Episode Transcript
Welcome back to the show, fellow conspiracy realist.
This is a classic episode while we were on the high seas.
We have a lot of folks that we call returning guests on Stuff they Don't Want You to Know, because they come in and out of all kinds of stories, and for several years over the course of this show, one guy who absolutely captivated our attention was the creator of WikiLeaks, Julian Assange.
Speaker 2He was amongst one of the first dozen episodes that we ever made of this iteration of stuff they Don't want you to Know, and he made several appearances on our video series on YouTube.
So do check out YouTube dot com, slash Conspiracy Stuff or at Conspiracy Stuff if you will.
Speaker 3Well, it's so funny that this just came up because I just got served a recommendation on one streaming app or another for the Alex Gibney documentary We Steal Secrets, the Story of WikiLeaks, which I had never got around to watching, and it's on my list, and it reminded me of this.
And now, isn't there some kind of like he's in the wind a little bit right now?
What's going on with old boy?
Speaker 1Well, we know that he made it back to Australia after we did this episode in twenty twenty, and from statements by his brother Gabriel Shipton at the time, the word on the street was he was still adjusting spending time with his family because he went through some horrific stuff right when it was locked up in the embassy.
We know that he attended some pro Palestinian protest in the past year.
He also went to some other notable events, but he's been kind of keeping his head down.
Yeah, Hey, do.
Speaker 2You think Julian Massage would ever talk to us?
Would we want to talk to him?
Speaker 4I think I would want to talk to him, absolutely.
Speaker 1Yeah, I get text him.
Okay, Ben, Well, well it's someone who says they're Julian Massage.
I think I just put up like that my phone.
But well, yeah, let's reach out because I think it would be a fascinating perspective and it's worth exploring, especially because we know the reporting about this guy was so heavily tilted and influenced by powerful forces when WikiLeaks was having its heyday in the news.
Speaker 3It's practically referred to as like a terrorist, like a cyber terrorist.
Speaker 1Right, and for some he is a soldier in the war for transparency.
To others, he is portrayed as a super villain.
In this episode from twenty twenty, we ask whatever happened to Julian Massage.
Speaker 4But first let's hear a quick word from our sponsor.
Speaker 5From UFOs to psychic powers and government conspiracies, history is riddled with unexplained events.
You can turn back now or learn the stuff they don't want you to know.
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Speaker 2Hello, welcome back to the show.
My name is Matt, my name is Noah.
Speaker 1They call me Ben.
We are joined as always with our super producer, Paul Mission Controlled Decant.
Most importantly, you are you.
You are here, and that makes this stuff they don't want you to know.
Today, we're focusing on the story of one man, a single individual, a larger than life figure who once upon a time dominated global news.
To some, he is an inspiring icon of free speech and transparency, the kind of figure you'd build a statue for.
To others, he's a power mad super villain, an agent of chaos, and to still others many people, he's just dangerous.
His name is Julian Assange.
Speaker 2Our last update that we did on this show on Julian Assange was almost exactly a year ago today.
It was May tenth, twenty nineteen, and today's May sixth, twenty twenty.
As we're recording this, so you know, we're not gonna spend too much time in the background because previously we have covered basically Julian Assauge's earlier situations.
If you really want to learn that stuff, you can go back to those episodes.
But for for today, we're gonna look at where he is now, briefly, how he got there, and the very very real, big picture issues that his current situation is revealing.
Speaker 3Do you guys think what makes people think super villain is his like stark white hair.
You know, it seems like a really good feature for a for a like a Superman villain of some kind.
Speaker 2Well, Ben Ben has his background right now in the video chat we're doing.
He's got a picture of Julian back there, and to me, it doesn't feel very super villainous.
Speaker 1I mean, that's the that's the issue.
You know, we're recording shows while we're several weeks into quarantine.
But this guy, this picture that I have in the background, he's he's a quarantine master, you know, he's been on lockdown for nearly seven year, so when they're pulling him out, he's got the he's grown a beard that is as white as his naturally white hair.
And I think I could agree with you, Noel, for especially for people who aren't reading the specifics of what he does.
If you just see a headline in the picture of the guy and you like Bond films, you might be tempted to say, yeah, that guy looks like a super villain.
A lot of it will go into dress too, Like if he wore a turtleneck more often, I think that would up the Bond quotient.
But maybe I'm thinking of the earlier Bond movies.
Speaker 3Maybe he had like a bionic hand or something, and like a cat that he would stroke with that bionic hand.
Speaker 1Or a weird gun.
Speaker 2Is that is that, Inspector Gadget, No, what is that from?
Speaker 4Yeah, doctor Claw, he stroked the weird cat with the bionic arm.
Yeah, okay, okay.
Speaker 3Then there's also Blowfeld in the James Bond movies, who also had a cat.
Speaker 1Or at least at the at the very least Doctor Claw had a metal gauntlet, but since they called it a claw, like to think it was like a bionic hand situation.
