Freedom of Speech or Not
In 2010, WikiLeaks released
tons of military documents which raised worldwide discussion.
- On 5th April 2010, WikiLeaks has released a classified US military video describing the indiscriminate slaying of over a dozen people, including two Reuters’ news staff – Namir Noor-Eldeen and Saeed Chmagh, in the Iraqi suburb of New Baghdad in 2007. Two young children involved in the rescue were also seriously wounded. Since the time of attack, Reuters has been trying to obtain the video through the Freedom of Information Act. However, Reuters was not succeeded until WikiLeaks released it.
Source: WikiLeaks. (2010, April 5). Collateral Murder. Retrieved from
http://collateralmurder.com/.
- On 25th July 2010, WikiLeaks has released around 92,000 documents about war in Afghanistan, which were not available to the public before, through Der Spiegel, The New York Times and The Guardian. The documents consist of information on the deaths of civilians, increased Taliban attacks, and involvement by Pakistan and Iran in the insurgency.
Actions of US Government
- On July 6, 2010, Private Bradley Manning, a 22-year-old analyst with the United States Army in Baghdad, was charged with disclosing Collateral Murder video. He is currently imprisoned in Kuwait. 300 supporters marched at Fort Meade.

- The U.S. Justice Department opened a criminal probe of WikiLeaks and founder Julian Assange
- The Washington Post reported that the department was considering charges under the Espionage Act which is difficult because of First Amendment protections for the press.
- Federal prosecutors have also considered prosecuting Assange for trafficking in stolen government property.
Words Explanation:
WikiLeaks is an international not-for-profit media organization. They publish submissions of private, secret, and classified media from anonymous news sources, new leaks and whistleblowers. They announce that their goal is to “bring important news and information to the public”. The three basic principles that WikiLeaks based on are “the defense of freedom of speech and media publishing, the improvement of common historical record and the support of the rights of all people to create new history.”
WikiLeaks is an international not-for-profit media organization. They publish submissions of private, secret, and classified media from anonymous news sources, new leaks and whistleblowers. They announce that their goal is to “bring important news and information to the public”. The three basic principles that WikiLeaks based on are “the defense of freedom of speech and media publishing, the improvement of common historical record and the support of the rights of all people to create new history.”
First Amendment
is part of the Bill of Rights to the United States Constitution. The amendment
prohibits the abridging the freedom of speech, infringing on the freedom of the
press and prohibiting the petitioning for a governmental redress of grievances.
Journalists have
never been prosecuted for soliciting and publishing classified information
because they are protected by the First Amendment.
Espionage Act of 1917 is a United States
federal law, prohibits any attempt to interfere with military operations, to
support U.S. enemies during wartime, to promote insubordination in the
military. It also relates to freedom of speech.
Moral
Dilemma in WikiLeaks Case
On the one hand, we think or believe that confidential communication or
documents of governments should remain secrets; on the other hand, we
appreciate WikiLeaks’s advocacy of freedom of speech. Hence, at the end, which
side of this moral dilemma do you stand for?
Different Perspectives towards the Case
Source: N.d. (July 12, 2011). Revolution
Truth- WikiLeaks and a Truth Revolution. Retrieved from http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hd0Z4G8V1uo.
Support
- Brazil President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva said
- Ron Paul , Republican Congressman of Texas, said in a Fox Business interview,
- Some Australia media professionals said,
- Internet Society stated
- WikiLeaks awarded Economist New Media Award which was presented by Index on Censorship in 2008. [6]
- WikiLeaks awarded Media Award which was presented by Amnesty International in 2009. [7]
- WikiLeaks nominated Nobel Peace Prize in 2011. [8]
Criticisms
- U.S. Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, said
- Australian Prime Minister, Kevin Rudd, said
- John Young, operator of Cryptome, claimed,
‘‘would
not trust them (anonymous) with information if it had any value, or if it put
me at risk or anyone that I cared about at risk.’’ [11]
- Reporters Without Borders, criticized,
‘‘indiscriminately
publishing 92,000 classified reports reflects a real problem of methodology
and, therefore, of credibility. Journalistic work involves the selection of
information. The argument with which you defend yourself, namely that WikiLeaks
is not made up of journalists, is not convincing.’’ [12]
Our Position
Many critics reject WikiLeaks due to the
potential consequences or dangers that WikiLeaks would bring to the influenced
parties. Thus, we would use one of the moral approaches - utilitarian approach which is an approach focus on consequence of action - as our position to
analyze if we should defend our right to speak or keep documents confidential.
