| 
 | RamblingsAllan C. BrownfeldAllan
      C. Brownfeld covers Washington, D.C. Remembering
      April 1865—the Month that Saved America     
      Widespread ignorance of American history among students and
      teachers at high schools and colleges is a major threat to national
      security, Pulitzer Prize winning historian and author David McCullough
      recently told a U.S. Senate committee.      
      “We are raising a generation of people who are historically
      illiterate” and ignorant of the basic philosophical foundations of our
      constitutional free society, said the past president of the Society of
      American Historians. “We can’t function in a society if we don’t
      know who we are and where we came from.”      
      At the same time, serious works of history have become bestsellers,
      among them McCullough’s own biography of John Adams. Another
      best-selling work of history that is worthy of serious study is April
      1865: The Month That Saved America by Jay Winik, senior scholar
      at the University of Maryland’s School of Public Affairs.      
      This single month, April 1865, witnessed the fall of Richmond, a
      daring last-ditch Southern plan for guerrilla warfare, Lee’s retreat,
      and then, Appomattox. It saw Lincoln’s assassination just five days
      later and a near successful plot to decapitate the Union government,
      followed by chaos and coup fears in North, collapsed negotiations and
      continued bloodshed in the South and, finally, the start of national
      reconciliation.      
      “April 1865 is a month that could have unraveled the American
      nation,” Winik writes, Instead
      it saved it. It is a month as dramatic and as devastating as any ever
      faced in American history—and it proved to be perhaps the most moving
      and decisive month not simply of the Civil War, but indeed, quite likely,
      in the life of the United States.      
      For most Americans, it is at a small red brick house in Appomattox,
      Virginia on April 9, 1865—Robert E. Lee’s fateful meeting with Ulysses
      S. Grant—that the story of the Civil War stops. This, Winik argues,  . . . is a mistake. For
      one thing, the war was still not over; it could have lasted more hard
      months, even years. For another, no period was more harrowing, or had so
      great an impact upon this country, as the days that followed Lee’s
      surrender. Within six days, Abraham Lincoln was dead, the first-ever
      assassination of an American president. Never before or since in the life
      of this nation has the country been so tested as in this one week alone. .
      . . Time and again, things might have gone altogether differently.      
      The story of April 1865 is not just one of decisions made, but also
      of decisions rejected. Lee’s rejection of continuing the war as a
      guerrilla battle, the preference of Jefferson Davis, and Grant’s choice
      to be magnanimous at Appomattox cannot be overestimated in importance.      
      With the fall of Richmond, Jefferson Davis and the Confederate
      government were on the run. Davis, Winik writes, . . . was thinking about
      such things as a war of extermination . . . a national war that ruins the
      enemy. In short, guerrilla resistance. . . . The day after Richmond fell,
      Davis had called on the Confederacy to shift from a conventional war to a
      dynamic guerrilla war of attrition, designed to wear down the North and
      force it to conclude that keeping the South in the Union would not be
      worth the interminable pain and ongoing sacrifice. “We have now entered
      upon a new phase of a struggle the memory of which is to endure for the
      ages,” he declared. “Relieved from the necessity of guarding cities
      and particular points, important but not vital to our defense, with an
      army free to move from point to point and strike in detail detachments and
      garrisons of the enemy, operating on the interior of our own county, where
      supplies are more accessible, and where the foe will be far removed from
      his own base and cut off from all succor in case of reverse, nothing is
      now needed to render our triumph certain but the exhibition of our own
      unquenchable resolve. Let us but will it, and we are free”      
      But Robert E. Lee knew the war was over. Grant was magnanimous in
      victory and, Winik points out,  . . . was acutely aware
      that on this day, what had occurred was the surrender of one army to
      another—not of one government to another. The war was very much on.
      There were a number of potentially troubling rebel commanders in the
      field. And there were still some 175,000 other Confederates under arms
      elsewhere; one-half in scattered garrisons and the rest in three remaining
      rebel armies. What mattered now was laying the groundwork for persuading
      Lee’s fellow armies to join in his surrender—and also for reunion, the
      urgent matter of making the nation whole again. Thus, it should be no
      great surprise that there was a curious restraint in Grant’s tepid
      victory message passed on to Washington.      
