emordnilap wrote:Even the impact (or lack of impact) of the resistance doesn’t matter. It is resistance that it is the crime.
Yep. The United States is quite literally a terrorist nation. It literally terrorises anyone who resists its will. It does this openly.
Which means we have something of a paradox here. The US wants, ultimately, to string Assange up by his balls for leaking their secrets. But in order to actually get hold of him, officialdom has to pretend he's really wanted on obscure sex charges in Sweden, and the politicians have to pretend that they don't really know it's all about getting him to the hands of the Americans. And the longer the affair drags on, the weirder the whole situation will look. How are they going to justify a large police presence around the Ecuadorian embassy, 24/7 and with no sight in end, for a fugitive who is wanted for having sex without asking to use a condom first? They could justify it if they said "He's wanted in the US for his wikileaks activities", but then they can't extradite him to Sweden!
If he stays where he is, I think he is now safe. The political consequences of storming the embassy are too severe, and the longer he stays put then the harder to it will become to justify his extradition.
"We fail to mandate economic sanity because our brains are addled by....compassion." (Garrett Hardin)