The Approach of Utilitarianism is
an ethical theory that holds that an action is right if it produces, or it
tends to produce, the greatest amount of good for the greatest number of people
affected by the action. In utilitarian approach, actions
take on moral value only when considered in conjunction with the effects that
follow upon them, i.e. the consequences. Also,
an action is right not only for few parties affected but also for anyone else
similarly situated. Therefore, all persons affected by the action should be
considered.
Applying
utilitarian approach to WikiLeaks case, firstly, we
should find out those parties that are affected by WikiLeaks action.
- Affected Parties Include:
The US government and military
The US citizens and the public
Citizens in Afghan and Iraq
The global public and society
Then, we should analyze the consequences that those parties have, including both good and bad consequences.
- Good Consequences:
For the victimized
countries and citizens, due to WikiLeaks cables, what they have suffered is
known by the global public. Global citizens
can blame or criticize American
military by word of mouth and even actions. Therefore, justice for those victims can be
defended.
For the global public,
they have ways to know what has happened in the world. Their
right of freely accessing to important information is protected
by WikiLeaks. Hopefully, American
government and military can restrain themselves and reduce their destruction on
those victimized countries. Also, it
forces American officials to take their responsibility for what they have done.
- Bad Consequences:
For WikiLeaks itself, because of its release, its founder has been arrested and threatened. Also, American government has exert pressure on some corporations such as Visa and MasterCard corporations to halt business with WikiLeaks, thus making WikiLeaks in a very difficult situation.
For some victimized countries, since WikiLeaks reveal some unnecessarily detailed information such as the sensitive details of Afghans who had assisted ISAF forces, some individuals may be exposed into danger in their hostile environment. Nevertheless, fortunately, no one has been attacked up to now.
In general,
although there are bad consequences and American government is forced to stand
in a passive and embarrassed situation, we think that WikiLeaks
produces more good consequences
than bad consequences.
Firstly, it is because it forces American
government, and even other
countries’ government,
to make their policy more transparent. It is good
for the public to know what their governments are doing and monitor their
actions. If governments are doing some immoral decisions or misconducting, the
public have ways and rights to blame them and make them become much better. As
the UK Financial Times comments, “ in
order to protect the freedom of information, the embarrassments of some
countries involved in WikiLeaks are just a small consideration.”
Moreover, as
mentioned before, no one has been really hurt
due to WikiLeaks cables - the most serious potential consequence is not bad at all. Therefore,
in a large scope, WikiLeaks has produced greatest good for the greatest people. In conclude, we think
that, from utilitarian point of view, the
action WikiLeaks is moral and freedom of speech is defended.
Extension – Freedom of
Speech
Without a doubt,
the above WikiLeaks’s case raises the issue of moral dilemma over freedom of
speech and confidentiality, in other words, it challenges the level of freedom
of speech. Let’s imagine that there is a world with extreme freedom of speech
and a world without freedom of speech, what would the world like respectively?
- A World WITH EXTREME Freedom of Speech
A world with
extreme freedom of speech means that everyone has extreme right to express
themselves. Hence, the world would be much transparent. More information about
individual behaviors, business practices, and countries’ culture would be
released, focusing everyone to do better. As Minxin, P. in ‘‘Corruption threatens China’s
Future’’ said, when measuring
corruption in China, ‘‘the general lack of transparency adds to
the difficulty.’’ ; but in a world with
extreme freedom of speech, more information would help to ease the difficulty, helping that people, company, or countries
to do better.