      Appomattox was not preordained. “If anything,” notes Winik, . . . retribution had
      been the larger and longer precedent. So, if these moments teemed with
      hope—and they did—it was largely due to two men who rose to the
      occasion, to Grant’s and Lee’s respective actions: one general,
      magnanimous in victory, the other, gracious and equally dignified in
      defeat, the two of them, for their own reasons and in their own ways,
      fervently interested in beginning the process to bind up the wounds of the
      last four years. . . . Above all, this surrender defied millenniums of
      tradition in which rebellions typically ended in yet a greater shedding of
      blood. . . . One need only recall the harsh suppression of the peasants’
      revolt in Germany in the 16th century, or the ravages of Alva during the
      Dutch rebellion, or the terrible punishments inflicted on the Irish by
      Cromwell and then on the Scots after Culloden, or the bloodstained
      vengeance executed during the Napoleanic restoration, or the horrible
      retaliation imposed during the futile Chinese rebellion in the mid-19th
      century . . .        
      Lee was not alone in rejecting the idea of guerrilla war. General
      Joe Johnston, offered generous terms of surrender by Union General William
      Tecumseh Sherman, cabled the Confederate government for instructions. The
      order was to fight on. Johnston was told to take as many of his men as
      possible and fall back to Georgia. Johnston refused and decided to
      surrender. “Johnston was, in effect, willingly ignoring the edict of the
      Confederate president,” writes Winik. He himself would later
      acknowledge that he directly “disobeyed” his instructions. But
      Johnston, who wired back to Davis that such a plan of retreat was
      “impracticable,” saw no other way. In his view, it would be “the
      greatest of crimes for us to attempt to continue the war,”. . . To fight
      further would only “spread ruin all over the south.”. . . What
      ultimately must stand out is not Johnston’s military ability or his
      daring in battle, but this one decisive act in which he brazenly violated
      the chain of command—and in doing so, helped heal a country.      
      In early May, when the Mississippi governor and the former governor
      of Tennessee rode out and urged General Nathan Bedford Forrest to retreat
      with his cavalry to continue a guerrilla war, Forrest barked back: “Any
      man who is in favor of further prosecution of this war is a fit subject
      for a lunatic asylum.” The attempt to establish “a separate and
      independent confederacy had failed,” Forrest noted, and they should meet
      their responsibilities “like men.” He added, “Reason dictates and
      humanity demands that no more blood be shed.”      
      Then Forrest took one final step that would long surprise many in
      the North. Echoing the sentiments of Lee before him, in places almost word
      for word, he added: I have never on the
      field of battle sent you where I was unwilling to go myself, nor would I
      advise you to a course which I felt myself unwilling to pursue. You have
      been good soldiers, you can be good citizens. Obey the laws, preserve your
      honor, and the government to which you have surrendered can afford to be
      and will be magnanimous.      
      As the war came to an end, writes Winik,  Hate, despondency and
      vengeance now loomed like a hydra for America: they could have steeped the
      country in rancor and chaos, and destroyed any possibility of true union.
      But they did not. Over 620,000 lay dead, one-twelfth of the North and an
      astonishing one-fifth of the South; all told, it was the most battle
      deaths in the country’s history, as great as in all of the nation’s
      other wars combined. Yet remarkably, as the North and South, leaders and
      citizens alike, struggled to adjust to the new order, they rose to the
      occasion.      
      At the war’s end, the question of whether the United States would
      prosper and endure or disintegrate and decline remained an open one. Winik
      declares that,  Throughout history’s
      long, checkered span, for republics, particularly those that undergo civil
      wars, the odds were not good, and, in fact, never had been. The Greek
      example, to recall Alexander Hamilton’s immortal words, was
      “disgusting.” After a reign of splendor, the Roman Republic fell
      ignominiously. There were a few republics in Europe, but none of them was
      large—and most had not acquitted themselves particularly well either. .
      . . The Founding Fathers were, of course, aware of all this, and more than
      that, were haunted by it.      