So those are those are some speculations, right, but let's get to the facts.
So here are the facts.
The gist of Julian Nossange.
You know, Julian Nossange was born in Australia in nineteen seventy one July third.
Specifically, for a full look at his biography and his early years his ascendants, if you will please check out our previous episodes.
What we'd like to give you by way of background now is just a very high level look at what you could call his career and the consequences of his career path.
Speaker 3So today, Asan is probably best known for his activism, which inspired him to create the website Wiki Leagues in two thousand and six.
I think we're all pretty familiar with wiki leaks, but let's think of it as kind of a one stop shop for would.
Speaker 4Be whistleblowers and leakers.
Speaker 3Of classified documents and footage from around the world.
In theory, sort of a repository for all the stuff they don't want you to know, regardless of who they might specifically be.
And Wiki Leak's gained international attention in April of twenty ten when the organization released footage showing members of the US military fatally shooting eighteen civilians, including journalists, from a helicopter in Iraq.
Speaker 1Yeah, that was sort of the leak heard around the world, you know what I mean, I've.
Speaker 2Been I still remember being in the fish Bowl office at our previous office when that footage was released, and you and I discussing it almost immediately after it came out.
It was a very intense thing to witness, especially being that it was not something that was ever meant to get to us as you know, the American public or the world public.
Speaker 1Right.
Yeah, And on a personal note, I missed the fish Bowl.
Everyone listening if you checked out our YouTube videos and maybe we talked about it occasionally, but that was just so cool.
Other than being nearly impossible to film in, it was pretty cool.
Long story short on that one.
It used to be a single person's office and then we moved in and there were like seven of us at one point six, six or seven anyway.
Speaker 2At least six.
Paul would know best.
Speaker 1Paul would know best.
Oh yeah, that's right.
Paul was a fishbowler as well, and this footage rocked, not just the fish Bowl, but the world, and at this point won a pause and give you a heads up that we are going to be talking about some things of a sexual nature, so this may not be suitable for all listeners.
Later that same year, twenty ten, when he released the footage, Assange was detained in the United Kingdom because Sweden had issued an international arrest warrant over allegations that he had sexually assaulted two women during his time in the Scandinavian country.
Speaker 3Yeah Specifically, the allegations concerned the idea that he had raped one woman and then molested and coerced another, all during August tenth when he was in Stockholm to give a lecture, and authorities were very motivated to question him about these allegations.
Assans maintained and continues to maintain to this day, that both encounters were consensual, and this triggered an extensive court battle.
Eventually, he ended up seeking asylum in the Ecuadorian embassy in London in order to avoid possible extradition to either Sweden or ultimately the US, where his actions with Wiki Leaks led him to believe he would not receive a fair shake.
Much like Chelsea Manning, who partnered with Wiki leaks to leak that earlier footage that we spoke about, and as we know, Chelsea Manning was significantly demonized and the brunt of some very very serious consequences.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Yeah.
Part of Chelsea Manning's case, though, goes into the fact that Chelsea was a member of the US Army, so there's some heavier consequences.
But still you're right the writings on the wall.
Julian Essange very rightly thought that he would not get a fair trial, and so it was that he spent He tried to get to Ecuador proper, but he ended up spending seven years almost hold up in the embassy.
And there were a lot of media reports about him.
You can see some interviews.
They depicted him in ways that sometimes sounded like propaganda or character witness stuff.
Now, now, to be fair, we have not ourselves spoken with mister Assange, but he does have a reputation of being a bit shall we say, contankerous, like he'll walk out of an interview if he feels it's unfair.
His bedside manner, some journalists find it lacking, but you'll see reports of him like being a bad HouseGuest, basically like he wasn't cleaning up after his cat, and that became How surreal is that that became an issue in the embassy.
He also had two children during this time.
He was finally arrested by British police on April eleventh, twenty nineteen, right after the Ecuadorian President, Lennon Moreno announced via Twitter again that the country had withdrawn his asylum status along the way Sweden withdrew their earlier allegations.
But after he was dragged out of the embassy in that picture that you guys can see behind me, which is contrasted with what I think that's Game of Thrones?
Which character is that from Game of Thrones?
I y lewin.
Yeah, that's a good call, I think so, Yeah, I think you're right.
So ultimately, the UK court sentenced him to fifty weeks in jail on May first, twenty nineteen, not for leaking documents, just for jumping bail, for breaching bail agreements.
And then that's when Swedish prosecutors reopened their investigation into the allegations of sexual misconduct and assault.
Speaker 2Yeah, and you know Wiki leagues over the years that it has been operating, both while Julian Assange was really at the Helm and you know, doing day to day operations as well as when he was in the embassy, and there were others running wiki leaks, which it did continue actively publishing releases for a while.
There were a ton of controversies that arose, you know, obviously from the ones we've already outlined there, but countless others.
