Australia’s Genius Son: Julian Assange, A Sense of Place Magazine, 17 April, 2019.

Australia’s Genius Son

Julian Assange

John Stapleton
Apr 17, 2019 · 13 min read
Source: Rutley
Which master government strategists planned this?
With all their resources, money, power and operational capacities, who on Earth dreamed up the idea of making the intelligence community’s Number One nemesis front page news around the world?
And ensuring the story is dramatic enough that it will stay there in the coming months and years.
The sight of a disheveled Julian Assange, the most significant individual journalist, publisher and whistle blower of the 21st Century, being bundled into a police van in London has unleashed worldwide chest beating from the regressives and outrage amongst his many supporters.
In a time of universal deceit the truth is incendiary, and that is the fault line on which Assange lies.
The US government started what are widely deemed criminal, cruel and counterproductive wars in Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan.
Julian Assange exposed the perpetrators for the viciously incompetent self-interested apparatchiks they are.
Who really belongs in jail?
Dick Cheney or Julian Assange?
And they forget: Assange is well inside the top percentile of the most intelligent people on Earth. He’s already out gamed them before they’ve had breakfast.
He is not only far more intelligent than any single one of the politicians criticising him, he’s extremely idealistic, a dangerously unpredictable trait thrown into the ruins of entirely compromised Western democracies.
Jennifer Robertson outside court confirming they have received an extradition request from the US
Assange also has a crack legal operative on his side, Jennifer Robinson, whose clients include CNN, Bloomberg News and The New York Times. Amongst her qualifications, a Master of Philosophy in International Public Law from the University of Oxford. Not to mention she presents extremely well on television.
Outside a British court she revealed that they had received a provisional extradition request from the US:
Julian Assange’s Australian lawyer Greg Barns told A Sense of Place Magazine:

Who’s Fooling Who?

As late as December last year human rights experts at the United Nation’s Working Group on Arbitrary Detention repeated their calls for the UK to honour its international obligations and for Julian Assange to be released.
Their statement read in part:
Nobody saw this as fitting cover to resolve the issue; instead national security authorities in Britain, Australia and the US all locked themselves into their own arbitrary decisions. And ultimately made fools of themselves.
Protest poster over denial of the internet to Assange inside the Ecuadorian Embassy. The beginning of the end.
The UN group also commented that they were “further concerned that the modalities of the continued arbitrary deprivation of liberty of Mr. Assange is undermining his health, and may possible endanger his life given the disproportionate amount of anxiety and stress that such prolonged deprivation of liberty entails.”
The technology now available means you can be mentally tortured from afar. The man who helped expose the widespread misuse of government surveillance was, it would most certainly appear, himself a subject of prolonged harassment.
The bedraggled state of Julian Assange as he was dragged from the Ecuadorian Embassy would confirm the worst fears.
Having ignored the United Nations condemnation of her illegal conduct, to cheers from the chimps in the British Parliament Prime Minister Theresa May welcomed Assange’s arrest, saying it showed that “no one is above the law”.
Except, of course, her.
Yes that’s the same execrable Theresa May increasingly described as the worst Prime Minister in UK history, the PM whose tortured Brexit negotiations have betrayed the entire weary nation.
Then there was US President Donald Trump. After previously declaring he loved WikiLeaks, this time around he says: “I know nothing about WikiLeaks. It’s not my thing.”
But if you really want to see Cretaceous toads plumbing the political depths, there’s nowhere like the Land Down Under, where the political hypocrisy over Assange has been entirely shameful.
You might well ask why one of the country’s most famous citizens did not take refuge inside the Australian embassy.
For the simple reason he was not safe there.
The weasel words of Australian politicians — up to their necks in a dangerous American alliance and with tens of billions of dollars of military contracts dancing in the background — began long ago.
Way back in 2010, even before he was forced to take refuge in the Ecuadorian Embassy, that hero of the Australian left, first female Prime Minister Julia Gillard, rushed to condemn Wikileaks and Julian Assange himself.
Ms Gillard was left red-faced when she could not explain to reporters exactly how Assange’s actions were illegal under Australian law.
The whistle blower himself promptly hit back in The Guardian newspaper:
Fast forward to the present, in the rapid churn of Australian Prime Ministers Scott Morrison currently holds the chalice.
Of Julian Assange’s arrest he said:
In other words, screw you, the Australian government is going to do what it has always down, kowtow to the Americans and lift not a finger to help one of its own citizens.
In the UK Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn issued a statement:
No such luck in Australia.
Opposition Labor leader Bill Shorten, shortly to be Prime Minister unless all the polls are wrong, said he had no view on Assange’s extradition to the US.
“I don’t know all the facts of the matter,” he said.
See. Absolute weasels.

