Forgetting Bradley Manning (Video)
Thursday 16 December 2010
by: Laura Flanders | GRITtv | Video
Julian Assange of WikiLeaks is out on bail—apparently headed for the 10-bedroom home of British former army officer Vaughan Smith, described by the Guardian as a rightwing libertarian. Assange's lawyer joked that it would not be so much “house arrest as manor arrest” while he fights extradition to Sweden on sexual assault charges.
There's no manor for Bradley Manning. As Glenn Greenwald noted yesterday, the alleged leaker of much of the WikiLeaks information--including the “Collateral Murder” video showing soldiers shooting Iraqi civilians—has been sitting in solitary confinement for seven months under torture conditions. Denied even sheets and a pillow for his bed, Manning is under constant surveillance to prevent him even for exercising for 23 out of 24 hours of every day.And nw he's under a regimen of authority-administered anti-depressant drugs.
From the start, and as Assange has consistently pointed out, Manning and other whistleblowers are the ones who've put themselves on the line. Pentagon papers leaker Daniel Ellsberg calls Manning his hero. He has not been tried or convicted of any crime. And yet the 22-year-old Army private's received none of the celebrity support that Julian Assange has.
Blogger Jill Filipovic notes that to talk about Manning, we'd have to talk about the hard stuff, the questions of what WikiLeaks means and what the consequences of leaks are, and detention in America -- things that aren't solved with high-profile cash donations.
Today, Assange is out of jail. But let's not forget that without Bradley Manning and many others like him, Julian Assange and WikiLeaks and all our new-found public information would be as in the dark as Manning is right now.
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Comments
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Does anyone know if Bradley
Fri, 12/17/2010 - 14:28 — William Allen (not verified)Does anyone know if Bradley Manning is allowed to receive mail, and if so, how to address it?
its not a 'manning against
Fri, 12/17/2010 - 18:28 — Anonymous (not verified)its not a 'manning against assange' equation. assange has pointed out that manning is a hero or a true patriot, as has ellsberg. anyone thinking these ppl are criminals are moronic in the extreme not to mention completely drunk on the cool-aid. whatever happened to innocent-until-proven-guilty?!!! whatever happened to humane treatment of human beings? what ever happened to America?
Ellsberg has a cite to
Fri, 12/17/2010 - 20:31 — Anonymous (not verified)Ellsberg has a cite to donate to Pvt. Manning's defense fund if anyone is so inclined at: www.courage to resist .org. (Skip the spaces. I have to use them to post the link here or my post is denied.)
Poor kid; as he is in the
Sat, 12/18/2010 - 00:13 — edgar valderrama (not verified)Poor kid; as he is in the maw of the army, I'm afraid we might as well declare him a martyr and forget about him...
maw (1. The mouth, stomach, jaws, or gullet of a voracious animal, especially a carnivore.)
I don't know if he is
Sun, 12/19/2010 - 21:58 — Anonymous (not verified)I don't know if he is getting his mail. Send letter or card to:
PFC Bradley Manning
US Marine Corps Brigg
Quantico
Virginia
edgar, No, we can't, we
Tue, 01/11/2011 - 14:26 — Frances in California (not verified)edgar, No, we can't, we mustn't "forget" Bradley Manning. I went to a Peace Rally late last year in my "Free Bradley Manning" T-shirt. I was interviewed by a naive young thing who didn't even know who Daniel Ellsberg is. If I were Manning's mom, it would help a little to know other American moms, complete strangers won't back down on supporting a hero-son.
"Article 13 of the Uniform
Tue, 01/25/2011 - 09:34 — sterling (not verified)"Article 13 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice
Punishment
"No person, while being held for trial, may be subjected to punishment or penalty other than arrest or confinement upon the charges pending against him, nor shall the arrest or confinement imposed upon him be any more rigorous than the circumstances required to insure his presence, but he may be subjected to minor punishment during that period for infractions of discipline."
The question: Does the treatment he is experiencing constitute punishment? I think so.
Conclusion: Someone or some people are breaking military law.
Suspects: The brig commander? The base commander? The Secretary of the Navy? The Secretary of Defense? The Commander-in-Chief?"