      After the Civil War’s end, Winik argues,  . . . obliterated was
      any serious thought of future secession by any side, any state, any
      section. Before the war, Americans often spoke of the United States in the
      plural—“The United States are . . .” For example, in his classic
      work on the history of America, noted historian John H. Hinton wrote in
      1834: “By some, the United States are highly eulogized; by others, they
      are eagerly depreciated.” Sometime after the war, however, so changed
      was America that this was now modified to a singular noun. Thus,
      Hinton’s words would become “The United States is . . .” The war’s
      end—and how it ended, both manner and means—had, in fact marked a
      decisive break with the past, the great chasm between the era of
      contingent republics and permanent nations, which until then was all of
      human doings. No less than the Founders who assembled in 1776 it made
      America.      
      Winik concludes: April 1865 was
      incontestably one of America’s finest hours: for it was not the deranged
      spirit of an assassin that defined the country at war’s end, but the
      conciliatory spirit of leaders who led as much in peace as in war,
      warriors and politicians who, by their example, their exhortation, their
      deeds, overcame their personal rancor, their heartache, and spoke as
      citizens of not two lands, but one, thereby bringing the country together.
      True, much hard work remained. But much, too, had already been
      accomplished. Supreme Court Takes a Step Backward from the Ideal of a Color-Blind
      Society      
      The Supreme Court had an opportunity in June to reaffirm the ideal
      of a color-blind society—precisely the kind of society that the leaders
      of the civil rights movement sought to achieve.      
      Instead, they equivocated. By a 6-3 vote, the court ruled that the
      University of Michigan’s undergraduate admissions policy—which awarded
      20 points out of 150 to specified minority groups (eight more points than
      were earned by a perfect SAT score)—was unconstitutional. In a 5-4
      decision, the University of Michigan’s use of racial preferences in
      determining who gets into its law school—a somewhat more subtle
      formula—was upheld. Thus, for all intents and purposes, affirmative
      action programs based upon race remain alive and well.      
      Even many liberals, some of them former supporters of affirmative
      action, found these decisions contradictory and illogical. Columnist
      Michael Kinsley, for example, notes that, Admission to a prestige
      institution such as the University of Michigan or its law school is what
      computer types call a “binary” decision. It’s yes or no. You’re in
      or you’re out. There is no partial or halfway admission. The effect of
      any factor in the decision is also binary. It either changes the result or
      it doesn’t. It makes all the difference or it makes none at all. Those
      are the only possibilities. . . . Any factor that changes the result has
      the same impact as if it were an absolute quota of one. It gets you in, or
      it keeps you out. And this is either right or wrong. . . . The majority
      opinion says that its preferred flexible-flier style of affirmative action
      does “not unduly harm members of any racial group.” Well, this depends
      on what you mean by “unduly,” doesn’t it? . . . We’re dealing with
      an all-or-nothing-at-all decision here. Every time affirmative action
      changes the result, a minority beneficiary benefits by 100 percent and a
      white person is burdened 100 percent, in the only currency at issue, which
      is admission to the University of Michigan. This burden may be reasonable
      or unreasonable, but it is precisely the same size as the burden imposed
      by the mathematical-formula-style affirmative action that the court finds
      objectionable. . . . The court’s message to universities and other
      selective government-financed institutions is: We have fudged this
      dangerous issue. You should do the same.      
      Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, who wrote the opinion upholding the
      University of Michigan law school’s affirmative action program,
      rationalized her rejection of the Constitution’s equal protection
      clause, which provides that no state shall “deny to any person within
      its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” She cited a previous
      Supreme Court decision in doing so, Adarand Construction v. Peña,
      that says “Government may treat people differently because of their race
      only because of the most compelling reasons.”      
      What, then, was the “most compelling reason” to support
      race-based admissions policies? Her answer: minority “underrepresentation.”
      Another liberal columnist, Richard Cohen, provides this assessment of that
      reasoning: In one form or anther,
      O’Connor uses the term repeatedly. But she never defines it. Like
      pornography, she knows it when she sees it. Underrepresentation would not
      be, say, 14.5 percent of the law school class—the actual figure of
      minority students enrolled—but it would be, say, 4 percent of the class,
      the predicated percentage if there were no affirmative action program.
