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Wikileaks and Julian Assange Mega-thread

WikiLeaks backlash all bark, no bite: experts

WASHINGTON, (AFP) - Despite their martial overtones, the attacks on credit card and other websites by supporters of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange are more political protest than real cyber war, experts say.

Over the past week, the Internet has rung with a call to virtual arms by "Anonymous," a band of computer hackers that has targeted websites of Visa, Mastercard, PayPal and others for cutting off WikiLeaks access to funds.

"The war is on," the group has proclaimed, vowing to attack any entity with an "anti-WikiLeas agenda."

But the campaign has fallen short of a real cyber war, said James Lewis, a specialist in cybersecurity at the Center for International and Strategic Studies, a Washington think tank.

"I would say that a war involves damage and destruction. This is more like a noisy political demonstration, like a mob surrounding a bank and refusing to let anyone in or out. It’s not war," he said.

"For me, this is political theater, kabuki — entertaining and perhaps influential, but much less than war."

Calling it cyberwar is "a piece of rhetoric," said Allan Friedman, research director at the Brookings Institution’s technology innovation center — especially, he added, since there are no clearly identified camps and "Anonymous" is merely a "very loose online community."

"What people call cyberwar is much more a cybermob," he said.

"The Anonymous have succeed in shaking things up but they have thus far not actually managed to do anything that has any lasting effect."

With their denial of service attacks, which paralyze targeted websites under a deluge of bogus requests to a server, hackers have only hit at companies’ windows on the web, which is "a fairly easy thing to do," Friedman said.

"They’ll have a first move advantage but I don’t think this is sustainable. And all of the websites that have been attacked are now back online," he said.

Similar denial of service attacks originating in Russia, but even more massive in scale, struck Estonia in 2007 and Georgia in 2008, causing temporary disruptions.

"These attacks have a political effect but I don’t think they have a lot of effect on people’s confidence in using their credit cards," Adam Segal, an expert at the Council on Foreign Relations, said of the most recent attacks.

Visa and Mastercard have continued to conduct transactions, and people have continued making payments with credit cards.

Far more difficult to pull off would be the kind of viral attack that penetrates banking networks and brings down systems for handling financial transactions, these experts say.

"I’m not sure about the capacity of these groups. Probably some of them are quite good, they can probably cause some damage, but it’s not clear to me what political purpose it would serve, given the context," Segal said.

article link
                    (Reproduced under the Fair Dealings provisions of the Copyright Act)
 
Journeyman said:
So bring on the protests. Sad, that you've chosen this as your shining hour of glory.  ::)
Can I call 'em, or what?  ;D

WikiLeaks 'hacktivists': Freedom defenders or nerd supremacists?
 
"FIRE AT WILL, gentlemen!" Rafix wrote in an online message. "Enjoy the EPIC battle of GLORY!"
Link


WikiLeaks supporters’ group abandons cyber attacks
Is that like a "Friends of Bill W" thing  ;)



ps - resorting to "stereotype and generalizations" is obligatory when discussing the activities of groups of people; one uses such generalizations as are based on commonly-observed attributes. While acknowledging that individual members of any herd behave with slight differences, that doesn't make the generalizations any less valid -- even if it hurts the feelings of those herds' members.  ;)


 
They abandoned the cyber attacks because the media recently released how easy it was to track who was doing the attacks unless they were using something like Tor to mask their identities. The kids that downloaded and ran the "Low Earth Orbit Ion Cannon" hacking script and ran it without hiding behind a whole lot of proxies may end up with a Federal Police knock on the door shortly from whatever country they're in.
 
George Wallace said:
Reproduced under the Fair Dealings provisions of the Copyright Act.
WikiLeaks supporters’ group abandons cyber attacks



By Georgina Prodhan, Reuters
December 11, 2010 11:02 AM
Ottawa Citizen

LINK

So?  What is it?  Are they stopping or are they increasing their attacks?  The MSM doesn't seem to know.



