Several weeks
ago, I wrote about the steps taken by the U.S. government to pressure large
corporations to choke off the finances and other means of support for WikiLeaks
in retaliation for the group's exposure of substantial government deceit,
wrongdoing and illegality. Because WikiLeaks has never been charged with, let
alone convicted of, any crime, I wrote: "that the U.S. government largely
succeeded in using extra-legal and extra-judicial means to cripple an adverse
journalistic outlet is a truly consequential episode." At the end of that
column, I disclosed that I had been involved in discussions "regarding the
formation of a new organization designed to support independent journalists and
groups such as WikiLeaks under attack by the U.S. and other
governments."
That group has
now been formed and, this morning, was formally launched. Its name is Freedom of
the Press Foundation. Its website is here and its Twitter account, which will be
quite active, is @FreedomOfPress.
I'm very excited
to have participated in its formation and will serve as an unpaid member of the
Board of Directors, along with the heroic whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg, 2012
McArthur-fellowship-recipient and Oscar-nominated documentarian Laura Poitras,
co-founder of the Electronic Frontier Foundation John Perry Barlow, the actor
and civil liberties advocate John Cusack, BoingBoing co-founder Xeni Jardin, and
several other passionate free press and transparency activists. Numerous
articles have been written today about its launch, including from the New York
Times' media reporter David Carr, the Guardian's Dan Gillmor, Forbes' Andy
Greenberg, Huffington Post's media reporter Michael Calderone, FDL's Kevin
Gosztola, and board member Josh Stearns.
The primary
impetus for the formation of this group was to block the U.S. government from
ever again being able to attack and suffocate an independent journalistic
enterprise the way it did with WikiLeaks. Government pressure and the eager
compliance of large financial corporations (such as Visa, Master Card, Bank of
America, etc.) has - by design - made it extremely difficult for anyone to
donate to WikiLeaks, while many people are simply afraid to directly support the
group (for reasons I explained here).
We intend to
raise funds ourselves and then distribute it to the beneficiaries we name. The
first group of beneficiaries includes WikiLeaks. We can circumvent those
extra-legal, totally inappropriate blocks that have been imposed on the group.
We can enable people to support WikiLeaks without donating directly to it by
donating to this new organization that will then support a group of deserving
independent journalism outlets, one of which is WikiLeaks. In sum, we will
render impotent the government's efforts to use its coercive pressure over
corporations to suffocate not only WikiLeaks but any other group it may
similarly target in the future.
The second
purpose is to ensure that truly independent journalistic outlets - devoted to
holding the U.S. government and other powerful factions accountable with
transparency and real adversarial journalism - are supported to the fullest
extent possible. Along those lines, we have selected three other organizations
along with WikiLeaks as our initial beneficiaries:
Muckrock News, a
truly innovative group devoted to enabling any citizen easily and quickly to
file Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) or public records requests with the
government, and then "guides the requests through the system so the government
does not disregard" them. They also act as a news organization by analyzing and
publicizing any newsworthy information they and their users uncover. Currently,
"they are conducting a Drone Census of the United States, filing public records
requests around the country that ask police agencies if they plan on buying
domestic drones for surveillance purposes."
The UpTake, a
Minnesota-based group that uses truly innovative means to break "down walls of
power to expose the raw truth by pushing for transparency and access to
information." They use citizen journalism, crowd-sourcing and cutting-edge
technology to film and document the bad acts of government agents. I worked next
to them when I covered the incredibly excessive federal and local police actions
and brutality against protesters at the 2008 Republican National Convention in
St. Paul, and was truly impressed with them then, as I watched all sorts of
young activists and older ones use hand-held video cameras and phones to
comprehensively cover all sorts of police abuses being ignored by most large
journalistic outlets, which were comfortably ensconced inside the convention
hall. They've expanded their operations substantially since then, have a long
list of achievements to tout, and - most excitingly to me - can serve as a
template for how to engage in real journalism across the country using citizens
and the power of technology.
The National Security
Archive, a group founded "by journalists and scholars to check rising
government secrecy" and which "combines a unique range of functions:
investigative journalism center, research institute on international affairs,
library and archive of declassified U.S. documents." It also "serves as an
advocacy organization to defend and expand citizen access to government
information", as exemplified by its having "filed over 40,000 targeted Freedom
of Information and declassification requests to more than 200 offices and
agencies of the United States." Anyone who writes about or works on transparency
and civil liberties issues (including me) depends on it; due to its efforts,
"more than 10 million pages of previously secret U.S. government documents have
been made public."
Each of these
groups is innovating real, adversarial journalism. They deserve the support of
anyone who believes that rampant government secrecy and a supine establishment
media are serious problems. And our new organization needs the support of
everyone who finds the ability of the U.S. government to shut off the funding of
journalistic groups it dislikes to be threatening and
wrong.
By clicking here, you can donate to all four of these groups at once or to any combination of them in whatever amounts you specify. Every two months, we will release a new bundle of deserving groups or individuals devoted to these values of independent, adversarial journalism and in need. You can also donate directly to the Freedom of Press Foundation, which will distribute the funds to the beneficiaries in accordance with our published criteria. All of the details of the group's operation, mission, and goals are here. Those who lack the resources to donate can help in other ways, listed here.
Secrecy is the
linchpin of abuse of power. Few priorities are more important, in my view, than
supporting and enabling any efforts to subvert the ability of the U.S.
government and other factions to operate in the dark. It's particularly vital to
undercut the U.S. government's ability to punish and kill groups that succeed in
these transparency efforts. Those are the goals to which this new press freedom
foundation are devoted, and I hope that anyone who believes these goals are
important will find ways to support this effort.
ARA/HJ