn't a taxpayer-funded service, after all, like your local public free library. montani semper liberi
Will:
Excellent column...Kudos are in order Polecat_39- Third that...
Good to see there is still some solid reporting done without a partisan after-taste. Report the facts with references and let the reader decide. Sounds simple but missing in much of main stream media today. The news just prints or says what the Government dictates now through Reuters, AP and such. bgreen1617 - Second the motion.
Hector
The Socialist in Chief would have blamed Bush.
eyesell
I'm as liberal as the next person, but what he is described as doing here is common theft. If I post material on a pay section of my web site it is intended that people pay for it to compensate me for my time and energy.
He was taking money from the pockets of people who developed this content. cybersport- Honestly, I agree with you on many levels. If he's going to ignore laws because he doesn't believe in them, he has to face the consequences.
Having said that, they were shooting for 50 years in federal prison. Most of the murderers and rapists in this city see a fraction of that time. The punishment didn't fit the crime here at all.
I think we should have to pay a reasonable fee for content, I just hate the way many companies currently handle it and that they really have more power than they probably should. Ilmare - Unfortunately, the cause of "internet freedom" all too often boils down to getting everything for free, whether it's TV shows, music, movies or virtually any other intellectual property. Somebody, please, get a copy of Will Bunch's book and post it for free on the internet, and we'll see how loudly he invokes "civil disobedience."
J H - heard he was possibly looking at 50 years. seems excessive. rest in peace.
Shucks, I missed this press conference. Was it filled with Barry's typical pre-planned rhetoric? FletcherT
this is rich will. the left bashed any and all that dared ask anything tough to the bamster then lament nobody asks anything tough to the bamster. can't make this sh&* up. lol rysagr
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