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When secrecy protects a lie (Cronkite Senility Alert!)
Denver Post ^ | 4/4/2004 | Walter Cronkite

Posted on 04/08/2004 3:29:19 PM PDT by GeorgiaYankee

The Denver Post walter cronkite

When secrecy protects a lie By Walter Cronkite

Sunday, April 04, 2004 -

The initial refusal of President Bush to let his national-security adviser appear under oath before the Sept. 11 Commission might have been in keeping with a principle followed by other presidents - the principle being, according to Bush, that calling his advisers to testify under oath is a congressional encroachment on the executive branch's turf. (Never mind that this commission is not a congressional body, but one he created and whose members he handpicked.) But standing on that principle has proved to be politically damaging, in part because this administration - the most secretive since Richard Nixon's - already suffers from a deepening credibility problem.

It all brings to mind something I've wondered about for some time: Are secrecy and credibility natural enemies? When you stop to think about it, you keep secrets from people when you don't want them to know the truth. Secrets, even when legitimate and necessary, as in genuine national-security cases, are what you might call passive lies.

Take the recent flap over Richard Foster, the Medicare official whose boss threatened to fire him if he revealed to Congress that the prescription-drug bill would be a lot more expensive than the administration claimed. The White House tried to pass it all off as the excessive and unauthorized action of Foster's supervisor (who shortly after the threatened firing left the government).

Maybe. But the point is that the administration had the newer, higher numbers, and Congress had been misled. This was a clear case of secrecy being used to protect a lie. I can't help but wonder how many other faulty estimates by this administration have actually been misinformation explained as error.

The Foster story followed by only a few weeks the case of the U.S. Park Police chief who got the ax for telling a congressional staffer - and The Washington Post - that budget cuts planned for her department would impair its ability to perform its duties. Chief Teresa Chambers since has accepted forced retirement from government service.

Isolated incidents? Not really. Looking back at the past three years reveals a pattern of secrecy and of dishonesty in the service of secrecy. Some New Yorkers felt they had been lied to following the horrific collapse of the World Trade Center towers. Proposed warnings by the Environmental Protection Agency - that the air quality near ground zero might pose health hazards - were watered down or deleted by the White House and replaced with the reassuring message that the air was safe to breathe.

The EPA's own inspector general said later that the agency did not have sufficient data to claim the air was safe. However, the reassurance was in keeping with the president's defiant back-to-work/business-as-usual theme to demonstrate the nation's strength and resilience. It also was an early example of a Bush administration reflex described by one physicist as "never let science get in the way of policy." In April of 2002, the EPA had prepared a nationwide warning about a brand of asbestos called Zonolite, which contained a form of the substance far more lethally dangerous than ordinary asbestos. However, reportedly at the last minute, the White House stopped the warning.

Why? The St. Louis Post-Dispatch, which broke the story, noted that the Bush administration at the time was pushing legislation limiting the asbestos manufacturer's liability. Whatever the reason, such silence by an agency charged with protecting our health is a silent lie in my book.

One sometimes gets the impression that this administration believes that how it runs the government is its business and no one else's.

But this is a dangerous condition for any representative democracy to find itself in. Democracies are not well-run nor long-preserved with secrecy and lies. Walter Cronkite has been a journalist for more than 60 years, including 19 as anchor of the CBS Evening News.


TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: cronkite; liberaloldcranks
"It all brings to mind something I've wondered about for some time: Are secrecy and credibility natural enemies? When you stop to think about it, you keep secrets from people when you don't want them to know the truth. Secrets, even when legitimate and necessary, as in genuine national-security cases, are what you might call passive lies."

OK, no more secrets. All military operations will be announced in advance. Maybe we should have announced the time and place of the D-Day Invasion.

1 posted on 04/08/2004 3:29:20 PM PDT by GeorgiaYankee
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To: All

Donate Here By Secure Server
2 posted on 04/08/2004 3:31:54 PM PDT by Support Free Republic (Hi Mom! Hi Dad!)
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To: GeorgiaYankee
This old crank just needs to stay on his yacht and shut up.
3 posted on 04/08/2004 3:33:21 PM PDT by Viking2002
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To: GeorgiaYankee
"...revealed to Congress that the prescription-drug bill would be a lot more expensive than the administration claimed..."

