This from "The Rude Pundit". Follow link to original.
There have been many "Snowdens" over the years. We tend to look upon them as heroes today. Anyone who exposes tyranny is a hero.
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http://www.rudepundit.blogspot.com/
By the end of his life, no one loved former Massachusetts governor Thomas Hutchinson.
A loyalist's loyalist, Hutchinson led the state during both the Boston
Massacre and the Boston Tea Party. He was hated by the Americans and
never fully accepted by the leaders of Great Britain, where he lived
after fleeing the gathering war fever. After he died, John Adams pretty
much called him a dick.
But the man wrote letters, tons of 'em. Someone gave Benjamin Franklin a stack of letters
that Hutchinson, as chief justice and then governor, along with
province secretary Andrew Oliver, wrote to Great Britain in 1767-1769,
letters that said things like, "I wish the good of the colony when I
wish to see some further restraint of liberty rather than the connection
with the parent state should be broken," as well as asking for more
British troops to help squelch the nascent rebellion. Hutchinson
implored the receiver to keep the communications secret.
For his part, in 1772, Franklin showed the letters only to the leaders
of the Revolution, but Adams said, "Fuck that," and printed some of them
in the Boston Gazette in 1773, which, of course, caused a huge
public uproar against Hutchinson and fanned the flames against the
British. When three people were charged by the British with the leak,
and two others were going to duel over accusations of who stole them,
Franklin stepped up and said he did it. It cost him his job as
Postmaster General. Hutchinson put himself into exile in England for the
rest of his life rather than face impeachment at home. He became
something of a right-wing troll for the crown, as one letter of his criticizing the Declaration of Independence demonstrates.
In his confession, Franklin admitted to the leak of the letters, but he
defended his intentions: "They were written by public officers to
persons of public station, on public affairs, and intended to procure
public measures; they were therefore handed to other public persons who
might be influenced by them to produce those measures." And then
Franklin concluded with a great middle finger to those accusing him of
some kind of treason: "The chief caution expressed with regard to
privacy was to keep their contents from Colony Agents, who the writers
apprehended might return them, or copies of them, to America. That
apprehension, it seems, was well-founded; for the first agent who laid
his hands on them thought it his duty to transmit them to his
constituents."
Franklin thought that the people deserved to know what their leaders
were plotting against them. That we honor him today must mean we believe
there is some good to such actions.
Ten Economic Questions for 2025
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Here is a review of the Ten Economic Questions for 2024.
Below are my ten questions for 2025 (I've been doing this online every year
for 20 years!). These...
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