Reproduced under the Fair Dealings provisions of the Copyright Act.



WikiLeaks cyberwar ramps up


10/12/2010 10:49:20 PM
CBC News

LINK

Apparent WikiLeaks-related cyberattacks ramped up as thousands of people around the world volunteered their computers for use in the attacks.

Downloads of free software used in the attacks have jumped by thousands of downloads overnight to over 40,000, reported U.S. data security company Imperva Friday.

Meanwhile, the websites of police and prosecutors in the Netherlands were working only sporadically after a 16-year-old was arrested in relation to attacks on MasterCard and PayPal. Dutch media reported that the "hacktivist" group Anonymous, which supports WikiLeaks, had been targeting the two sites with denial-of-service attacks. Such attacks flood websites with traffic, making them unavailable.

Anonymous has taken responsibility for attacks on companies such as Visa that have cut off support to WikiLeaks or have been alleged to have cut off support for WikiLeaks. In Visa's case, it had begun refusing to allow donations to the site on Dec. 7, nine days after WikiLeaks began releasing classified U.S. diplomatic cables onto the internet.

A news release Friday claiming to be from Anonymous said the group wanted "to raise awareness about WikiLeaks and the underhanded methods employed by the above companies to impair WikiLeaks's ability to function."

WikiLeaks distanced itself from the attackers Thursday with this statement on its website: "This group is not affiliated with WikiLeaks. There has been no contact between any WikiLeaks staffer and anyone at Anonymous."

Toronto company hit

MasterCard, Amazon and PayPal have been targeted by attacks, along with the Toronto company EasyDNS, because of the similarity of its name to that of EveryDNS, which had previously helped translate WikiLeaks's IP address into its "wikileaks" domain name.

EveryDNS decided to stop doing that after it was attacked by hackers on the opposite side of the cyberwar - those against WikiLeaks.

Mark Jeftovic, president and CEO of EasyDNS, said word mistakenly spread that his company had revoked its support for WikiLeaks.

"And the backlash started," he said. "It was just incredible. I couldn't believe what was happening."

Since then, Jeftovic has decided to support WikiLeaks by offering its services to two domains that are distributing WikiLeaks content.

Another victim of the attacks was former U.S. Republican vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin, whose credit card accounts were hacked after she publicly said WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange had "blood on his hands."

U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder has since said he is looking into the attacks.

David Silverberg, managing editor of the online news website digitaljournal.com, told CBC News that Anonymous, which calls its campaign Operation Payback, believes in a free and open internet.

"And they'll use anarchist methods and what they call hacktivist methods to get their point across."

Silverberg added that the attacks are being carried out by some people who voluntarily download code to harness their computers as "soldiers," along with unwitting "zombie" computers infected by malicious code.

Matt Mullenweg, founder of the online blogging service Wordpress, said he thinks retaliatory hacking is "usually kind of childish on both sides."

Meanwhile, Rob Kozinets, who researches technology and marketing at York University's Schulich School of Business, said attempts to shut down WikiLeaks are doomed to failure, but in the meantime the battle over freedom versus restriction and censorship is playing its way out on the internet.

"It's a game of whack-a-mole," he said. "As soon as you whack that mole, it's not only that another one is popping up, but another one is coming behind you to hit you on the head with a hammer."

With files from The Associated Press

 
WikiLeaks founder victim of feminism
  Article Link
Leaks themselves pale beside political motivation for legal harassment
By Lorne Gunter, edmontonjournal.com December 12, 2010

So far the diplomatic cables disclosed by the website WikiLeaks have failed to impress me.

Ooo, Afghan President Hamid Karzai is corrupt. I never would have guessed. German Chancellor Angela Merkel is averse to sending German troops abroad. (Frankly, it only ever worries me when German chancellors favour sending troops into other countries.)

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin fancies himself an "alpha dog." Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi is a decrepit old man who is too cosy with the Russians. Nicolas Sarkozy of France is a "naked emperor." And Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is like Hitler.

