- cross-posted to:
- globalnews
- cross-posted to:
- globalnews
A former Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) software engineer who was convicted for carrying out the largest theft of classified information in the agency’s history and of charges related to child abuse imagery was sentenced to 40 years in prison on Thursday.
The 40-year sentence by US district judge Jesse Furman was for “crimes of espionage, computer hacking, contempt of court, making false statements to the FBI, and child pornography”, federal prosecutors said in a statement. The judge did not impose a life sentence as sought by prosecutors.
Joshua Schulte was convicted in July 2022 on four counts each of espionage and computer hacking and one count of lying to FBI agents, after giving classified materials to the whistleblowing agency WikiLeaks in the so-called Vault 7 leak. Last August, a judge mostly upheld the conviction.
Russia has, by the overwhelming evidence, interfered the most in recent history. Casting it off as, “bUt EVEryOnE DoES iT” doesn’t stop us from recognizing the chief offender.
That seems awfully convenient. Though when state secrets are leaked to Russia and said individuals flee to Russia, those connections… Well, they’re tangible and in plain-sight.
Repeating your first point regarding whataboutism – kinda of strange – is a race-to-the-bottom mindset. Admission that Russia does interfere only lends credence to my points. Neither does “many countries interfere!” make it right.
Such a peculiar cognitive dissonance between:
and
I want a source for this. What I know is that Russia spent $300 million since 2014 to influence foreign elections. That’s a lot of money! But, spread that out over multiple countries and multiple election cycles and it seems very clear that Russia has not interfered the most. The 2024 presidential race has, so far, already surpassed $300 million. What it looks like is Russia, like every oil&gas company, influences US elections. It’s bad, it’s not special.
US’s elections are pay-to-play thanks to clownish Supreme Court decisions like Buckley v. Valeo (which found that money is speech and limiting speech is a violation of the 1st amendment), the Bennett decision (which found that public campaign financing is unconstitutional because it dilutes the value of private spending and thus private “speech”) and, of course, the Citizens United decision which I’m sure you’re already familiar with. We have a problem and blaming it all on Russia is unserious.
Also, in the course of looking things up for this argument, did you know that AIPAC is set to spend more than $100 million this election cycle to defeat US candidates opposed to the genocide in Gaza. In one election! In one country!
You’re talking about Snowden? State secrets were leaked to the world and then he fled to Russia to avoid going to US prison. That doesn’t really imply he leaked secrets on behalf of Russia, merely that Russia was willing to shelter him for political gain.
When did I ever say anything about it being right? My only point is that Russia isn’t unique and blaming everything on Russia is 🤡
It’s amazing what you can do when your Ruble is worth a penny to the US Dollar; to have spent that much money relative to Russia’s economy is quite substantial, really. Besides, it wouldn’t take that many Russian trolls paid cheaply to yield an impact, as our own department of justice said. But regardless, the evidence speaks for itself – for I inquire: Is there anyone you know of who has spent more or is of a greater concern to Federal agencies? Good luck with that.
Sure, Buckley v. Valeo, SpeechNow vs. FEC, Citizens United – I don’t disagree these are monumental issues just the same. None legalized foreign interference, however. So I’m not sure what the point is you’re trying to make. Why should we downplay Russia’s outsized influence fanning the flames of right-wing extremism in America (Funny, The Base right-wing militia leader fled to Russia, too) and clearly taking a page out of what Nazis did exactly during in 1930s America? Besides, we can walk and chew bubble-gum at the same time.
I agree, that is terrible.
Either way, Russia benefits. I don’t have much sympathy and don’t view him as some noble martyr when you flee to country with objectively-worse human rights and corruption records but we may just have to agree to disagree on this. Still I can simultaneously recognize the merit of what he leaked as being productive for domestic dialogue and the debate of privacy vs. security.
Where did I say I blamed “everything” on Russia?
And sure, Russia may not be unique, but it’s by far the biggest fish in that category until proven otherwise. (China likely second).
