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Edward Snowden talks ethics of whistleblowing

Edward Snowden, former NSA infrastructure analyst turned whistleblower, spoke on May 15 to Cubberley Auditorium to discuss the philosophical tensions of whistleblowing and government surveillance. The 2015 Symbolic Systems Distinguished Speaker, Snowden spoke via video conference from Moscow.

Professors of philosophy John Perry and Kenneth Taylor moderated the discussion, part of which also served as a recording of “Philosophy Talk,” a nationally-syndicated radio program which grapples with problems in philosophy and how philosophy relates to our everyday lives.

After brief introductions by Perry and Taylor, Snowden addressed the dilemmas in whistleblowing and his thoughts on his situation. Taylor asked whether he sees himself as a hero or a traitor, considering the various depictions presented by the government and media.

“This is a really common question that’s asked a lot,” he said. “I think it’s got one of the least interesting answers. I don’t think about myself or how I will be perceived. It’s not about me. It’s about us. I’m not a hero. I’m not a traitor. I’m an ordinary American like anyone else in the room. I’m just trying to do the best that I can.”

Snowden, who currently resides in Russia under asylum, proceeded to discuss the cost-benefit analysis that whistleblowers must consider before leaking information.

“I certainly paid for it,” he said. “I lived in Hawaii, had a wonderful girlfriend, a home, a happy family, a successful career. To walk away from that it does require a real commitment to something…I think the driving principle is that you have to have a greater commitment to justice than a fear of the law.”

Perry and Taylor asked whether Snowden was reluctant to “break the law.” Discussing his personal motivations for leaking the NSA documents, Snowden said he was motivated more by “self-interest” than altruism, as he felt that he would improve societal wellbeing by revealing and ultimately dismantling the NSA’s metadata collection programs. He added that he feels there are moral obligations to act when the law no longer reflects the morality of the society it governs.

“When legality and morality begin to separate, we all have a moral obligation to do something about that,” he said. “When I saw that the work I was doing and all my colleagues were doing [was] being subversive not only to our intentions but contrary to the public’s intent, I felt an obligation to act.”

Snowden spoke at length about the institutional failures in the U.S. government that allowed for the NSA activities in question to occur.

“The courts were frozen out, the majority of Congress was frozen out, the populace was frozen out,” he said.

He added that he attempted to reintroduce this system of checks and balances—which failed in the case of the NSA—in his own methodology for releasing the documents. By involving conflicting parties in the press and the government, Snowden said he hoped to serve the public interest: bringing attention to privacy issues while also mitigating security risks.

“I never published a single document on my own because I believe that the model, the ideal of American government is actually quite a shrewd one,” he said. “I tried to emulate the model of checks and balance. Instead of making a unilateral decision, that ‘The world must know,’ I worked with the free press, institutions that we trust, American journalists.”

At various points, Snowden expressed concern that the world as a whole is moving toward increased government surveillance at the expense of privacy, citing recent measures in France among other nations. He cautioned against acceptance of this trend and frequent justifications used by governments, such as heightened security. Citing the NSA leaks, he said that there was no clear benefit, while the privacy costs were great.

Snowden also addressed several issues related to the Internet, including expectations of privacy on the web, Chelsea Manning’s role in leaking confidential government documents to WikiLeaks and new liberation technologies.

“The Internet goes into our homes and also into the confines of our mind. That’s where we confide in friends, that’s where we express ourselves, that’s where we develop our thoughts. It’s where we decide what we believe in and who we want to be.”

On the role of WikiLeaks, he said, “Much like with whistleblowing, if all other parts of the system fails, there’s a fallback [in WikiLeaks]. There’s an ultimate choice that can provide real, unvarnished truth in the most extreme circumstances.”

Snowden recommended two major policy changes: ending mass surveillance and better protecting whistleblowers. On the first point, he cited the “infective” nature of surveillance projects and the ineffectuality of the NSA’s data collection in producing any concrete security outcome. On the second point, he argued for creating independent agencies staffed by civil liberties advocates to handle cases like his.

“If I had taken these documents to Congress, I would’ve gone to jail,” Snowden said, alluding to the massive costs facing whistleblowers.

