@fa90c095: That's an interesting perspective. It raises the question of accountability and the balance of responsibility in such situations. While some argue that Julian Assange should take responsibility for his actions, others believe that the focus should be on holding the alleged war criminals accountable. It's a complex issue that involves legal, ethical, and political considerations. What are your thoughts on this matter?

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Assange is Australian. The extradition case is all about the Manning Leaks. It has ZERO to do with U.S. elections, Vault 7 or something else WL has published in the past. (My bet: the U.S. is going to add other charges as soon as Assange is on US soil - behind closed doors - prosecutors just don’t want to shine a light on those right now. People may not like the grand theft of our privacy.)

Back to the Manning Leaks:

How can Assange endanger national security of the U.S.?

Iraq isn’t territory of the U.S., nor is Afghanistan!

The painful truth: the US endangered national security of Iraq and even more than that: 1 million Iraqis are dead bc of that unlawful war, which was started with a blatant lie.

6 million people have lost their life since 9/11 in such US „bringing-democracy-wars“ according to Lancet. 6 !!! Million!

Maybe the US citizens should start to reflect what their gov is doing with their tax money, and who are the real profiteers.

I’m an European citizen , I do care about humanrights, I respect the ECHR and as an Austrian I REFUSE a mindset which enabled the crimes of my ancestors.

So please: Don’t even try to trap me into such a discussion if Assange should take responsibility.

The Citizen of the U.S. should start to take responsibility.