I'm actually going to start here, simply because I don't have to conform to your moral view of the world, and for you to even suggest it shows how out of touch with reality you are.
Good Grief, who said you had to conform to my moral view? I was pointing out that since we are operating on different underlying premises (or principles in this case) then we were never going to agree in our conclusions drawn from the same the facts.
In other words I agree to disagree with you. And since no individual has the true one right view of the Universe, I'm not too bothered that my view of reality is "out of touch" with yours.
The issue is not the leaking of the information; it's in how the information was obtained.
So it's OK to break the law when you leak information as long as you don't break the law when you obtain the information?
No matter how you try to spin this, if your premise is one is
never justified breaking the law, you cannot cherry pick which laws you apply that too. You can, of course, tell us some other underlying principle why it is preventing free speech to temporarily interfere with someone's web page. Or, you could come up with something more substantial than an arbitrary distinction between two laws. It's OK to leak secret or confidential documents that reveal a crime, or reveal government deceiving the public, but it's not OK to leak documents for personal gain or to truly aid the enemy.
But to just say, it's OK to leak documents you legally obtained, is saying confidentiality and secrecy laws are all bad laws and can be ignored.
I have answered; you just refuse to accept the answer. Not my fault.
So is your answer then, it's OK to leak secret or confidential documents as long as you obtained them legally?
I accept your answer, I'm just calling attention to the flaw in your logic that your distinction is whether something is legal or not.
You are the one bring morality into this; I never said anything about it. My position is simple, if you legally have access to information that the law is being broken and you decide to leak that information be it publically or to the authorities, then I have few problems with it. If you break the law to obtain information you don't legally have access to based on a belief that they are breaking the law, then you are taking the law into your own hands and are just a vigilante. Now that I do have a problem with.
(emphasis mine)
OK, this is a tad different. You've added the distinction of if/when the information you came upon legally involves evidence someone is breaking the law. Manning leaked all kinds of State Department cables that didn't involve exposing breaking any law. The video of the accidental shooting of Iraqi civillians wasn't a video of soldiers breaking the law, it was a video of something the military was embarrassed to tell the public.
Those leaks all involved exposing politicians putting on one face to the public and a different face in private. I'm not aware any of the hidden-from-the-public information was illegal to have hidden.
So your distinction based strictly on 'the law' is getting muddied. And that is all I'm trying to point out to you. You've made a hasty dogmatic statement that something is wrong because of a black and white 'moral' rule. Your asserting of what is right and what is wrong is a moral assertion. It is not an assertion of an evidence based conclusion like evolution theory is valid.
You also managed to totally miss the point of the analogy too. One is a legal killing, one is illegal, but there is a fine line between them. In the same way, there is a fine line between legally obtaining information, and illegally obtaining it. The release of that information is irrelevant.
I assure you, I didn't miss the point. You seem unaware there are LAWS regarding releasing legally obtained information.
But we can move past this, you added the caveat, leaking information a law was being or had been broken. I've added, no law was revealed as being broken in the Manning releases or in the Pentagon Papers. The documents revealed legal but unethical government actions.
So extrapolating from this for you, because you are not articulating your point very well but I think I have an idea now just which distinctions you are making, (correct me if I am wrong) you are looking at this as breaking the law to call attention to something, and, you are defining that as vigilantism.
So, OK, let's go that direction. Lots of protestors break laws when demonstrating. Martin Luther King did. Many Vietnam war protesters did. And more recently it was illegal when
Lt Dan Choi handcuffs self to White House fence to protest military's gay ban.
Wow, talk about stretching a long bow. No one has a right to the use of media. Can you imagine a world where anyone could get their insanity advertised on TV? Would you really want the Government paying for 9/11 Truthers, Reptilian believers, Autism caused by inoculations, and homeopathic medicines to all be getting equal air time as Coca Cola and Geico?
It would take an entire new discussion to get at what I mean and figure out what you mean here. But maybe I can condense it down with a different analogy.
Dan Choi, in my example above, broke the law by handcuffing himself to the White House fence in order to call attention to his issue, one guy against the US government. Ellsberg and Martin Luther King participated in numerous protests, including illegal actions to call attention to their issues. If they had had legal means that were as effective, they would not have needed to break the law to achieve their goals.
Some people have certainly argued (especially during the Vietnam protests) that these illegal means of demonstrating were wrong. People could vote at the ballot box. We are a country of laws, yadda yadda. There is rarely, if ever, a consensus of opinion that breaking the law is OK in any one case. It's always in the eye of the beholder if a cause is just and if an illegal action is just.
You've decided that breaking the law to disclose another crime is just. You've decided vigilantism crosses the line and is not just. You have not weighed in on if it is just to break the law to disclose government secrecy you find morally wrong. That is what Manning and Ellsberg did. The documents they released revealed an unethical but not an illegally acting government.
And you've apparently not thought about how
what Anonymous has done was civil disobedience not vigilantism. Vigilantism refers to taking the law into your own hands when you believe the government has failed to do so. Civil disobedience refers to breaking a law in order to draw attention to or influence an issue.
Both vigilantism and civil disobedience can run from minor acts to extreme acts. PETA is known to use serious vandalism in acts in their civil disobedience. Not very many people agree that is right to do. Destruction of property as an act of civil disobedience is much less acceptable to most people.
But how about blocking the entrance to a building or property? Chaining yourself to a tree to prevent its being cut down? Occupying the state capitol building?
It's useful to
think things through rather than trying to apply dogmatic moral rules for what is right and what is wrong. The Universe is not in black and white, but it is in multiple shades of grey. Especially if you are going to be quoting, "people rule, laws help".