Press Enter to search or select a section to narrow results

Ron Paul’s Passionate Defense Of Julian Assange And WikiLeaks On House Floor

Steve Williams · Saturday, December 11th 2010 at 11:58AM · 105 views
by Colby Hall | 10:19 am, December 10th, 2010

Ron Paul is nothing if not an conservative iconoclast. The Texas Republican House Representative, with deep libertarian roots is taking a counter-intuitive departure from the traditional and established GOP rhetoric on the issue of WikiLeaks. In an impassioned speech on the U.S. House floor, Paul likened the attack on Julian Assange to “killing the messenger for bringing bad news” before providing nine provocative questions for Americans to consider.

Mr. Paul concluded his speech with a list of questions for the American citizens to consider, the transcript of which is below (via FromTheOld.)

Number 1: Do the America People deserve know the truth regarding the ongoing wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Yemen?

Number 2: Could a larger question be how can an army private access so much secret information?

Number 3: Why is the hostility directed at Assange, the publisher, and not at our governments failure to protect classified information?

Number 4: Are we getting our moneys worth of the 80 Billion dollars per year spent on intelligence gathering?

Number 5: Which has resulted in the greatest number of deaths: lying us into war or Wikileaks revelations or the release of the Pentagon Papers?

Number 6: If Assange can be convicted of a crime for publishing information that he did not steal, what does this say about the future of the first amendment and the independence of the internet?

Number 7: Could it be that the real reason for the near universal attacks on Wikileaks is more about secretly maintaining a seriously flawed foreign policy of empire than it is about national security?

Number 8: Is there not a huge difference between releasing secret information to help the enemy in a time of declared war, which is treason, and the releasing of information to expose our government lies that promote secret wars, death and corruption?

Number 9: Was it not once considered patriotic to stand up to our government when it is wrong?

http://www.mediaite.com/tv/ron-pauls-passi...

About the Author

Steve Williams Coatesville, PA

Share This Article

Comments (4)

Jen Fad Sunday, December 12th 2010 at 8:46PM

Points 5,8,&9 are worthy of response by the US govt since we have been lied to as citizens?

ROBINSON IRMA Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM

It was so interesting hearing on christ Mathew program taht comes on on NBC on sat. how they were talking about the news reporters are just waiting for thenext wilileaks reports so they can cover it and how wilileaks will still be talked about 50 years from now...

now I can not really say if the guest on that program was talking about something coming out of Wilileaks, but he was saying we could be expecting some arrest of some in the I bleieve nickson of Reagan's or was it Carter's administration in relationship to the killing of an Israeli political leader...they were i the segment of the probram when C.M. always ask them to tell him something he don't knnow when this bomb shell came up and I really was not giving it my full attention at the time. (smile)

ROBINSON IRMA Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM

STEVE , love the post and here is something in my news paper by Robert Sheer a contributing editor for National magizine and editor -in-chief of the political blog Truthdigs.com and e-mail him at rscheer@truthdig.com. he is a contributing columist in the Other View, section each Friday. IN his article he speaks of another one of my political hero president Thomas Jefferson...in the article he is saying how Ca. Senater Dianne Feinstein and chair of teh Senate Intelligence committee has called for Assange ,"to be vigorously prosuted for espionage" And, how Assange is doing no more that Ellsberge when Daniel Ellsberge( in the historical case) gave the New York Times the Pentagon Papers expose of the official lies justifing the Vietnam war, Assange is acting as the reporter here, and thus must be sheilded by the RFirst Amenment's guarantee of journalistic freedom....

now back to the author's quote of president Thomas Jefferson."If it were left to me to decide whether to have a government without newspapers or newspapers without governmnet, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter" This was in a letter he wrote in 1787. (smile)

ROBINSON IRMA Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM

...now taht I think about it , it was the president Carter's administration he was talking about. (smile)

Post a Comment

Please log in to post comments.