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Life Arts    H3'ed 4/9/25

Journalism and the peace dividend (reprint)

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John Hawkins
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If you resist their invisible authority or persist in seeking clarity, they will come for you and blow out your f*cking candles. Happy birthday, motherf*cker.

What Muratov claims about the Putin regime is equally true, and perhaps even more sinister because of the "patriotic" (see vaterland) deceit involved, journalists, real journalists, are in a war with the highest stakes - the publication of state propaganda versus information of vital public interest. A couple of years ago, The Intercept ran "Team of American Hackers and Emirati Spies Discussed AttackingThe Intercept," a piece about how the publication was the target of secret eavesdropping and spying originating from ex-NSA agents who'd gone to the UAE to enhance its nascent hacking activities embodied by the "security" company Dark Matter. They had reported on Dark Matter's start-up three years prior, in a piece called "Spies for Hire." They have also been the target of Israel for reporting on the Jewish state's brisk ascension into the upper echelons of hacking tools, "selling its products around the world to governments that want to spy on their own citizens," The Interceptnotes.

It's important to begin a campaign to overturn the politically initiated 1917 Espionage Act, which is what Assange faces should he be extradited to America. But also, once he is here, it is important, ironically, that he stay in America. There has been talk from US government officials that perhaps Assange could "finish out" his sentence in Australia - a bizarre arrangement motivated by the fact that in Australia he'd be beyond American jurisprudence. America has, among many things, two advantages that Aussies lack, guns and proactive Bill of Rights-defending lawyers (there is no Bill of Rights in Australia). And it's not clear if Assange would receive better prison treatment in Australia, where he's not regarded as a hero, beyond the Lefty academic lot, by the largely conservative populace - the state has rarely come to his assistance. Max prison life in Australia is harsh as all get out, if the account by Gregory David Roberts in his 2003 reality-based prison escape novel Shantaram (highly recommended by the way) is any indication.

In the meantime, raise a glass to these intrepid spirits all around us. And raise a finger to the surveillance state that always assumes that you're up to no good. Like they should talk.

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John Kendall Hawkins is an American ex-pat freelance journalist and poet currently residing in Oceania.

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