Syria promised not to send weapons to Hezbollah, then did anyway. Gasp! The Saudis and other Arabs urged the U.S. to bomb Iran's nuclear sites. The horror! (But it is no surprise that Iranians, who are Persians and Shiite Muslims, are disliked by their neighbours who are Arab and mostly Sunni.)

I'm shocked, shocked I tell you.

Even the most recent revelations, announced Friday -- that Cuba could be broke in two to three years and that North Korea may have given Myanmar nuclear-weapons technology -- are hardly bombshells. Cuba's been in financial trouble ever since the fall of the Soviet Union nearly two decades ago, so much trouble that this past spring it announced it was axing 500,000 public workers. And, while I did not know the North Korea-Myanmar relationship, it hardly surprises.

There are tens of thousands more cables to be released, but given that none of the 251,000 documents given to WikiLeaks were "top secret" and only 15,000 (about six per cent) even made it up to the level of "secret," it's doubtful any of the remaining messages from U.S. diplomats back to their bosses in the State department will contain "game-changing" information.

It's possible that information released about U.S. sources in some autocratic countries could lead to those sources being imprisoned or even executed. But otherwise, this information is mostly gossipy and of little strategic importance.

What is more fascinating are the rape charges emanating from Sweden against WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange. While I find Assange both conceited and flippant, from what we know of the sexual assault allegations, he would appear to be a victim of the gender war against men.

Timing significant

Two women with whom Assange had sex during a recent speaking-tour stop in Stockholm seem to have had second thoughts about sleeping with him after they learned they had shared him within a matter of days of one another.

In an exhaustive investigation into the allegations, Britain's Daily Mail -- no fan of effete lefty activists such as Assange -- portrayed Assange as the aggrieved party.

The paper learned that "Sarah," Assange's first conquest in Sweden, was an official with a centre-left political party, a known radical feminist, a disciple of one of Sweden's most vehemently feminist academics, a former campus sexual equity officer and a webmistress who, until recently, maintained a website devoted to "7 Steps to Legal Revenge," about how women can use the courts to get back at unfaithful lovers.

Even after filing a police complaint against Assange, Sarah (neither woman's real name can be used because of the nature of the alleged crime) told a Swedish newspaper that in both her case and Jessica's (the other victim's assumed name) "the sex had been consensual from the start but had eventually turned into abuse."

In Sarah's case, the alleged abuse is Assange's refusal to take an HIV/ AIDS test after the condom he used during their episode broke. In Jessica's case, the alleged assault is Assange's refusal even to wear a condom during their second encounter in under 12 hours.

In both cases, though, the women now accusing Assange of assault freely socialized with him after his alleged misconduct -- Sarah hosted him to a party at her apartment and let him stay there several nights, while Jessica went out to breakfast with him immediately after the incident of unprotected sex. Only three days after the two learned that Assange had had sex with each of them did they go to police.

The two women insist jealousy is not their motivation for accusing Assange. Yet both are represented by the same lawyer, who is a leading crusader for broadening Sweden's legal definition of rape so that more men can be successfully convicted.
More on link
 
So, now he's a "victim" of feminists? 


Just when I thought I had heard everything  ::)
 
Technoviking said:
So, now he's a "victim" of feminists? 


Just when I thought I had heard everything  ::)

Or it could be poetic justice....... ;D
 
WikiLeaks rival plans Monday launch after internal split, founders say

London (CNN) -- Arguing that WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has "weakened the organization," a newly organized rival to the website known for leaking official secrets says it will launch Monday.

The founders of Openleaks.org say they are former WikiLeaks members unhappy with the way WikiLeaks is being run under Assange.

"It has weakened the organization," one of those founders, Daniel Domscheit-Berg says in a documentary airing Sunday night on Swedish television network SVT. He said WikiLeaks has become "too much focused on one person, and one person is always much weaker than an organization."

