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Old 08-12-2008, 10:31 AM   #1 (permalink)
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Transparency in government

There are times when a government simply can't be totally honest. There are military things like troop locations and troop movement, intelligence things like what we know about whom, and if these were to get out then the defense of the country would be put in jeopardy. Lives could be lost. I'm reminded of when Geraldo was demonstrating on international TV the movements of the troops he was accompanying, giving away information that theoretically could have put them in real danger.

On the other side, there are times when the government isn't honest. Recently it's been in the news that the Vice President tried to link Iraq to one of the hijackers on 9/11 via a forged letter. If it weren't for someone stepping forward and breaking the silence or someone seeking out the hidden information, things like this would never be uncovered by the public. And it seems that the less transparent a government, the more they can get away with.

What can and can't be said? Where is the line between responsible secrecy and lies of omission? Do you believe that your government (that goes not just for citizens of the US, but all our TFP international crowd) is too secretive? Do you believe they should be more secretive?

I, personally, am a bit concerned about the US government recently. The lead up to the Iraq war seems to be littered with problems, and had the American people and Congress known more about those problems at the time it's possible that the war wouldn't have been approved. It seems that as the information slowly leaks out now that things were done under the protection of secrecy that betrayed a lot of people's trust.



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Old 08-12-2008, 11:12 AM   #2 (permalink)
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The 'non-transparency' in government goes way back before the Bush administrations. I believe you can probably track the illicit secrecy, or call it the attempt to hide stuff from the people, to at least Nixon, and maybe even before then. The responsibility for not keeping it in check falls right in to the laps of congress at that point. They are the only ones capable of bringing charges against a sitting president or VP. Their failure to do so, whether it's to protect the partisanship or the totally invalid excuse of protecting the country, is only further incentive to continue it. After that, the fault lies directly with us, the people. We continue to elect people of the same parties who promulgate the lies and secrecy.
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Old 08-12-2008, 07:12 PM   #3 (permalink)
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When you say honest it becomes a comparison to truth doesnt it? Do you mean there are times the government can't divulge classified information? I agree with you military movements should always remain classified even in peace time operations. I can't think of anything else that should. I think the secrecy goes way back, but (sorry . . .little paranoia statement here) JFK is the first step in it getting much worse. A statement "we cant comment on that for security reasons" seems acceptable compared to a straightforward lie. I think our elected reps have forgotten what and who they are serving. In the end, who do we have to blame?
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Old 08-13-2008, 10:05 AM   #4 (permalink)
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I just wanna know what's really in "Hangar 18" at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.
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Old 08-13-2008, 10:18 AM   #5 (permalink)
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I just wanna know what's really in "Hangar 18" at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.
There is, but it's just a really big food court. The Baskin Robbins in there is just tops.

Can you imagine if the American people and Congress had an opportunity to read the Patriot Act from cover to cover before it was voted on? It wasn't classified, it just simply wasn't made available.
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Old 08-13-2008, 12:38 PM   #6 (permalink)
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The challenge with transparency in any organization is that it doesn't give people enough time to deal with the communications that come up. Instead of spending time working on the work that needs to be done, there is effort that has to be put into communications to fend off criticism, disagreement of how things are currently proceeding.

My statement comes from being a member of a board of directors where shareholders believe that it is their right for transparancy since it is where they live. Many have misguided thinking that they have rights to board of directors meeting minutes and more communication. The reality is the business corporate law doesn't require it. As a shareholder in stocks, I don't want transparancey to the point where I'm going to question and send off emails and letters. I want them to do what they are required to do, and then if there is wrong doing to be held accountable for doing so. I believe that access after the fact is enough to prevent people from wrongdoing up front.
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Old 08-13-2008, 12:57 PM   #7 (permalink)
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Transparency isn't about getting in your way, though, it's about accountability. It's so when someone actually does do something wrong, there's evidence... and that prevents people from doing something wrong. Accountability and responsibility are good things in business or government, even though they're somewhat rare. It's not about following the law, it's about doing what's best for the company or government.

