-Caveat Lector-

http://www.bostonphoenix.com/boston/news_features/editorial/documents/02552163.htm

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What does Bush fear?
The war against an open society continues

TWELVE MONTHS AGO, we editorialized against the Bush administration�s penchant for
secrecy. We asked what the president was trying to hide. (See "Information, Please,"
Editorial, November 29, 2001)

One year later, it�s clear that we were asking the wrong question. President Bush isn�t
trying to hide anything with his unprecedented moves to keep documents and governmental
actions from the public. He�s doing something much more pernicious: he is trying to 
change
the way this country governs itself. This isn�t about secrecy. This is about ideology.

Many of the Bush administration�s moves to restrict the flow of information and keep
governmental operations from the public view have been criticized as outgrowths of the
war on terrorism: detaining potential terrorism suspects without charging them;
implementing secret immigrant-deportation hearings; creating secret military tribunals;
requesting that broadcasters not air tapes of Osama bin Laden; and restricting
congressional classified-briefing access to the four party leaders in the House and 
Senate
and the chairs of the House and Senate intelligence committees. But it would be wrong 
to
think Bush�s penchant for secrecy relates only to September 11.

His aversion to public scrutiny predates his term in the White House. The Freedom Forum
notes in a recent report assessing the state of the Freedom of Information Act that on 
his
last day in office as governor of Texas, Bush sent 1800 boxes of official papers 
generated
during his tenure "to his father�s presidential library at Texas A&M, where the Texas 
public-
information law as yet does not apply." And there have been other, non-terror-related
headline-making moves to keep information from the public. There was the 
administration�s
illegal refusal to provide information in response to the General Accounting Office�s 
request
for information about Vice-President Dick Cheney�s energy-task-force meetings. And 
there
was the president�s unprecedented executive order prohibiting the release of 
presidential
archives (the order was issued in time to keep many of the domestic-policy-related
documents created during his father�s administration from the public). Both have been
chalked up to the simple, but clumsy, desire to hide potentially embarrassing 
information.
But they show us more than that. They tell us that Bush and his cronies deeply 
distrust the
workings of democracy.

We haven�t seen his much contempt � and fear � of the public and its right to examine 
the
workings of government since Richard Nixon was president. Nixon, with his jowls, beady
eyes, persistent five o�clock shadow, and self-pitying whines about his "enemies," all 
but
invited head-on opposition. But Bush, with his smooth suburbanite, country-club manner,
keeps getting away with moves previous presidents could only dream of. This creates a
clear and increasingly present danger to the spirit of democracy.

Last week brought yet another example of this threat to our society. The Los Angeles 
Times
editorialized about the latest proposal to give governmental agencies the authority to
manage their own archives. It sounds efficient � the people most familiar with the 
large
volume of reports, proposals, guidelines, and other documents that flow like water from
every corner of the government would be in charge of publishing them. Office of
Management and Budget director Mitch Daniels even claims the move will save $70 million
annually. The only problem is that it would end the two-centuries-old practice of 
sending
government documents to the Government Printing Office, which makes them available to
the public through publication and distribution in 1300 reading rooms across the 
country, as
well as online.

The Times�s summation of such a move is chilling � and it shows that for all of Bush�s 
nods
to democracy (such as his apparent desire to bring democracy to Baghdad), he 
continually
subverts it here at home: "Currently, a federal agency such as the Pentagon can�t 
delete an
embarrassing passage from a historical document without first going through the hassle 
of
asking each reading room to obscure the passage with a black marker. If Daniels gets 
his
way, all an agency will have to do is call up the document in Microsoft Word and 
quietly hit
Control X to delete the passage for eternity."

In the meantime, the administration�s interference with the media�s attempts to report 
on
the military continues (see "Necessary Bedfellows," News and Features). The war in
Afghanistan saw the Pentagon abandon even the pitiable press-pool system of reporting
devised after the US invasion of Grenada. And now, there is only one briefing for 
reporters
on the war on terror � from the Pentagon. Even during the Gulf War and NATO action in
Kosovo, there were two briefings for reporters: one in Washington and one from the 
field.
As Washington, DC�based freelancer Richard Byrne writes, "The dual approach allowed
reporters to probe operational details from two perspectives � and often to find the 
truth
through comparison. The effectiveness of NATO bombing of Yugoslavia in 1999, for
instance, was often gleaned from a complex interplay of briefings from NATO officials 
in
Europe, half-truths broadcast by Serbian television, and later �clarifications� from US
officials in Washington, DC." But now, even that is gone.

The OMB Watch, an organization formed in 1983 to keep tabs on the executive branch's
powerful Office of Management and Budget, notes that "we are rapidly shifting from a
society based on the public�s right to know to one in which information is made 
available on
a need to know basis."

Bush and Cheney have repeatedly said that they want to restore power to the office of 
the
president. Yet a 21st-century president enjoys privileges, prerogatives, and power 
that the
framers of the Constitution would find positively dictatorial. This shift toward 
government
secrecy has attracted criticism from all quarters. Conservative demagogue Phyllis 
Schlafly
wrote in March, "The voters aren�t going to buy the sanctimonious argument that the 
Bush
Administration has some sort of duty to protect the power of the presidency." Even 
Judicial
Watch, the right-wing organization that tormented the Clinton administration with 
lawsuits,
has joined the liberal Sierra Club in suing the Bush administration for refusing to 
release
information about who met with the administration�s energy task force headed by Cheney.
And conservative Republican lawmaker Dan Burton, who chairs the House Government
Reform Committee, had to threaten the administration with a subpoena before he was able
to get documents related to the FBI�s corrupt relationship with mobster Whitey Bulger
released to his committee. "They believe in making the chief executive stronger by
protecting information and sources and the Congress," Burton told the Hill, which 
covers
Congress. "Many people in Congress, like myself, feel we need to continue to fight for 
our
right to have access to things so there is a difference of opinion."

Differences of opinion are not just good in a democracy � they are vital. Bush has set 
out
on a dangerous path, and he continues to move forward without any real opposition. The
shame is that so few seem to understand the nature of this threat.

What do you think? Send an e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Issue Date: November 21 - 28, 2002
Click here for an archive of our past editorials.
Back to the News & Features table of contents.

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