And one of the main ones that we talked about that you know, the Iraq War tape, that specific video that was released.
It was a part of a larger Iraq war release that was called the Iraq War Logs.
It was also called i think the Baghdad War Diaries, something to that effect.
So that tape was released in April of twenty ten.
Then the full Iraq War Logs were released in October of twenty ten, and this was a trove of almost four hundred thousand classified reports that, according to WikiLeaks and other people who have gone through these documents, quote, document the war and occupation in Iraq from the first of January two thousand and four to the thirty first of December two thousand and nine.
And this is the thing we were talking about, that the massive event.
It was everyone talking about this multiple countries and institutions weighed in about what needed to happen because of this release, and really everyone, especially the United States, went into damage control because not only did this affect how the US government and militaries were going to be looked at, it also was going to affect how the allies of the United States government were going to be scrutinized in the future.
It really was a big deal.
Speaker 1Yeah, it's set massive precedent, you know, and there were so many contradicting narratives when it plays so much attempt to spin.
It was very it's very difficult to watch history being made because history books make it seem so clean, so point A to point B, but there's so many things that get lost in the shuffle.
And that's just one of the controversies.
Right.
We also know that later wiki leaks in twenty ten leaked more than two hundred and fifty thousand classified diplomatic cables.
A cable here in this sense is not like an HDMI cable or something.
It's and it's not like comcasts.
It's a message, right, It's a secret message that different embassies send to one another.
And these these privileged communications might be intelligence on the ground from an intelligence agency.
They might be something as small as like the ambassador to Syria said that he was willing to work with us on this, but I just think I just think he was trying to get me out of the room, because the man has notorious ibs.
Like it's very frank, behind the scenes kind of looks at stuff.
There are things the governments of the world do not want the international public, other countries, or their domestic constituents to know.
So it is not, by any means hyperbole to say that this fundamental rocked the world of diplomacy, and the repercussions are still reverberating today.
This did some irreparable damage to international relations.
Speaker 3Yeah, I mean think about like if you were on an email thread with like somebody, and then you thought you had deleted that person temporarily from the thread and sort of talking a bunch of trash about them with your you know, cohorts, and then you realize that that person actually was on the whole time.
Not a good look.
This is sort of like a much larger scale version of that, because as you said, Ben, I mean, these could just be very candid, little snippy comments, you know, and it's not like it would necessarily be stuff that would blow open the doors of like, you know, any kind of conflict necessarily directly or any kind of intelligence that would you know, be just earth shattering.
Speaker 4It's just a bad look.
Speaker 3I mean, diplomacy in and of itself is about good bedside manner and keeping those relationships healthy and stroking egos.
And this would do a whole lot of damage to break down some of those relationships that a lot of these diplomats had worked very hard to nurse and maintain.
Speaker 2And by the way, if you want to see either of these two subjects that we just talked about, the Iraq warlogs or the diplomatic cables, you can find all of that.
It's all searchable on the WikiLeaks dot org website.
Just if you're curious or you know, you're feeling a little dangerous, you can go check those out.
Speaker 1Yeah, yeah, we should say one benefit of talking about these past weeks is that they are all available, you know what I mean.
It reminds me of the streisand effect.
You guys know what that is, right, No, So the streisand effect is essentially saying that once something is out there, once something is published online, especially it cannot be removed no matter how much someone wants it to be removed.
It's named after a picture of Barber streisand I believe that she asked to be removed from the internet.
And you know, we all are familiar with the denizens of the internet.
That is the same thing as telling them please pretty please spread this everywhere.
Speaker 2Yeah, it was her Malibu home as of two thousand and three.
I believe that she was attempting to remove.
Speaker 1That's right, And you could see the argument there because it's like, hey, this is, you know, my personal dwelling place.
But this situation reminds me of something very funny.
I don't know if I mentioned it to you guys when the wikileak stuff really started hitting, but there were internal emails throughout the intelligence industry, which is the right word, and throughout the defense industry where people were literally telling government employees, hey, we know this is out there, it's on the news, it's online, just so you know, you will get in trouble if you read it unless you have the correct classification.
And that was such an attempt to like close the barn door after the horses have stampeded away.
We just didn't have the legislation for this, and that's part of why it rocked the world so fundamentally.
And that's not even we're not even talking about twenty sixteen, right, but the emails, because later WikiLeaks released some twenty thousand pages of emails from the Hillary Clinton campaign, as we'll call former Secretary of State Clinton was running for US president in twenty sixteen, and also emails from the Democratic National Committee.
It is again not hyperbole to say that these altered the course of US politics in a big, big way.
Speaker 4Yeah, it's true.
Speaker 3I mean the emails which later became part of the internet catchphrase.
Speaker 5You know.
