this post was submitted on 01 Feb 2024
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A former Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) software engineer who was convicted for carrying out the largest theft of classified information in the agency’s history and of charges related to child abuse imagery was sentenced to 40 years in prison on Thursday.

The 40-year sentence by US district judge Jesse Furman was for “crimes of espionage, computer hacking, contempt of court, making false statements to the FBI, and child pornography”, federal prosecutors said in a statement. The judge did not impose a life sentence as sought by prosecutors.

Joshua Schulte was convicted in July 2022 on four counts each of espionage and computer hacking and one count of lying to FBI agents, after giving classified materials to the whistleblowing agency WikiLeaks in the so-called Vault 7 leak. Last August, a judge mostly upheld the conviction.

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[–] [email protected] -5 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) (1 children)

Russia has, by the overwhelming evidence, interfered the most in recent history.

I want a source for this. What I know is that Russia spent $300 million since 2014 to influence foreign elections. That's a lot of money! But, spread that out over multiple countries and multiple election cycles and it seems very clear that Russia has not interfered the most. The 2024 presidential race has, so far, already surpassed $300 million. What it looks like is Russia, like every oil&gas company, influences US elections. It's bad, it's not special.

US's elections are pay-to-play thanks to clownish Supreme Court decisions like Buckley v. Valeo (which found that money is speech and limiting speech is a violation of the 1st amendment), the Bennett decision (which found that public campaign financing is unconstitutional because it dilutes the value of private spending and thus private "speech") and, of course, the Citizens United decision which I'm sure you're already familiar with. We have a problem and blaming it all on Russia is unserious.

Also, in the course of looking things up for this argument, did you know that AIPAC is set to spend more than $100 million this election cycle to defeat US candidates opposed to the genocide in Gaza. In one election! In one country!

That seems awfully convenient. Though when state secrets are leaked to Russia and said individuals flee to Russia, those connections… Well, they’re tangible and in plain-sight.

You're talking about Snowden? State secrets were leaked to the world and then he fled to Russia to avoid going to US prison. That doesn't really imply he leaked secrets on behalf of Russia, merely that Russia was willing to shelter him for political gain.

Repeating your first point regarding whataboutism – kinda of strange – is a race-to-the-bottom mindset. Admission that Russia does interfere only lends credence to my points. Neither does “many countries interfere!” make it right.

When did I ever say anything about it being right? My only point is that Russia isn't unique and blaming everything on Russia is 🤡

[–] [email protected] 1 points 9 months ago (1 children)

It's amazing what you can do when your Ruble is worth a penny to the US Dollar; to have spent that much money relative to Russia's economy is quite substantial, really. Besides, it wouldn't take that many Russian trolls paid cheaply to yield an impact, as our own department of justice said. But regardless, the evidence speaks for itself -- for I inquire: Is there anyone you know of who has spent more or is of a greater concern to Federal agencies? Good luck with that.

Sure, Buckley v. Valeo, SpeechNow vs. FEC, Citizens United -- I don't disagree these are monumental issues just the same. None legalized foreign interference, however. So I'm not sure what the point is you're trying to make. Why should we downplay Russia's outsized influence fanning the flames of right-wing extremism in America (Funny, The Base right-wing militia leader fled to Russia, too) and clearly taking a page out of what Nazis did exactly during in 1930s America? Besides, we can walk and chew bubble-gum at the same time.

Also, in the course of looking things up for this argument, did you know that AIPAC is set to spend more than $100 million this election cycle to defeat US candidates opposed to the genocide in Gaza. In one election! In one country!

I agree, that is terrible.

You’re talking about Snowden? State secrets were leaked to the world and then he fled to Russia to avoid going to US prison. That doesn’t really imply he leaked secrets on behalf of Russia, merely that Russia was willing to shelter him for political gain.

Either way, Russia benefits. I don't have much sympathy and don't view him as some noble martyr when you flee to country with objectively-worse human rights and corruption records but we may just have to agree to disagree on this. Still I can simultaneously recognize the merit of what he leaked as being productive for domestic dialogue and the debate of privacy vs. security.

When did I ever say anything about it being right? My only point is that Russia isn’t unique and blaming everything on Russia is 🤡

Where did I say I blamed "everything" on Russia?

And sure, Russia may not be unique, but it's by far the biggest fish in that category until proven otherwise. (China likely second).