There are probably two things, chiefly, that fuel support for Julian Assange.
First, the idea that the mainstream media are not independent, but merely mouthpieces for the establishment. There’s some truth to this.
Secondly, the fact that Wikileaks is revealing, this time, things that we already knew: that governments are two-faced.
While I have posted my reservations about Wikileaks elsewhere, the latest newsâthat the US and Red China collaborated on ensuring that COP15 would failâshows that governments are quite happy to follow the money, and be complicit with corporations who wish to continue polluting.
Creating transparencyâsomething I harped on about since joining the Medinge Group and writing in Beyond Branding with my colleaguesâis something I believe in, so knocking down a few walls and having certain suspicions confirmed are good things.
In the 2000s, the processes in our systems revealed that the Emperor had no clothes over at Enronâwhich prompted, in some respects, Beyond Brandingâand, more recently, that the sub-prime mortgage market was a crock.
Maybe it is about time that the processes revealed a few truths about government, and the very reasons so many of us mistrust them, or give politicians such a low rating in surveys.
The fact that despite the democratic ideal, many are not working for us.
On the 8th, Stefan Engeseth cheekily suggested on his blog that Wikileaks should be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. Yesterday, Russia suggested that Julian Assange could receive its nomination.
Although Russia itself has come under fire, it rather likes having the two-faced nature of NATO confirmed by Wikileaks: on the one hand, saying that Russia is a strategic partner, while on the other, planning to defend the Baltic states and Poland from a Russian attack.
A Peace Prize for a website or a founder who put certain anti-Taliban informants at risk would not get my vote, but the underlying sentiment of no more secrets does.
The sad thing is that it might not, single-handedly, usher in an era where governments level with us moreâbut it is one of many moves that might.
I say this as the establishment, including financial institutions, closes in on the website. As pointed out to me by Daniel Spector, PayPal and Mastercard are quite happy to accept your donations to the Ku Klux Klan, but will decline those to Wikileaks.
Posts tagged ‘Nobel Peace Prize’
Wikileaksâ brand of transparency is the enemy of the establishment
10.12.2010Tags: Beyond Branding, climate change, diplomacy, Julian Assange, media, Medinge Group, news, Nobel Peace Prize, PayPal, politics, press freedoms, Red China, Russia, Stefan Engeseth, transparency, USA, Wikileaks
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