The Biden Victory Fund was over $650 million. That’s just one political action fund for 2020, just for a single candidate.
The Trump Make America Great Again Committee? Over $880 million, for one candidate, in one election.
The Republican National Committee: $320 million in 2020
ActBlue: $350 million in 2020
Please, Russia is a gas station with guns. They’re not primarily responsible for America being a shithole.
Also, please remember, that’s not Russia spending $300 million in America alone. That’s spread out all over the world. It’s also not in any one year, it’s spread out over several election cycles! In all likelihood their focus on America is over half of that total fund, but not much more than that. They have a lot of fingers in a lot of pies and it’s absurd to claim they’re the worst offender in American elections.
That’s just wrong. America has a higher prisoner-per-capita ratio and kills far more people. Russia isn’t good, but America is literally the greater evil. Gaza vs Ukraine puts this into stark relief. One is an illegal war. That’s bad! One is a genocidal extermination campaign. That’s clearly worse! Yet, America has no problem with funding the genocide as long as it takes.
Yep, and these things are legal. Not foreign interference attempting to alter the outcome to their own gain. Not sure if you’re aware of this or not, but Russia is not a foreign citizen and thus cannot play the game of SuperPACs, let alone directly fund campaigns as domestic individuals can.
Whether that’s right or wrong is another topic but clearly beside the point. As I said, the two issues are not mutally-exclusive. But that you would basically say it’s A-Okay that Russia is trying to undermine our elections because of internal domestic spending is… Peculiar at best. What, should we wait for when Russia spends billions upon billions? Perhaps we should nip this in the bud now.
The answer is: “No, there is not a greater concern to Federal agencies than Russia in foreign election interference.”
Again, a straw-man fallacy; please cite where I said this. Yes of course Russia isn’t responsible for everything; and sure, domestic Republicans and corporations are corrupt enough in their own right. But Russia has certainly amplified this internal division and should absolutely be a talking-point going into the elections as to why a foreign corrupt dictator wants Republicans to win so badly.
Citation needed. Unless you have some seriously selective date ranges for considering murder counts and think the Russian Gulags are actually going to publicly document their torture – I’m just going to laugh this one out of the park. As with most things, it’s far more complicated than these absolutist terms one can conveniently armchair from their Lemmy account. It’s no wonder one isn’t in a political position or high level advisor or an expert in… Well, really much of anything I surmise. But feel free to go live in the bastion of freedom and human rights that is Russia, apparently, LOL.
Thanks for the laugh; looks like we found who was the clown all along!
Corruption being legal isn’t good lol
Over all, there are now more people under “correctional supervision” in America—more than six million—than were in the Gulag Archipelago under Stalin at its height.
As for incarceration rates, the numbers vary depending on how you count it, but here America is as the worst on Earth
As for murder, aside from the 1000 people murdered by cops every year, I was talking internationally. The War on Terror? Operation Condor? The Dirty Wars? The Jakarta Method? America is responsible for millions of deaths around the world from its direct meddling. And now we can add the genocide in Gaza to the list.
Did Russia do that too?
Let me just be clear:
Incarceration rates don’t prove worse corruption; while the drug laws need changed, that in itself is not proof of a corruption on the scale of Stalin lol.
War on terror, Condor, Dirty Wars, etc. - None come remotely close to Russia, both foreign and domestic. Sorry. Soviet-Afghan War, Chechnya, Georgia, Syria, Ukraine, not to mention Red Army atrocities, or Stalin executions and domestic oppression with millions dead. Or the blatant assassination and silencing of dissidents within Russia from Nemtsov to Nevalny and tightening of laws where one cannot even speak publicly about the war without 15 years imprisonment lol. People dragged away for protesting with a blank sign LOL. I protested the Iraq War very early on and I was never at risk for 15 years imprisonment simply for being opposed to it LOL. Yet here you are purporting false-equivalence fallacies.
You lose on the numbers and severity. This is just a fact.