      That calamity enables her to suspend the Constitution.      
      The argument that minority students are needed for “diversity,”
      Cohen argues,  . . . is total
      nonsense—and insulting to blacks and Hispanics, who are not mere
      condiments recruited to add spice to an otherwise bland law school class.
      . . . The use of such numbers not only implies an impermissible quota but
      also suggests there really is such a thing as a correct figure. . . .
      O’Connor’s opinion is an intellectual mess. . . . The Supreme Court is
      supposed to clarify the very issues that befuddle the rest of us.
      O’Connor not only failed to do that, but she and her colleagues failed
      so spectacularly that maybe it is the high court that could use some
      affirmative action itself. Clear thinkers are underrepresented.      
      In his dissent, Justice Clarence Thomas, the Court’s only black
      member, quoted from a speech by the noted black abolitionist Frederick
      Douglass, delivered nearly 140 years ago,  What I ask for the Negro
      is not benevolence, not pity, not sympathy, but simply justice. . . . All
      I ask is give him a chance to stand on his own legs. Let him alone!      
      The dream of a color-blind America that motivated men and women of
      good will during the years of struggle for equal rights has been abandoned
      by many who now seek a system of proportional representation in which
      individuals will be judged not on the basis of their own merit but as
      members of a particular race or ethnic group. In the end, it is
      “racism” to judge men and women on the basis of race—whether it be
      to bestow rewards or to inflict penalties.      
      Our legal tradition mandates individual rights, not group rights.
      This has, in fact, been the goal of the civil rights movement for many
      years. Thurgood Marshall, arguing for the NAACP in the case of Sipuel
      v. Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma (332 U.S. 631, 1948)
      declared: “Classifications and distinctions based on race or color have
      no moral or legal validity in our society.”      
      The Civil Rights Act of 1964 specifically states that no employer
      would be required to hire on the basis or race in order to correct some
      racial imbalance in the work force. What the law does is forbid
      discrimination on the basis of race, religion, sex and age.      
      Title VII, Section 703 (j) says: Nothing contained in
      this title shall require any employer . . . to grant preferential
      treatment to any individual or to any group because of the race, color,
      religion, sex or national origin of such individual or group on account of
      an imbalance which may exist with respect to the total number of
      percentage of persons of any race, color, religion, sex or national origin
      employed by any employer.      
      In supporting this legislation, Senator Hubert Humphrey (D-MN)
      declared that the act  . . . does not require
      an employer to achieve any kind of racial balance in his work force by
      giving any kind of preferential treatment to any individual or group. He
      said that there must be an “intention to discriminate” before an
      employer can be considered in violation of the law.      
      Beyond all of this, as Justice Thomas has said, affirmative action
      programs based on race are demeaning to the very groups they are meant to
      serve, implying that members of these groups cannot compete successfully
      in the open marketplace.       
      From the very start of affirmative action there have been many
      eloquent black voices raised in opposition. The Supreme Court would have
      done well to consider those voices more carefully.      
      In an article, “The Moral Crisis of the Black American” (The
      Public Interest, Summer, 1973), Orlando Patterson writes: There can be no moral
      equality where there is a dependency relationship among men. There will
      always be a dependency relationship where the victim strives for equality
      by vainly seeking the assistance of his victimizer. In situations like
      these we can expect sympathy, even magnanimity from men, but never—and
      it is unfair to expect otherwise—the genuine respect which one equal
      feels for another.      
      Mr. Patterson notes that judging individuals on the basis of race
      legitimizes “atavistic sentiments” and “awakens and lends
      respectability to the most primordial of group identities—race.”      