In an e-mail to CNN, Domscheit-Berg said the group hopes to launch its site Monday.

Like WikiLeaks, which facilitates the anonymous disclosure of secret information, Openleaks says its goal is to help people deliver material to news outlets and other organizations without being identified. The Swedish daily Dagens Nyheter, citing internal Openleaks documents, reported that the new site intends to act as an intermediary, "without a political agenda except from the dissemination of information to the media, the public, non-profit organizations, trade and union organizations and other participating groups."

Domscheit-Berg said WikiLeaks put "everything we had" into the high-profile disclosures of hundreds of thousands secret U.S. documents over the past five months.

"I think the wisest thing to do would have been to do this slowly, step by step, to grow the project. That did not happen," he says in the SVT documentary.

Assange and WikiLeaks have been the focus of worldwide condemnation since their first major release of classified U.S. documents in July. Since it began disclosing more than 250,000 U.S. diplomatic cables in November, it has been hit with denial-of-service attacks, been kicked off servers in the United States and France and lost major revenue sources.

And Assange has been held in a British jail since Tuesday as he battles extradition to Sweden, which wants to question him about allegations of sexual assault. Assange has denied any wrongdoing, and supporters have called the charges an attempt to strike back him and his organization.

But Domscheit-Berg said, "If you preach transparency to everyone else, you have to be transparent yourself."

"You have to fulfill the same standards that you expect from others," he told SVT. "And I think that's where we've not been heading in the same direction philosophically anymore."

Another former WikiLeaks staffer said he had brought up his discontent with Assange, but that the WikiLeaks founder had not wanted to listen.

"Eventually this ended with me arguing with Julian about basically his dictatorial behavior, which ended in Julian saying to me that if I had a problem with him I could just 'piss off,' I quote," Herbert Snorreson said.

WikiLeaks spokesman Kristinn Hrafnsson would not discuss disagreements between Assange and other members of the organization. But as for the planned launch of a rival group, he said, "the more,the better."

"Well, I'm inclined not to talk too much about the people, the few people that have decided that their interest is not with WikiLeaks anymore," he told SVT. "What I hear is that some of the people are contemplating to open up their own website with the same ideal as WikiLeaks and I think that is an excellent idea and I wish them well."

Article
 
Let me get this straight.

Girl #1 asks guy to use a condom.
Guy says no.
Girl has consensual sex with guy anyways.


Girl #2 asks guy to use a condom.
Guy says no.
Girl has consensual sex with guy anyways.

Girl 1&2 upset afterwards and charge him with rape or whatever, only AFTER they find out he had sex with both of them?
Way to represent the gender ladies.
 
Grimaldus said:
Let me get this straight.

Girl #1 asks guy to use a condom.
Guy says no.
Girl has consensual sex with guy anyways.


Girl #2 asks guy to use a condom.
Guy says no.
Girl has consensual sex with guy anyways.

Girl 1&2 upset afterwards and charge him with rape or whatever, only AFTER they find out he had sex with both of them?
Way to represent the gender ladies.

Me thinks there is more to this story  (is that his story??) ... being that there's charges, arrest warrants, interpol involvement ...  ::)

But, way to represent the "it's always the victims fault" stoneage way of thinking.

 
Grimaldus said:
Let me get this straight.

Girl #1 asks guy to use a condom.
Guy says no.
Girl has consensual sex with guy anyways.


Girl #2 asks guy to use a condom.
Guy says no.
Girl has consensual sex with guy anyways.

Girl 1&2 upset afterwards and charge him with rape or whatever, only AFTER they find out he had sex with both of them?
Way to represent the gender ladies.

I don' think Grimaldus is blaming the victims here. You have to admit that the accusations are a bit sketchy. Both women had consensual sex with Assange and then retroactively decided it was rape. If this goes through, what next?

Women can simply decide Mr. X is a rapist because they've had a relationship with him and decide to exact revenge for some reason?
 
