On
Wednesday, during the sentencing phase of his trial, Bradley Manning made the
following statement, which needs to be
read in its entirety:
First, your Honor. I want to start off with an apology. I am sorry. I am sorry that my actions hurt people. I am sorry that it hurt the United States. At the time of my decisions, as you know, I was dealing with a lot of issues -- issues that are ongoing and they are continuing to affect me
Although they have caused me considerable difficulty in my life, these issues are not an excuse for my actions. I understood what I was doing and the decisions I made. However, I did not truly appreciate the broader effects of my actions. Those effects are clearer to me now through both self-reflection during my confinement in its various forms and through the merits and sentencing testimony that I have seen here.
I am sorry for the unintended consequences of my actions. When I made these decisions I believed I was gonna help people, not hurt people. The last few years have been a learning experience. I look back at my decisions and wonder, 'How on earth could I, a junior analyst, possibly believe I could change the world for the better over the decisions of those with the proper authority?'
In retrospect I should have worked more aggressively inside the system as we discussed during the Providence Statement and had options and I should have used these options. Unfortunately, I can't go back and change things. I can only go forward. I want to go forward. Before I can do that though, I understand that I must pay a price for my decisions and actions.
Once I pay that price, I hope to one day live in the manner I haven't been able to in the past. I want to be a better person-- to go to college-- to get a degree-- and to have a meaningful relationship with my sister's family and my family.
I want to be a positive influence in their lives, just as my aunt Deborah has been to me. I have flaws and issues that I have to deal with, but I know that I can and will be a better person. I hope you can give me the opportunity to prove-- not through words, but through conduct-- that I am a good person, and that I can return to a productive place in society.
Thank you, your Honor.
The
first and most important thing that needs to be said about this statement is, as
Wikileaks responded, it “shows that as
far as his sentencing is concerned there are still decades to play for. Public
pressure on Bradley Manning’s military court must intensify in these final days
before the sentencing decision against him is made.” We all must continue to support
Bradley Manning, and continue to campaign for his unconditional release. After
three years of detention, including prolonged solitary confinement, being repeatedly
stripped naked and subjected to cruel and degrading treatment, after having his
guilty plea to charges making him liable to 20 years of imprisonment deemed
insufficient, after being denied a chance to make a whistleblower or a no-harm
defense, after having his deepest personal traumas paraded against him, and
facing 90 more years of prison time, Bradley Manning can make any plea he
thinks might save him decades of imprisonment, and continue to exact our
unflinching support.
To
understand how firm that obligation is, please look at Dennis Loo’s list of all
that we owe Manning (Because of Bradley
Manning),
which concludes:
Because of Bradley Manning, the public is informed of things the government would never have let us know about, and would have continued to categorically deny with straight faces; and
Because of Bradley Manning’s conscience, bravery, and sacrifice on behalf of the interests and future of humanity, the world is a different place, a world in turmoil but with a chance now to turn things aright.
Whatever
plea Bradley Manning makes to the tribunal that will determine his fate for the
next 90 years, the job of his supporters remains to campaign for his immediate,
unconditional release.
Now,
however, there is a conundrum. That is because, to put it bluntly, Bradley Manning does not determine the
meaning of Bradley Manning.
As
discomfiting as it may be, and as difficult as it may make our task, we have to
acknowledge that, politically speaking, this statement of Manning’s is
terrible.
It
may be personally necessary for him, in ways that no one not facing a century
of prison time can fathom. As must everyone, his first task is to navigate the predicaments
of his life. We now know more about his intense isolation and alienation,
resulting from his very difficult lifelong personal predicaments, of a kind for
which our aggressively individualistic society offers little support. That is now intensified
exponentially by the seemingly inescapable legal predicament, facing eternal confinement,
he is now in, thanks to the one person he dared turn to for support. (There is
no hell hot enough for Adrian
Lamo.) In such a context, there’s no judging or begrudging his personal
decision.
Politically,
however, it is undeniable that this statement works against the movement his
own actions helped to create – including the movement for his defense.
The
first thing in his discourse is apology. Followed by “I am sorry” four
times. Followed by “I hurt the United
States” and “hurt people” because “I was dealing with a lot of issues” and “I
did not truly appreciate the broader effects of my actions” and didn’t have
enough respect for “the decisions of those with the proper authority.” It is a
discourse dripping with guilt and remorse for his actions, that explains those
actions in terms of personal confusion and immaturity, and that culminates by
denigrating himself – self-judging himself through the very actions of his that
we value most, and see as proof of what a fine person he already is – as
someone who needs “the opportunity to prove” to this punishing tribunal that he
can “be a better person.” This is a sad
stance, in which Manning implicitly disavows his strong actions, and his own
strength in taking them, throwing himself at the mercy of the pitiless machine whose
crimes he himself exposed.
This
statement also implicitly undermines the rationale of the movement – the movement Manning did more than anyone else to engender – that defends American
whistleblowers as those who act on political and moral principle, in ways that
are carefully considered, and that help and strengthen our citizenry and our
country. Between those positions, which
this movement has forcefully articulated, and this statement of Manning’s,
there is no congruence; there is contradiction.
To deny this is to be – well, not credible.
Indeed,
to be credible, and to stay the
course of support for Manning as the political agent he has been, we have to
accept that we are doing so whether he recognizes himself to be that agent or
not. This statement provides ammunition that will be used against Edward
Snowden and Julian Assange, and any others – it may in fact deter some – who dare follow the brave example of them
and Manning himself. Unfortunately, it’s clear that, in order effectively to
defend his actions and theirs, we cannot depend on, and indeed have to distance
ourselves from, Manning’s discourse of self-understanding.
