Is there room for the

Is there room for the Freedom of Information Act in U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft’s America?

See: On the Public’s Right to Know
The day Ashcroft censored Freedom of Information
, an SF Gate Editorial Opinion. (Thanks, John)


No one disputes that we must safeguard our
national security. All of us want to protect our
nation from further acts of terrorism. But we must
never allow the public’s right to know, enshrined in
the Freedom of Information Act, to be suppressed
for the sake of official convenience.

Here’s another quote from the same piece:

Consider, for example, just a few of the recent
revelations — obtained through FOIA requests —
that newspapers and nonprofit watchdog groups
have been able to publicize during the last few
months:

  • The Washington-based Environmental Working
    Group, a nonprofit organization, has been able to
    publish lists of recipients who have received billions
    of dollars in federal farm subsidies. Their Web site,
    www.ewg.org, has not only embarrassed the
    agricultural industry, but also allowed the public to
    realize that federal money — intended to support
    small family farmers — has mostly enhanced the
    profits of large agricultural corporations.

  • The Charlotte Observer has been able to reveal
    how the Duke Power Co., an electric utility,
    cooked its books so that it avoided exceeding its
    profit limits. This creative accounting scheme
    prevented the utility from giving lower rates to 2
    million customers in North Carolina and South
    Carolina.

  • USA Today was able to uncover and publicize a
    widespread pattern of misconduct among the
    National Guard’s upper echelon that has continued
    for more than a decade. Among the abuses
    documented in public records are the inflation of
    troop strength, the misuse of taxpayer money,
    incidents of sexual harassment and the theft of
    life-insurance payments intended for the widows
    and children of Guardsmen.

  • The National Security Archive, a private
    Washington-based research group,

  • has been able to obtain records that document an
    unpublicized event in our history. It turns out that in
    1975, President Gerald Ford and Secretary of
    State Henry Kissinger gave Indonesian strongman
    Suharto the green light to invade East Timor, an
    incursion that left 200,000 people dead.

  • By examining tens of thousands of public
    records, the Associated Press has been able to
    substantiate the long-held African American
    allegation that white people — through threats of
    violence, even murder — cheated them out of their
    land. In many cases, government officials simply
    approved the transfer of property deeds. Valued at
    tens of million of dollars, some 24,000 acres of farm
    and timber lands, once the property of 406 black
    families, are now owned by whites or corporations.

These are but a sample of the revelations made
possible by recent FOIA requests. None of them
endanger the national security. It is important to
remember that all classified documents are
protected from FOIA requests and unavailable to
the public.

Yet these secrets have exposed all kinds of official
skullduggery, some of which even violated the law.
True, such revelations may disgrace public officials
or even result in criminal charges, but that is the
consequence — or shall we say, the punishment —
for violating the public trust.

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