OK, now in this case, and in this case ONLY, I'm backing Asshat.
Another former WikiLeaks staffer said he had brought up his discontent with Assange, but that the WikiLeaks founder had not wanted to listen.
The belief that employers are obligated to fawn upon and grant every concern raised by an employee is a union-mentality delusion. If it's so traumatic that the boss won't listen to your "discontent," quit -- it's his company, not yours.
 
Inky said:
Women can simply decide Mr. X is a rapist because they've had a relationship with him and decide to exact revenge for some reason?

I'm 99.99% posotive that if the above little quote from you was all there was to this ... that there wouldn't be an arrest warrant or interpol involvement. So, because there is that involvement ... I'm thinking that the other evidence not yet out there for public consumption will come out in court. I think you guys jumping to the "women exacting revenge" conclusion based upon selective publication of selective bits in the media is pretty lame ass.

If it doesn't (if there isn't anything else), then I'm guessing it'll be a not guilty. Let him have his day in court (and the women theirs) just like any other person would be entitled to before you pass your judgement on this being a simple "revenge" scenario.
 
ArmyVern said:
But, way to represent the "it's always the victims fault" stoneage way of thinking.

I've never suggested it's always the victims fault, thats silly Vern. My opinion is based off of comments such as this

In both cases, though, the women now accusing Assange of assault freely socialized with him after his alleged misconduct -- Sarah hosted him to a party at her apartment and let him stay there several nights, while Jessica went out to breakfast with him immediately after the incident of unprotected sex. Only three days after the two learned that Assange had had sex with each of them did they go to police.
........

I'll wait for their books to come out before I pass judgement I guess.
 
I'm blaming the lawyer ;D
Why ?
quote
"a leading crusader for broadening Sweden's legal definition of rape so that more men can be successfully convicted."
 
Why is it, especially at this site, that people who should know better continue to attempt drawing erudite conclusions based on the flawed reporting by our MSM journalistic hacks? Can't we just sit and wait until the court case happens? Once again, because of said speculation, we are drawing the thread off track, shifting the focus from the immediate asshat involved to some other overflogged item.
 
recceguy said:
Why is it, especially at this site, that people who should know better continue to attempt drawing erudite conclusions based on the flawed reporting by our MSM journalistic hacks? Can't we just sit and wait until the court case happens?
Another case in point?
http://forums.milnet.ca/forums/threads/98038.0.html
 
Grimaldus said:
I've never suggested it's always the victims fault, thats silly Vern. My opinion is based off of comments such as this
........

I'll wait for their books to come out before I pass judgement I guess.

Yep, and my comment to you was based on this extraneous bullshit:

Grimaldus said:
...

Way to represent the gender ladies.

::) Sure sounds like a 'judgement' to me.
 
Take it to PMs everyone. Leave the thread intact for a change.

Milnet.ca Staff
 
Even radical feminists think the charges against Assange are dubious and politically motivated. Ardin is now hiding out in the Palestinian Territories and is not communicating with authorities.

Here is one of the most famous feminists take on the situation, Naomi Wolf.

Julian Assange Captured by World's Dating Police

Dear Interpol:

As a longtime feminist activist, I have been overjoyed to discover your new commitment to engaging in global manhunts to arrest and prosecute men who behave like narcissistic jerks to women they are dating.

I see that Julian Assange is accused of having consensual sex with two women, in one case using a condom that broke. I understand, from the alleged victims' complaints to the media, that Assange is also accused of texting and tweeting in the taxi on the way to one of the women's apartments while on a date, and, disgustingly enough, 'reading stories about himself online' in the cab.

Both alleged victims are also upset that he began dating a second woman while still being in a relationship with the first. (Of course, as a feminist, I am also pleased that the alleged victims are using feminist-inspired rhetoric and law to assuage what appears to be personal injured feelings. That's what our brave suffragette foremothers intended!).