      Professor Shelby Steele of San Jose State University in California
      declares: Good intentions can
      blind us to the effects they generate when implemented. In our society,
      affirmative action is, among other things, a testament to white good will
      and to black power. . . . But after years of implementation I think that
      affirmative action has shown itself to be more bad than good and that
      blacks . . . now stand to lose more from it than they gain. . . . By
      making black the color of preference, these mandates have reburdened
      society with the very marriage of color and preference (in reverse) that
      we set out to eradicate. . . . I think one of the most troubling effects
      of racial preferences for blacks is a kind of demoralization. Under
      affirmative action, the quality that earns us preferential treatment is an
      implied inferiority. The effect of preferential treatment—the lowering
      of normal standards to increase black representation—puts blacks at war
      with an expanded realm of debilitating doubt, so that the doubt itself
      becomes an unrecognized preoccupation that undermines their ability to
      perform.      
      In his important book, Preferential Policies: An International
      Perspective, Professor Thomas Sowell, senior fellow at the Hoover
      institution at Stanford University, examines such programs in a number of
      countries. He concludes that,  One of the clearly
      undesired and uncontrolled consequences of preferential policies has been
      a backlash by non-preferred groups. This backlash has ranged from campus
      racial incidents in the U.S. to a bloody civil war in Sri Lanka . . .
      Preferential honors for members of particular groups can easily render
      suspect not only those particular honors but also honors fully merited and
      awarded after free and open competition. . . . To jeopardize the respect
      and recognition of individuals from preferred groups by rewarding
      “honors” tainted with double standards is not only to downgrade their
      own achievements but also to downgrade their chances of accomplishing
      those achievements in the first place. . . . After the media revealed that
      black students were admitted to the Harvard Medical School with lower
      qualifications, white patients began to refuse to be examined by such
      students . . .       
      In the latest Supreme Court decision, Justice O’Connor says: We expect that 25 years
      from now, the use of racial preferences will no longer be necessary to
      further the interest approved today. What
      lies ahead, it seems, is another quarter century of litigation to
      determine whether the American society is to be “color blind,” as
      Martin Luther King and other civil rights leaders urged, or to be based
      upon race and some form of proportional representation. If it is the
      latter, with our ever-changing demographics—a recent study shows that
      Hispanics are now America’s largest minority group—we are setting the
      stage for inter-group strife and tension.      
      The Constitution calls simply for “equal protection” of all
      citizens. When, finally, will that standard become good enough for the
      Supreme Court?   How
      Much Government Secrecy Is Consistent with a Free and Open Society?      
      Secrecy on the part of government and freedom for citizens may be
      compatible if that secrecy is limited to matters that clearly relate to
      national security. But when secrecy has little relationship to matters of
      security, it becomes a serious threat to constitutional government and to
      the limits upon government power that make us free. At the present time,
      there can be little doubt that too much of what government is doing is
      being kept from the American public.      
      The late Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan (D-NY) became a crusader
      against government secrecy late in life. He declared that it “can confer
      a form of power without responsibility, about which democratic societies
      must be vigilant,” Secrecy, he argued, “unless carefully attended to,
      is a source of considerable sorrow in government.”      
      In 1997, the Commission on Protecting and Reducing Government
      Secrecy, chaired by Moynihan, concluded that government classifies too
      many documents—millions every year—while failing to distinguish among
      different sorts of documents and to protect secrets of real importance.
      The commission declared that secrecy is inherently antithetical to open
      debate in a flourishing democracy, and the perception of a government
      bloated with secrets erodes public trust.      
      The Bush administration has shown a potentially dangerous penchant
      for secrecy that has alarmed both liberals and conservatives. Mark
      Tapscott, director of the Heritage Foundation’s Center for Media and
      Public Policy, asks Why does the White House
      seem so determined to close the door on the people’s right to know what
      their government is doing?      
      Mr. Tapscott cites three examples: Section 204 of the White
      House’s original proposal to establish a Department of Homeland
      Security, White House Chief of Staff Andrew Card’s March 2002 directive
      that agencies restrict access to “sensitive but unclassified”
      information, and the administration’s claim of executive privilege to
      keep secret information regarding President Clinton’s infamous midnight
      pardons.      
      In Clinton’s case, 140 people were pardoned, including his
      Whitewater partner Susan McDougal, his brother Roger (convicted on
      cocaine-related charges), and international fugitive Marc Rich, wanted by
      the Justice Department for allegedly conspiring with the Iranian
      government in 1980 to buy 6 million barrels of oil, contrary to a U.S.
      trade embargo.      