Sure, but the fact that there are more people in US prisons than in Stalin’s gulags should tell you something about America.
Now let me clarify something. The Russian Federation didn’t exist before the USSR fell, so we can only really talk about the period from 1991. That’s the “selective time range” I’m using. When I say America is the worst on Earth, I’m saying it’s currently the worst on Earth.
I’m not talking about countries that don’t exist anymore. You’re the one that brought gulags up, I just wanted to mention a disturbing fact about America’s carceral system. This doesn’t even get into the history of chattel slavery and the genocide of the Native Americans, this is just about the fact that modern America has the worst prisoner-per-capita ratio on Earth and also the largest prisoner population on Earth. Worse than Russia, worse than China, the worst.
US prisons are torture centers where people get raped and murdered all the time, are used for extremely cheap slave-like labor, and have mass graves like the 215 people have been buried behind a Mississippi jail since 2016. US prisons are comparable to gulags and in some cases worse.
Now globally I imagine there might be worse prisons today, so I won’t say that US has the worst prisons on Earth. They’re pretty fucking bad, though, and when combined with having the highest prisoner-per-capita ratio and highest number of prisoners its a monument to human suffering that is unparalleled in the modern world.
That’s just wrong. The Great Purges may have seen 750,000 executions. That was certainly excessive, not something I’m defending, and that’s literally not genocide. He didn’t target an ethnic, racial, religious, or national group. He killed perceived enemies of his state and he did so along class and political lines.
The War on Terror is estimated to have caused 4.5 million excess deaths.
Now, maybe it was unfair of me to bring up Operation Condor & the Dirty Wars (60,000–80,000 deaths in Central and South America) and Jakarta (between 100,000 and 1,000,000 deaths in Indonesia) because those were before the Russian Federation even existed. I just finished reading The Jakarta Method and it was on my mind, I shouldn’t have let that distract me from my point. Apologies.
And that’s not good!
Its not like protesters haven’t been assaulted and arrested by cops in the US since before our parents were born, and I can point out that the US is trying to extradite Julian Assange for doing journalism and prosecuting the Cop City protesters on RICO charges, but you’re right that Russia is still definitely worse on this front. I think the mass incarceration and global imperialism are worse problems.
Pretty sure you lose on the numbers. Severity is arguable, but I think quantity is a quality all on its own.
I’ll first open by noting that you had no problem referring back to Stalin when you thought it benefitted your argument, or referring to conflicts by the US outside the original date range. When it turns out it really didn’t and you realize that accepting those dates would be utterly impossible to defend in the broader scope of corruption and murder, you quickly changed your tune – and as I predicted – opted for a narrow date range under some excuse (which I’ll get into further below).
Second, true the Russian Federation isn’t the same as the USSR, but that would be like deciding to remove the Civil War from the domain of US History because the Confederacy no longer exists. Simply absurd. Moreover considering that Putin has openly waxed poetry about the USSR and Russian Empire and transitioning back to what he perceives as the golden age, well, I think it’s perfectly valid to bring up the Stalin era. The gulags for all intents still exist. The same building the KGB operated with torture chambers is still run by the FSB. The seat of government still resides at the Kremlin, does it not? Hell, is Putin who was a strong proponent of the USSR and active KGB agent at the time now not the exact same person in power over said region and who advocates for the original territory the USSR once held dominion over?
I don’t feel it can tell much of anything, honestly. Again, because you’re not taking proportionality into account, let alone whether those crimes warrant imprisonment, versus the actual transparency of US criminal logs versus the likes of Russia. Nobody will sincerely say that they prefer to go under the Stalinist judicial system and face Gulags versus going to trial in modern-day US lol. This is why using incarceration rates alone is a terrible test for corruption and oppression.
Generally speaking the incarceration rates are pretty comparable between modern Russia and US, ~328 vs. 350 / 100k. This of course taking Russian figures with a massive grain of salt. When aggregating all facets of corruption and oppression, Russia takes the cake., and we’ll get into that more below.