Thank you again, Interpol. I know you will now prioritize the global manhunt for 1.3 million guys I have heard similar complaints about personally in the US alone -- there is an entire fraternity at the University of Texas you need to arrest immediately. I also have firsthand information that John Smith in Providence, Rhode Island, went to a stag party -- with strippers! -- that his girlfriend wanted him to skip, and that Mark Levinson in Corvallis, Oregon, did not notice that his girlfriend got a really cute new haircut -- even though it was THREE INCHES SHORTER.

Terrorists. Go get 'em, Interpol!

Yours gratefully,

Naomi Wolf

Then she threw out a serious take on the issue.

J'Accuse: Sweden, Britain, and Interpol Insult Rape Victims Worldwide

How do I know that Interpol, Britain and Sweden's treatment of Julian Assange is a form of theater? Because I know what happens in rape accusations against men that don't involve the embarrassing of powerful governments.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange is in solitary confinement in Wandsworth prison in advance of questioning on state charges of sexual molestation. Lots of people have opinions about the charges. But I increasingly believe that only those of us who have spent years working with rape and sexual assault survivors worldwide, and know the standard legal response to sex crime accusations, fully understand what a travesty this situation is against those who have to live through how sex crime charges are ordinarily handled -- and what a deep, even nauseating insult this situation is to survivors of rape and sexual assault worldwide.

Here is what I mean: men are pretty much never treated the way Assange is being treated in the face of sex crime charges.

I started working as a counselor in a UK center for victims of sexual assault in my mid-twenties. I also worked as a counselor in a battered women's shelter in the US, where sexual violence was often part of the pattern of abuse. I have since spent two decades traveling the world reporting on and interviewing survivors of sexual assault, and their advocates, in countries as diverse as Sierra Leone and Morocco, Norway and Holland, Israel and Jordan and the Occupied Territories, Bosnia and Croatia, Britain, Ireland and the united States.

I tell you this as a recorder of firsthand accounts. Tens of thousand of teenage girls were kidnapped at gunpoint and held as sex slaves in Sierra Leone during that country's civil war. They were tied to trees and to stakes in the ground and raped by dozens of soldiers at a time. Many of them were as young as twelve or thirteen. Their rapists are free.

I met a fifteen-year-old girl who risked her life to escape from her captor in the middle of the night, taking the baby that resulted from her rape by hundreds of men. She walked from Liberia to a refugee camp in Sierra Leone, barefoot and bleeding, living on roots in the bush. Her rapist, whose name she knows, is free.

Generals at every level instigated this country-wide sexual assault of a generation of girls. Their names are known. They are free. In Sierra Leone and Congo, rapists often used blunt or sharp objects to penetrate the vagina. Vaginal tears and injuries, called vaginal fistulas, are rampant, as any health worker in that region can attest, but medical care is often unavailable. So women who have been raped in this way often suffer from foul-smelling constant discharges from infections that could be treated with a low-cost antibiotic -- were one available. Because of their injuries, they are shunned by their communities and rejected by their husbands. Their rapists are free.

Women -- and girls -- are drugged, kidnapped and trafficked by the tens of thousands for the sex industry in Thailand and across Eastern Europe. They are held as virtual prisoners by pimps. If you interview the women who spend their lives trying to rescue and rehabilitate them, they attest to the fact that these women's kidnappers and rapists are well known to local and even national authorities -- but these men never face charges. These rapists are free.

In the Bosnian conflict, rape was a weapon of war. Women were imprisoned in barracks utilized for this purpose, and raped, again at gunpoint, for weeks at a time. They could not escape. Minimalist hearings after the conflict resulted in slap-on-the-wrist sentences for a handful of perpetrators. The vast majority of rapists, whose names are known, did not face charges. The military who condoned these assaults, whose names are known, are free.