After the first hour, the “Philosophy Talk” segment concluded. Snowden stayed for another half hour to answer questions from the audience, with topics ranging from his personal life in Moscow to the working environment within the NSA.

Snowden ended the discussion with a hope that he might one day return to the United States, although he said he was not exactly optimistic at the chances.

“If there’s any question, if the opportunity was presented, I would of course come home,” he said. “Because that’s where I live, that’s where my family is.”

The full recording of “Philosophy Talk” will be available the week of July 3 on radio stations nationwide.

 

Contact Victor Xu at vxu ‘at’ stanford.edu.

About Victor Xu

Victor Xu '17 is the managing editor of news and a graphics designer. An economics major, he hails from Carmel, IN. He is interested in international development and Kanye West. To contact Victor, email him at vxu ‘at’ stanford.edu.
  • Whey Standard

    “If I had taken these documents to Congress, I would’ve gone to jail,”

    That depends, if he went to the Intelligence Committees, he certainly wouldn’t have, but he probably would have been fired by the contractor he worked for.

  • Tina

    I believe he once worked for the CIA and tried to use the chain of command there as well as with the contracting company for whom he worked, but was rebuffed both times.

  • http://about.me/alankurtz Alan Kurtz

    Snowden resigned from the CIA in February 2009, and has never asserted that he internally reported ethical issues within the agency. In March 2014, Snowden contended that while working as a contractor for the NSA, he’d identified “clearly problematic programs” to ten officials, who he said failed to act. In May 2014, Snowden told NBC News: “The NSA has records—they have copies of emails right now to their Office of General Counsel, to their oversight and compliance folks from me raising concerns about the NSA’s interpretations of its legal authorities.” Later that month, U.S. officials released a single email that Snowden had written in April 2013, in which he’d inquired about certain matters stemming from his training but did not allege abuses. In June 2014, the NSA said it had found no records of Snowden complaining about the agency’s operations. Snowden himself, said to be meticulous and methodical, has produced no documents or other evidence corroborating his claims of internal whistleblowing.

  • http://about.me/alankurtz Alan Kurtz

    Victor Xu, thank you for this article. I look forward to the full recording of “Philosophy Talk” becoming available in July. Meanwhile, you indicate in passing that Snowden addressed “Chelsea Manning’s role in leaking confidential government documents to WikiLeaks.” Please, would you share the gist of his remarks on Manning? As you probably know, there has been considerable debate on Twitter about attempts by Snowden and his facilitators, such as journalist Glenn Greenwald, to differentiate his more selective approach to leaking from Manning’s indiscriminate dumping.

  • H.P. Loathecraft

    “if he went to the Intelligence Committees certainly wouldn’t have”.

    Binney, Wiebe and Drake all three went through the proper channels and their efforts were turned against them, they all were subsequently the targets of criminal investigations. All lost their security clearances and ultimately their jobs and careers, Drake was prosecuted under the Espionage Act. Yet all of the aforementioned individuals fit the legal definition of whistleblowers and all acted properly. According to Jessylyn Raddack, “The inspector general was the one who gave their names to the Justice Department for criminal prosecution under the Espionage Act.”

    The notion that there is a functional oversight mechanism or a meaningful accountability regime is a false one.

  • Victor

    Snowden emphasized that he released his documents through American newspapers so that there would be many people making the decision to release the documents, not just him. When Taylor directly asked whether he thought he took more precautions than Manning, he declined to say so but reiterated that he chose to go through media so there were “checks in balances.”

  • Yunzer

    Wikileaks does as good a job at carefully evaluating documents for release as the Guardian does. Don’t believe the anti-Wikileaks allegations to the contrary.

  • http://about.me/alankurtz Alan Kurtz

    Obviously one person who disagrees with you is Edward Snowden. Unlike Manning, Snowden did not pass the files he stole to WikiLeaks. For that matter, WikiLeaks was not Manning’s first choice, either. Recall Manning first contacted The Washington Post and then The New York Times but failed to rouse their interest. Only then did the soldier reach out to WikiLeaks.

  • EthanAllen1

    This is actually what Edward Snowden is quoted as having said regarding his reasoning pertaining to the release.