Speaker 3But her emails explored and expanded on multiple Clinton controversies that had already been out there in the public imagination, and we discussed some of those early on in the campaign between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump, where we did Trump, you know, the most popular Trump and Clinton conspiracy theories, and the Clinton conspiracy theories are massive because they involve both her and her husband, and the questionable relationship between the Clinton Foundation and its donors.
Speaker 4Clinton's kind of you know.
Speaker 3Close knit relationships, shall we say, with some very powerful Wall Street interests that became problematic especially considering that she kind of, you know, was trying to cast herself as sort of the people's candidate and her incredibly close ties with very wealthy and powerful campaign contributors.
This is just you know, beginning to scratch the service.
But it's fair to say that the League's played a huge role in the outcome of that year's presidential election.
And it also, you know, I mean, I think a lot of people looked at as Songs early on as sort of this great equalizer, you know, and trying to take powerful people to task.
And that's all well and good if the outcome is on your side, right, And so I think he really became a hugely divisive figure on the left when this happened, and it started to feel like he was perhaps more interested in getting the other side elected, and that became very confusing.
Part of his character really kind of complicated the relationship with the public and Julian Assange.
Speaker 2I would say two things here.
I recently listened to Glenn Greenwald, now of the Intercept, that's how he's best known currently, but a journalist who is discussing how Julian Assange really does represent a largely hated figure on both the political left and right within the United States because of you know, the people who would consider him anti war or anti you know, military, because of the Iraq war logs and other things and the diplomatic cables.
They they very much dislike him from that angle.
And then from this, like you said, and the people on political left very much dislike him because they essentially blame him for Hillary Clinton losing the election.
One commonality that we've seen through these leaks is that it is attempting, at least it feels that it's an attempt to show that behind the curtain scene of the powerful people in every single one of these that we just that we've already kind of mentioned here.
And I guess when you are doing that and showing a peek behind the curtain of all powerful people, you're gonna kind of piss everybody off.
Speaker 1Yeah, yeah, agreed, very much so.
And you know, I want to ask you guys here just an opinion.
You know, do are you all of the opinion that this that this did significantly atpack the election or was it?
I mean, how much do you think it swung the needle?
Speaker 2I would say it swung the needle.
I mean, my opinion is that.
Yes, for sure, it did because it changed the conversation that was happening on the news cycle almost like right up into the election, right up into the day of the election.
It really did change what people were talking about.
Speaker 4Oh no, I mean, I think that's there's no question about it.
Speaker 3It absolutely hijacked the conversation in a way that Clinton was just not able to put back in that Pandora's box, you know, And it really completely took away her power to kind of steer the narrative, which, you know, say what you will about whichever side of politics that you fall on.
She definitely was trying very hard to cast herself in this light of being kind of the people's candidate, of being this sort of you know, even handed person that wasn't connected to any kind of wrongdoing and that she really cared about the everyman for lack of a better term, and this really kind of shattered a lot of that, and it made it at least whether it was true or not, at least the contents of the emails and the nature of the whole private server situation, and whether or not she completely flaunt flouted the rules and just went her own way.
It really robbed her of the ability and her campaign of the ability to steer that narrative, and it was just impossible to spin it at that point.
Speaker 1Yeah, it's the old saying holds true.
If you are defending yourself in any kind of political sphere, then you are automatically losing.
The fascists were right about it.
The Republicans and the Democrats were right about it.
It's just sort of the part of the part of the house rules of these terrible, terrible games.
But there you have it.
Here's the takeaway.
A single man, flesh and blood, just as many of the people listening to the show today are unelected, himself, was able to shake the world.
You can understand why so many powerful people consider him dangerous.
When we last left Julian Assange, he had been removed from the Ecuadorian embassy.
All indications appeared that he would continue on a legal battle at a glacial pace, likely from prison as he sought to avoid extradition and probably in his impossible death in the United States.
So where are we at now?
We'll answer the question after a word from our sponsors.
Here's where it gets crazy.
What's happening now?
Well, it turns out the conspiracy to expose conspiracies has not worked out especially well for Julian as Songe.
Speaker 3Yes, you'll recall how he said.
As Songe was sent us to fifty weeks in jail.
Well, he was due to be released in September of twenty nineteen, the twenty second specifically, when is jail term for breaching that bail ended and they just didn't let him out.
The Westminster Magistrates Court noted that there were substantial grounds for believing if free as Songe would make another run attempting to gain safe status, or like Edward Snowden, make it to a country that would not extradite him to the United States.
I mean it's sort of you know, it's just the same way a court assesses anyone's risk of flight.
You know, they won't grant you bail, or they'll make your bail excessively high if they think or if they even think that you're going to flee, let alone, if you've got an established pattern of doing that, which as Songe absolutely had so.
Julian Assange remains in the Belmarsh Prison in the United Kingdom.
His partner, lawyer Stella Morris, who he has two children with, recently said quote, the life of my partner Julian Assan is severely at risk.
He is on remand at HMP Belmarsh, and COVID nineteen is spreading within its walls.
