Everything is Secret, So Don’t Bother Asking
Did you know that in 2011 the U.S. government classified more than 92 million documents? Did you know that less than a generation ago, we got by with fewer than six million documents being classified? Along with this explosion in classification and state secrets, did you know that efforts to declassify documents -- to make them theoretically accessible to ordinary Americans -- have plummeted from 196 million pages declassified in 1996 to only 26.7 million in 2011?
Put simply, in less than a generation classification has increased by a factor of fifteen and declassification has decreased by a factor of seven. Boy, that makes me feel a lot freer and safer.
These facts and others that should raise the hackles of any red-blooded American are in this eye-opening article by Tom Engelhardt. Why should they raise our hackles? For at least three reasons.
First, classification is important; state secrets do need to be guarded. But more important than classification is government transparency. We the people need to know everything that we can know, because if we don't, we can't hold government and our elected officials accountable. Classification in a democracy must be used judiciously and sparingly, else democracy itself is imperiled.
Again, classification serves an important role. When I was in the military, I had a security clearance and access to sensitive information and areas. As an additional duty, I served as a unit security officer and also destroyed classified information. Having served during the Cold War and knowing of Soviet efforts to steal secrets, I well recognize the importance of being vigilant.
That said, our government has taken vigilance to new levels of extremity. And extremism in the pursuit of secrecy is no virtue.
So here's the second reason why over-classification is bad: by classifying nearly everything, you make the divulgence of the same a crime. You deter whistle-blowers and truth-tellers. You scare away an already generally compliant media from its vital role as a check on power. And it gets worse. Nowadays, even if something isn't formally classified, the government can claim that the leak of unclassified yet "sensitive" information can be dangerous, since it could expose a pattern of information that threatens state secrets and national security.
At the same time as it deters truth-tellers, over-classification helps those who'd use claims to secrecy to cover their butts. And perhaps most insidiously of all (and this is my third reason), over-classification contributes to a mindset in government that's best summarized as contempt for the people, as captured by the infamous quote by the fictional Colonel Jessup in A Few Good Men that "You can't handle the truth."
But who can't handle the truth? Us? Or our government? Sadly, in the name of "transparency" our government is continuing to stamp "SECRET" on nearly everything that moves, further contributing to a sclerotic system that grows increasingly neurotic in an ever-expanding pursuit of secrecy.
And that doesn't sound like the kind of government accountable to the people that our Founders had in mind.
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3 comments on "Everything is Secret, So Don’t Bother Asking"
July 20, 2012 12:51pm
There two ways to look at this. One says the sofistication of our adversaries technological threat is much greater. Because of unprotectd embeded technology our infrastructure is highly vaulnerable to attack therefore a justification for secrecy in that area. The other is the corporations that are literaly raping everything on this planet with total disregard for any environmental issues are completely out of control. Just ask all the scientists at the FDA who have been systematicaly spied on and had their careers destroyed by FDA management criminal thugs. Corporate whores is what I call them. Then ask the scientists at the EPA who are desperately trying to protect us, and give accurate scientific information about melting sea ice and global warming. They have been stifled threatened and had their careers destroyed by more corporate whores protecting the oil industry. The mangement responsible for this and other programs of censorship and ilegal spying should be in jail. The American people need to grow up and wake up. These congressional prostitutes on capitol hill and their industry revolving door lobbyists are comitting a form of treason against the American people in an effort to cover up their sell out to corporate thugs who wish to do great harm to this country. Their long record of murder extortion bribary and fraud is unquestioned and proven beyond a shadow of a doubt.
July 20, 2012 11:54am
The more government becomes separated from the people, the more its activities become secrete because it has to hide how it screws the people it is supposed to protect and enhance their welfare. The more the elite do illegal things, the more secrete the public records. A government of, for and by the people by definition has no secretes from the people. In such a government, secrecy is an anomaly because the government is the PEOPLE. Systemic cracks get wider the more opaque the process becomes. The most secrete of all systems is justice. Most of the citizens are locked out unless they can pay an attorney an arm and a leg to get them through the process. Justice monopolized by the medieval language is justice denied to the general public.
July 20, 2012 11:29am
I have no reason to believe that the government has ever recognized its increased responsibility at guarding against its own abusive of power when classified information is involved, rather than taking the opportunity to abuse power.