    “I never published a single document on my own because I believe that the model, the ideal of American government is actually quite a shrewd one,” he said. “I tried to emulate the model of checks and balance. Instead of making a unilateral decision, that ‘The world must know,’ I worked with the free press, institutions that we trust, American journalists.

    Note there is no “emphasized” reference to “American journalists”.

    With regards to “Chelsea Manning’s role in leaking confidential government documents to WikiLeaks and new liberation technologies.”, Mr. Snowden had this to say:

    “Much like with whistleblowing, if all other parts of the system fails, there’s a fallback [in WikiLeaks]. There’s an ultimate choice that can provide real, unvarnished truth in the most extreme circumstances.”

    Both your mistaken attribution to Mr. Snowden “..checks in balances.”, ostensibly referring to his intent to achieve viable “checks and balance” in the publication of the documentary evidence in keeping with, in his actual words, “..the ideal of American government.”, and your assertion that Mr. Snowden..

    “When Taylor directly asked whether he thought he took more precautions than Manning, he declined to say so but reiterated that he chose to go through media so there were “checks in balances.”

    “declined” to answer.

    Exactly where in this article did Taylor ever ask any such question, directly or otherwise?
    As Usual,
    EA

  • EthanAllen1

    I find it interesting that you have somehow divined Edward Snowden’s disagreement with the commentary of Yunzer. Mr. Snowden appears to be more than willing and able to speak in his own behalf, I suspect that he would disagree with you attributing your own beliefs to him by name, especially beings you also publically describe him as a thief herein.

  • http://about.me/alankurtz Alan Kurtz

    Maybe I missed it. Did Snowden pass the files he stole to WikiLeaks? If not, it’s obvious he didn’t trust Assange at that point, and only accepted Julian’s help later, when it came time to pay his hotel bill in Hong Kong and airfare to Moscow.

  • EthanAllen1

    Sir, you may not be some form of stooge for government interests, but you certainly are presenting an entertaining impersonation of one.
    Has it ever occurred to you that publically funded cover-up of government corruption and malfeasance is not in the public interest?
    As Usual,
    EA

  • EthanAllen1

    That’s a good one! Your continued pretended insight into Mr. Snowden’s thinking and reasoning is, indeed, remarkable. Fortunately, for Mr. Snowden, he has demonstrated no such need for idle speculation and dissembling to present his cause. What’s your excuse?
    As Usual,
    EA

  • http://about.me/alankurtz Alan Kurtz

    I wondered how quickly you would stoop to ad hominem. Thanks for getting right to it and not making us wait.

  • Jim Young

    They used to have at least some oversight mechanism and meaningful accountability. To me, that effectively ended when they suppressed the Peers Commission’s investigation into My Lai. General Peers was a former OSS and CIA official that knew the levels of justice that are needed in the dirty work of war, and was seemingly prepared to fully bring it to light in what I consider the truly worst atrocity in Vietnam. He held his tongue afterwards, after the politicians like Mendel Rivers had made it impossible to do the less public, but essential sorting of crimes of war, like they had at least done a fair job of before. I believe he later regretted his acquiescence to the top political levels since that meant more than ever was covered up, more effectively than ever before, too. That let the situations keep getting worse, to me, characterized by the last fairly prominent person who actually believed that truth and justice could be accomplished with in an unimaginably corrupted system. General Taguba seemed to actually believe Rumsfeld and his chain of command wanted the truth about Abu Ghraib.

    I’ve heard Snowden particularly used the example of Thomas Drake (I believe 3rd from the top ranking in NSA) and the frame job they tried on him (and others). He was one of the ones most would have been expected to be “invited into” the Prizm program Hayden so carefully misled the public on, along the lines of “No one in the NSA invited into the program (implied to be Prizm, as if it were the only program) expressed anything but extreme enthusiasm for it,” very careful to leave out all others like 5 very high level officials that we would expect to know about it.

    There are no effective internal channels anymore, as far as I can detect, so my advice is to take suspicions or observations of internal wrong doing to outside groups like the ACLU or EFF so they can at least try to get a better picture, while still keeping the most truly dangerous secrets out of the hands of any but those that will use it in an honest agent accountability (and corrective) regime. It might be handy to always have a neutral honest agency to keep copies of the data, even if we do ever get back to internal oversight mechanisms we can trust. Otherwise what stops them from degenerating, or disappearing, as the one we used to have seem to have done?

