
Supporters of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange are seen outside the Old Bailey, the Central Criminal Court September 7, 2020.
When I first met Julian Assange more than 10 years ago, I asked him why he had started WikiLeaks. He replied: "Transparency and accountability are moral issues that must be the essence of public life and journalism."
I had never heard a publisher or an editor invoke morality in this way. Assange believes that journalists are the agents of people, not power: that we, the people, have a right to know about the darkest secrets of those who claim to act in our name.
If the powerful lie to us, we have the right to know. If they say one thing in private and the opposite in public, we have the right to know. If they conspire against us, as Bush and Blair did over Iraq, then pretend to be democrats, we have the right to know.
It is this morality of purpose that so threatens the collusion of powers that want to plunge much of the world into war and want to bury Julian alive in Trump's fascist America.














Comment: "He forced us in the West to look in the mirror." But alas, the West refused to 'see'.