Joe Guy wrote:Scooter wrote:Joe Guy wrote:The word traitor is a political term mostly used to describe situations where there is potential danger to one country caused by someone who gives its classified information to another country.
It is "mostly used" in that way, is it? Do you have research on all of the uses of the word "traitor" throughout history, or even in the past ten years, that supports that assertion?
Yes.
Care to share, or nothing but another bald assertion?
After Wikileaks put the information out there it was no longer a secret. Reporting on it after the fact is not the same as finding and making classified information available
So what if another country that was not aware of the info on Wikileaks only learned the information when it became available in the NY Times? How many people must learn secret information before we reach the magic cutoff point where it is no longer traitorous to disseminate it further?
It wasn't my decision to define traitor as betraying another's trust or being false to an obligation or duty. Did you actually read the Webster definition?
I read it and explained why it was so loose as to be meaningless. Do you understand that dictionaries serve both normative and descriptive purposes? And that in this case, neither purpose is served particularly well, for reasons already stated.
The one seeing this in black & white is you. You want the word traitor to not mean what it actually means.
Because I don't want words to mean anything the user wants them to mean, makes me see things in black and white?
Oh, and I accept your apology for lying about what I said.
That's okay but what you've decided is the definition of traitor doesn't make Manning any less of a traitor than he is.
I absolutely agree. And by the same token, what you've decided is the definition of traitor doesn't make Manning any more of a traitor than he is. Except my definition agrees with what both the Constitution of the United States and the court passing sentence on Manning have to say, and according to both he is no traitor at all. Are you actually claiming that some loosey goosey definition that could mean anything should carry more authority than the U.S. Constitution?
But no worries, apparently the Absurdists have won; words have no meaning, so we can make them mean whatever we want. Happy now?