Protect Assange, don’t abuse him
“Guardians of women’s rights” in the British liberal press have rushed to condemn the WikiLeaks foun
By John Pilger Published 15 December 2010
Forty years ago, a book entitled The Greening of America caused a sensation. On the cover were these words: "There is a revolution coming. It will not be like revolutions of the past. It will originate with the individual." I was a correspondent in the United States at the time and recall the overnight elevation to guru status of the author, a young Yale academic, Charles Reich. His message was that political action had failed and only "culture" and introspection could change the world. This merged with an insidious corporate public relations campaign aimed at reclaiming western capitalism from the sense of freedom inspired by the civil rights and anti-war movements. The new propaganda's euphemisms were postmodernism, consumerism and "me-ism".
The self was now the zeitgeist. Driven by the forces of profit and the media, the search for individual consciousness all but overwhelmed the spirit of social justice and internationalism. A new deity was proclaimed; the personal was the political.
In 1995, Reich published Opposing the System, in which he recanted almost everything in The Greening of America. "There will be no relief from either economic insecurity or human breakdown," he now wrote, "until we recognise that uncontrolled economic forces create conflict, not well-being . . ." There were no queues in the bookstores this time. In the age of economic neoliberalism, Reich was out of step with the rampant individualism of the west's new political and cultural elite.
False tribunes
The revival of militarism in the west and the search for a new "threat" following the end of the cold war depended on the political disorientation of those who, 20 years earlier, would have formed a vehement opposition. On 11 September 2001, they were silenced finally, and many were co-opted into the "war on terror". The invasion of Afghanistan in October 2001 was supported by leading feminists, especially in the US, where Hillary Clinton and other false tribunes of feminism made the Taliban's treatment of Afghan women the rationale for attacking a stricken country and causing the deaths of at least 20,000 people while giving the Taliban new life. That the warlords backed by America were as medievalist as the Taliban was not allowed to interrupt such a right-on cause. The zeitgeist, the years of "personal" depoliticising and distracting true radicalism, had worked. Nine years later, the disaster that is Afghanistan is the consequence.
It seems the lesson must be learned all over again as a group of media feminists joins the assault on Julian Assange and WikiLeaks, or the "Wikiblokesphere", as Libby Brooks abuses it in the Guardian. From the Times to the New Statesman, apparent feminist credence is given to the chaotic, incompetent and contradictory accusations against Assange in Sweden.
On 9 December, the Guardian published a long, supine interview by Amelia Gentleman with Claes Borgström, the "highly respected Swedish lawyer". In fact, Borgström is foremost a politician, a powerful member of the Social Democratic Party. He intervened in the Assange case only when the senior prosecutor in Stockholm dismissed the "rape" allegation as based on "no evidence". In Gentleman's Guardian article, an anonymous source whispers to us that Assange's "behaviour towards women . . . was going to get him into trouble". This smear was taken up by Brooks in the paper that same day. Ken Loach and I and others on "the left" are "shoulder to shoulder" with the misogynists and "conspiracy theorists". To hell with journalistic inquiry. Ignorance and prejudice rule.
The Australian barrister James Catlin, who acted for Assange in October, says that both women in the case told prosecutors that they consented to have sex with Assange. Following the "crime", one of the women threw a party in honour of Assange. When Borgström was asked why he was representing the women, as both denied rape, he said: "Yes, but they are not lawyers." Catlin describes the Swedish justice system as "a laughing stock". For three months, Assange and his lawyers have pleaded with the Swedish authorities to let them see the prosecution case. This was denied until 18 November, when the first official document arrived - in the Swedish language, contrary to European law.
Unveiled threat
Assange still has not been charged with anything. He has never been a "fugitive". He sought and got permission to leave Sweden, and the British police have known his whereabouts since his arrival in this country. This did not stop a London magistrate on 7 December ignoring seven sureties and sending him to solitary confinement in Wandsworth Prison.
At every turn, Assange's basic human rights have been breached. The cowardly Australian government, which is legally obliged to support its citizen, has made a veiled threat to take away his passport. In her public remarks, the prime minister, Julia Gillard, has shamefully torn up the presumption of innocence that underpins Australian law. The Australian minister for foreign affairs ought to have called in both the Swedish and the US ambassadors to warn them against any abuse of human rights against Assange, such as the crime of incitement to murder.
In contrast, vast numbers of decent people all over the world have rallied to Assange's support: people who are neither misogynists nor "internet attack dogs", to quote Libby Brooks, and who support a very different set of values from those espoused by Charles Reich. They include many distinguished feminists, such as Naomi Klein, who wrote: "Rape is being used in the Assange prosecution in the same way that women's freedom was used to invade Afghanistan. Wake up!"
