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Scheer writes: "What is at issue in the information Snowden's courageous actions have revealed is our government's denial of the core principles of the enlightenment: rule by, and of, an informed and thoughtful citizenry that has come to be smothered by the omnipresent corporatized national security state."

A demonstrator in Sau Paulo, Brazil, shows discontent in July against his government's rejection of National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden's asylum application. (photo: Andre Penner/AP)
A demonstrator in Sau Paulo, Brazil, shows discontent in July against his government's rejection of National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden's asylum application. (photo: Andre Penner/AP)


Exposing Public Wickedness Is More American Than Apple Pie

By Robert Scheer, Truthdig

07 January 14

 

t's the revolt of the geeks. Edward Snowden is John Peter Zenger digitized, a post-Internet free-press hero soaring above the security obsessions of the past decade to assert the inalienable requirements of individual sovereignty in a wired world.

It was Zenger whose journalistic efforts to expose the wrongdoing of a colonial governor appointed by the crown landed him in jail facing the charge of "seditious libel," quite similar to that brought against Snowden for exposing the NSA's illegal spying.

Their defense is the same: True patriotism demands a vigilant confrontation with government infamy. "I know not what reason is," Zenger published in his defense back in 1734, "if sapping and betraying the liberties of a people be not treason." After Zenger spent more than eight months in jail, a jury of his peers exonerated him and his cry for an unfettered free press came to be enshrined in the U.S. Constitution.

Continue Reading: Exposing Public Wickedness Is More American Than Apple Pie

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