Several months ago, I wrote about Edward Snowden and
suggested that his failure to face prosecution was inconsistent the type of
civil disobedience taught by Thoreau and Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther
King. I received many comments on that
post suggesting that my view was naïve, given the overwhelming power of the US
prosecutorial system. True, it is a
powerful system, but it is one that remains subject to the checks and balances
that protect people under our form of government.
When you fail to face the music, you undermine the moral high ground of
your disobedience, and you suggest that your actions were more about you than
about the cause.
I continue to feel the irony of Snowden’s choices since that
time, starting with a move to Russia, scarcely a place that values political
freedom. A recent article in Prospect by George Packer has reinforced for me my original view by
illustrating the downward path Snowden has been compelled to take since then. Here’s a summary excerpt from the article:
In the year since the
first NSA disclosures, Snowdel has drifted a long way from the Thoreauvian
ideal of a majority of one. He has become an international celebrity, far more
championed than reviled. He has praised Russia’s and Venezuala’s devotion to
human rights. His more recent disclosures have nothing to do with the
constitutional rights of US citizens.
Many of them deal with surveillance of foreign governments, including
Germany and Brazil, but also Iran, Russia, and China. These are activities that, wise or unwise,
fall well within NSA’s mandate and the normal ways of espionage. Snowden has
attached himself to Wikileaks and to Assange, who has become a tool of Russian
foreign policy and has no interest in reforming American democracy—his goal is
to embarrass it. Assange and Snowden are
not the first radical individualist to end up in thrall to strongmen.
Snowden’s contribution to America was to cause the country
to catch its breath and think through the extent to which the government invades
people’s privacy. There is little sign, though,
that the body politic will act in any comprehensive way on these matters, or
that the public at large cares enough to become politically active on
them. Packer notes:
One valuable model for
reform appeared last December, in “The NSA Report” of the President’s Review
Group, a far-reaching set of recommendations for constraining data collection
by the US government. Obama largely ignored
it, perhaps counting on the waning attention of the American people.
By his absence from the US—yes, even from a prison
cell—Snowden tossed away his possible influence in keeping the public debate
alive. It has been the likes of the
“Letter from the Birmingham Jail” that have successfully pinged America’s
conscience. Instead, Snowden’s choice of
accepting the help of an unaccountable oligarch has forever deleted his
influence back home.
Packer concludes:
Snowden looked to the
internet for liberation, but it turns out that there is no such thing as an
entirely free individual. … No one lives
outside the fact of coercion—there is always a state to protect or pursue you,
whether it’s Obama’s America or Putin’s Russia.
3 comments:
I know I risk making SOMEone unhappy by posting anything on this subject, but my post is to say yeah, this is a complex subject, and I appreciate this perspective.
Last night I saw Snowden and Brian Williams on NBC and I noted his civil disobedience point, but I didn't connect the dots about going to jail.
A major concern, though: he pointed out that under today's laws an *open, fair* trial would be impossible because the evidence for public consideration is *banned* from public consideration (I assume that's under USA Patriot). Any thoughts on that?
"He has praised Russia’s and Venezuala’s devotion to human rights..."
Given that a fellow college alumnus Leo Lopez is being held in Venezuala I find that comment alone offensive and detrimental to Snowden's cause.
If you haven't seen this rebuttal of Packer, you might take the arguments into consideration: http://crookedtimber.org/2014/05/28/george-packer-and-his-problems/
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