Also, the world
would be full of different and creative ideas. With extreme freedom of speech,
people express themselves extremely, creating tons of different ideas which
would help improvement of governments’ policies, invention of products, innovation of business
practices, and even
revolution of the world.
However, with
extreme freedom of speech, we would probably be information overloaded. It is
doubtless that different people have different opinions towards an issue; but
with extreme freedom of speech, the situation would be magnified. We might be
too well-informed. We would be difficult to make decisions in this situation.
Also, there would be more conflict. Coin has only two sides, so as
normal opinion over an issue. Nevertheless, with extreme freedom of speech,
more sides would be generated. There would not be only good or bad, but
different definition or level of good or bad. Different sides argue with each
other. In individual level, this would make relationship worse. In business
level, this would ruin deals between companies. In social level, this would
destroy the city due to lots of protests.
- A World WITHOUT Freedom of Speech
On the other side, a
world without freedom of speech means that everyone does not even have the
basic right to express themselves. Hence, the world would be closed. A country
would not know what is happening in B country. As Michael Reagan in
‘‘When is different just different, and when is different wrong’’ stated,
‘‘What works in a company’s home country can fail in a country with different
standard of ethical conduct. Such difficulties are unavoidable for business
people who live and work aboard’’. What he said is true. If we do not know what is happening in other
countries, it is not possible for us to do business with people in other
countries.
Also, the world would be standardized. We
would not search for information; information would eventually search
us. We would just accept and believe what we told. Take North Korea,
which is probably one of the countries with very limit freedom of speech, as an
example. Citizens are
ruled by an exclusive dictator, brainwashing is frequently practiced, and
concentration camps are still
existed and so on. This would narrow
the possibilities a society can take and create massive poverty.
However, without free speech, the world would be peaceful. As we said,
everyone would accept and believe what they told. There would be only one side,
no opposite side at all. Thus, there would be no argument and no conflict. The
world would be harmonious. We would not need to decide as there would be no
choice. The level of loyalty would be extremely high, making implementation of
policies of business and government efficient.
In general, it seems that having freedom of speech is better. However,
is freedom of speech always ethical? Is there any moral guidance for the freedom of speech?
We try to draw some in
following part:
- It Must be True
If someone freely spread some
information, but the information is false or nonexistent, do you still regard
this “freedom of speech” moral? Of course not, as this kind of information
deceives others, misleads others and may cause huge loss or harm. This kind of
situation is quite common in real life; for example, after the Wenchuan
Earthquake occurred in China in 2008, someone posted subsequent aftershock
alarm on the Internet,
which was later confirmed as rumors. It is just someone wanted to take advantage
of this event to make people frightened and to make the society into chaos.
Therefore, the first guideline of a moral free speech is to state something
true
- The Intention Should Be Good
But, is it
ethical to freely speak so long as what you are saying is true? Consider if
your close friend told you
that she has a drug problem, is it ethical
for you to announce that on Facebook? The answer is no. The intention to
release this information is just to fulfill the curiosity of the public at the expense of your
friends’ hurt. Therefore, freedom of speech should have a good intention. “Good” means all the
right things defined by the society, such as not hurting, not slandering and so on. Considering
the case of WikiLeaks,
its intention claimed to be
“provide a universal way for the revealing of
suppressed and censored injustices.” Therefore, the second guideline is
that, freedom of speech should have a good intention.
- The Potential Consequence Should Be Considered
Telling the truth, with a good intention is still not enough, sometimes
the freedom of speech may hurt some innocent parties, so that we should also
think about the consequences. For example, WikiLeaks revealed some unnecessary information such as the
sensitive details of Afghans who had assisted ISAF forces. This information may
expose individuals into danger in their hostile environment. Therefore, the
third guideline is, freedom of speech should not harm innocent parties.
