Nope, Cot, None of those things even enter into my thought process, nor would they.
I'm working on a much longer answer, and will post it later in the day.
EDIT: Here's the long answer:
No, Cot, it's just as clear, and no more difficult. Not only would I have no qualms about turning the son of a bitch in, if he's convicted, I wouldn't have any qualms about being his executioner. Although, as I consider it, he should really be turned over to a mob of widows of service members killed in action.
Let us be very clear: There is NO moral or ethical dilemma here. What Manning did was WRONG and abhorrent in the worst way possible. He betrayed is country -and worst still, his brothers in arms- for no reason other than he could. His highest attainment here is nothing more than bragging rights. At the very least people like Ames, Pollard, the Walkers, Whitworth, or the Rosenbergs did it for money or ideological reasons; which is to say "concrete motivations". While I can't condone betraying your country for cash, it is understandable. Betrayal for ideological reasons is understandable, and may even be excusable (although not necessarily legally tolerable) depending on where you stand on a given doctrine.
However, to do this for nothing more than pure kicks is the lowest kind of debasement.
To go over your questions one-by-one:
1) A promise, especially an implied one, pertaining to "keeping a secret" doesn't hold any water if someone makes another party an accessory after the fact to a crime. Even if a person is completely amoral and unethical, self-preservation would dictate that someone strongly consider turning the information over to the authorities when dealing with a crime this serious. That goes double for a convicted felon like Lamo, who would certainly know that if he were found to be connected to this in any way could be facing a very long jail term.
2) Personally, people around me should damn well know where I stand ahead of time. I am not a doctor, lawyer (gag), or priest (double gag). As such I have no moral, legal, or ethical bounds to maintain another person's illegal secret(s) or criminal information under professional privilege. It's simple. If you don't want word of your criminal behavior to get out, don't tell people, especially me.
3) No loss there. A true friend doesn't make others responsible for their own failings. If someone was a very close friend, and did decide to burden me with such a confession, my only response would be along the lines of "So who's going to the authorities, you or me?" Note that I said 'a very close friend'. Acquaintances and the like don't get the option of doing it before me.
For those of you who think that it was bad or even repugnant for Lamo to tell the authorities, consider the question this way: substitute "murder" (or whatever crime you hold to be worst) for "treason", and place yourself in Lamo's position. At what point do you stop ignoring the crime -and your own complicity as an accessory after the fact in the eyes of the authorities- and when exactly do your morals, ethics, and/or self interests tell you have to talk?
I'm working on a much longer answer, and will post it later in the day.
EDIT: Here's the long answer:
No, Cot, it's just as clear, and no more difficult. Not only would I have no qualms about turning the son of a bitch in, if he's convicted, I wouldn't have any qualms about being his executioner. Although, as I consider it, he should really be turned over to a mob of widows of service members killed in action.
Let us be very clear: There is NO moral or ethical dilemma here. What Manning did was WRONG and abhorrent in the worst way possible. He betrayed is country -and worst still, his brothers in arms- for no reason other than he could. His highest attainment here is nothing more than bragging rights. At the very least people like Ames, Pollard, the Walkers, Whitworth, or the Rosenbergs did it for money or ideological reasons; which is to say "concrete motivations". While I can't condone betraying your country for cash, it is understandable. Betrayal for ideological reasons is understandable, and may even be excusable (although not necessarily legally tolerable) depending on where you stand on a given doctrine.
However, to do this for nothing more than pure kicks is the lowest kind of debasement.
To go over your questions one-by-one:
1) A promise, especially an implied one, pertaining to "keeping a secret" doesn't hold any water if someone makes another party an accessory after the fact to a crime. Even if a person is completely amoral and unethical, self-preservation would dictate that someone strongly consider turning the information over to the authorities when dealing with a crime this serious. That goes double for a convicted felon like Lamo, who would certainly know that if he were found to be connected to this in any way could be facing a very long jail term.
2) Personally, people around me should damn well know where I stand ahead of time. I am not a doctor, lawyer (gag), or priest (double gag). As such I have no moral, legal, or ethical bounds to maintain another person's illegal secret(s) or criminal information under professional privilege. It's simple. If you don't want word of your criminal behavior to get out, don't tell people, especially me.
3) No loss there. A true friend doesn't make others responsible for their own failings. If someone was a very close friend, and did decide to burden me with such a confession, my only response would be along the lines of "So who's going to the authorities, you or me?" Note that I said 'a very close friend'. Acquaintances and the like don't get the option of doing it before me.
For those of you who think that it was bad or even repugnant for Lamo to tell the authorities, consider the question this way: substitute "murder" (or whatever crime you hold to be worst) for "treason", and place yourself in Lamo's position. At what point do you stop ignoring the crime -and your own complicity as an accessory after the fact in the eyes of the authorities- and when exactly do your morals, ethics, and/or self interests tell you have to talk?

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