TSA screenings pale in comparison to what Wikileaks has just done to Americans–and with less justification. Airport body searches are meant to save lives. The release of all those stolen diplomatic cables strips government bare just for the hell of it.
After the Eisenhower years, a former aide named Emmet Hughes wrote a “scathing” book about inner deliberations of the White House, which JFK denounced to his staff, saying, “I hope nobody here is writing that kind of book.” Nobody did.
We are a long way from bipartisan agreement that governing without reasonable privacy invites chaos. Barack Obama promised transparency, but a document dump by a criminal Private First Class has set off what the UK’s Guardian calls a “global diplomatic crisis.”
The New York Times justifies publication on the grounds that “the documents serve an important public interest, illuminating the goals, successes, compromises and frustrations of American diplomacy in a way that other accounts cannot match.”
Maybe so, but does the public have a need to know every detail of its representatives’ “frustrations,” doubts and just plain dirt-dishing–about Libyan leader Qadafi’s “voluptuous blonde nurse,” the bags of money an Afghan vice president carried on his trip to Washington and other such gossip?
An answer to this argument is made in the recent publication of Daniel Patrick Moynihan’s papers. After a distinguished career as scholar and public servant, Sen. Moynihan told his constituents on retiring just before 9/ll:
“(T)he great fear that I have is the enveloping culture of government secrecy and the corresponding distrust of government that follows. Since the end of the Cold War–which, incidentally, all those secret agencies quite missed–the secret side of government just keeps growing.”
MORE.