So this is absolutely a topical update.
Speaker 4Here.
Speaker 3Morris sees more than just a song's personal health in jeopardy here saying that quote, Julian needs to be released now, for him, for our family, and for the society we all want our children to grow up in.
Yeah, Okay, yeah, I mean, you know, it depends on what your take is on that particular vision of society that a songe espouses, you know.
And again, I mean a big part of his character is the idea of like free speech and about you know, taking powerful people to task.
But he is absolutely, has been and remains a super divisive figure.
So let's talk about a bigger picture issue here that we've a little bit in some of our COVID nineteen updates, the risk of coronavirus and prisons.
Speaker 2Well, yeah, it's certainly a hairy situation for anyone who is being kept anywhere within fairly close quarters to other human beings, especially if there are any kind of sanitary issues within let's say a prison like that, And in prisons across the world, people are being infected with coronavirus because it only takes one person to enter that closed system at some point to then infect one other and then exponentially grow that outbreak.
But in this particular prison HMP Belmarsh where Julian Assange is at least two people within the prison have contracted COVID nineteen or have they've contracted the coronavirus and are dealing with symptoms of COVID nineteen.
And prisons just in general are pretty rough places to be with individuals who have attributes and possibly charges pending against them for varying things of varying severities, and in you know, these uncertain times, there are higher than average odds of things like violence occurring within prisons where there's that kind of fear of something like coronavirus or uprisings or you know, maybe even riots, very violent riots occurring within these prisons.
Speaker 1Yeah, yeah, that's absolutely correct.
In fact, there are numerous reports already of riots about prison conditions in the US and abroad, and in some countries prisoners have even successfully taken guards hostage, not even necessarily to say, hey, we're throwing down the prison walls, let my people go.
But more to say, we need to bring attention to the pandemic bloodbath that may occur when we are locked in here like animals for whatever reason.
So this, this prison angle has a lot of fairly plausible conspiratorial aspects to it, because you know, we've seen the kind of manufactured concerns that pop up in other celebrity prison stories.
Someone has a high paid lawyer, like someone working for Weinstein or something, who says, you know, he's very fragile.
Therefore, even though he's been convicted of these crimes, he should get some sort of special treatment because it's the human thing to do.
By the way, for R and B fans, R Kelly is looking for the same thing, the argument being that he has diabetes and COVID is going to blow through prison systems.
But in Assanja's case, there's solid evidence that his life may be at risk more so than a Weinstein, more so than an R.
Speaker 2Kelly, because not as much as a an ep free Epstein, not as much as an Epstein.
Speaker 1Right, we should call that we should make the Epstein scale.
If the you know, fellow conspiracy realist.
If you have the time and the inclination, please feel free to make an infographic of the Epstein scale the likelihood have died in prison.
Speaker 2You know, I would I just really quickly bet.
This is a very interesting thing to think about, because the reason Julian Assange is in jail, you know, is officially because of jumping bail, but really, when you put all of the math together, it's because he had damning evidence against very powerful people, right or he was able to release information about powerful people in the actions they take.
Speaker 4That.
Speaker 2Then you think about somebody like Jeffrey Epstein that very likely at least allegedly had the worst kind of evidence against extremely powerful people, and we saw what happened to him.
You know, who knows if it was.
Look, we can't prove to you if it was self inflicted or not self inflicted in his case, but he was only in prison for a short time, That's all I would.
Speaker 1Say, Right, Yeah, it's very much worth pointing out that plenty of powerful people wants this guy dead, even if they can't kill WikiLeaks, which is also on the wish list.
We should note that, you know, the Trump administration is currently attempting to extradite assage to the US.
However, remember we're very quickly going into the no real good guy's morally gray territory because the desire to gain possession of assage transcends the growing stark ideological divide in domestic US politics.
Establishment Democrats want the guy under the jail or under the daisies as much as establishment Republicans.
He has very few friends in Congress, you know what I mean, And it's kind of misleading.
That's why I appreciate the point you made knowl earlier about people liking a hero or calling someone a hero until their principles, whatever they may be, run counter to our own principles.
Speaker 3It's just the idea of like one person's freedom fighter is another person's terrorist.
It all depends on what side of the issue you fall A lot of the times, you know, I mean, certainly both sides can be guilty of what would be considered negative acts or even atrocities.
But still, in terms of the way you view the means justifying the ends, you could probably say, well, they might have done some bad things, but they were ultimately supporting what I think is a just cause.
Speaker 1And oh and we should point out a in a no way, baby, but kind of moment.
Let me tell you what really happened.
The US is still kind of in damage control over this, and has been since two thousand and six, so for more than a decade they've been in damage control here in the States.
Uncle Sam says Assange is not wanted because he caught the US doing some bad things red handed, or because he damaged the soft power of the reputation abroad, or because he embarrassed the US.
