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(English) Bradley Manning: One Soldier Who Really Did “Defend Our Freedom”

2010-12-30 33 Kommentare

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  • Joe

    Strongly agree. I really don’t understand how any logical person would want another human to suffer for any reason, let alone someone who was acting on good conscious. Throughout history its people who go against the status quo and often times put their lives and reputations on the line fighting for freedom who make history. Look at MLK Jr, he wasn’t popular in his day. Infact he was threatened, intimidated, and most likely murdered for speaking out against Vietnam. Unfortunately, Vietnam happens again and again and we’ll have to speak up everytime.

    2010-12-30 22:14
  • Bill

    As an ex-soldier of many battles, I salute Kevin Carson and this article. He has hit the nail fairly and squarely on the head…! Pfc. Bradley Manning is a brave hero and a good man – Julian Assange too. And there are others.

    2010-12-31 01:24
  • Phil

    I don’t disagree with the premise of your article (ie: I think Wikileaks will do more good than harm in the long run, and depends on the actions of whistleblowers & “leakers” if that is a word.) However, can you clarify this:

    What was WW2? Pearl Harbor? Stopping Hitler? I’m guessing this is an oversight, I don’t think you can seriously say WW2 was “expansionist”.

    2010-12-31 02:21
  • Herp Derp

    I agree.

    Hi Reddit!

    2010-12-31 06:55
  • Fred

    Spot on, Kevin. Pfc. Bradley Manning should be honored, not scorned, for the sacrifice he has made in our name. I for one will strive to keep his actions from falling into historical insignificance. And to Pfc. Bradley Manning, may 2011 see you vindicated and ready to receive all the help you need to rejoin the society that you have pushed towards being a slightly less ugly place.

    2010-12-31 07:02
  • Simon

    Maybe the fights in World War 2 had a freedom defending side effect. At least we here in Europe got some freedom back and i am thankful for it. But today the consequence of US Wars are less freedom in many parts of the World including the USA.
    Bradley Manning shows that there is still hope for your society.

    2010-12-31 07:21
  • Jamie Clarke

    I dont think Bradley Manning impaired the ability of the United States to play their money laundering game but he did the right thing as a person.

    Maybe good people are the cure for bad government.

    2010-12-31 07:49
  • Mike D.

    Bradley Manning is a TRUE AMERICAN HERO that represents what America should stand for……Individual Freedom

    2010-12-31 09:23
  • David Piland

    What about WWII? I think a strong argument can be made our freedom was in question. I agree our actual freedoms weren’t threatened DIRECTLY for Vietnam, Korea or the Gulf Wars, but WWII the US was definitely on the list of countries to conquer or subdue at least. This doesn’t take away from your over all argument of whether Pfc. Bradley is a hero or not (he isn’t he broke the law), but the statement our freedoms weren’t in danger since 1812.

    2010-12-31 09:28
  • Sub

    Citations required. And then some.

    And, in case you didn’t know, Johann Hari isn’t exactly Robert Woodward.

    2010-12-31 10:10
  • Dave B

    Overall, agree fully. But I have to add the Civil War to your list of wars. Many people were freed because of it.

    2010-12-31 10:26
  • Frank

    “knuckle-draggers on right-wing message boards” stopped reading right there

    2010-12-31 10:51
  • Payroll Taxes

    Great information. Keep up the good work and continue providing us more quality information from time to time.

    2010-12-31 11:49
  • Peter

    Well said sir. And thank you.

    2010-12-31 12:52
  • David Clark

    You need to read a history book or two.

    The soldiers who fought for American independence were duped into fighting so that rich slave owners could keep their slaves and avoid taxes. Sound familiar? The Evil Empire (Britain) actually abolished slavery well before the freedom loving Americans.

    As for 1812, the British were busy fighting Napoleon. The freedom loving Americans therefore thought they could use the diversion to grab Canada (for free). So the Brits came and burnt down Washington DC.

