Roadtoad
Bufo Caminus Inedibilis
Just to toss this out for consideration: Was Daniel Ellsberg a traitor?
Ellsberg, while working for the Rand Corporation, passed the Pentagon Papers to the New York Times. In 1971, this precipitated one of the most serious controversies regarding Freedom of the Press and the right of the Government to maintain a degree of confidentiality.
The problem for the Federal Government was what it was they wanted kept secret. There was already serious doubt regarding the Pueblo Incident, and there had long been other concerns over time regarding our involvement in Vietnam. By the time Ellsberg released the documents to the Times, it was becoming fairly obvious that Robert MacNamara and Lyndon Johnson had been lying to us for the better part of Johnson's tenure in the White House. The release of the Pentagon documents not only confirmed there was a credibility gap, but that thousands of Americans had lost their lives for little more than MacNamara's ego, and to pander to the hard-line anti-Communists inside and out of the Government.
Consider also the actions of Mark Felt, who we learned a while ago was Deep Throat, Woodward and Bernstein's source on Watergate. Would Felt be considered a traitor, and subject to trial for Treason? Under what I'm presuming are Toontown's criteria, both men would have been tried and executed.
Simply classifying documents because the Government doesn't want the information released ought to provoke alarm in most people. Why shouldn't this information be known, particularly since as citizens, we have every right to know what our government is up to, within certain limitations. I don't want military movements known, as I've said, until the action is over, and the enemy's been put down. Carter earned a degree of respect after the failure to rescue our people from Iran for being open about the failure, and how it happened, not to mention accepting (incomplete) responsibility.
It would seem to me that rather than forcing the average person to demonstrate why something should not be classified, it ought to be incumbent on the government to show why it should. Some things are genuine no-brainers, but some leave me cold.
Ellsberg, while working for the Rand Corporation, passed the Pentagon Papers to the New York Times. In 1971, this precipitated one of the most serious controversies regarding Freedom of the Press and the right of the Government to maintain a degree of confidentiality.
The problem for the Federal Government was what it was they wanted kept secret. There was already serious doubt regarding the Pueblo Incident, and there had long been other concerns over time regarding our involvement in Vietnam. By the time Ellsberg released the documents to the Times, it was becoming fairly obvious that Robert MacNamara and Lyndon Johnson had been lying to us for the better part of Johnson's tenure in the White House. The release of the Pentagon documents not only confirmed there was a credibility gap, but that thousands of Americans had lost their lives for little more than MacNamara's ego, and to pander to the hard-line anti-Communists inside and out of the Government.
Consider also the actions of Mark Felt, who we learned a while ago was Deep Throat, Woodward and Bernstein's source on Watergate. Would Felt be considered a traitor, and subject to trial for Treason? Under what I'm presuming are Toontown's criteria, both men would have been tried and executed.
Simply classifying documents because the Government doesn't want the information released ought to provoke alarm in most people. Why shouldn't this information be known, particularly since as citizens, we have every right to know what our government is up to, within certain limitations. I don't want military movements known, as I've said, until the action is over, and the enemy's been put down. Carter earned a degree of respect after the failure to rescue our people from Iran for being open about the failure, and how it happened, not to mention accepting (incomplete) responsibility.
It would seem to me that rather than forcing the average person to demonstrate why something should not be classified, it ought to be incumbent on the government to show why it should. Some things are genuine no-brainers, but some leave me cold.

