Midgen wrote:
Hero and Traitor are not necessarily mutually exclusive.
The government has done a fantastic job of making people who do things they don't like into criminals.
That's rather tautological. The government doesn't like rapists, murderers, bank robbers, horse thieves, people that bilk old ladies out of their money, or pirates either, and does a very good job of making them into criminals as well.
People that have a responsibility to protect classified information and intentionally fail to do so
should be criminals. However, that principle also should not allow the government to hide programs like this one behind a veil of secrecy, then use the law to prosecute the whistleblower. This is clearly a case of whistleblowing (ignoring, for the moment, his interest in China and Russia), but the problem is that since the program was authorized by a court, it doesn't seem to be protected under normal whistleblower protections.
The real problem here is that we have a secret court in the first place. That would appear to violate the prohibition on "public trials" which, even though it doesn't specifically refer to the matters that come before the FISA court, implies that that actions of the court ought to be visible to the public.
This guy is not a hero; he's a whistleblower, and his actions are worthy of praise in that respect, but he casts real suspicion on himself by not staying to face the music and continue to draw public attention to the issue, or at least by going to a friendly foreign country that might be inclined to grant asylum.
He's a distinct contrast to Bradly Manning who was a traitor in every way except the most technical legal sense, and simply just vomited information onto the internet wholesale out of disgruntlement, then tried to pretend to be taking a moral stand, when all he really revealed was "holy ****, people sometimes get shot up by attack helicopters when there's a war on."