Highly Principled Non-State Actor

Not one of his critics have achieved anything remotely like what Assange has done.
And the questions will begin soon enough: Why exactly is the US so keen to arrest one of the most influential figures of the 21st Century?
What exactly did he expose that did not deserve to be exposed?
Perhaps it was the indiscriminate or targeted extra-judicial killings in the name of terror, the deliberate geopolitical destabilization, the widespread malfeasance of the US Empire, the universal surveillance and abrogation of personal freedoms in the name of the war on terror? War crimes and human rights abuses? For exposing that Abu Ghraib was the tip of the iceberg, that America supported torture, that it deliberately fomented sectarian violence in Iraq, that it backed former Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki because he agreed to keep Iraqi oil fields open to the West?
Perhaps it was the links between Saudi Arabia’s funding of both the Islamic State and the Clinton Foundation.
Perhaps it was the organisation’s publicity breakthrough with the 2010 release of classified footage showing US troops shooting from Apaches helicopters at targets on the ground in Baghdad, most of them civilians. Two journalists were killed in the incident.
WikiLeaks has released a classified US military video depicting the indiscriminate slaying of over a dozen people in the Iraqi suburb of New Baghdad — including two Reuters news staff.
The infamous material was released in a package titled Collateral Murder.
The transcript read in part:
“Got a bunch of bodies lying here…”
“We’re shooting some more…”
“Hahaha I hit ‘em.”
“Nice.”
“Nice.”
“Good shoot’n.”
“Thank you.”
Of all the many achievements attached to the organisation, the 2015 publication of The Wikileak Files: The World According to US Empire ranks high among them.
In his introduction ‘Wikileaks and Empire’ Assange records that at the time of writing the organisation had published 2,325,961 diplomatic cables and other US State Department records, comprising some two billion words, the equivalent of some 30,000 volumes.
Assange writes:
Andrew Fowler, author of The Most Dangerous Man in the World: The Inside Story of Julian Assange and Wikileaks, told A Sense of Place Magazine there was worldwide interest in the Assange story.
Andrew Fowler said he was taken aback at how public Assange’s arrest was.
Mr Fowler said Assange should be seen as a normal journalist.

Noam Chomsky

When news of the U.S. seeking to jail Julian Assange first emerged in 2017 the world’s most cited academic Noam Chomsky described the CIA’s targeting of the whistleblower as “a disgraceful act”.
In an Interview with Democracy Now he said:
Chomsky says if the charges are true, of aiding and abetting Chelsea Manning and Edward Snowden, Assange should be honoured for it.

The Truth Will Always Win

Thousands of news stories in dozens of languages have flowed across the world’s media landscape since Assange’s arrest on 11 April, 2019.
Helpfully, in a piece titled ‘The Affair Assange shows up what’s behind the curtain’, the editor of the Fabius Maximus website Larry Kummer has put together what he regards as some of the best analysis.
In his piece The Martyrdom of Julian Assange, Pulitzer prize winning journalist Chris Hedges writes:

Always Quote The Mother

There’s an old journalistic saying, always quote the mother.
Also true in the case of Julian Assange.
Apart from his high intellect, one of the most fascinating things about Assange is his very ordinariness; including his stuffed-up childhood as the son of a single mother.
As a boy, his family moved constantly from one place to another. He had lived in more than thirty Australian towns and cities by his mid-teens. In adulthood his lifestyle was also nomadic. He shifted through hotel after hotel with little more than a laptop and a change of clothes — while those who feared, despised and condemned him luxuriated inside their large houses and comfortable social circumstances.
Who will history see as the greater man? Those who pocketed their dividends from the manufacture of armaments, or one who exposed the worst conduct of the elites and the military in their bombing of Iraq and Afghanistan?
Julian’s mother Christine Ann Assange told an interviewer back in 2012 that as a child her son had wanted to be a physicist:
In another interview Ms Assange said:
Christine Assange is no more sanguine over recent events.

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