To
put it another way, Bradley Manning is not Bradley Manning. Personally, he’s not the Bradley Manning we
have been talking about politically. One might say, using a true cliché, that he’s
not the Bradley Manning that he was. Who would be, after all that he’s been
through? In this statement, he’s certainly not the Bradley Manning that we want
him to be. He’s not, in other words, the Bradley Manning that we have been producing
in our political discourse – and that we
must continue, with all due attention to his utterances, but grounded in
our own understanding of his all-important actions, to produce.
Bradley
Manning’s actions, for which he deserves all credit, are no longer “his.” They have a life of their own, and will speak
in ways whose significance will be determined in a contested conversation, which
his voice, though important, does not control.
We
confront here the political version of what in literary
theory is the question of the author’s authority (echoed in legal theory as the
question of “original intent”): Is the
author of a novel, poem, play, or any cultural text the source and final
arbiter of its meaning? It the author the text’s definitive reader? Or is the
meaning of a text determined in social-differentiated and historically-evolving
networks of readers (including
critics), cultural (academic, media, and political) institutions, and
associated framing discourses that work over the text to "clarify"
and "elucidate" -- actually to produce -- its meaning and
value in ways that escape any authorial intention? In the latter position, which I hold, the
author’s expressed or imputed reading of a text, is -- although an important
one to which attention should be paid – but one voice in this process of the
production of meaning and value.
Take,
for example, Samuel Beckett, one of the twentieth-century’s most highly-regarded
playwrights, and his Waiting for Godot,
one of the twentieth-century’s most prized plays. Beckett famously derided a
well-worn path of interpretation of his play by saying: “If by Godot I had
meant God I would have said God, and not Godot.” And, sure, one should take
that sentiment into account and proceed with care if one is convinced of the
religious, or anti-religious, undertones of the play, but even Beckett himself
can’t really close that path off. And do
we, his readers, bow to his wishes, when he exclaims,
horrified at the prospect: “I AM AGAINST WOMEN PLAYING GODOT”? (Yes, his
all-caps.) Do we accept the authority of
his estate when it sues – successfully in France in 1992, and unsuccessfully in
Italy in 2006 – to prevent the staging of a female Godot? I think, rather, that these gestures make it even clearer
that the author, or even his lawyer, does not get to determine the meaning of
his work. Sorry, Sam, but your work, your text, has a life of its own, that you
no longer control.
An example of a politicized struggle over the author’s tenuous authority
took place in 1984, when Reagan’s presidential campaign, with some cooperation
from the national media, tried to appropriate Bruce Springsteen as a Reaganite
kind of guy, and his music and career as "meaning" the American dream:
how hard work, ambition, and the unfettered ability to accumulate wealth can give
hope to working-class Americans. Springsteen answered back. He began reminding his concert audiences that the words of his songs (like "My
Hometown") hardly proclaim the durability of that erstwhile American dream. He also publicly
donated concert proceeds to union welfare funds, and spoke to workers rallying
against plant closures, telling them: "What goes unmeasured is the price
that unemployment inflicts on people's families, on their marriages, on the
single mothers out there trying to raise their kids on their own.” Although the
media did not pay as much attention to these authorial interventions, they did
mute the Reaganite chorus, and led to a kind of stand-off. In this case, then,
the intervention of a living author had a real (and positive) effect – because he
engaged in the ongoing, contested discourse that was producing its meaning.
[It’s
another story, but all of this can be seen as a symptom of the fact that
nobody perfectly “knows” the meaning of what they do, that as social and
psychological subjects we are constituted by a number of contradictions, such
that neither the social subject nor the psychological subject is perfectly
coherent. Nor, despite the sometime
useful aphorism, is the one (the “political”) always congruent with, or even
running on the same track as, the other (the “personal”). Like all of us,
Bradley Manning has (at least) two trains running.]
With
Bradley Manning, we are in the position of having to assume the authority to
assert a meaning for his actions that now contradicts his own “authorial” interpretation
(à la Beckett), while paying sympathetic and wary attention to the influence of
his living authorial voice (as in the Springsteen example) and the unfortunate
memes supplied by its last utterance, which our political and media apparatuses
are going to repeat and amplify in the worst possible ways.
This
is going to be difficult, and there’s no use pretending otherwise. It’s not as
easy, not as straightforward, to call for the unconditional release of a
prisoner who has ratified his need for punishment and rehabilitation. It’s not as easy to insist that his actions
have been constructive and enriching of our national life when he says they hurt people. It’s not as easy to insist on his political and moral
clarity when he attributes his actions to “issues” and insufficient respect for
“proper authority.” It may get harder, depending on how Bradley Manning, under
intense, unfathomable pressure, “proves” to his tribunal and himself that he’s
“a good person, and … can return to a productive place in society.” He could
become the Norma McCorvey of whistleblowers,
or the Edward Snowden of whistleblowers. We can’t know. Bradley Manning is
confused, and is confusing us.
That’s
our tough luck. Per the
song: That’s what our world is today. Right now, without
illusion, and without trying to deny the obvious, we have to recommit to our
conviction that Bradley Manning is a person whose exemplary concern for his
country and humanity led him to perform an important service for us all, that
he does not deserve to spend another millisecond in prison, and that his
actions are and will be celebrated and honored by all who honor justice and
truth. And we must reserve and preserve
our anger, our fury, for those who have done, and are doing, their utmost to
crush the spirit of a good and decent man, those who are taking a man who, in
his confusion and courage, has changed the world for the better, and are punishing
him, and persuading him that he deserves to be punished, for doing so. Bradley
Manning revealed a lot of crimes, but this crime -- well, now is the time for our tears, and anger.
Which
is why, despite some folks’ bristling at the Mr. Fish graphic, I have no
problem embracing and displaying both of these images together, and, confused
as I am, producing their meaning as one and the same:
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