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It's Friday, June 16. Welcome to a new episode of System Update, our live nightly show that airs every Monday through Friday at 7 p.m. Eastern exclusively here on Rumble, the free speech alternative to YouTube.
Tonight, Daniel Ellsberg, who made history by leaking the Pentagon Papers, died today of pancreatic cancer at the age of 92. The 1971 leak for which Ellsberg was responsible was likely to send him to prison for decades, if not life, as he well knew when he did it. And yet, at the age of 40, with some of the most impressive establishment credentials anyone could compile, he knowingly sacrificed his liberty because he believed it was so imperative that Americans know the truth about the Vietnam War, namely that top official in the Johnson and Nixon administrations were continuously promising Americans that they were months away from victory when, in private, they were saying exactly the opposite and were doing so from the very start of the war. They knew that victory was not only impossible but that the best-case scenario was a stalemate with the North Vietnamese.
Ellsberg is most famous for the Pentagon Papers case, which fostered as well one of the most important press freedom rulings in the history of the Supreme Court but his significance was not confined to that controversy. It extended well beyond that, indeed, the same values and causes that led him to that extraordinary act of self-sacrifice were the same that motivated his work until the last month of his life as he battled a very malignant form of cancer that took his life relatively quickly.
One of the great honors of my life is that I was able to meet and then work with and develop a friendship with Ellsberg, someone who was really a childhood hero to me. I want to take the time tonight to examine his life, not just as a matter of historical significance and not just to honor someone who is heroic in the best senses of the word and not just someone whose fame has probably eroded with time, but also because the controversies that drove him and the decisions that he made have so much relevance to today's politics and our debates, in particular, over foreign policy, transparency, press freedom and more.
Then a new study about gender dysphoria published in the journal The Archives of Sexual Behavior, by Springer Nature, was just retracted after trans activists pressured and badgered the Journal to withdraw it. This is far from the first time that political agendas have limited the range of what is permissible when it comes to scholarship and study, particularly on the issue of transgender rights. We'll speak with the author of this now-retracted study, Northwestern Professor of Psychology Michael Bailey, about the latest pressure campaign and what it means for academic freedom.
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For now, welcome to a new episode of System Update starting right now.