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Date: 2024-04-25 Page is: DBtxt001.php txt00003927

Country ... USA
Whistle Blowers

Blowing the whistle on Obama's America ... Do the threats facing whistleblowers under Obama's presidency mean Americans know less about what their government does?

Burgess COMMENTARY
According to this piece, during his campaign in 2008 President Obama said the following, and I could not agree more:

'Often the best source of information about waste, fraud and abuse in government is a government employee committed to public integrity, willing to speak out. Such acts of courage and patriotism ... should be encouraged rather than stifled.'
For the President and some in the administration, the process of 'managing' the United States requires some level of secrecy, and there are also a lot of bad actors that need secrecy to stay invisible doing their evil in the shade. I am not really surprised that in practice President Obama needs to choose secrecy over the protection of whistle blowers.

For myself, I want to see the protection of whistle blowers ... and some active encouragement of whistle blowers. I am more than disappointed at the way the US is handling the case of Manning, Assange and WikeLeaks, and I am grateful that these people and WikiLeaks have been able to inform the world about some of the inner workings of government. In my own case I have been appalled at the incompetence of a lot of what goes on in government ... but this incompetence gets hidden when all the documents are 'secret'. This is nonsense and an abuse of power of government ... but it is the norm.
Peter Burgess

Blowing the whistle on Obama's America Do the threats facing whistleblowers under Obama's presidency mean Americans know less about what their government does?

This week: A Listening Post special - Whistleblowing and the US media.

On the campaign trail four years ago, US presidential candidate Barack Obama shared his views on whistleblowers. He said: 'Often the best source of information about waste, fraud and abuse in government is a government employee committed to public integrity, willing to speak out. Such acts of courage and patriotism ... should be encouraged rather than stifled.'

As president, the reality has been very different. During his first term in office, six whistleblowers have been charged under the Espionage Act for allegedly mishandling classified information. That is twice as many as all previous presidents combined.

The threat facing whistleblowers has implications in many areas, including defence, intelligence and national security. And then there is the impact it is having on the US media: In a digital age, where electronic paper trails are hard to hide, journalists are no longer able to guarantee their sources' anonymity. And if the sources dry up, so do the stories and the American people are left knowing less and less about what their government is doing.

In the first half of this full edition special, we blow the whistle on President Obama's America.

Jesselyn Radack is a lawyer who worked as an ethics adviser for the US Department of Justice. In 2001, Radack revealed that the FBI questioned John Walker Lindh - 'the American Taliban' - illegally and that his so-called confession might not stand up in a court of law. Radack was heavily criticised and became the target of a Federal criminal 'leak investigation'. After a year she resigned.

In the second half of the show, Radack talks to us about the impact whistleblowing has had on US journalism and what news organisations are doing about it.

Source: Al Jazeera


AJE Listening Post
Last Modified: 05 Jan 2013 10:40
The text being discussed is available at
http://www.aljazeera.com/programmes/listeningpost/2012/06/20126816273761143.html
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