  • H.P. Loathecraft

    Thomas Drake:

    “I differed as a whistleblower to Snowden only in this respect: in accordance with the Intelligence Community Whistleblower Protection Act, I took my concerns up within the chain of command, to the very highest levels at the NSA, and then to Congress and the Department of Defense. I understand why Snowden has taken his course of action, because he’s been following this for years: he’s seen what’s happened to other whistleblowers like me.

    By following protocol, you get flagged – just for raising issues. You’re identified as someone they don’t like, someone not to be trusted. I was exposed early on because I was a material witness for two 9/11 congressional investigations. In closed testimony, I told them everything I knew – about Stellar Wind, billions of dollars in fraud, waste and abuse, and the critical intelligence, which the NSA had but did not disclose to other agencies, preventing vital action against known threats. If that intelligence had been shared, it may very well have prevented 9/11.

    But as I found out later, none of the material evidence I disclosed went into the official record. It became a state secret even to give information of this kind to the 9/11 investigation.”

  • H.P. Loathecraft

    William Binney: “We tried to stay for the better part of seven years inside the government trying to get the government to recognize the unconstitutional, illegal activity that they were doing and openly admit that and devise certain ways that would be constitutionally and legally acceptable to achieve the ends they were really after. And that just failed totally because no one in Congress or — we couldn’t get anybody in the courts, and certainly the Department of Justice and inspector general’s office didn’t pay any attention to it. And all of the efforts we made just produced no change whatsoever. All it did was continue to get worse and expand.”

  • http://about.me/alankurtz Alan Kurtz

    I trust you’re not seriously alluding to the ACLU and EFF as “neutral honest agencies.” (1) The lawsuit ACLU v. Clapper was filed six days after Snowden’s leaks were first published, and incorporated them in arguing that the NSA’s bulk metadata collection program is unconstitutional. (2) ACLU staff attorney Ben Wizner represents Snowden in both legal matters and as speaker and moderator at anti-NSA events. (3) Photos of Snowden in Hong Kong in June 2013 show his laptop sporting an EFF sticker that proclaims, “I Support Online Rights.” (4) In Snowden’s immediate aftermath, EFF reported on its website, the group “raised 10 times more money in a single week than normal.” (5) When it comes to the NSA, neither ACLU nor EFF is neutral.

  • http://about.me/alankurtz Alan Kurtz

    You quote Mr. Drake’s opinion piece published by The Guardian on June 12, 2013, where he writes, “I understand why Snowden has taken his course of action…. By following protocol, you get flagged—just for raising issues.” This was indeed the only point of my comment to which you replied: that, despite his assurances to the contrary, there is no evidence Snowden followed protocol.

  • H.P. Loathecraft

    Correct. Snowden did not ‘follow protocol’ since no legitimate protocol exists, save for one intended to trap and punish legitimate whistleblowers determined to expose criminality, waste and abuse of power, leaving available but one and only one option which is to report such abuse to trusted agents of the fourth estate, either anonymously or publicly. Snowden courageously chose the latter.

    Ergo: the statement “Snowden did not follow protocol” is rendered meaningless in context of actual conditions in the real world as opposed to imagined or desired ones.

  • http://about.me/alankurtz Alan Kurtz

    Well, now you’re differing with Snowden, who asserts he did follow protocol yet refuses to release his exculpatory emails to prove it.

  • H.P. Loathecraft

    Whether he did or didn’t attempt to “follow protocol” is of little interest to me. He says that he did so at least ten times.

    Snowden has revealed an awful lot of inconvenient truths and, in the process of damage control in the media, the government–all the way up to the President–have been caught outright in a whole series of lies regarding both the various programs’ scope and their legality.

    Whether or not his claim is true matters little, but the fact that the government says “we looked and we couldn’t find anything” is almost laughable inasmuch as we’re to be expected to take them at their word, given their record of deception.

    Bottom line is, the so-called ‘protocol’ is one crafted to put those that would expose the government’s criminality and immoral activities in jail and nothing more.

