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In reply to the discussion: “This is most closed, control-freak administration I’ve ever covered.” [View all]ProSense
(116,464 posts)11. "This administration exercises more control than George W. Bush’s did"
What a bunch of garbage. Bush hid everything and lied about everything. It took the Obama administration to release some e-mails that organizations were demanding from Bush for years.
Transparency, Declassification, and the Obama Presidency
By Lee White
<...>
Steven Aftergood (Director of the Project on Government Secrecy at the Federation of American Scientists and the publisher of the blog Secrecy News)
Thomas Blanton (Director of the National Security Archive at George Washington University in Washington, D.C.)
Anne Weismann (Chief Counsel for Citizen's for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington-CREW)
Patrice McDermott (Executive Director of OpenTheGovernment.Org)
- more -
http://www.historians.org/Perspectives/issues/2012/1209/Transparency-Declassification-and-Obama-Presidency.cfm
By Lee White
<...>
Steven Aftergood (Director of the Project on Government Secrecy at the Federation of American Scientists and the publisher of the blog Secrecy News)
In retrospect, the Administration erred in making its early public statements promising unprecedented transparency. The President raised expectations so high that the ensuing disappointment was inevitable. The smarter move would have been to demonstrate openness in actions, not in words, and to exceed public expectations.
<...>
Thomas Blanton (Director of the National Security Archive at George Washington University in Washington, D.C.)
There are obviously some differences of opinion on this subject. My own is that too often we conflate "the Obama administration" with actions of specific agencies or specific bureaucrats, when in fact the policy decision at the top has been pretty good, just stymied by ongoing bureaucratic obfuscation in the middle and the bottom. Or even worse, continuity by federal career employees of Bush policies that the White House has not succeeded in changing.
<...>
Anne Weismann (Chief Counsel for Citizen's for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington-CREW)
In my assessment, the administration's record on transparency is mixed. Without question, President Obama put strong, pro-transparency policies in place that really set the benchmark for a more open government. The problem has been in implementing those policies at the agency level. Agencies have been encouraged to make proactive disclosures, but they have shown little regard for the quality of and public interest in the information they are posting. And the administration has not provided them much guidance on this front.
<...>
Patrice McDermott (Executive Director of OpenTheGovernment.Org)
I think it is a very mixed bag. There are strong indications that the initiatives and efforts of the Obama Administration have begun to institutionalize changes in the attitudes of components of the Executive Branch, mostly in the area of domestic right-to-know. While the effectiveness of FOIA as a disclosure and accountability tool for the public continues to lag behind the promises the President and the Attorney General made, much more attention is being directed by agencies to improving the process, and agencies are putting more information out proactively (without requiring or waiting for a FOIA request)and not just the usual stuff they want you to know. The greatest frustration on the domestic policy front has been the ongoing changes in policy personnel in the White House, creating problems of follow-through and consistency.
<...>
- more -
http://www.historians.org/Perspectives/issues/2012/1209/Transparency-Declassification-and-Obama-Presidency.cfm
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“This is most closed, control-freak administration I’ve ever covered.” [View all]
WillyT
Oct 2013
OP
Inexcusable coming from this President, esp. considering his stance during the election in 2008
Roland99
Oct 2013
#2
"My Administration is committed to creating an unprecedented level of openness in Government."
progressoid
Oct 2013
#8
Your excerpt violates copyright, since it is longer than four paragraphs. As to its substance, I am
msanthrope
Oct 2013
#12
Sachtleben is a shizzy poster boy, having pleaded guilty to child porn charges
struggle4progress
Oct 2013
#15
Especially when the article in the OP is implying the current admin is worse than Nixon ever was.
baldguy
Oct 2013
#31
Washington Post Buries Reporting Questioning Evidence Justifying Iraq War
struggle4progress
Oct 2013
#48
Downie's behavior a decade ago probably better reflects his current views than whatever he was doing
struggle4progress
Oct 2013
#56
Wash. Post buried report questioning Iran nuke intel, despite mea culpa for doing the same on Iraq
struggle4progress
Oct 2013
#50
I think you need to learn the difference between a "story" and an "opinion piece"
struggle4progress
Oct 2013
#54
Ok, I did read the entire opinion and come to a different conclusion which I hope is permissable.
mountain grammy
Oct 2013
#68
Thanks. Us Grandmas need to stick together. We've seen too much and come too far to go back.
mountain grammy
Oct 2013
#77
Is there a special filter that alerts the BOrG to jump on threads so quickly?
BrotherIvan
Oct 2013
#70
do you have any commentary on the actual article rather than your snide comments
KittyWampus
Oct 2013
#74