Using your business example, look at it from a market perspective. Short of giving away vital strategies that competitors might want, there's a lot of good that can come from allowing stock holders access to what's going on with the suits. They can make more informed decisions and the market can be more healthy. If McDonalds has a new CEO, and no one is really sure how well the CEO will do, wouldn't it be good to see him or her speak in a meeting and get a better idea of how capable he or she will be? I would think so. Secrecy often leads to fear, and fear is why so many markets are plagued by inaccurate speculation.

Likewise, governmental secrecy leads to fear, and rightly so considering the behavior of this administration and many before it. The president and congress are both polling around 20% approval right now, and it's because the transparency we're getting is into the past. We aren't finding out about all of these horrible decisions until the consequences are upon us because there's not enough transparency.
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Old 08-13-2008, 01:06 PM   #8 (permalink)
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your first paragraph you and I are in agreement.

Your second, shareholders do get opporutnities to hear the CEO speak, interviews, speaker engagements to name a few. Note, the CEO is NOT on the Board of Directors. He answers to the BoD. The BoD makes decisions and directives for the CEO based on what the CEO brings to the board and what the board brings to the CEO.

Also, for public stocks there are shareholder meetings, you can call in and listen to all the people speak from the President of the BoD to the CEO. Every year the company files a 10K which lists what the company has done, what they are doing. Speculation is just that, it's gambling in more syllables.

The third paragraph, there is lots of publicly available information. Many resources that many do not utilize. Again, we agree on the accountabilty factor and trail. For me that is good enough. I have enough on my plate to worry about day to day. I elect representatives to deal with it for me in regards to public policy and government action. If they fail me, I vote for someone else.
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Old 08-13-2008, 01:17 PM   #9 (permalink)
 
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a) the state is not a private corporation.
the stakes involved with transparency are basically different.

b) am i wrong, cyn, or is your argument, at bottom, kinda like george bernard shaw's "critique" of socialism, which was that it'd be nice if it didn't take up so many evenings and weekends?
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Old 08-13-2008, 02:16 PM   #10 (permalink)
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The professor has a point: private companies and the government are different in ways that might hinder the overall discussion. The CEO/COO is usually chosen by the board and not the shareholders, a corporation doesn't see managerial changes every 4 years, and, unless you're Blackwater, a corporation can't really declare war. Maybe the corporation illustration should be put on the back burner for the time being.
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Old 08-13-2008, 02:29 PM   #11 (permalink)
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I didn't talk more about corporations, I only responded agreement and some correction to perception.

No, I've only stated that my experience with transparency invovled 1637 families, some of which want transparency to see all the mechanics and mechanisms of the day day, month to month activities. To these people it involves their home, which is tied to economic value and retirements. Some people paid $12,000 for their home which can be valued today at $700,000. There are others who paid $700,000. Each has distinct notions of how their value needs to be kept.

rb, I've not stated any argument. I've stated my opinion.

As far what it means in Shaw's critique? I don't know I've not read it nor even heard about it. What I can say is that you have CSPAN, CSPAN2, CSPAN3, you have THOMAS.GOV, and many other poilitical oriented media outlets, and you don't get the same levels of engagement interest as you do with Harry Potter or Hannah Montana.
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Old 08-13-2008, 03:34 PM   #12 (permalink)
 
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but the perception your agreeing with and/or correcting presupposes that you can move from a governmental organization to a private corporation seamlessly---i think that is an error. it think that error is politically motivated as well--not necessarily on your part individually, cyn--but ideologically it is of a piece with any number of other conservative memes---the model for government in the political sense is a public and political institution, not a private corporation, not a co-op. if you want to make the argument that the organization of work is *political* then that's different--but going that way would involve questions of the division of intellectual labor, hierarchy, information relay systems and protocols---in which case i'd be arguing for worker councils against the idea that a capitalist-style corporate body is a good model for any kind of equitable social regulation. we can have these arguments, too---the only move that seems to me inadmissable is pretending that these are not problems.

