The headlines for two seemingly unrelated news stories danced above
the folds of America’s daily newspapers during 2013. One evoked the
familiar haunts of a 50-year-old murder. The other revealed some details
about overreaching surveillance having been conducted by the
government. Our government.
Both stories brought to mind the countless troubles trying to keep too many secrets under wraps can set in motion.
On
Nov. 22, 2013 the 50th anniversary of the assassination of President
John F. Kennedy was observed. For the school children of 1963 that
sucker punch was stunning in a way nothing has been since.
The
President's Commission on the Assassination of President Kennedy,
better known as the Warren Commission, published its report on Sept. 24,
1964: Lee Harvey Oswald was found to have been a lone wolf assassin.
Since he was put down by a self-styled executioner two days after
Kennedy fell, the commission’s investigators never heard Oswald's
testimony.
Much of how those investigators operated and
too much of what they found was kept in the dark. Unfortunately, the
cloaked-in-secrecy aftermath of the JFK assassination created a void
that attracted speculation. Some aspects of the Warren Commission’s
findings were puzzling. For instance, its famous “single bullet theory”
had one projectile traveling circuitously, almost magically, through two
victims.
In 1965 gunmen murdered Malcolm X in an
auditorium in Manhattan. A sniper killed Martin Luther King as he stood
on a motel balcony in Memphis in 1968. Two months after that Robert F.
Kennedy was gunned down in a Los Angeles hotel. Unfortunately, the
official stories on those three shootings were widely disbelieved, too.
Everything baby boomers have seen since this tumult has been tinted by
the cynicism it spawned.
More scrutiny of how those
assassination inquiries were conducted might have led to different
conclusions. Moreover, even if casting more sunlight on those probes had
yielded no significant changes in the bottom lines, millions of
citizens would surely have felt more comfortable about the good faith of
the processes.
It took revelations that spoke of bad
faith to steer us away from blithely tolerating so much secrecy. Among
them were: the My Lai Massacre horrors; the publishing of the Pentagon
Papers; the Watergate Scandal hearings; the Iran-Contra Scandal
hearings; the bogus justification for invading Iraq.
Over
the years such revelations changed America. Perhaps led by the baby
boomers we have become a people who expect their government to lie. We
also expect to be subjected to a steady stream of lies every day from
advertising for mammoth corporations -- companies that, like our
government, routinely spy on us.
It’s no wonder that
today there are those who see fugitive whistleblower Edward Snowden as a
hero. He revealed to many of them that the Patriot Act of the Bush
administration's era wasn't so much about promoting patriotism. It was
about spying. Some people who read the news regularly already knew
that.
Nonetheless, Snowden’s stunt put him on the
celebrity map. By simultaneously leaking classified information about
how far-flung our government’s surveillance has been and going on the
lam, Snowden instantly became the darling of at least two large groups:
1. Government haters, in general. 2. Folks who like pouring pop culture
into their tall glasses of politics, like a soft drink mixer.
To
a third group, Snowden’s weak imitation of some previous brave
whistleblowers has been at least as annoying as it has been edifying.
Still, Snowden does deserve plenty of credit for launching new
discussions of how much spying, by any entity, we the people should
countenance.
Which, right away, leads straight to one
galling conclusion: to some extent, spying is here to stay. If you use
credit cards, cell phones and the Internet you're going to be tracked.
Plus, the practice of security cameras and phone cameras recording
images of everything is only going to increase.
So,
rather than bellyaching about officials watching us, what we should be
doing is demanding to watch the watchers. We should be calling for
sunlight into the operation of governments at all levels. We should
insist on knowing the sources of all the money flowing into elections
and lawmaking. We should be able to see through corporate veils that
hide malfeasance, too.
We can also try to outlaw some
kinds of information gathering. Maybe that will work, but it’s more
important to accept that privacy, in its old fashioned sense, is a horse
that left the barn years ago. Wise up, rather than dwelling on
protecting an individual's privacy -- secrets, again -- society's more
important need is for openness where it counts most.
Truth
is more important than privacy. Sunlight should be a big political
issue of this election year, maybe the biggest. But it probably won't
be, because the people financing political campaigns don't want it to
be.
Single Bullet Theory?
Great name for a band.
-- 30 --
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