Freedom of Speech in Business World
Freedom of Speech in the Workplace
Freedom of speech is everywhere. In business level, how can we handle it
in the workplace?
- Manager vs. Empoyees
As David, A. T. and Robin, J. E. in ‘‘Making difference matter: a new paradigm
for managing diversity’’ said, diversity can help company
‘‘how to design process, reach goals, frame tasks, create effective teams,
communicate ideas, and lead.’’ and
‘‘help companies grow and improve by
challenging basic assumptions about an organization’s functions, strategies,
operations, practices, and procedures.’’ Diversity includes different
opinions. Allowing employees to share constructive
criticism is somehow the key
to success.
Take United
States as an example, certain laws, do provide employees with some
protection for certain types of expression at work, such as workplace
discrimination and
harassment. Managers should also protect the rights of employees to let them
freely express their thoughts, criticism or any other ideas. However, managers
should have some tactics to handle freedom of speech among employees well. As Florida, R. and Goodnight, J. in ‘‘Managing for Creativity’’ stated ‘‘Minimizing hassles create an ideal condition for creative thought.’’ In our words, it helps create freedom of speech. Thus, we recommend managers to:
- Be prepared to hear bad news.
- Be nice. When team members truly believe they can talk to you without fear of having their head snapped off, you'll get great information.
- Encourage respectful dialog at all levels, and never retaliate against an employee for saying something that hurts his feeling
- Frequently ask questions like, ‘‘what do you think?’’ to get great ideas and comments and ensure throwing down of welcome mat
As Ketter, P. in ‘‘What's the big deal’’ stated ‘‘employees have a responsibility of their own.’’ Thus, in addition of managers' responsibility, employees should also be eager to take a part or courage to promote freedom of speech.
Freedom of Commercial Speech
- Company vs. Public
The term
"commercial communications" refers to any publicity activities intended
as part of a marketing process for goods or services. The main activities
associated with commercial communications are advertising, public relations,
sales promotion, direct and relationship marketing, events marketing and
commercial sponsorship.
We want to take
tobacco advertising as an example. It is now one of the most highly regulated
forms of marketing.
Some or all forms of tobacco advertising are banned
in many countries. For example, tobacco advertising on Hong Kong
television was outlawed on December 1, 1990 (Legislation.gov.hk,
1990). In Singapore,
tobacco advertising was completely banned on 1 March 1971. (The Singapore
Herald, 1971).
We believe that everyone has a basic right to
freedom of expression, but only insofar as no harm comes to others as a result.
When freedom of expression results in harm to others, society is morally
obligated to restrict this freedom. Cigarette advertising, one form of free
speech, causes grave harm. Smoking now accounts for at least 350,000
tobacco-related deaths each year. The costs of smoking to society as a whole
are also staggering. In addition, cigarette smoking is responsible for an
estimated $23 billion in health care costs annually and over $30 billion in
lost productivity. Furthermore, cigarettes are the leading cause of residential
fires and fire deaths in this nation.
We also hold an opinion that society has a duty to protect the right of individuals not to be deceived or manipulated. And, according to Joe Tye, a staunch critic of the tobacco industry, "No advertising is more deceptive than that used to sell cigarettes. Images of independence are used to sell a product that creates profound dependence. Images of health and vitality are used to sell a product that causes disease and suffering. Images of life are used to sell a product that causes death."
We also hold an opinion that society has a duty to protect the right of individuals not to be deceived or manipulated. And, according to Joe Tye, a staunch critic of the tobacco industry, "No advertising is more deceptive than that used to sell cigarettes. Images of independence are used to sell a product that creates profound dependence. Images of health and vitality are used to sell a product that causes disease and suffering. Images of life are used to sell a product that causes death."
Cigarette advertisements also rely almost
exclusively on psychological manipulation. Alluring images of power, prestige,
glamour, success, vitality and sex appeal are held before the public's eye,
creating a positive association between "the good life" and smoking.