They say he's wanted because he illegally endangered the lives of informants aka spies or assets, dissidents aka also possibly spies or assets, but maybe you know, maybe sincere dissidents as well as activist aka spies or assets.
But hey, maybe maybe activists in multiple countries including of course rock Iran and Afghanistan.
So what what?
What gives?
Speaker 4What?
Speaker 1What is he actually going to be charged with or indicted for?
Speaker 2Do we know?
Yeah, there is an indictment impending charges standing against Julian Assange from the United States, And I'm gonna boil it down to you in the way that Jennifer Robinson explained it in a recent conversation with Glenn Greenwald.
She's a human rights attorney and she's representing Assannge, and she explains it that the charges essentially state that Assonge was communicating had communications of some sort with Chelsea Manning at the time known as Bradley Manning, and that Assannge discussed with Chelsea ways in which she could access highly classified materials in a way that would protect her identity.
That's really what it's saying.
That's the whole thing.
Assannge was in connection with Chelsea Manning, and Chelsea Manning got the materials to him and then he released them.
And also, according to Jennifer, there's a widely held misconception that's just kind of been floating around and it started from this Department of Justice press release that came out out not that long ago, and within this release it falsely stated, at least according to Robinson, that as Soonge was being charged with quote hacking, so in some way using you know, a computer or a system to access classified government materials and then get those for Chelsea or with Chelsea Manning, because you know, we discussed Chelsea Manning is the person who ended up getting a lot of that documentation that became the IRAQ warlogs and the tapes.
So just the last thing here is that, according to Jennifer Robinson, within that indictment, there is no allegation that Assonge attempted to hack the US government in any way to get to gain material.
There's also no allegation within that indictment that he unlawfully accessed any government computers or systems whatsoever.
That's just just to put it out there.
In conclusion, the charges are that he had a discussion with Chelsea Manning about how to hide her identity while accessing secret documents.
Speaker 1Okay, and then once that kind of stuff proceeds, if it does indeed proceed, then we'll see those kind of charges become increasingly specific as prosecutors explore their options.
So this naturally leads us to the next part of the update, which is this what's on the horizon.
We'll explore that after a word from our sponsors.
We've returned.
So just a few days ago, as we record this peak behind the curtain interest of transparency.
It is May sixth, Wednesday, A lovely day outside in Atlanta.
As far as I can.
Speaker 4Tell, Blustery, I would say, yes, I love it.
Speaker 1I was writing on the porch.
I wish I could record out there.
Just a few days ago, Juliannassange received word that he will have to wait until at least September of twenty twenty before a British judge will hear the US request for his extradition.
This comes to us from a possibly biased source.
To be fair, Kristen Fraftsman, the editor in chief of WikiLeaks.
Earlier they said a video posted on social media that it's unacceptable and confirmed that ASSANGEO likely has to spend another four months at least in prison, and if a hearing does come to pass in September, that means that he will have spent one year in prison after being dragged out of that embassy on his what was that on his charge of fifty weeks for jumping and bail.
Speaker 2Yeah, that he was supposed to be let out.
What'd you say last year?
Speaker 1Yes, yeah, that's correct.
And additionally, the editor there at WikiLeaks said he was not able to set a sounge, that was not able to attend some earlier hearings via video link because he was unwell.
So that gives us, unless that spin, that gives us a pretty solid argument that at least in his case, the health concerns are real.
Reporters said he was deteriorating mentally already when he was in the Ecuadorian embassy.
Speaker 3So the fate of a Songe may actually set a legal precedent in the United States.
Regardless of where you stand with these leaks.
In particular, it can't really be denied that they pushed the public in multiple countries to hold politicians accountable and well attempt to do so.
Speaker 4Anyway.
Speaker 3Imagine a world where any disclosure, even if it's incredibly vital to the public interest, becomes a crime.
Speaker 4And that's like dystopian kind of stuff right there.
Speaker 3Whistleblower protections, which have historically been better on paper than in actual practice, have truly eroded in the time since a Soinge was kind of at his peak.
Consider that other countries like China and Russia have already started intimidating civilians for quote rumor mongering end quote.
As we've discussed in the COVID nineteen episodes, the scientists that reported the early signs of that virus was accused of that very thing and essentially blackballed and treated like a criminal.
And that was a big part of what we can now call some form of cover up.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Yeah, And Russian doctors keep falling out of windows.
One fell out of a window after he made a video update where he's protesting being forced to work despite not having ppe personal protective equipment and despite having tested positive for COVID, they still wanted him to work.
And then just a few days later he released a video where he said that was all crazy.
He denied any of those claims, everything was fine, and then he fell out of a window.
I don't know if you guys would keep a track of that, but yeah, make no mistake, there is a war for information.
That war is very old, but now there is a war on information.
Speaker 4Hmm.
