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daniel ellsberg, what about mr.baker's remarks that he could have released one or two documents, and that would be sufficient to spurred the debate . >> you talk about -- he talked program,ealing on one but the way you put it, when i put out four thousand pages to the newspapers, and 3000 other pages to the senate foreign relations committee -- there was no intelligence committee at that time -- which i did not get time, newspapers at that when i saw the effects of that it gave me a moral that i have been saying for 40 years, and i have been asking people, do now do -- do not do what i did. do not wait until bombs are falling, until thousands more have died, before you tell your truth. i would also say by now do not tell it only to congress it i gave it to congress one year and a half before it came out. senator fulbright failed to bring the hearings on the ground or he would be deprived of secret information that you waited for me to do it. if i did not do it, -- he waited for me to do it. if i did not do it, it wo
daniel ellsberg, what about mr.baker's remarks that he could have released one or two documents, and that would be sufficient to spurred the debate . >> you talk about -- he talked program,ealing on one but the way you put it, when i put out four thousand pages to the newspapers, and 3000 other pages to the senate foreign relations committee -- there was no intelligence committee at that time -- which i did not get time, newspapers at that when i saw the effects of that it gave me a moral...
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daniel ellsberg, what about
daniel ellsberg, what about
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Feb 9, 2014
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look at what was said about daniel ellsberg, who everybody now regards as a hero, but 40 years ago you had the mike rogers and james clappers of that era calling him a russian spy and a traitor and engaging in treason and endangering the united states. it's really just a very similar pattern. i knew a long time ago when i went into journalism it wasn't the profession to go into if you want to be universally loved. if you do it the right way you're going to make a lot of powerful people and their loyalists unhappy and i'm perfectly okay with that. >> i hope to see you here in new
look at what was said about daniel ellsberg, who everybody now regards as a hero, but 40 years ago you had the mike rogers and james clappers of that era calling him a russian spy and a traitor and engaging in treason and endangering the united states. it's really just a very similar pattern. i knew a long time ago when i went into journalism it wasn't the profession to go into if you want to be universally loved. if you do it the right way you're going to make a lot of powerful people and...
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Feb 9, 2014
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look at what was said about daniel ellsberg, who everybody now regards as a hero, but 40 years ago you had the mike rogers and james clappers of that era calling him a russian spy and a traitor and engaging in treason and endangering the united states. it's really just a very similar pattern. i knew a long time ago when i went into journalism it wasn't the profession to go into if you want to be universally loved. if you do it the right way you're going to make a lot of powerful people and their loyalists unhappy and i'm perfectly okay with that. >> i hope to see you here in new york in a couple months. >> thanks very much, brian. appreciate it. >> thanks for being here. we have to take a quick break. we will look at the awful story of woody allen and his step daughter and accusations that "the new york times" treated allen unfairly even as another newspaper decided not to go with that story at all. two reporters will be here in a moment. don't go away. the old dining table at 25th and hoffman. ...and the little room above the strip mall off roble avenue. ♪ this magic moment it is the
look at what was said about daniel ellsberg, who everybody now regards as a hero, but 40 years ago you had the mike rogers and james clappers of that era calling him a russian spy and a traitor and engaging in treason and endangering the united states. it's really just a very similar pattern. i knew a long time ago when i went into journalism it wasn't the profession to go into if you want to be universally loved. if you do it the right way you're going to make a lot of powerful people and...