Such ads bypass conscious reasoning. They unconsciously arouse in a person a
powerful desire that is not rationally weighed against one's own best
interests.
In conclusion, in this case, we think that society
is morally obligated to ban the
promotion of a product linked to so much suffering and devastation and that
places such a drain on society's resources.
Footnotes:
[1] Antonova, M. (2010,
December 9). Putin leads backlash over
WikiLeaks boss detention. Sydney Morning
Herald.
[2] N.d. (2010,
December 10). Wikileaks: Brazil President
Lula backs Julian Assange. BBC News. Retrieved from
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-11966193.
[3] N.d. (2010, December 10). Ron Paul: Lying is not patriotic [Video file]. Video posted to
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ywoInPNXZJk.
[4] Walkleys. (2010, December 13). Australian Media’s Finest Defend WikiLeaks.
Retrieved from http://www.walkleys.com/news/1076/.
[5] Curtis, S. (2010, December 8). ISOC: WikiLeaks attacks threathen free
expression. Eweek Europe. Retrieved from
http://www.techweekeurope.co.uk/news/isoc-wikileaks-attacks-threaten-free-expression-15294.
[6] Dwyer, D. (2011, February 3). Norwegian Nominates Wikileaks' Julian Assange for Nobel Peace Prize.
ABC News. Retrieved from
http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/wikileaks-julian-assange-nominated-nobel-peace-prize/story?id=12825383.
[7] N.d. (2008, April 22). Winners of index on censorship freedom
of expression awards announced. Index on
Censorship. Retrieved from
http://www.indexoncensorship.org/2008/04/winners-of-index-on-censorship-freedom-of-expression-award-announced/
[8] N.d. (2009, June 3). Amnesty
International Media Awards 2009: full list of winners | Media | guardian.co.uk.
Guardian (UK). Retrieved from
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2009/jun/03/amnesty-international-media-awards.
[9] N.d. (2010, Nobvember 29). Secretary of State Hillary Clinton calls WikiLeaks
documents 'an attack on the international community. New York Post. Retrieved from http://www.nypost.com/p/news/international/obama_administration_in_damage_control_JBSDPnEISQvcyu0ZfHx7XL#ixzz16kRfnGL0.
[10] N.d. (2010, December 8). Wikileaks: Australia FM blames US, not Julian Assange. BBC. Retrieved from http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific-11945558.
[11] McCullagh,
D. (2010, July 20). Wikileaks' estranged
co-founder becomes a critic (Q&A) | Privacy Inc. – CNET News.
News.cnet.com. Retrieved
from
http://news.cnet.com/8301-31921_3-20011106-281.html.
[12] N.d. (2010, December 1). Reporters Sans Frontières – Open letter to WikiLeaks
founder Julian Assange: ‘‘A bad precedent for the Internet's future. En.rsf.org. Retrieved from
http://en.rsf.org/united-states-open-letter-to-wikileaks-founder-12-08-2010,38130.html.
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Extension
First of all, we would like to thank you for all the comments and appreciation.
In this extension, we do want to add a better introduction of this blog. In the previous content, we did have introduction of the case and tried to have a better structure in explaining ideas. However, an introduction of the blog is missed.
Actually, our blog is discussing a controversial and ethical-related issue – freedom of speech – by using the case of WikiLeak, making readers to rethink the choices between confidentiality and freedom of speech.
US government always advocates freedom of human rights and transparency of policies. However, action is always bigger than words. Does she really do so? In this blog, we would like to use the case of WikiLeak to analyze if the action of government is ethical. Different opinions from different parties on the issue of WikiLeak will be showed. Our position in the issue will also be stood by using the utilitarianism approach. Moreover, hypothetic assumption will be made to help discuss the level of freedom of speech we should have. And we would try to set principles and rule while advocating freedom of speech.