    One more thing, as a contractor, Snowden had no whistleblower protection guarantees because they are limited to government employees only. Pres. Obama erroneously or dishonestly pointed to ‘Presidential Policy Directive 19’ http://fas.org/irp/offdocs/ppd/ppd-19.pdf as proof that Snowden had legal avenues available that he could have pursued, but in fact the directive did not apply to him as a natsec contractor.

    OTOH, an Obama administration media ally, NBC reported “NBC News had learned from “multiple sources that Snowden did indeed send at least one email to the General Counsel’s office raising policy and legal questions.” It was working to confirm further details and had filed a Freedom of Information Act request for any other records of Snowden going through channels.

  • http://about.me/alankurtz Alan Kurtz

    “Whether or not his claim is true matters little,” you write. It matters to me. If untrue, he’s a liar.

  • H.P. Loathecraft

    As opposed to his critics in government, who are all confirmed to be liars, all the way to the top.
    No “ifs”, “ands” or “buts”.

  • http://about.me/alankurtz Alan Kurtz

    In other words, as you see it, Snowden has a license to lie—as long as he’s lying about the government.

  • H.P. Loathecraft

    I don’t grant licenses. Snowden has never once been proven to have lied. Some spook denying the existence of communications he claims to have issued does not rise to the standard of ‘proof’.

    Moreover, I explicitly said “it is of little interest to me”. In other words, weasely distractions such as “Snowden might have lied once” are relatively, if not entirely meaningless, especially in light of the absence of any credible evidence that he has done so.

  • EthanAllen1

    Re: Jim Young – May 23 @ 11:11 AM
    Thank you for adding your informed perspective and concerns to this discussion; I sincerely hope that you will continue to provide the students of Stanford and others attracted to this venue with the honest wisdom of your perspectives. The younger generations of our society have a vested interest in being provided with reliable truths regarding both the historical successes and failures of their government; if they are to become informed constituents of it.
    “Work is love made visible.” KG
    As Usual,
    EA

  • http://about.me/alankurtz Alan Kurtz

    During comedian John Oliver’s Moscow interview with Snowden, first aired on HBO on April 5, 2015, the champion of transparency was evasive when asked, “How many of those documents have you actually read?” Snowden replied, “I’ve evaluated all the documents that are in the archive,” and insisted, “I do understand what I turned over.” He would not, however, answer the simple question of how many he’d read. This, despite having claimed, as reported by The Guardian in June 2013, “I carefully evaluated every single document I disclosed to ensure that each was legitimately in the public interest.”

    Given his subsequent evasion, this comes very close to a lie. Moreover, common sense undermines the likelihood of Snowden having “carefully evaluated” more than 58,000 NSA files in the weeks leading up to his leak—to say nothing of his qualifications to decide whether or not it was in the public interest to expose each of these secret documents.

  • H.P. Loathecraft

    Reading /=/evaluating.
    Most of the contents of the files are graphics and flow charts. There is little actual reading involved.

    “…to say nothing of his qualifications to decide whether or not it was in the public interest to expose each of these secret documents.”

    He prudently did not rely on his own “qualifications.
    He turned the materials over to trusted journalists who are indeed qualified to make such judgments, one of them being a lawyer who previously specialized in constitutional cases in NYC and who was in the employ at that time of an international publication which, like the Wash. Post for whom Barton Gellman writes, has an extensive legal dept. staffed with experienced attorneys.
    Both are as qualified to make that call as anyone alive.

  • Jim Young

    I trust them more than I trust government agencies that no longer have anything approaching neutral protectors of the law and rights that I thought we used to have internal to most agencies. I believe the CIA, for example, had an internal secure repository for personnel to file histories that I would consider Devil’s Advocate or Israeli Army “10th man” reports, kept secret from the public, but available to those who followed.

    Daniel Ellsberg had access as an analyst to what I knew as CHECO (Current History Examinations of Current Operations) reports from Vietnam. He has more friends than he might know, within various agencies, including, I believe (the now deceased) George Jacobson, whom I remember as the head of the pacification program in Vietnam, trapped in the last unsecured building in the Saigon Embassy compound during Tet 68 (he had a soldier toss a .45 up to him on the 2nd floor to clear the last two VC out from the lower floor). Jacobson also would slip into anti-war protests to try to see what the protestors were about (without the filter of news media or investigators/spies that might not get as true a picture as he thought he could through personal observation) I believe former Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs also used those classified at the time CHECO reports as background for his book “The Village.”

