U younger People of the World ,I never heard of the Young man Your Generation Has just "lost" & didn't know anything about Him? ....Until I read about His "suicide" & I got that old feeling back ....The TIME ,when our generation starting having THINKERS " out side the box" ---brilliant minds :) ,FREEDOM thinkers ....trying 2 lead a new generation ,out of bondage! Trying only to better the Human condition 4 ALL MANKIND ...."suicides" ."mishaps" " accidents" " murders" .......we got some difficult days ahead & we got 2 C it thru. I am Sorry 4 Your Loss , all of OUR LOSS ! He is home ...now ,at rest Peace :)
(Some will say this is not the time. I disagree. This is the time when every mixed emotion needs to find voice.)
Prosecutor as bully
(Some will say this is not the time. I disagree. This is the time when every mixed emotion needs to find voice.)
Since his arrest in January, 2011, I have known more
about the events that began this spiral than I have wanted to know.
Aaron consulted me as a friend and lawyer. He shared with me what went
down and why, and I worked with him to get help. When my obligations to
Harvard created a conflict that made it impossible for me to continue as
a lawyer, I continued as a friend. Not a good enough friend, no doubt,
but nothing was going to draw that friendship into doubt.
The billions of snippets of sadness and bewilderment
spinning across the Net confirm who this amazing boy was to all of us.
But as I’ve read these aches, there’s one strain I wish we could resist:
Please don’t pathologize this story.
No doubt it is a certain crazy that brings a person
as loved as Aaron was loved (and he was surrounded in NY by people who
loved him) to do what Aaron did. It angers me that he did what he did.
But if we’re going to learn from this, we can’t let slide what brought
him here.
First, of course, Aaron brought Aaron here. As I said when I wrote about the case (when obligations required I say something publicly), if
what the government alleged was true — and I say “if” because I am not
revealing what Aaron said to me then — then what he did was wrong. And
if not legally wrong, then at least morally wrong. The causes that Aaron
fought for are my causes too. But as much as I respect those who
disagree with me about this, these means are not mine.
But all this shows is that if the government proved
its case, some punishment was appropriate. So what was that appropriate
punishment? Was Aaron a terrorist? Or a cracker trying to profit from
stolen goods? Or was this something completely different?
Early on, and to its great credit, JSTOR figured
“appropriate” out: They declined to pursue their own action against
Aaron, and they asked the government to drop its. MIT, to its great
shame, was not as clear, and so the prosecutor had the excuse he needed
to continue his war against the “criminal” who we who loved him knew as
Aaron.
Here is where we need a better sense of justice, and
shame. For the outrageousness in this story is not just Aaron. It is
also the absurdity of the prosecutor’s behavior. From the beginning, the
government worked as hard as it could to characterize what Aaron did in
the most extreme and absurd way. The “property” Aaron had “stolen,” we
were told, was worth “millions of dollars” — with the hint, and then the
suggestion, that his aim must have been to profit from his crime. But
anyone who says that there is money to be made in a stash of ACADEMIC ARTICLES
is either an idiot or a liar. It was clear what this was not, yet our
government continued to push as if it had caught the 9/11 terrorists
red-handed.
Aaron had literally done nothing in his life “to
make money.” He was fortunate Reddit turned out as it did, but from his
work building the RSS standard, to his work architecting Creative
Commons, to his work liberating public records, to his work building a
free public library, to his work supporting Change
Congress/FixCongressFirst/Rootstrikers, and then Demand Progress, Aaron
was always and only working for (at least his conception of) the public
good. He was brilliant, and funny. A kid genius. A soul, a conscience,
the source of a question I have asked myself a million times: What would
Aaron think? That person is gone today, driven to the edge by what a
decent society would only call bullying. I get wrong. But I also get
proportionality. And if you don’t get both, you don’t deserve to have
the power of the United States government behind you.
For remember, we live in a world where the
architects of the financial crisis regularly dine at the White House —
and where even those brought to “justice” never even have to admit any
wrongdoing, let alone be labeled “felons.”
In that world, the question this government needs to
answer is why it was so necessary that Aaron Swartz be labeled a
“felon.” For in the 18 months of negotiations, that was what he was not
willing to accept, and so that was the reason he was facing a million
dollar trial in April — his wealth bled dry, yet unable to appeal openly
to us for the financial help he needed to fund his defense, at least
without risking the ire of a district court judge. And so as wrong and
misguided and fucking sad as this is, I get how the prospect of this
fight, defenseless, made it make sense to this brilliant but troubled
boy to end it.
Fifty years in jail,
charges our government. Somehow, we need to get beyond the “I’m right
so I’m right to nuke you” ethics that dominates our time. That begins
with one word: Shame.
One word, and endless tears.
No comments:
Post a Comment