Tuesday, December 07, 2010

These Kids Today, with Their Youspace and Mybook

Christian Caryl is the Washington Chief Editor for CIA shell company, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, so it should come as no surprise that he finds that wikileaks lacks "an adequate reason for exposing official secrets", by which obviously he means that wikileaks has not sought to make a mock moral case for its document dump somehow acting to the betterment of the United States. Bear this in mind. It is the fundamental, underlying principle of his entire essay.

One of the truest truisms of the craft of writing is that if your entire essay can be summarized as "no," then it is probably not worth writing.

One is justified in asking: Will deaths occur? We do not know, and we may not hear about them if they do. But damage of various kinds is sure to result.
Damage of various kinds? That's milquetoast even by the standards of a government stooge. Will the moon fall into the Pacific Ocean, causing the extinction of all life on earth? We do not know, and we may be dead before it happens. He makes a bizarre and otiose claim that wikileaks front man Julian Assange is incapable of responding to the charges that opened secrets will proximately cause human deaths, and then he prints Assange's response to precisely those charges:
(For his part, Assange seems remarkably unable to discuss these very real dangers; in the Time interview he claims that “this sort of nonsense about lives being put into jeopardy” is simply an excuse.)
So, he is "unable to discuss these very real dangers" because he dismisses the notion that they are very real. He says the accusation isn't creditable, and the accuser mumbles that he isn't being specific.

And then we move on to territory so familiar, so worn, so rife with cliché that I am surprised even the fuddy New York Review of Books would print it, even on a blog.
One of the most obvious is that WikiLeaks is posting these raw documents on the Web, the most permissive information medium we have yet to invent. As a result we are now experiencing yet another jump from the ploddingly analog to the explosively digital. Just as the concept of “privacy” fades into obscurity when sixteen-year-olds can present their innermost thoughts to an audience of billions, so, too, does the Internet distribution of official secrets change the rules of the game.
Oh, man, paging Tom Friedman: someone has stolen your patented formula. The rules of what game? The ability of teenagers to embarrass themselves in front of a modestly larger audience than their own high school (but billions? Guurrrrll) is comparable to "the distribution of official secrets" how, exactly? What is the object and what is the vehicle in this bizarre metaphor. Is the world's preeminent military hegemon the oversharing sixteen-year-old, or is Daddy's little girl nuclear tipped, if you know whaddahmean? It's impossible to take this kind of writing as anything but a joke, because it labors so thoroughly to maintain a pretense that some delicate moral line is being crossed, that the operation of empires is fraught as the sexual reputation of an adolescent girl. That is plainly preposterous. Even if you grant the premise that wikileaks is destructive, heedless, and incoherent, it remains an absurd and offensive comparison.

Caryl, like pretty much every other American, um, journalist, has got the ethical onus exactly backwards.
The Internet has brought countless benefits to mankind, but, as we see now, it also creates incalculable potential for mischief: it amplifies the threats of schoolyard bullies, empowers terrorists and fringe groups, and opens up huge new spaces to technologically savvy criminals. Now that data can be shared, linked, and exploited with near-instantaneous ease, the risks entailed by the publication of information mushroom out of all recognition; there is simply no way that any editor, however well-meaning, can make an informed judgment about the potential repercussions entailed by the release of vast amounts of confidential data of this sort. But this is where we are, and I wonder whether preaching restraint can have much effect. The technology has outpaced the ethics, and I wonder whether the ethics can ever catch up again.
Oh, yes, yes. On the other hand, the Internet has not yet, to my knowledge, killed a few hundred thousand Muslims, deposed a couple of governments in order to establish expatriate kleptocracies, and launched secret wars throughout the gulf and East Africa. Any effort in contravention of the government that engages in such acts is inherently more ethical than that government and its acts. And notice too that embedded in the argument against document-dumping is an argument against secret-sharing of any kind. It's right there in plain sight. "There is simply no way that any editor, however well-meaning . . ." Since we cannot determine whether what the government keeps secret is good or bad (for the government) due to the sheer volume of additional secrets to which we are not yet privy, we should therefore remain silent, knowing not whereof we speak.

24 comments:

ts said...

So you have no frame of reference here, Julian. You're like a child who wanders into the middle of a movie and wants to know...

Anonymous said...

I just read today that half of Europeans are otiose. So its not just an American problem.