Liberal battle-axe cronkite makes it sound as if he thinks or cares that that's a bad thing. I'll bet he thought all of johnson's "Great Society" foolishness was a good idea too - and the numbers on those were fudges, too. The operative word is hypocrite.
4 posted on 04/08/2004 3:35:12 PM PDT by Felis_irritable
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To: GeorgiaYankee
"It all brings to mind something I've wondered about for some time:

Now just where did I leave my brain?"

5 posted on 04/08/2004 3:36:09 PM PDT by Rokurota
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To: GeorgiaYankee
At one time I, like a great many Americans, held this man in high esteem. Now, he is merely a sad example of impotent liberal rage of the past and present.
6 posted on 04/08/2004 3:38:23 PM PDT by Frank_Discussion (May the wings of Liberty never lose a feather!)
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To: GeorgiaYankee
I wonder if he would be willing to apply that standard to the Clinton 9/11 commission testimony?
7 posted on 04/08/2004 3:40:37 PM PDT by cripplecreek (you tell em i'm commin.... and hells commin with me.)
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To: GeorgiaYankee
because this administration - the most secretive since Richard Nixon's

I wonder if he's capable of having a thought that doesn't involve Richard Nixon.

8 posted on 04/08/2004 3:45:05 PM PDT by vikingchick
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To: GeorgiaYankee
Secrets, even when legitimate and necessary, as in genuine national-security cases, are what you might call passive lies."

This arrogant and ignorant SOB was "the most trusted men in America." What a sad state America is in.

9 posted on 04/08/2004 3:45:05 PM PDT by TopQuark
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To: GeorgiaYankee
men => man, of course.
10 posted on 04/08/2004 3:45:43 PM PDT by TopQuark
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To: GeorgiaYankee
Never mind that this commission is not a congressional body, but one he created and whose members he handpicked

Guess that Mr. Cronkite is not one to let silly facts get in the way of his assertions. The commission members were not "handpicked" by the President. According to Section 603 of Public Law 107-306:

SEC. 603. COMPOSITION OF COMMISSION.

(a) Members.--The Commission shall be composed of 10 members, of whom--

(1) 1 member shall be appointed by the President, who shall serve as chairman of the Commission;

(2) 1 member shall be appointed by the leader of the Senate (majority or minority leader, as the case may be) of the Democratic Party, in consultation with the leader of the House of Representatives (majority or minority leader, as the case may be) of the Democratic Party, who shall serve as vice chairman of the Commission;

(3) 2 members shall be appointed by the senior member of the Senate leadership of the Democratic Party;

(4) 2 members shall be appointed by the senior member of the leadership of the House of Representatives of the Republican Party;

(5) 2 members shall be appointed by the senior member of the Senate leadership of the Republican Party; and

(6) 2 members shall be appointed by the senior member of the leadership of the House of Representatives of the Democratic Party.

11 posted on 04/08/2004 3:49:55 PM PDT by Zeppo
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To: GeorgiaYankee
Does antone ready listen to this oold "News reader"?
12 posted on 04/08/2004 3:51:35 PM PDT by A. Morgan ("Va-poo-rizer," a spray that makes dog sh*t magically disappear.. bet it works on those in Fallujah.)
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To: GeorgiaYankee
It's time to change Waltie's diapers.
13 posted on 04/08/2004 4:01:47 PM PDT by RightWingAtheist
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To: GeorgiaYankee
coming from the man who generated the media lie about the Tet offensive in the Vietnam war, this is AMAZING
14 posted on 04/08/2004 4:02:02 PM PDT by mo
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To: GeorgiaYankee
.

NEVER FORGET



WALTER CRONKITE was on the side of our terrorist enemies against us during the Vietnam War.

Still is.



NEVER FORGET

.

15 posted on 04/08/2004 7:34:13 PM PDT by ALOHA RONNIE (Vet-Battle of IA DRANG-1965 http://www.LZXRAY.com)
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