There’s serious disagreement over what Edward Snowden is. We can all agree on the basic facts of what he did, but we disagree about what to call him. He worked for the U.S. National Security Agency and contractors for the NSA. He saw things that he thought were wrong, so he turned over a lot of U.S. government secrets to a couple of newspapers, exposing details and making allegations about the government spying on its own people.
But is Snowden a hero or a villain? For many of us, he’s a hero. He’s exposed spying that we assumed was secretly going on. For those of us who believe this, he’s a hero for risking his life and his future to expose something that he believed was morally wrong.
The people who call Snowden a traitor fall into two camps. One is the group of politicians and bureaucrats who already knew what was going on and didn’t see anything wrong with snooping on the rest of us. Although I find that position legally and morally repugnant, it’s to be expected. It’s the other group of people who are more problematic. That’s the people who want Snowden arrested and put into prison because he broke the law.
I observed this conversation Saturday between a friend of mine and one of his friends. He started by posting a statement in support of Snowden, and the woman responded.

Good artists show us what we can’t yet see with our own eyes
Market failure? Why do we have so many overeducated people?
If you knew when you would die, would that affect how you lived?
Free tires for a stranger? We forget all the people doing good
If you start sharing your abuse, some will tell you to ‘get over it’
If voting really changed anything, governments would make it illegal
What kind of person are you if there’s not a word to define you?
This is why people are confused about what anarchists really are
Will better marketing make you love state-controlled medical industry?