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“We Steal Secrets” — A Documentary About Julian Assange

Gibney and AssangeAlex Gibney (left), the Oscar-winning director of Taxi to the Dark Side, Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room and many other political and social documentaries, has made a fascinating film about Julian Assange (right) and WikiLeaks that has already pissed off a lot of people on the left – and is about to piss off a bunch more. We Steal Secrets: The Story of WikiLeaks portrays the Australian hacker-hero Assange as a flawed and complicated figure.

As British journalist Nick Davies puts it in the film, the same extraordinary personality who created WikiLeaks is also the one who destroyed it. On one hand, Assange has led the fight for freedom of information in the asymmetrical conflict between the world’s citizens and fearsome Goliaths like the CIA and the Pentagon. On the other, he has allowed his alarming personal failings and his persecution complex to become much too large a part of the story, and has succumbed to what one source in the film calls “noble cause corruption.”

Many will argue that one thing is not like the other, that the greater campaign that WikiLeaks has led against the sinister forces of government and/or corporate secrecy is too important to be derailed by one man’s personal misdeeds. Of course that’s true, in the larger scheme of things. Gibney defends his approach eloquently in our interview, and I would urge people to see this film before they make assumptions about what argument it makes or whose side it’s on. One could probably summarize its Assange analysis this way: The guy has done some extraordinary things, but he’s no candidate for sainthood – and too many people on the left are ready to embrace heroic Joan of Arc figures, and to see the world in terms of a binary struggle between good and evil. It does no one any favors to pretend that the charges against Assange are not troubling, or that he has not insisted on politicizing them rather than dealing with them privately and decently, or that he and many of his supporters have not reacted to them in shameful and misogynistic fashion.

Source: Andrew O’Hehir in Salon, May 18

The Resistible Fall of Europe: The Views of George Soros

From a GeorgeSoros.com newsletter:

Dear Friends and Colleagues,

On Sunday, George was awarded the Tiziano Terzani Prize for his 2012 book Financial Turmoil published in Italy by Hoepli. I thought you might be interested in an example of his latest comments about the European financial crisis, which are adapted from a press conference he held in Udine, Italy.

QUESTION: The impression in Europe is that we are going through a very far-reaching and deep crisis, possibly the last crisis, because Europe is losing ground against the Far East and South America. And it could really mean that we are losing our sovereignty. Do you think that Europe will be able to regain the economic and political strength to be a leader in the world, or is this really the end? Do you think that Europe will be a world leader again? Or do we have to prepare for a reversal of growth?

SOROS: I share your concern about the gravity of the crisis. I have taken it very seriously. As a believer in an open society, I have made it my first priority for the last few years. This book [Financial Turmoil] is a testament to my concern. I do not think that the euro crisis is the end of Europe. We must not allow it. The EU as it was originally conceived was the embodiment of the values and principles of an open society, and it had the potential to exercise a beneficial influence in the world in promoting those principles. It is a great loss for the world that the EU has become totally preoccupied with its own internal problems.

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