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It's being appealed so he could still be extradited. The reasoning was essentially that the US prison system is more inhumane and he's a suicide risk. The US could provide assurances to the appeals court convincing them to overrule the decision. I think it's likely they succeed.
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I could see Trump doing this tomorrow as a distraction from his other pardons. The focus would be on him pardoning Assange and Snowden instead of him pardoning more of his loyal soldiers. It's icky for Snowden to be lobbying him to do it but I can fully understand the pragmatism.
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Assange is a creep and was manipulated as a tool by state actors but is still a journalist. I don't care what happens to him as an individual but for the sake of other journalists I hope he's not extradited or convicted based on publishing state secrets, helping his sources, etc.
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A journalist who's obtained private information assesses what parts if any have public interest relevance and promptly discloses those. Doesn't release non-public-interest secrets just to fuel smear campaigns or hold back disclosures for strategic timing.
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That's a very idealized view of how journalism works. Look at the Snowden leaks themselves. The journalists he gave the information took their own approaches to handling it and there was a lot of timing and a very particular selection of what they wanted to publish.
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Sure they shouldn't just dump it all at once. Assessing what to release, if anything needs redaction, etc. takes time and what has pressing public interest relevance changes with what issues are current.
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I think Assange's motivation has been the decline of US power based on his perspective that US foreign policy is massively evil. He's so focused on that to the point that he has blinders on when it comes to other countries. Don't think that means he isn't a legitimate journalist.
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Yes, but is that agenda in line with serving a public interest or causing harm? Just because these two positions have been adopted by opposing political sides in the US doesn't make them equivalently political.
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I don't think US domestic policy is on his radar. Foreign policy is what he cares about and I think from his perspective he was acting in the international public interest. Right or wrong, I think he genuinely believed Hillary was far more likely to get the US into more wars.
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