    Soldiers fight for the “freedom” of those who pay them – or at any rate promise to, just like factory workers work for the “freedom” of their bosses. Did you know that George Washington delayed paying his soldiers until most of them left to return to their farms? So he cheated them out of their wages.

    2010-12-31 14:51
  • Jim

    The author lost most of his credibility in my eyes as a proclaimed anarchist. Although intelligently written I feel as though his bias removes the power of his argument.

    2010-12-31 16:14
  • TM

    Jim…
    He might be left wing loony and a bit of a anarchist, but what he said here is true.

    I am not biased and i can agree with most of his argument. In a true right wing society will have it foundation based on free will, of the markets and the people. The most important freedom we have is freedom of information… the truth.

    2011-01-01 00:29
  • Art Brennan

    If the allegations of the US Department of Defense are true then Bradley Manning is following the higher law and deserves our deepest thanks for exposing the war crimes committed by our federal government and its military forces. I am a veteran and a retired superior court judge. I am disgusted with the conditions under which Bradley Manning is being held. I am embarrassed and ashamed that the US government is using the US Marine Corps to carry out its dirty work against a young man who has been convicted of no crimes and who should be afforded his Constitutional right to be physically and emotionally healthy as he prepares for trial against the prosecutorial might of the United States government.

    2011-01-01 21:06
  • peter brown

    Bradley Manning is a real hero and I agree entirely with Retired Judge Art Brennan.
    Thank God for all Americans who are prepared to stand up for the values upon which the people’s nation was founded… values ensconced in the Constitution, values which have too often been corrupted or ignored by the U.S. Govt.

    2011-01-02 11:47
  • applemaniac

    Well said. Couldn’t agree more. Also don’t forget the Vietnam wars, Daniel Ellsberg and Watergate. History repeats itself, noting changes, still the same old corrupt governments like 2000 years ago.

    In my opinion we have to take the money out of the government – make governing non-profit – its the only logical way out of this mess. Obama’s re-election campaign will cost 1 BILLION Dollars. Who is going to pay for that? Who wants money back from Obama after re-election? And what chances have smaller Parties, like the US Pirate Party have with funding about 2 dollars? Think hard if you are still living in a Democracy.

    There is also a -massive- Discussion (618 comments) about this blog post going on at Reddit.com. http://3.ly/cU29

    2011-01-02 18:33
  • Kevin

    FTA: He’s impaired the ability of the U.S. government to conduct diplomacy in pursuit of some fabled “national interest” that I supposedly have in common with Microsoft, Wal-Mart and Disney. He’s risked untold numbers of innocent lives, according to the very same people who have ordered the deaths of untold thousands of innocent people. According to White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs, Manning’s exposure of secret U.S. collusion with authoritarian governments in the Middle East, to promote policies that their peoples would find abhorrent, undermines America’s ability to promote “democracy, open government, and free and open societies.”

    2011-01-03 00:36
  • Freedom

    I agree, except on one point. The last war for freedom would have to be the civil war, unless freedom for slaves does not count as American Freedom. Some may tout the war was about economics, if freedom of a people was done because it was best for the bottom line, then it is still freedom, just done for the wrong reasons.

    2011-01-03 15:34
  • JC

    Again… well written, and thank you for writing such a piece!!

    This young man deserves to be honored.

    I agree that terrible things like WW1, WW2, Pearl Harbor, Vietnam, 9/11 took place and we can NEVER get back lives we lost when these awful events took people FROM us we will NEVER be able to get back. us.

    All this young man is trying to say is its happening again under the name of FREEDOM! and we are letting it be “SWEPT UNDER THE **** RUG!!

    I stand with and by you Pfc.Manning!!!! Thank you for being a modern day Hero. Standing up to the man and fighting back with all your 23 year old bones know how to do it with.

    Truth. No better way.

