1901 Days in High-Security Prison (and 8 More Years in Severe Confinement) for the 'Crime' of Exposing War Crimes and Corruption
WebM: Wikileaks on almost a month since Assange's release
THIS new video was shared today or some time yesterday by Wikileaks, as in the Twitter/X account (they've not updated their Web site in ages), even though it mostly blends together a bunch of other (old) clips to make an easily-digestable 37-minute clip. This covers many things including the hearing in Saipan.
Mr. Assange is not entirely free right now. Aside from health issues ('health debt' caused by prolonged psychological torture and a lack of movement, light etc.) there may be monetary problems.
Earlier this month we wrote about it ("The Father John Shipton: The Goal of The US Government Was to Bankrupt WikiLeaks, Julian Assange, and His Family").
As of a few hours ago the media also says: "The charter flight cost $781,480, according to documents tabled in the Senate." (Probably Australian dollars)
That's even more than they initially stated. Are they still trying to bankrupt him and his family? Just to ensure Wikileaks cannot get back to its feet? The cofounder of Wikipedia - no typo or Freudian slip here - otherwise expects Julian Assange to return and there's this new clip about what role he might play. For him to return to publishing leaks would be a victorious act of defiance against an empire which detests journalists and despises critics. █
Julian Assange and Kevin Gosztola's book "Guilty of Journalism."