    To me these were the ones that backed up enough to get a better picture than the spiral of incompetent or corrupt reports that led to ever worse situations and coverups.

    Perhaps you could try to persuade me there are any legitimate internal channels left. If you can, I’d still like to get a second and third opinion from those like General Taguba (Abu Ghraib investigation), or like General Peers (My Lai investigation), though he passed away in 1984, so I’d like another like him.

  • http://about.me/alankurtz Alan Kurtz

    In that case, Snowden could’ve answered John Oliver’s question by saying, “Carefully evaluating every single document did not require actual reading. Most of the files are graphics and flow charts. Nobody reads those. They’re like comic books. A quick glance is all it takes to determine whether or not leaking them might jeopardize national security.”

  • H.P. Loathecraft

    Ever been interviewed for an internationally viewed TV show? How did it go? Were you nervous at all?

  • EthanAllen1

    Re: H.P. Loathecraft – May 23 @ 2:25 PM
    Thank you for taking the time to employ your vast and honest grasp of the Edward Snowden disclosures in the effort to properly inform the discussion on this venue. Your ability to debunk serial dissembling and obviously intentional mischaracterizations is both enlightening and refreshing to read.
    “Work is love made visible.” KG
    As Usual,
    EA

  • http://about.me/alankurtz Alan Kurtz

    By the time John Oliver interviewed him in April 2015, Snowden was far from a novice on TV. He’d been interviewed by documentarian Laura Poitras in June 2013, by journalist Hubert Seipel for German TV in January 2014, by anchorman Brian Williams for NBC in May 2014, and of course has made countless appearances by video from Moscow at conferences and other venues throughout the world, including the European Parliament in March 2014. Nobody is better prepared than Edward Snowden. Each interview is polished to perfection. The man has been on camera more than Kim Kardashian.

  • H.P. Loathecraft

    Were you the editor? Tell us what was on the cutting room floor?

  • H.P. Loathecraft

    Pour yourself a cup of tea and sit for a spell in a quiet room with the shades drawn and I’m confident your hardon for Ed will eventually subside.

  • http://about.me/alankurtz Alan Kurtz

    Your vulgarity is as telling as EthanAllen1’s ad hominem—and just as puerile.

  • H.P. Loathecraft

    Duly noted, Colonel Kurz.

  • EthanAllen1

    Re: Alan Kurtz – May 23 @ 11:48 AM

    You say:

    “When it comes to the NSA, neither ACLU nor EFF is neutral.”

    Of course neither organization is “neutral”, they both represent and advocate for felty to the U.S. Constitution on behalf of its citizens and their rights to lawful representative governance. The better question is: Why do you oppose such efforts?
    “Work is love made visible.” KG
    As Usual,
    EA

  • H.P. Loathecraft

    Former US Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs Hodding Carter III has something in common with you, Colonel.

    He too was wrong about Edward Snowden, only he has come to his senses and publicly acknowledged it

  • EthanAllen1

    Exactly who constitutes this “us” you are referencing?
    From my view your dissembling and gratuitous mischaracterizations are virtually the only “stooping” lowering the quality of this otherwise cogent discussion; but that is just my opinion.
    You are correct to be offended by my conjecture regarding your motives and alliance; your advocacy obviously provides a necessary element in this important debate, one that would not be occurring had Mr. Snowden not provided a factual foundation for the having of it.
    So, I apologize and thank you for your contribution!
    “Work is love made visible.” KG
    As Usual,
    EA

  • EthanAllen1

    Re: Alan Kurtz – May 23 @ 3:11 PM

    Can it not be argued that “vulgarity” can not honestly be construed as offensive, if it is merely employed as poetic license to add emphasis to a salient point. Gratuitous vulgarity, however, manifests itself in many and more harmful, immoral, and unethical behaviors.

    Which of these two variations of vulgarity does this statement embody?

    “I can no longer sit back and allow Anarchist infiltration, Anarchist indoctrination, Anarchist subversion and the International Anarchist Conspiracy to sap and impurify all of our precious bodily fluids.” AK

    “Work is love made visible.” KG
    As Usual,
    EA