    2011-01-04 04:39
  • Stone Taggart

    Sometimes, breaking the law is the RIGHT thing to do. He definitely *did* break the law, but it was a good thing he did for everyone. My disgust for Obama grows every day that he does not use his ability to grant a presidential pardon to free this great patriot. I know I sure as fuck would pardon him.

    2011-01-04 21:41
  • Pierre_I

    While not an anarchist, in fact far from it, I agree with the thrust of your article.

    The handling of Private Bradley will be remembered long after the euphoria of the first African American incumbent has worn off and the polish of a peace prize has become dimmed by the dust of business as usual within the Beltway.

    The US government response has been more akin to the slovenly governance of the 60′s and 70′s.

    There was and probably remains an opportunity for some reflection by the powers that be to return towards a rational and moral position, one that stops treating it’s own constituents so dismissively and cynically.

    Private Bradley at the very least needs to be sympathetically heard, and allowed to justify his actions in the context of the US Constitution, if not the opening passages of the Declaration of Independence. His actions should additionally highlight the obligation of the oath/affirmation of a member of the US military and what conflict exists between exposing a coverup to the US population and the world, vs mute acquiescence.

    2011-01-10 02:55
  • JohanB, Sweden

    Just so you know: When the US proclaims that’s it’s going to fight for freedom, we in the rest of the world either makes a “vomit”-gesture, or run for shelter. Please stop doing that.

    2011-01-10 09:14
  • Justice

    Hitler was sponsored from Wall Street. Henry Ford, Standard Oil, and so on. Antisemitic Bankers from all aroud the World supported Hitler. But if Hitler had won the war, the whole World would have turned into a KZ so it was realy necessary to fight him. 1944 the Nazis planned the European Society and wanted to go on to turn the World into a KZ. The fight against Hitler is not over. I think the most US Army members are on the side of Bradley Manning, and if Apache Killers want to kill kids, it could make Marines so agressiv, that I cant give guarantee, that they don’t shoot their officiers themself. Here in Germany, we have a similiar case. Nazi Minister Hans Filbinger !

    2011-01-11 10:11
  • Bradley Manning and the Rule of Law | NewsLanc.com

    [...] Iraq, Manning was ordered “to round up and hand over Iraqi civilians to America’s new Iraqi allies, who he could see were [...]

    2011-01-12 10:00
  • john Janssen

    Bradley Manning is the martyr from the corrupted US goverment.

    The US goverment shows that it supports war crimes and murders on citizens by international law they are also responcible then for the war crimes, because they have an obligation to prosecute war criminals and murders on first complain.

    So by international law, the whole US goverment should be acused from war crimes.

    2011-01-13 23:32
  • The People Supporting Bradley Manning | The Lipman Times

    [...] the imprisoned PFC. I posed as a member of the group with the handle “getagrip.” I read an article about how Manning was one of the few soldiers that did defend our freedom. The article was [...]

    2011-01-14 11:40
  • Jake Maverick

    surely if anyone deserves to be tortured, it’s those that do the torturing? they’re obviously very sick perverted individuals, but that’s g-men for you!

    2011-01-15 18:57
  • LocalHero

    Those of you who are defending our involvement in WWII need to read “Rethinking the Good War” (at least!). Here’s a link–

    http://www.lewrockwell.com/vance/vance181.html

    And the Civil War was NOT responsible for “freeing the slaves” as most have been brainwashed to spew. It’s too long to go into here but I suggest you watch this–

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i5wdfV-UaLI

    Or don’t(!) and remain ignorant. But your opinion on the warm, fuzzy feeling you get when you consider the Civil War will be easily dismissed by the few who know the Truth.

    2011-01-17 02:45
  • LocalHero

    And BTW, Mr. Carson, unlike a few of the knuckle-draggers on here, the fact that you’re an anarchist bumped your opinion up a notch or two even before I started reading the article. Well done, friend.

    2011-01-17 02:48

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