Goalpost moving aside, even if I entertained this, at this very second, Russia is still the chief offender given their ongoing direct assault on Ukraine that has seen 10,000 civilians and frankly many thousands of defending innocent Ukrainian military personnel, their direct involvement in Syria that has seen 300,000 civilians killed, the First Chechen War, the Second Chechen war where many more thousands of civilians were killed. Meanwhile who are Russia’s allies? China? North Korea? Iran? You consider these more free and less corrupt than the US too, do you? If by extension the US responsible for enabling Israel, then so too is Russia for Enabling Kim and the suffering and famine he causes within North Korea, or the Tibetans and Uyghurs oppressed in China.
Meanwhile Russia is in the bottom-20th percentile of the world in journalism transparency and journalism safety.
Meanwhile right now Russia’s highest court designated the LGBT movement as an extremist movement as they crack down terribly on the rights of these people. Meanwhile domestic violence has been decriminalized and no surprise, it runs rampant.
Yep no doubt we have major problems in the US - especially in state prisons and local jails in the south. I freely agree with that. So imagine how about Russia’s conditions must be for me to exclaim their conditions are worse. I mean, just look at what they did in Bucha with the world watching.
Hell, there isn’t even enough transparency and internal investigation within Russia TO expose something like this from within without the reporters being murdered. At least credit given that this was an American investigation that uncovered this and sought to correct it.
But to exclaim the average example of US prisons even remotely compares to modern Russian prisons / gulags? No, no chance. Nobody would genuinely choose a Russian prison over a US prison. Slave-like labor, you say? I guess you’re not familiar with Russian penal colonies. “Penal colonies originated from the Soviet Union’s work camps known as gulags but even date back to at least the 18th century.”
It’s peculiar that one would cite the 750,000 direct executions but not the millions caused by neglect and intentional starvation. Finally, Ukrainians would like a word on your claim of no genocide.
Forget the fact that there has been a lot of attention paid to the internal ethnic genocide Putin is committing by disproportionately sending ethnic minorities to the meat-grinder of the Ukrainian front.
Yes, every single major conflict is going to have these broader “excess death” implications proportional to the scale of the conflict. This is not unique to Iraq and Afghanistan, obviously. This goes for Syria, Chechen wars, Ukraine, and so on. Considering the global drop in grain supply thanks to Russia’s targeting of Ukrainian grain shipments, I suspect that too will be linked to broader famine crises in reports to come.
https://www.hrw.org/world-report/2023/country-chapters/russian-federation
It’s worse than “not good,” it’s complete and utter political oppression. A degree of authoritarianism that is non-existent in America at the present moment.
You’re violating your own date range again in this falsely equivalent whataboutism. Being “assaulted and arrested,” versus “being assaulted, arrested, and locked up for 15 years as systemic legal policy for a tweet protesting the war, or using a blank protest sign” is a bit different.
There is nothing wrong with legal extradition between two countries; the key question is whether the trial would be a kangaroo court – which in Russia, it absolutely would be.
Comparing RICO charges to 15 years imprisonment for blank signs or any sort of tweet or peaceful opposition to the war (or even calling it that) is the most absurd false equivalence fallacy I’ve seen in recent memory. I was able to protest the Iraq war; Russians are not. Massive difference.
Considering the primary global imperialist right now is Russia, I’d beg to differ on that notion. Considering Russia has objectively the worst humanitarian record, journalistic integrity record, most oppressive domestic laws on dissent, and is currently engaged in a globally-unpopular imperial war in Ukraine – I really don’t see how you continue to defend them while exclaiming US the bigger offender right now when no compelling data supports your argument.
The difference in incarceration rates doesn’t make up for these factors. Especially when considering the primary cause of these incarceration rates are the drug war which is finally turning a corner with legalization becoming mainstream.
So by mere quantity and severity, Russia continues to be far more corrupt and oppressive.