Arathain Kelvar wrote:
I don't think anyone suggested anything about making decisions based on public opinion. If, however, the government, or a branch of government, is not behaving properly, that information should be released to the public.
No one suggested it, but that is the effect of publishing internal deliberations and decision-making, which would inevitably happen in this scenario. The fact that no one suggested it does not make it any less a consequence of this course of action.
Furthermore, this is begging the question. Who exactly is determining that the government is "behaving badly" (leaving aside the total lack of an identifiable standard there)? The people that want the information rel3eased? Great. So if someone wants information, all they have to do is announce that misbehavior is going on.
We have a Constitutional system in which the public intentionally has no direct participation in the correction of alleged wrongs. If the voters decide they do not like the actions being undertaken (whether known or suspected) they can vote people out. They failed to do so in 2004, thus endorsing the policies of the Bush administration, they failed to vote Obama out in 2012 despite claims that he was essentially continuing Bush's policies in most respects. The voters do not have to prove anything beyond a reasonable doubt before voting someone out, so mere suspicion is plenty - the gory details need not be publicized for our enemies to sift through and use for their benefit.
And as for the past argument that the vote isn't an effective check, this argument is being proven hilariously wrong as we speak. When this argument was deployed in the past it really meant "The vote isn't an effective check because the voters won't vote to check the government in the way my ideology says they ought to." (Yes, I realize that you were not the one making this argument, to the best of my recollection; it's repeated here for completeness and not directed at you)
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For two reasons: First, we are a representative democracy, and a nation of laws - we have a right to know when our representatives are breaking these laws.
We are a Republic, not a Democracy and no, we do not in fact have any such right - mainly because under our system of justice, the law isn't broken until there's a guilty verdict. You are putting the cart before the horse.
Yes, I get that this makes it difficult to prosecute crimes when they are undertaken under the cover of classification, but that's why we have separation of powers. Congress, by design, has its own powers and independence from the executive and is supposed to have a political incentive to discover and castigate executive wrongdoing.
We are a representative Republic with a specific system, so if you're going to assert we have a specific right under that system (never mind that no such right exists, and can't exist while maintaining the concept of due process of law) you can't then reject the rest of that system because you're suspicious of it or because it doesn't give you the level of personal oversight you feel entitled to. I suggest running for Congress; since you feel so strongly about these issues why not take a crack at it? Given some of the idiots that have managed to get elected I'm pretty sure you'd have a chance.
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Second, we provide oversight of the people providing oversight of the executive branch. We need the information in order to pressure our reps to take action. There are numerous accounts of congressional inquiries occurring only after a public outcry. It's an important tool in our democracy.
So the public was already aware of the issue. Evidently there was already plenty of public information available or else that outcry wouldn't have occurred.