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63 comments
Although I agree with much of what Mr. Pilger says, I cannot sit back while he rewrites American political history. The attack of 9/11 did not "silence finally" "those who... would have formed a vehement opposition" to American foreign policy. Ten days after 9/11, on Friday, September 21, 2001, the first New York antiwar demonstration took place (from Union Square to Times Square), attended by thousands whose slogan became "our grief is not a cry for war." I was there. I was also at numerous demonstrations held over the next 18 months leading up to the most inspiring demonstration I've ever witnessed: the one of February 15, 2003, in which hundreds of thousands of people braved one the coldest days I've ever experienced to protest the immoral Iraqi War before it had even begun. Protests continued for some time, until their uselessness in the face of an almost universal mainstream media blackout became undeniable. So there was a strong and vibrant, but ultimately futile peace movement by Americans of all ages who were neither cowed nor co-opted by "the war on terror."
Is John Pilger implying that the women are lying?
The strange convolutions of the on and off again sex crime allegations ought to raise suspicions of every genuine feminist. As someone who has been a feminist- that is a person that believes that women ought to have equal rights to those that men have- since the early 70s, and probably before if you count my arguments with my father on the same kind of issues, I am appalled that anyone, male or female, could use the pretext of such crimes to gag someone who is daring to expose the dishonourable behaviour of the powerful.
Rape and sexual abuse does not respect the rights of the victims. But equally, false allegations, especially those for political purposes, do not respect the rights of the accused.
There are many of us who are heartily sick of the lies and secrets that have been tools used by the powerful, led by the USA, to fool the less powerful into believing that we need their wars, their drones, their targetted assassinations and their right to remove our rights one by one.
One of those precious rights is freedom of speech. Another is the right to have access to accurate, comprehensive and truthful information about what our elected representatives and their agents- military or diplomatic- are doing and thinking and proposing "for our benefit".
The fact that we have been royally lied to- no slur on her Maj- especially since the beginning of the new century, seems to have slipped under the radar screen of those who falsly claim that Julian Assange ought to be convicted for espionage + terrorism- or even worse, be murdered for what he may have done or not done.
What is it with these people?
Does the USA really believe that it can get away with the same old forever?
I think the writing is on the wall- or more accurately- on the www.
The cat is out of the bag.
The genie is out of the bottle.
Pandora's box has been opened.
I think the US's chance of stopping this is virtually zero.
If Mr Assange has committed a crime, then he should face his accusers. But he is entitled to due process and a fair trial.
A fair trial.
Not the usual American version.
Finally its about time that the Australian government woke up. One David Hicks was more than enough. Just as I hope one day he will be compensated for the crimes that have been perpetrated against him, so if this farce continues, Julian will be also entitled to compensation for the crimes being perpetrated against him.
If the USA is interfering with the sex abuse case, and if it is manipulating laws to try to pay him out for revealing the truth about their dishonesty and crimes, there may well be more than a million young computer whizz kids who will not take it lying down.
And I for one do not blame them. If I knew how, I would join them!
They have a right to the truth.
We all do.
And if our mealy mouthed governments, and supine media won't let us have it, then we will have to rely on others who will.
Others like Julian assange and Wiki Leaks.
And our old friend John Pilger.
Lavinia Moore
Coming from the country that gave all us young men great sex with the Nordic princesses who willingly bedded us randy young Brits in Israel and the Canary Islands, it's sad to see that Sweden is now using 'rape' in its dubious definition, as a case against Assange. Equally sad is watching the country that seemed to represent good law is now the 'stalking horse' for the CIA and all the conservative politicians in the USA who are desperate to assassinate Assange.
Sic transit gloria mundi.
'Tom O'Gara' noble points, well made. Go away, watch Pilger's film, come back and tell us how you still vehemently feel that the whole thing's a conspiracy theory and that we do in fact live in a fine ole world and that Pilger is the one uncritically peddling shameful lies to pay the mortgage. Bear in mind at all time that Afghans/Iraqia/Vietnamese are no less human than you are and have no less a right to not have their only lives shat upon to sustain your pathetic furious masturbation.
Incidentally that brilliant lawyer you mention finds it 'inexplicable' [sic] how Pilger is able to comment on 'accusations', when everyone else, himself included, can. One law for Pilger, one for everyone else. It's amazing the loopholes we can wrap ourselves up in to avoid facing the reality that underpins our lives. Some more convincingly than others.
I watched his film.
The war I apparently didn't see was actually the war I did see?
Emperors new clothes?
Jullian Assange is being stitched up!!!!!!!
Reading this thread is depressing. Helen you get the highest cliche gold star available, Mr. Divine, you are either illiterate, and the fact that you seem to be able to write contradicts this possibility, or simply didn't read or haven't read anything about the case besides Sun headlines - the women themselves said they weren't raped. Pathetic how easily people's only bias is used against them.
http://theendisalwaysnear.blogspot.com/2010/12/fix-needs-leak.html
Well then Bob, I hope you were out there fighting it with all your might. Because, for the rest of us, that TITLE is our excuse.
It's rather odd that 'decent people' like Pilger seem to some to occupy a spot way, way, outside the mainstream. Doesn't this show how far the mainstream has moved to the right, leaving people like Pilger, stranded on the hard, radical, left.