Speaker 2This is very true and you can see that depending on the outcome of Julian Osandra's situation, this could have a supreme impact on the future of potential whistleblowers like you were saying, Noel, And it has a lot to do with the fact that if you decide to leak information somewhere and you could be hunted down essentially by the government that you were blowing the whistle on.
I mean, it would really set a precedent for that.
And the big problem here it bans from the individual whistleblower to the outlets, the major news outlets that cover stories about leaked information.
If if you're recalled, during the Iraq warlogs Saga of twenty ten, as well as the diplomatic cables, the DNC emails, these were major releases done in conjunction with newspapers.
It wasn't just WikiLeaks putting out information in with the Iraq warlogs.
That was the Guardian, that was the New York Times.
I think Despiegel released part of that information.
They all kind of segmented it out.
It was all, you know, major news outlets releasing leaked material via WikiLeaks.
And this is something we have to remember.
Major news outlets, let's say, like the Guardian or the New York Times, these news outlets have on their sites easily accessible methods for anyone to anonymously provide newsworthy information to those outlets.
Essentially, if we're thinking about it in this framework, aiding and abetting potential whistleblowers.
And we have two examples of this.
You can go to the Guardian dot com slash secure drop right now to check out the way that they want you to give them leaked information or to leak them information securely and anonymously.
You can also go to ny times dot com slash tips to see how The New York Times wants you to do it.
They're suggesting that you use WhatsApp and signal and secure drop to make contact with them and then to send them materials.
And you know, if the whistleblower individual falls because of Julian Osandra's situation, it would also make sense that perhaps the you know, journalism is the way we understand it, leaked important information would become in some ways illegal.
Speaker 1Yeah, and then maybe your past actions could become prosecutable offenses.
There's one thing.
I did this on a different show.
I wanted to mention this to you guys because I thought you would find it interesting, and hopefully you will too, fellow listeners, speaking of censorship, a completely different person who perhaps sees themselves as a whistleblower has run into what they say as a conspiracy of censorship.
David Ike just had his YouTube channel deleted.
Will not be going back up.
I think around nine hundred thousand subscribers.
His Facebook page was also deleted because the tech companies are instituting a ban against anybody spreading misinformation about the coronavirus.
So, as you can imagine, there are a lot of people who are saying, yes, you have to do this because he's endangering lives, which is similar to the argument made by the US government about assage.
And then you have people who are saying, you know, I might not agree with this guy at all, but he is he is exercising free speech.
It's a little sticky there, you know, when we start to navigate the idea of public safety, censorship, free speech, because with great speech comes great responsibility, does it not, And you know, you have to ask yourself about the platform there.
But but tech companies are a little different, of course, because it's their sandbox.
They make the rules, they can do whatever they want.
I just think it's interesting that we're seeing more and more of these these information conflicts rising to the foe.
And this is in no way an endorsement of David Ike.
Speaker 2Yeah, assuredly.
Speaker 1Yes.
Speaker 2I just wanted to bring this up where we're talking about kind of the control of speech on outlets like that, on platforms such as YouTube.
I just wanted to mention to you guys.
I don't know if you saw the email come through.
We got contacted by our old pals at All Time Conspiracies.
Some of you older conspiracy realists may remember a time on YouTube when we made some videos with the guys on this channel called All Time Conspiracies, and I did a little catching up with them, and they've written back to us.
They went through the exact same issues we did with the YouTube algorithm and their content being suppressed essentially because they were talking about political issues, conspiratorial issues, and they ended up having to shutter their channel and they've moved on.
So if anyone is interested they want to do an episode with us, They've got a podcast now similarly to ours.
So I thought that might be a fun matchup mash up in the podcast world now instead of on video, just to talk about what happened to our YouTube channels.
Speaker 1I would be interested in that for sure.
What do you think, Nol?
Speaker 3Absolutely?
Yeah, no, I mean always down for a good collab with like minded folks.
Speaker 1And this leads us to one more potential development.
So we are at a we are at a branch.
We are possible forks in the road, and as Yogi Bearrap You'll announcer famously said, when you come to a fork in the road take it.
Sorry that jokes for you, Dad, But this we do see some very important, mutually exclusive things on the horizon.
One of these things is going to happen to Julian Assange.
One He may die in prison before that extradition hearing occurs or before it is carried through, and then for some very powerful people, a big part of the problem would have solved itself.
However, we have to remember, you know, like Jay Gavera famously said in his last words, shoot fool, you're only killing a man.
WikiLeaks wouldn't die if asanj did, it would continue.
It's not a perfect system, and there are allegations, as I believe one of us mentioned earlier, that it has a shifting agenda of its own, you know, including pretty serious allegations that have partnered with Russia to wage some sort of asymmetrical information warfare against the US.
So one possible occurrence is that he dies in prison.
End of story.
Speaker 2And we're talking there, you know, about one person dying in the movement continuing.
We're also talking earlier about maybe it would prevent other whistleblowers from coming forward.