arguing from some perception on your individual part, based presumably on just what you think as pulled from beneath your hat, given the rules of engagement---which are not a problem (to be clear about that)----that therefore transparency is useless is not an argument at all. what you call "transparency" is a simply information stream. it is a top-down information stream as well--so there's no political content to it or around it--your idea of transparency seems to be a live video feed from an auditorium somewhere, maybe a bunch of them, like in the old days of cpan when it was routinely entertaining, showing hours of escalators running or men's room entrances and such--"you" are "in the room" and there's "information" about "what's going on"---so in the shallowest possible sense, you could say that's "transparency" i guess.

but that means what you're really doing is dodging the issue of what transparency could possibly be about. from what i can tell, tossing flyers out the window of an office building that say something about what's going in "is" transparency so far as you're concerned, and if folk who are concerned don't scurry about to pick up that "information" then obviously the problem lay with them.
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Old 08-13-2008, 03:52 PM   #13 (permalink)
 
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Transparency and accountability in government is about ensuring that the abuses of the last eight years that severely limited and resricted the public's "right to know" (like no other time in my lifetime) do not continue in the future.

It it demanding a strong and enforceable Freedom of Information Act, including a process that holds future presidents accountable if agencies/departments within his administration refuse to comply.

It is demanding a law to require future presidents to provide a detailed justification to Congress (and the people) on all signing statements that alter the intent of laws enacted by Congress.

It is demanding a federal shield law that protects the media and sources within the government so that only justifiable national security issues are restricted and not issues of incompetence or malfeasance by a future president or agencies/departments within his administration.

It is demanding a law that if a future presidents classifies millions of documents with "national security" designations, he provide Congress with a detailed "national security" justification for those classifications.

It is demanding a process that will prevent future presidents from "mistakenly" destroying millions of White House e-mails.

It is having the federal judiciary issue a precedent setting ruling on executive privilege so that claims of executive privilege by future presidents cannot be used to subvert the legitimate Congressional oversight process.
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Old 08-13-2008, 05:00 PM   #14 (permalink)
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I'm buying DC a drink. That's exactly what I was hoping for.
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Old 08-13-2008, 07:05 PM   #15 (permalink)
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Sorry will I didnt read the rules of PUB Discussion; putting a video in there is like lighting a cigarette in the non smoking section. (not trying to create more work for you Cynthetiq)
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Old 08-13-2008, 07:08 PM   #16 (permalink)
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Imagine you were pointing to something that was on that crappy little 13" tv in the corner.
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Old 08-13-2008, 07:34 PM   #17 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dc_dux View Post
Transparency and accountability in government is about ensuring that the abuses of previous years that severely limited and resricted the public's "right to know" (like no other time in my lifetime) do not continue in the future.

It it demanding a strong and enforceable Freedom of Information Act, including a process that holds future presidents accountable if agencies/departments within his administration refuse to comply.

It is demanding a law to require future presidents to provide a detailed justification to Congress (and the people) on all signing statements that alter the intent of laws enacted by Congress.

It is demanding a federal shield law that protects the media and sources within the government so that only justifiable national security issues are restricted and not issues of incompetence or malfeasance by a future president or agencies/departments within his administration.

It is demanding a law that if a future presidents classifies millions of documents with "national security" designations, he provide Congress with a detailed "national security" justification for those classifications.

It is demanding a process that will prevent future presidents from "mistakenly" destroying millions of White House e-mails.

It is having the federal judiciary issue a precedent setting ruling on executive privilege so that claims of executive privilege by future presidents cannot be used to subvert the legitimate Congressional oversight process.
There, fixed it for you. And yes, I agree with your post. Nicely done and well written.
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Old 08-13-2008, 08:05 PM   #18 (permalink)
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rb, simply stated, I hear from the shareholders that voted for me and other board members that "it's democracy, I voted for you." and "you need to tell us what's going on because you work for us" (Sorry, my brain is a bit toast after going over lots of figures and issues from a board meeting this evening.)

No, I explain to them that is about fiduciary responsibility only.

Again, as far as transparency is concerned, I'm happy with the transparency that's available to me now. I can see how my representatives vote, on the city, state, and federal level. I can see what the pending the bills are, and look at more information than what we previously available to me when I was growing up and more interested in politics.