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Feb 23, 2014
02/14
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and part of that was actually, you know, ellsberg had to make selection choices partly on the basis of what he could actually get out. now we have these unknowably large stories that technically are incredibly difficult. but also isn't the difficulty of them an enormous journalistic challenge? you talked a little bit about the difficulty of that. there must have been times when both of you thought, are we actually capable of reporting this story? >> i think from the beginning we realized we couldn't do it alone in different ways. there was a very obvious point, we were running this as a new baby foreign addition of "the guardian." the first thing we had to do was crawl back to the parent company and put in some help. but the second thing you realize is you're going to need outside experts. we talk a lot about being open at "the guardian." it's one of our philosophies of how we work. this story that is the most secret thing you could ever do but at the same time you have to accept you can't do alone. you're going to need security experts, you're going to need to consult with experts. ot
and part of that was actually, you know, ellsberg had to make selection choices partly on the basis of what he could actually get out. now we have these unknowably large stories that technically are incredibly difficult. but also isn't the difficulty of them an enormous journalistic challenge? you talked a little bit about the difficulty of that. there must have been times when both of you thought, are we actually capable of reporting this story? >> i think from the beginning we realized...
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supporting and defending public interest journalism co-founded by pentagon papers leaker daniel ellsberg who describes snowden as a personal hero announce that snowden is joining its board of directors the whistleblower accused of espionage and theft of government property in the us was nominated for the nobel peace prize will have to wait to find out if he wins this year's laureate will be announced in october the norwegian lawmakers who put him forward for the nomination said what snowden did quote lead to the reintroduction of trust and transparency as a leading principle and global security policies in october in moscow edward snowden also received the sound adams associates integrity award named after a cia whistleblower in the vietnam war the award is. annually given by a group of retired cia officers also last year snowden was nominated for the european union socket of human rights prize and was a potential winner of the time magazine person of the year title which he lost to pope francis last but not least edward snowden's popularity has become so far reaching that he has his own
supporting and defending public interest journalism co-founded by pentagon papers leaker daniel ellsberg who describes snowden as a personal hero announce that snowden is joining its board of directors the whistleblower accused of espionage and theft of government property in the us was nominated for the nobel peace prize will have to wait to find out if he wins this year's laureate will be announced in october the norwegian lawmakers who put him forward for the nomination said what snowden did...
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Feb 21, 2014
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and part of that was actually, you know, ellsberg had to make selection choices partly on the basis of what he could actually get out. now we have these unknowably large stories that technically are incredibly difficult. but also isn't the difficulty of them an enormous journalistic challenge? you talked a little bit about the difficulty of that. there must have been times when both of you thought, are we actually capable of reporting this story? >> i think from the beginning we realized we couldn't do it alone in different ways. there was a very obvious point, we were running this as a new baby foreign addition of "the guardian." the first thing we had to do was crawl back to the parent company and put in some help. but the second thing you realize is you're going to need outside experts. we talk a lot about being open at "the guardian." it's up with of our philosophies of how we work. thanks story that is the most secret thing you could ever do but at the same time you have to accept you can't do alone. you're going to need security experts, you're going to need to consult with exper
and part of that was actually, you know, ellsberg had to make selection choices partly on the basis of what he could actually get out. now we have these unknowably large stories that technically are incredibly difficult. but also isn't the difficulty of them an enormous journalistic challenge? you talked a little bit about the difficulty of that. there must have been times when both of you thought, are we actually capable of reporting this story? >> i think from the beginning we realized...
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Feb 24, 2014
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basically, until ellsberg, who was the principal whistleblower of the same ilk as some of the more recent cases, basically, it took him to expose that the johnson administration had given a complete false history of the vietnam war. >> i think your question is about the duty on the press to respond to a whistleblower. somebody who is brave enough to leak information and bring it to a news organization, then our absolute duty is to publish it and to do the best job we can. i think that was what edward snowden had mine. that was his absolute primary consideration. he wanted it out with responsibly and carefully. he did not want it all over the internet, but he wanted it published. we take that very seriously. >> i am going to step a little outside of the review group here and try to complicate things a bit. john stuart mill min, a great essay, said been somewhat like a one eyed man who was blind in one eye and could see further, but he did not have the perspective. some elements of the intelligence committee have been like that. they can see great on one imension, but they do not have the p
basically, until ellsberg, who was the principal whistleblower of the same ilk as some of the more recent cases, basically, it took him to expose that the johnson administration had given a complete false history of the vietnam war. >> i think your question is about the duty on the press to respond to a whistleblower. somebody who is brave enough to leak information and bring it to a news organization, then our absolute duty is to publish it and to do the best job we can. i think that was...