But if he did die in prison, the other scenario is that maybe more whistleblowers come forward because they see it almost as a martyrdom situation, where the way he was treated and how it all went down, they want to stick it to the man essentially and continue in that legacy outside of what he leaks.
Speaker 1Mm hmm.
And now we have to ask ourselves, what about the precedents If he goes to trial, it's going to be even more crucial, you know what I mean?
Speaker 2Uh?
Speaker 1Then, I mean here, let's be a little bit idyllic, at least from his perspective.
What if a songe is able to stay in the United Kingdom the same way, for instance, that Edward Snowden is currently staying in Russia.
Uh, it probably won't happen.
What if he's able to escape and live on the run, you know, like that Beatles Is it Beatles?
Or is just Paul McCartney band on the run?
That's it?
Thank you?
Yeah?
So what if he pulls that just for the rest of his life?
Speaker 5Uh song on the run?
Speaker 1There we go.
Yeah, we'll figure out who Sailor's saying?
Is that in that regard?
I guess it's Uncle Sam.
But here's the question, what if what if Assane goes to a US court, gets extra died, it goes to trial and gets found somehow not guilty, it gets off scott free.
Don't worry about that too much, because that is almost definitely not going to happen.
Speaker 2Yeah, he would end up going to jail again, right, And I could I could see a scenario like that, Ben, where he does end up going to jail in the United States and then just goes away and then every once in a while, one journalist from one outlet will write a piece on it once a year.
Speaker 5Yeah.
Speaker 1Well, you know, I think one thing we can all agree on, Fellas, is that Wings has an enormous fan base, you know, an army across the world, and they probably won't let this story die because, you know, now that I'm thinking back on it, I'm pretty sure that the entire catalog of Wings is terribly prescient to the career and the controversy that is Julian A.
Sounge.
I've got I've got to look out the lyrics.
This goes deep.
We need to get Paul McCartney on the phone.
Who can call Paul McCartney, Matt Noel, can you do it?
Speaker 3You know, it's funny you should say that I'm actually working on a podcast with Paul McCartney's guitarist, So may well have an end to Macca.
Nice perfect, They call him Macca.
They call him Macca like the guitarist calls him Mecca.
That's a that's a big big Paul fans call him like McCartney Macca.
Oh okay, wow wow, it's like a pet name.
Speaker 1Or like McDonald's slaying for in Australia like McCaw.
Speaker 4I just called him poll.
Speaker 1So so that's where we are now, and to you from failing hands, we throw the torch, be yours to hold it high.
If you break faith with us who die, we shall not sleep.
Though poppies grow and flanders Field went on a little longer than it needed to, but you get the picture.
We want to know two things from you.
First, what do you think should happen to Julian Aesonge and others like him or those who come after him?
Secondly, what do you think will happen to this notorious whistleblowing mastermind?
Let us know.
You can find us on Facebook, you can find us on Instagram, you can find us on Twitter as a show and as individuals.
Speaker 2Yes you can, and just one last question I want to pose to you, what do you think the next big leak will be about?
Because there will be another big leak.
Speaker 1I'm gonna blow this wings thing wide open.
Speaker 2I'm telling you, all right, Well, we've got a nomination from this side.
Let us know what you think.
Like Ben said, you could find us usually at Conspiracy Stuff, sometimes at Conspiracy Stuff show.
Check out our Facebook group.
Here's where it gets crazy.
It's fantastic stuff written by fantastic people like you.
So go check it out.
Talk about the shows, Let's discuss, you know, some of the minutia.
Let's talk about future episodes.
Let's hang out there together on Facebook.
If you're into that kind of thing.
If you're not, you can always give us a call.
Speaker 3Our number is one eight three three st d w y t K.
Leave a message at the sound of Ben's tone, his sultry tones, and it'll go to us.
All three of us have access to it.
Though Matt is still kind of the gatekeeper.
I think Ben is more the key master.
But but Matt is Matt is the gatekeeper.
Speaker 2Wait, does that mean we have to copulated?
I forget how Win and Ghostbusters man, whatever, whatever, whatever you need, dude, you need, so.
Speaker 1You know, I do wonder which Ghostbusters we would be.
That's funny.
I was.
I got some spoilers about dan Ackroyd possibly in the future, but we'll we'll catch up on that down the road.
Yes, as as Noel said, give us a call.
Matt is our Matt is our phone guru.
But we do all have access and we are all listening in.
It makes our day to hear from you.
Just let us know if you're comfortable with your story, your name, or your specifics of your account being shared on air, because we don't want to compromise you.
Speaker 2Or if you're cool with us, you know, intentionally or unintentionally calling you back.
Speaker 1Yes, yes, if you're cool with us accidentally, but DIALI and you full steam ahead.
And if you hate all of that stuff for one reason or another, we totally get it and we as always have a backup plan.
You can email us directly.
Speaker 4We are conspiracy at iHeartRadio dot com.
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