      “It is doubtful that the full facts behind the pardons will ever
      be known,” states Tapscott, . . . as long as the
      administration refuses to disclose nearly 4,000 pages related to the
      former president’s actions. The Bush administration has taken a similar
      position on documents related to former attorney general Janet Reno’s
      controversial decision not to appoint a special counsel to investigate
      possible Clinton administration campaign finance illegalities. There was a
      time when at least one senior Bush administration official thought the
      Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) essential because “no matter what
      party has held the political power of government, there have been attempts
      to cover up mistakes and errors.” That same official added that
      “disclosure of government information is particularly important today
      because government is becoming involved in more and more aspects of every
      citizen’s personal and business life, and so access to information about
      how government is exercising its trust becomes increasingly important.”
      So spoke a young Illinois Republican congressman named Donald Rumsfeld, in
      a floor speech on June 20, 1966, advocating passage of the FOIA, of which
      he was a co-sponsor.      
      In March, President George W. Bush signed an executive order that
      makes it easier for government agencies, including the White House, to
      keep documents classified and out of public view. The order delays by
      three years the release of declassified government materials from 1978 or
      earlier. It treats all materials sent to American officials from foreign
      governments—no matter how routine—as subject to classification. It
      expands the ability of the CIA to shield documents from declassification.
      And for the first time, it gives the vice president the power to classify
      information. All of this amends an earlier order that actually eased the
      process of declassification.      
      Some of the Bush policies, such as closing previously public court
      proceedings were prompted by the September 11 terrorist attacks and are
      part of the administration’s drive for greater domestic security,
      Others, like Vice President Dick Cheney’s battle to keep records of his
      energy task force secret, reflect a determination to strengthen the
      authority of the executive branch.      
      Generally, said Alan Brinkley, a Columbia University historian,
      while secrecy has been increasingly attractive to recent administrations,
      “this administration has taken it to a new level.” Its “instinct is
      to release nothing,” said Professor Brinkley, adding that this was not
      necessarily because there were particularly embarrassing secrets to hide,
      but “they are just worried about what’s in there and what they don’t
      know about.”      
      In the year that ended on Sept. 30, 2001, most of which came during
      the Bush presidency, 260,978 documents were classified, up 18 percent from
      the previous year. And since Sept. 11, three new agencies were given the
      power to stamp documents as “secret”—the Environmental Protection
      Agency, the Department of Agriculture and the Department of Health and
      Human Services.      
      Both Democrats and Republicans in the Congress have expressed
      concern. Senator Charles Grassley (R-IA) said things were getting worse,
      and “it seems like in the last few months I’ve been running into more
      and more stone walls.” Senator Patrick Leahy (D-VT), who was first
      elected in 1974, said that, “Since I’ve been here, I have never known
      an administration that is more difficult to get information from.”      
      Secrecy, Daniel Moynihan has argued, does more harm than good. The
      CIA’s exaggerated estimates of Soviet economic strength for example,
      would have stopped influencing U.S. policy, he believed, if they had been
      published and any correspondent in Moscow could have laughed at them.
      “Secrecy is a formula for inefficient decision making,” said Moynihan,
      and plays on the instincts of self-importance of the bureaucracy.      
      Mary Graham, a scholar at the Brookings Institution and the John F.
      Kennedy School of Government at Harvard, sees two major risks in this
      administration’s level of secrecy.       
      Graham said:  What are often being couched
      as temporary emergency orders are in fact what we are going to live with
      for 20 years, just as we lived with the Cold War restrictions for years
      after it was over. . . . We make policy by crisis, and we particularly
      make secrecy policy by crisis.      
      Moreover, she said, it ignores the value of openness, which
      “creates public pressure for improvement.” When risk analyses of
      chemical plants were available on the Internet, she said, people could
      pressure companies to do better, or move away.      