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Feb 17, 2014
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>> burglary -- [laughter] >> i'll tell you what we know about president nixon and the ellsberg burglary, which have a not very far from here. what we know is that the president was told by john ehrlichman who was his chief domestic adviser, but also who was the head of something called the plumbers which is a group that was supposed to staunch leaks, plumbers, right? that there had been an operation in los angeles, and that was part of, it was part of what the plumbers were doing and it had aborted. and the president was told -- and the timing of this call correlates exactly with the operation here. now, the president himself was, was not sure whether he had ever authorized it because he asked the action officer whether he had authorized it. later, he said that whether or not he had authorized it he still thought it was right for national security reasons. because he thought that there was a conspiracy leaking information. the patriot act is not obvious government to break into a place without a warrant. that everywhere the patriot act and somewhat richard nixon did overlaps is the ques
>> burglary -- [laughter] >> i'll tell you what we know about president nixon and the ellsberg burglary, which have a not very far from here. what we know is that the president was told by john ehrlichman who was his chief domestic adviser, but also who was the head of something called the plumbers which is a group that was supposed to staunch leaks, plumbers, right? that there had been an operation in los angeles, and that was part of, it was part of what the plumbers were doing...
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Feb 21, 2014
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ellsberg, whoil was the principal whistleblower of the same ilk as some of the more recent cases, basically, it took him to expose that the johnson administration had given a complete false history of the vietnam war. >> i think your question is tout the duty on the press respond to a whistleblower. somebody who is brave enough to leak information and bring it to , then ouranization absolute duty is to publish it and to do the best job we can. i think that was what edward snowden had mine. that was his absolute primary consideration. he wanted it out with responsibly and carefully. he did not want it all over the internet, but he wanted it published. we take that very seriously. i am going to step a little outside of the review group here and try to complicate things a bit. john stuart mill min, a great , said been somewhat like a one eyed man who was blind in one eye and could see further, but he did not have the perspective. some elements of the intelligence committee have been like that. they can see great on one dimension, but they do not have the perspective. i think there is a risk in
ellsberg, whoil was the principal whistleblower of the same ilk as some of the more recent cases, basically, it took him to expose that the johnson administration had given a complete false history of the vietnam war. >> i think your question is tout the duty on the press respond to a whistleblower. somebody who is brave enough to leak information and bring it to , then ouranization absolute duty is to publish it and to do the best job we can. i think that was what edward snowden had...
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Feb 21, 2014
02/14
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basically, until ellsberg, who was the principal whistleblower of the same ilk as some of the more recent cases, basically, it took him to expose that the johnson administration had given a complete false history of the vietnam war. >> i think your question is about the duty on the press to respond to a whistleblower. somebody who is brave enough to leak information and bring it to a news organization, then our absolute duty is to publish it and to do the best job we can. i think that was what edward snowden had mine. that was his absolute primary consideration. he wanted it out with responsibly and carefully. he did not want it all over the internet, but he wanted it published. we take that very seriously. >> i am going to step a little outside of the review group here and try to complicate things a bit. john stuart millman, a great essay, said been somewhat like a one eyed man who was blind in one eye and could see further, but he did not have the perspective. some elements of the intelligence committee have been like that. they can see great on one dimension, but they do not have the p
basically, until ellsberg, who was the principal whistleblower of the same ilk as some of the more recent cases, basically, it took him to expose that the johnson administration had given a complete false history of the vietnam war. >> i think your question is about the duty on the press to respond to a whistleblower. somebody who is brave enough to leak information and bring it to a news organization, then our absolute duty is to publish it and to do the best job we can. i think that was...