Still I hate it when chicks post pictures of themselves where you can't tell how chubby they are.

Anonymous said...

And then we move on to territory so familiar, so worn, so rife with cliché that I am surprised even the fuddy New York Review of Books would print it, even on a blog.

No. No you aren't.

NutellaonToast said...

I agree with this completely, but I'm inclined to think that this whole wikileaks shit is still just more political theatre for everyone. What exactly is going to change now?

Americans were already sanguine about the overt bombing and take over of a couple countries, and a lot of them are well informed enough to be sanguine about the various other fun times we're having behind the scenes. Why the fuck will they care about various hypocrisies and diplomatic back biting and whatever other bullshit that it was safe to assume was happening a priori. How is this a game changer? You yourself said that the plot isn't the occurrence but merely the outright documentation... so what? Since when has proof mattered to how people act?

Anonymous said...

I just read today that half of Europeans are otiose. I've lived in Europe and it is no more than 40%. Of course, half of the rest are grandiose. The rest are fructose.

drip

the talking dog said...

I just read today that half of Europeans are otiose. I've lived in Europe and it is no more than 40%. Of course, half of the rest are grandiose. The rest are fructose.

Well, it still beats the American population, 46.2% of whom are comatose.

Mr.Fundamental said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Mr.Fundamental said...

post title ftw.

hey Christian Caryl: go fucking fuck yourself!

la Rana said...

Nutella, track down Assange's essays on the state as conspiracy. Contrary to John Burns et al.'s embarrassingly facile take on things, Assange has put some serious thought into this. Even if he's wrong, it seems worth finding out.

Note too: they have released only 1% of the cables thus far.

Mr.Fundamental said...

What exactly is going to change now?

we'll fucking find out, now won't we? this is way more entertaining than voting for Democrats.

Anonymous said...

But, but, but, I still don't understand why everyone is blaming the internet. Wikileaks didn't hack the information, it was given to them, and their primary means of publishing is not their own website, but the few major newspapers that regurgitate the info sent to them by wikileaks, all of which could have been done pre-internet, no?

Leonard said...

I still don't understand why everyone is blaming the internet.

You don't get it! The world is flat!

NutellaonToast said...

OK, what could you imagine possibly changing? I can see the lulz, yeah. very ENTERTAINING!!!! I'm just getting the sense that it's also being viewed as IMPORTANT!!!!, which is the part I don't get.

NutellaonToast said...

oh, i found that essay. I got this far into the introduction: "Firstly we must understand what aspect of government or eocorporatist behavior we wish to change or remove. Secondly we must develop a way of thinking about this behavior that is strong enough carry us through the mire of politically distorted language, and into a position of clarity. Finally must use these insights to inspire within us and others a course of ennobling, and effective action"

before I died of irony.

Ethan said...

I've lived in Christian Caryl for a decade, I can authoritatively state that you're way off base here.

Anonymous said...

before I died of irony.

if only. . .

NutellaonToast said...

You keep that up, nony, and I'll leak your true identity without consideration for what the negative consequences may be, if any!

la Rana said...

You died from irony? That's fucking irony squared. Like Mr. Fun sayeth, this-a-here roller-coaster just left the gate.

Enron said...

The goddamn plane has crashed into the mountain!

bonobo said...

it's also being viewed as IMPORTANT!!!!, which is the part I don't get.

Well, it all depends on what you mean by important. What do you consider important?

For me, this is, at the very least, an act of worldwide disobedience that aims at getting the Empire all caught up in an infowar it clearly doesn't want by distributing on a mass scale an exceptionally graphic and credible story of Empire's bullying, bribes and murders told in the Empire's own words.

We don't know how long this will last or where it will end but it's immediate aims - spreading information and making certain contemptible people miserable - are enough to suit me for the time being.

Justin said...

Interesting symmetry.
Caryl says that since no well-meaning editor should do any kind of reporting that is not approved by the government, so they should not publish. Nute argues that an act of dissidence cannot result in change, so they ought to do nothing.

For the record, Wikileaks is at step 3 of 4 of Ghandi's aphorism.

LA Confidential Pantload said...

Christian, man, I've got certain information....certain facts have come to light....

Anonymous said...

I've heard that irony is not contagious.

Could you move that mark to the left, please?

--The Real Donny

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