      On November 1, 2001, President Bush issued a sweeping order under
      which former presidents and vice presidents, or representatives designated
      by them or their surviving families, could bar release of documents by
      claiming one of a variety of privileges: . . . military, diplomatic,
      or national security secrets, presidential communications, legal advice,
      legal work or the deliberative processes of the president and the
      president’s advisers. Before the order, the
      Archivist of the United States could reject a former president’s claim
      of privilege. Now he cannot.      
      House Republicans were among the order’s sharpest critics. Rep.
      Steve Horn (R-CA) called a hearing within a few days and Rep. Doug Ose
      (R-CA) said the order “undercuts the public’s right to be fully
      informed about how its government operated in the past.” The order, Rep.
      Horn said, improperly “gives the former and incumbent presidents veto
      power over the release of the records.”      
      Historian Robert Dallek, a biographer of Lyndon Johnson and John F.
      Kennedy, says, This order of Bush, we feel
      it’s a disgrace—what it means is if this policy applies, they can hold
      presidential documents close to the vest in perpetuity, the way
      Lincoln’s papers were held by the family until 1947.      
      At the First Amendment Forum’s National Freedom of Information
      Day conference in March, Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter Jack Nelson,
      retired Washington bureau chief of the Los Angeles Times said: No president since I’ve
      been a reporter has so tried to change the very structure of government to
      foster secrecy.       
      Conservatives in the Congress are as concerned about present
      secrecy policies as liberals. Rep. Dan Burton (R-IN) says he had to use
      “strong-arm tactics” to get the information he needs. Burton reports
      that his committee has had difficulty getting the Justice Department to
      turn over documents relating to a 30-year-old case of FBI corruption in
      Boston, not a matter he sees as impacting national security in any way,
      “We finally got them but we had to be pretty strong-armed. We had to use
      strong-armed tactics to get the information,” he said.      
      During a Judiciary Committee hearing on oversight of the Department
      of Justice, Senator Arlen Specter (R-PA) chided Attorney General John
      Ashcroft for being unresponsive to his requests for information, “I want
      to ask you about how busy you are,” Specter asked Ashcroft. Now, maybe you’re too busy
      to respond to senators’ letters. And if you are, frankly, I could
      understand that. But if that’s so, then I know I can always track you
      down, find you at the White House. But it is a little difficult. How do we
      communicate with you? Conservative
      commentator David Brooks of the Weekly Standard says that the Bush
      administration is . . . in danger of getting
      addicted to secrecy the way Clinton was to sex. There is a congealing
      sense that secretiveness is the flaw of the Bush administration. This comment was
      prompted by the stonewalling of the White House in providing details of
      the pre bankruptcy contacts between Enron and the administration.      
      “The cumulative message from the White House and from Ashcroft
      is: Stall, don’t release.” said Tom Blanton, executive director of the
      National Security Archive, an access advocacy group. “They believe that
      the trend for 30 years has been to make the White House too open.”      
      Judicial Watch, the conservative advocacy group that gained
      prominence for its campaign to pry information from the Clinton
      administration, says that the Bush administration’s attitude is one of
      “arrogance throughout—that the government is not to be questioned.”      
      Nearly two centuries ago, John Adams stated that, “Liberty cannot
      be preserved without a general knowledge among the people.” In a letter
      to Thomas Jefferson in 1816, Adams said, “Power must never be trusted
      without a check.”      
      In a September 2002 court case in which a three-judge panel in
      Cincinnati said it was unlawful for the administration to conduct
      deportation hearings in secret whenever the government asserted that the
      people involved might be linked to terrorism, Judge Damon J. Keith of the
      U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit declared that, “Democracies
      die behind closed doors.” He said the First Amendment and a free press
      protect the “people’s right to know” that their government is acting
      fairly and lawfully, “When government begins closing doors,” he said, It selectively controls
      information rightfully belonging to the people. . . . A government
      operating in the shadow of secrecy stands in complete opposition to the
      society envisioned by the framers of our Constitution.      
      Excessive secrecy is inconsistent with a free and limited
      government. It should not matter which party is in power for those who
      seek to maintain our system to speak out when it is endangered by
      politicians who seek to expand their own power and prerogatives. Now is
      surely a proper time for the expression of that concern.    
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