Again, for me, I've got enough to worry about in my day to day and what affects my day. I'm not so concerned about lynching someone for a blowjob in the oval office or because they lied about starting a military action in some country with brown people in it.

IMO if dc_dux's items were brought forward, great. If they don't get brought forward, that's great too.
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Old 08-13-2008, 08:27 PM   #19 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Cynthetiq View Post
Again, as far as transparency is concerned, I'm happy with the transparency that's available to me now. I can see how my representatives vote, on the city, state, and federal level. I can see what the pending the bills are, and look at more information than what we previously available to me when I was growing up and more interested in politics.
I didn't have enough time to go through the Patriot Act before it was approved. Most of the Senate didn't, either. As a matter of fact, it took me months to sort through it. Sure, I don't have a law degree and I'm not a senator, but it was introduced October 1 and signed by the 26th. The first real opposition didn't appear until 2002, if I'm remembering correctly. I appreciate that a lot is transparent, but if only the unimportant stuff is transparent can we really call that reasonable?
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Again, for me, I've got enough to worry about in my day to day and what affects my day. I'm not so concerned about lynching someone for a blowjob in the oval office or because they lied about starting a military action in some country with brown people in it.
This is why RB brought up the Shaw quote.
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IMO if dc_dux's items were brought forward, great. If they don't get brought forward, that's great too.
I dunno, in this thread alone it was presented by a Democrat and understood and accepted by an independent and a conservative. There aren't a lot of people left in the country who agree with what's happened recently, and the group that's left is shrinking. It's not a mandate from the people, but it's kinda heading in that direction.
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Old 08-13-2008, 08:46 PM   #20 (permalink)
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You guys can keep referencing something that I've explained without explaining it and that I don't understand how it applies. Great! That's wonderful!

I'll say it again so that you guys can say it again. I have other things to do than have to have the burden of having to check, double check, triple check, all the information that was available via transparency to me.

I want it to be transparent to those that are available for the system of checks and balances. That's the way that I understand the creation of the Constitution of the seperation of powers, and the idea of representative government. Many of the founding fathers understood that people had to do other things besides mind the government reasons like having to deal with other things to basic ignorance and lack of education.
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Old 08-13-2008, 08:54 PM   #21 (permalink)
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No one's asking you to do it, Cynth. We're asking that those of us who want to do it will have the resources available so that we can. Rushing something through the House and Senate before even Senators could read it, let alone regular Joes, means that there would not, could not be a national debate until it was too late. And it's okay if you don't want to be in that debate. The nice thing about a republic like ours is you can completely ignore politics and no one will lock you up (unless you're a "terrorist"). I want to be in the debate. A lot of people did and do. In order for that debate to be fruitful, we need as many of the facts as possible and at least a little time to educate ourselves. That requires some transparency and some effort at honesty.
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Old 08-13-2008, 09:03 PM   #22 (permalink)
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There is another element of this too. Like Cynth, I don't know if I have the time or inclination to pore through every page of the Patriot Act. But I do like the fact that I have the right and I can if I want to.

Plus, in many ways, we have Fourth Estate or watch dog who is supposed to be scrutinizing things like this. In theory at least.
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Old 08-13-2008, 09:10 PM   #23 (permalink)
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No one's asking you to do it, Cynth. We're asking that those of us who want to do it will have the resources available so that we can. Rushing something through the House and Senate before even Senators could read it, let alone regular Joes, means that there would not, could not be a national debate until it was too late. And it's okay if you don't want to be in that debate. The nice thing about a republic like ours is you can completely ignore politics and no one will lock you up (unless you're a "terrorist"). I want to be in the debate. A lot of people did and do. In order for that debate to be fruitful, we need as many of the facts as possible and at least a little time to educate ourselves. That requires some transparency and some effort at honesty.
I don't know if you're asking me or not since I still don't know what the Shaw reference means. So maybe you are asking that of me, I don't know.

My experience with that kind of element of information gathering to the masses has lead me to see analysis paralysis a majority of the time. I personally have no interest in stagnating government to that point.
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