RT Times reports that Alexanderplatz square in Berlin has become the stage for a provocative art piece which celebrates whistleblowers and encourages ordinary citizens to speak out. "They have lost their freedom for the truth, so they remind us how important it is to know the truth,” says sculptor Davide Dormino. The life-sized statues of the three whistleblowers stand upon three chairs, as if speaking in an impromptu public meeting. Next to them is a fourth, empty chair. "The fourth chair is open to anyone here in Berlin who wants to get up and say anything they want," says the artist. Dormino, who came up with the idea together with the US journalist Charles Glass, specifically chose a classical bronze statue for his depiction – and not an installation or abstract piece – since statues are usually made of establishment figures. According to Domino while men who order others to their deaths get immortalized, those who resist are often forgotten, so “the statue pays homage to three who said no to war, to the lies that lead to war and to the intrusion into private life that helps to perpetuate war.” Activists and members of Germany’s Green party unveiled the life-size bronze statues on May Day.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday May 03 2015, @10:52PM
I happen to have the radical belief that people are not subhuman and less deserving of having their liberties respect simply because they were 'unfortunate' enough to be born in a different country.
The constitution does not limit itself to citizens, only people.
Unless you steal whatever it is stored on, yes.
The whole steal/copy thing is a red herring because we all know exactly what Snowden did whatever words are used to describe it. You should never have bothered arguing about it. That he picked a phrasing which would appear to someone ignorant of the situation slightly less favorable to Snowden is the least of the problems with his post.