Memo to Potential Whistleblowers: If You See Something, Say Something
by Norman Solomon - Global Research
Blowing the whistle on
wrongdoing creates a moral frequency that vast numbers of people are
eager to hear. We don’t want our lives, communities, country and world
continually damaged by the deadening silences of fear and conformity.
Whistleblowers don’t sign up to be whistleblowers. Almost always, they begin their work as true believers in the system that conscience later compels them to challenge.
“It took years of involvement with a mendacious war policy, evidence of which was apparent to me as early as 2003, before I found the courage to follow my conscience,” Matthew Hoh recalled this week.Hoh describes his record this way:
“It is not an easy or light decision for anyone to make, but we need members of our military, development, diplomatic and intelligence community to speak out if we are ever to have a just and sound foreign policy.”
“After over 11 continuous years of service with the U.S. military and U.S. government, nearly six of those years overseas, including service in Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as positions within the Secretary of the Navy’s Office as a White House Liaison, and as a consultant for the State Department’s Iraq Desk, I resigned from my position with the State Department in Afghanistan in protest of the escalation of war in 2009.”Another former Department of State official, the ex-diplomat and retired Army colonel Ann Wright, who resigned in protest of the Iraq invasion in March 2003, is crossing paths with Hoh on Friday as they do the honors at a ribbon-cutting — half a block from the State Department headquarters in Washington — for a billboard with a picture of Pentagon Papers whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg. Big-lettered words begin by referring to the years he waited before releasing the Pentagon Papers in 1971. “Don’t do what I did,” Ellsberg says on the billboard.
“Don’t wait until a new war has started, don’t wait until thousands more have died, before you tell the truth with documents that reveal lies or crimes or internal projections of costs and dangers. You might save a war’s worth of lives.”
The billboard –
sponsored by the ExposeFacts organization, which launched this week —
will spread to other prominent locations in Washington and beyond. As an
organizer for ExposeFacts, I’m glad to report that outreach to
potential whistleblowers is just getting started. (For details, visit
ExposeFacts.org.) We’re propelled by the kind of hopeful determination
that Hoh expressed the day before the billboard ribbon-cutting when he
said: “I trust ExposeFacts and its efforts will encourage others to
follow their conscience and do what is right.”
The journalist Kevin Gosztola,
who has astutely covered a range of whistleblower issues for years,
pointed this week to the imperative of opening up news media. “There is
an important role for ExposeFacts to play in not only forcing more
transparency, but also inspiring more media organizations to engage in
adversarial journalism,” he wrote.
“Such journalism is called for in the face of wars, environmental destruction, escalating poverty, egregious abuses in the justice system, corporate control of government, and national security state secrecy. Perhaps a truly successful organization could inspire U.S. media organizations to play much more of a watchdog role than a lapdog role when covering powerful institutions in government.”
Overall, we desperately need to
nurture and propagate a steadfast culture of outspoken whistleblowing. A
central motto of the AIDS activist movement dating back to the 1980s – Silence = Death –
remains urgently relevant in a vast array of realms. Whether the
problems involve perpetual war, corporate malfeasance, climate change,
institutionalized racism, patterns of sexual assault, toxic pollution or
countless other ills, none can be alleviated without bringing grim
realities into the light. “All governments lie,” Ellsberg says in a video statement released for the launch of ExposeFacts,
“and they all like to work in the dark as far as the public is concerned, in terms of their own decision-making, their planning — and to be able to allege, falsely, unanimity in addressing their problems, as if no one who had knowledge of the full facts inside could disagree with the policy the president or the leader of the state is announcing.”
Ellsberg adds:
“A country that wants to be a democracy has to be able to penetrate that secrecy, with the help of conscientious individuals who understand in this country that their duty to the Constitution and to the civil liberties and to the welfare of this country definitely surmount their obligation to their bosses, to a given administration, or in some cases to their promise of secrecy.”
Right now, our potential for
democracy owes a lot to people like NSA whistleblowers William Binney
and Kirk Wiebe, and EPA whistleblower Marsha Coleman-Adebayo. When they
spoke at the June 4 news conference in Washington that launched ExposeFacts, their brave clarity was inspiring.
Antidotes to the poisons of
cynicism and passive despair can emerge from organizing to help create a
better world. The process requires applying a single standard to the
real actions of institutions and individuals, no matter how big their
budgets or grand their power. What cannot withstand the light of day
should not be suffered in silence.
If you see something, say something.
Norman Solomon is co-founder of RootsAction.org and executive director of the Institute for Public Accuracy, which launched ExposeFacts.org in early June. His books include “War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death.”
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