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Foreign Policy Magazine's Top Global Thinker, Edward Snowden.

 

 

For Exposing U.S. Hypocrisy, Snowden Deserves Global Respect (Huanqiu, China)

 

Whatever one thinks of the actions of Edward Snowden, he has certainly given Beijing and Moscow a big stick to beat Washington over the head with. This editorial from China's state-run Hauqiu does the young whistleblower no favors. Haunqiu heaps praise on Snowden for knocking the U.S. off its moral perch and further weakening America's hold on the title 'world arbiter of justice and legality.'

 

EDITORIAL

 

Translated By John Chen

 

December 16, 2013

 

People's Republic of China - Huanqiu - Original Article (Chinese)

The enigmatic Edward Snowden: Perhaps for all the right reasons, the NSA whisteblower has weakened America's position.

 

ANONYMOUS WEB VIDEO: Message from 'Anonymous' on PRISM and Edward Snowden, July 28, 00:05:37RealVideo

Foreign Policy Magazine released its list of Global Thinkers for 2013 this week, and Edward Snowden, the U.S. National Security Agency whistleblower who revealed the PRISM surveillance program, tops the list. [FP's top ten 'Global Thinkers' are all related to the topic of surveillance and cyberspace]. Snowden is now in exile in Russia and is America's most wanted man.

 

In his statement to FP on his selection as a Global Thinker, Snowden criticized "the darkest corners of our national security bureaucracies." Snowden called 2013 "an important year for civil society," and from the point of view of the anti-surveillance opponent, that makes sense. However, having challenged the world's most powerful abuse of power, the stress on Snowden is great.

 

In non-Western societies, challengers to the existing order may receive support from the United States. Even when it violates the law, the U.S.-led Western world may also put direct pressure on relevant countries, requiring such challengers to be spared. This inspires certain convicted criminals to expect a sudden streak of luck.

 

The powerful global reaction to the PRISM program, including among U.S. allies and the American public, is proof that Snowden's deed was good. Rather than penalizing the agencies suspected of illegal surveillance, however, the U.S. government declared Snowden a "traitor" to the country. The people suspected of illegal wiretapping have not been pursued, while the person responsible for exposing a massive threat to U.S. civil society is. Washington even came up with an exceptional legal explanation for Snowden's extradition. This has forced Snowden into a corner.  

 

The fact that Snowden fled the United States for Hong Kong, where he met reporters for the Guardian, shows that he has lost confidence in a U.S. security sector and legal system he considers lawless. He judged the situation correctly. The U.S. expended great diplomatic resources to hunt him, which have negatively impacted relations with Russia and China.

 

Calling Snowden a "Global Thinker" is no exaggeration, and he deserves our respect for challenging American soft power and its right to define justice and injustice. The young man is the first person in recent years to have knocked the U.S. off of its moral pedestal.

 

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It was wrong for the U.S. government to have implemented the PRISM surveillance program and to declare Snowden a "traitor," and only paves the pave for more future embarrassment. Foreign Policy Magazine, which represents U.S. mainstream values, chose Snowden as top Global Thinker for 2013. This testifies to the division of U.S. society over the Snowden case. For the U.S. government, Snowden is a long-term hot potato.

Posted By Worldmeets.US

 

While America remains a formidable power, in this case it was prevented from having its way. The United States should not put its own security interests and values above the interests and diversity of the rest of the world. Seeking hegemony and absolute security is a luxury it cannot afford. With its ever-expanding interests, the United States runs the risk of looking like certain ancient empires: over extended. This will harm itself and others.

 

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Posted By Worldmeets.US Dec. 15, 2013, 05:15pm

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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