You are the one with apparent double standards, but feel free to continue pointing your fingers at the rest of the world, just don't expect the state of confusion to end so long as you persist along your current path.
Huh????

I haven't actually stated a position on this except to say if it is OK for one set to be discussed and reporoduced (wikileaks), then it should be perfectly acceptable for the climategate emails to be discussed and reporoduced.
I have noticed that those of oneside (the left?) are aghast at the hacking and theft of the climategate emails yet applaud loudly and defend Assange and his actions
I am pointing out this obvious double standard and the blind hypocrisy therein.
It is you who now flip flop.....
In one case we are talking about private emails between private individuals, in the other we are talking about the official reports between government officials.
So they are very different in your opinion. And it seems you are comfortable that wikileaks is ok, climategate not
I'm not suggesting anything, I am stating that all of the state department memos, reports and updates contained in the wikileaks US diplomatic service intercepts are official state department correspondence and communications. All of the personal emails stolen from the servers at CRU were personal correspondance from individuals to other individuals. It is sheer intellectual disingenuity to attempt the conflation of the two as contextually synonymous.
Again, they are different. Climategate not ok, wikileaks ok.
Wikileaks is a dump of confidential and classified state Department documents and reports. The "Climategate" hacking was a violation of civil rights and law against every individual amongst the private emails exposed for public view.
Ummm

Apart from this being absolute nonsense, you again assert they are very different: one is ok, one is not
You argue my point for me, the CRU emails were personal correspondance. Wikileaks concerned official state department reports and documentation.
Different, one ok, one not.
Both are crimes, I don't think either should be published.
flip flop.
As for the board's decisions, reprinting private CRU communications would have left them in a potential liability situation if the authors had chosen to pursue that course of action. Reprinting the State Dept. documents, after they had already been publically published, does not place them in any legally liable position. Ethics go beyond the law, but it appears that law is the standard applied in both cases, and fairly consistently from what I can tell.
I am not going to discuss this here, off topic. Please take it to the appropriate complaint thread.
You are the one with apparent double standards, but feel free to continue pointing your fingers at the rest of the world, just don't expect the state of confusion to end so long as you persist along your current path.
Please show me my double standard.
I am saying is that people (like you) are barracking and not applying the same principles consistently.
And if Assange has broken the law, let him be dealt with under law.