Women who testify to having been raped in Saudi Arabia, Syria and Morocco face imprisonment and beatings, and being abandoned by their families. Their rapists almost never face charges and are free. Women who testify to rape in India and Pakistan have been subjected to honor killings and acid attacks. Their rapists almost never face charges, are almost never convicted. They are free. A well-known case of a high-born playboy in India who was accused of violently raping a waitress -- who was willing to testify against him -- resulted in a cover-up at the highest levels of the police inquiry. He is free.

What about more typical cases closer to home? In the Western countries such as Britain and Sweden, who are uniting to hold Assange without bail, if you actually interviewed women working in rape crisis centers, you will hear this: it is desperately hard to get a conviction for a sex crime, or even a serious hearing. Workers in rape crisis centers in the UK and Sweden will tell you that they have deep backlogs of women raped for years by fathers or stepfathers -- who can't get justice. Women raped by groups of young men who have been drinking, and thrown out of the backs of cars, or abandoned after a gang-rape in an alley -- who can't get justice. Women raped by acquaintances who can't get a serious hearing.

In the US I have heard from dozens of young women who have been drugged and raped in college campuses across the nation. There is almost inevitably a cover-up by the university -- guaranteed if their assailants are prominent athletes on campus, or affluent -- and their rapists are free. If it gets to police inquiry, it seldom gets very far. Date rape? Forget it. If a woman has been drinking, or has previously had consensual sex with her attacker, or if their is any ambiguity about the issue of consent, she almost never gets a serious hearing or real investigation.

If the rare middle-class woman who charges rape against a stranger -- for those inevitably are the few and rare cases that the state bothers to hear -- actually gets treated seriously by the legal system, she will nonetheless find inevitable hurdles to any kind of real hearing let alone real conviction: either a 'lack of witnesses' or problems with evidence, or else a discourse that even a clear assault is racked with ambiguity. If, even more rare, a man is actually convicted -- it will almost inevitably be a minimal sentence, insulting in its triviality, because no one wants to 'ruin the life' of a man, often a young man, who has 'made a mistake'. (The few exceptions tend to regard a predictable disparity of races -- black men do get convicted for assault on higher-status white women whom they do not know.)

In other words: Never in twenty-three years of reporting on and supporting victims of sexual assault around the world have I ever heard of a case of a man sought by two nations, and held in solitary confinement without bail in advance of being questioned -- for any alleged rape, even the most brutal or easily proven. In terms of a case involving the kinds of ambiguities and complexities of the alleged victims' complaints -- sex that began consensually that allegedly became non-consensual when dispute arose around a condom -- please find me, anywhere in the world, another man in prison today without bail on charges of anything comparable.

Of course 'No means No', even after consent has been given, whether you are male or female; and of course condoms should always be used if agreed upon. As my fifteen-year-old would say: Duh.

But for all the tens of thousands of women who have been kidnapped and raped, raped at gunpoint, gang-raped, raped with sharp objects, beaten and raped, raped as children, raped by acquaintances -- who are still awaiting the least whisper of justice -- the highly unusual reaction of Sweden and Britain to this situation is a slap in the face. It seems to send the message to women in the UK and Sweden that if you ever want anyone to take sex crime against you seriously, you had better be sure the man you accuse of wrongdoing has also happened to embarrass the most powerful government on earth.

Keep Assange in prison without bail until he is questioned, by all means, if we are suddenly in a real feminist worldwide epiphany about the seriousness of the issue of sex crime: but Interpol, Britain and Sweden must, if they are not to be guilty of hateful manipulation of a serious women's issue for cynical political purposes, imprison as well -- at once -- the hundreds of thousands of men in Britain, Sweden and around the world world who are accused in far less ambiguous terms of far graver forms of assault.

Anyone who works in supporting women who have been raped knows from this grossly disproportionate response that Britain and Sweden, surely under pressure from the US, are cynically using the serious issue of rape as a fig leaf to cover the shameful issue of mafioso-like global collusion in silencing dissent. That is not the State embracing feminism. That is the State pimping feminism.

 
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