I will not take your bait. You have internet skills to look it up, but since you are a fan, I am certain you will not.Can you give me a link to where he says he hates the USA?
Conversely, can you give me a link to where he says he loves the USA?

I will not take your bait. You have internet skills to look it up, but since you are a fan, I am certain you will not.Can you give me a link to where he says he hates the USA?
I'm watching NASCAR... DO IT YOURSELF! I am a proud American who would have Julian Assange shot for acts of espionage against the United States of America. Now that you know my opinion, you are free to rage against me now. That seems to be the majority opinion in this thread: down with America and hooray for Assange.
"Too long, didn't read."
What it actually means is "I read it and thought it was such rambling unfocused nonsense it wasn't worthy of a serious reply". Probably.
Hmmm, he's too lazy to even type it?![]()
"Too long, didn't read."
What it actually means is "I read it and thought it was such rambling unfocused nonsense it wasn't worthy of a serious reply". Probably.
Hmmm, he's too lazy to even type it?![]()
I'm watching NASCAR... DO IT YOURSELF! I am a proud American who would have Julian Assange shot for acts of espionage against the United States of America. Now that you know my opinion, you are free to rage against me now. That seems to be the majority opinion in this thread: down with America and hooray for Assange.
I'm watching NASCAR... DO IT YOURSELF! I am a proud American who would have Julian Assange shot for acts of espionage against the United States of America. Now that you know my opinion, you are free to rage against me now. That seems to be the majority opinion in this thread: down with America and hooray for Assange.
I hate the American war machine and fully support any transparency that might wake people up to the idea that there is more to it than "fighting to protect our freedom". It is quite possible to hate things about the workings of a government and not hate a country or the people in it including those with different ideas than yours.
His condom broke. He didn't rape anybody.One other thing. Whatever one may think about ASS-ange's actions regarding WikiLeaks, I would not be so quick to dismiss the rape charge against him as a fabrication. If he's guilty of that, then let him go to prison for that. I would wager that even those who love Assange and want his man-babies think that rape is not something to be proud of.
His condom broke. He didn't rape anybody.One other thing. Whatever one may think about ASS-ange's actions regarding WikiLeaks, I would not be so quick to dismiss the rape charge against him as a fabrication. If he's guilty of that, then let him go to prison for that. I would wager that even those who love Assange and want his man-babies think that rape is not something to be proud of.
The founder of WikiLeaks, Julian Assange, is threatening to sue The Guardian for libel over claims in a book just published by the newspaper. He is believed to be upset by the suggestion that he initially refused to remove the names of local Afghan informants mentioned in Afghan war logs, allegedly saying they would "deserve it" if they were killed as a result of the leaks.
The Guardian was Mr Assange's main newspaper collaborator, and the prime mover in the publication of WikiLeaks documents. The New York Times, Der Spiegel and others joined the caravan later. At first, The Guardian's Nick Davies thought him "perfectly easy to deal with" when they met in Brussels in June 2010, but the impression was soon dispelled. The Australian, we learn, proved to be unpredictable, difficult and unreliable. A month after their meeting, Mr Davies fell out with him when, without warning, he gave Channel 4 the entire Afghan database.
The newspaper's book, Inside Julian Assange's War on Secrecy, does not offer a flattering portrait of its partner. In November 2010, Mr Assange threatened to sue The Guardian when it proposed to go ahead with publication of logs before he was ready. Bill Keller, the executive editor of The New York Times, has written his own account, also often critical of Mr Assange. Mr Keller quotes the verdict of a senior reporter, whom he had despatched to London, that the WikiLeaks founder resembled "a bag lady walking in off the street" who "smelled as if he hadn't bathed in days".
I doubt that the roughest "red-top" tabloid would write about a once-valued source in the way The Guardian and The New York Times have done about Mr Assange. Setting aside the descriptions of his sometimes bizarre behaviour and toilette, as well as his allegedly Neanderthal treatment of women, the book makes the serious charge that he did not care if Afghan informants were put at risk from reprisals. We are left with the impression of an unpleasant man.
I wonder what dirt "someone" has on the women who made the allegations. I wouldn't be surprised if they weren't doing what they felt they had to in order to save themselves.
I wonder what dirt "someone" has on the women who made the allegations. I wouldn't be surprised if they weren't doing what they felt they had to in order to save themselves.
That doesn't sit well with the fact that the women making the allegations live in Sweden, which I would have thought is highly regarded for protecting human rights, and isn't a poodle of the US.
For the most part it seems that if you agree with Wikileaks then Assange is a unfairly maligned victim of an international conspiracy, a gentleman and a scholar. If you don't he's a smelly egomaniacal rapist.
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