GLENN GREENWALD | JOURNALISM

Columnist who broke NSA leaks story grew up in Lauderdale Lakes

 
 
Glenn Greenwald
Glenn Greenwald

cherrera@MiamiHerald.com

“I somehow decided that if I thought I was right about something, then it would be worth pursuing that view no matter the consequences,” he said.

Those consequences landed him in detention and suspension a great deal of the time, behind a belief that institutions shouldn’t always be deferred to just because they hold power.

But he wasn’t done with Lauderdale Lakes just yet.

Five years later, and only one month after graduating with a philosophy degree from George Washington University in Washington, D.C., Greenwald was making headlines again in Lauderdale Lakes.

This time, Broward Sheriff’s deputies forcibly removed a 23-year-old Greenwald from the council podium as he argued for a change in meeting times, asserting that the council’s morning meetings discriminated against working people who might want to attend.

He would take on the city council again, filing to run. Again, he lost, this time to Josephus Eggelletion Jr.

His South Florida days of councils and commotions behind him, Greenwald left to study law at New York University. His political and debate background made him a powerful litigator at Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz, a New York firm that represented the rich and powerful in the city.

For a boy who was born in Queens and grew up poor with divorced parents, the job represented money unlike any he had ever had in his entire life. His mother worked as a McDonald’s cashier for some time to make ends meet.

His dream job at the prestigious law firm lasted 18 months.

“It was the antithesis of the powers I wanted to be representing,” he said. “My grandfather taught me that I had to arrive at my own views and have the confidence to embrace those views,” even if those views brought him against the world.

In 2000, he started his own practice to fight for the views he believed in. Within 10 years, his practice would grow to include six lawyers and defend many constitutional law cases.

Eventually, that lost its allure as well.

In 2005, he cleared his calendar and made a life-changing journey to Rio de Janeiro with his dog. “On the second day there, I just met someone and fell in love,” he said.

Greenwald, who came out as gay while in college, settled in Brazil for good after meeting his long-time partner David Michael Miranda. Same-sex unions are legally recognized in Brazil.

Greenwald decided to leave law behind and “really spontaneously” started a blog.

Shortly after, news broke that President George W. Bush had authorized the NSA to spy on Americans following the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. This was the kind of constitutional rights issue that Greenwald wanted to sink his teeth into.

“I wanted to be part of the broader political conversation,” he said. “I felt there were a lot of things that weren’t being said.”

Many liberal, progressive and democracy blogs started reading the work he was publishing and he soon reached the ears of Salon, a news website, which hired him in 2007 as a columnist.

When Snowden contacted him, he was prepared.

“I felt like my entire life was in preparation for this moment,” he said.

He has spent the last month under the spotlight of the world.

As the drama unfolds in the coming weeks, Greenwald watches from his home in Rio de Janeiro with his 10 stray dogs.

“It’s what keeps me sane,” he said. “When I’m not working, I’m rolling around with my dogs as part of the pack.”

From his early start in Lauderdale Lakes, Greenwald has hoped to show others not to fear power, but to challenge it.

“I’m very proud of him,” said mom Arlene Greenwald, who still works every day. “He has great principles and he’s sticking to his principles. He’s not afraid to speak out. I think that’s what changes people and the world, people who are not afraid to speak out.”

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