Tag Archives: FOIA

Obama’s Latest Blunder Is Treasonous In 178 Countries

By Floyd Brown

Democrats Despise Taxpayers SC Obamas Latest Blunder is Treasonous in 178 Countries

In May, I shared with you the details about 172 House members visiting over 90 countries and every continent except Antarctica in 2012 – all on your dime. But members of the U.S. House of Representatives actually travel modestly compared to the VIP travel undertaken by Obama’s friends and appointees.

And of course, any travel review needs to start with the travel queen of the last four years, Hillary Clinton.

Hillary traveled at a record-setting pace, journeying 956,733 miles and setting foot in 112 countries. This adds up to 2,084 hours spent flying around the world, which is equivalent to 86 whole days spent aboard her government-issued luxury jetliner. And how do we know these facts? Because she likes to brag about them.

But when it comes to costs, your guess is as good as mine. Despite repeated Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests, her department refuses to come clean about how much this travel cost U.S. taxpayers.

Ironically, Obama’s “most transparent administration in history” works hard to hide the details of the luxurious globe-trotting. But thanks to some hard work by lawyers using the Freedom of Information Act, some other portions of the travel details are beginning to surface.

And That’s Only the Beginning…

It’s only proper that Attorney General Eric Holder tells us how much his travels cost, since he’s the federal officer in charge of FOIA compliance. While he hasn’t been too diligent about asking others to comply, he did comply himself – to some degree.

From his disclosures, we learned that during 2011, Holder filed 62 long-distant jaunts that cost us, at a minimum, $1.45 million. However, he refused to disclose flight costs for seven major trips out, including travels to China, Hawaii, and Brussels.

Holder’s travelling includes an April 2011 sojourn to Las Vegas, mixing business and personal travel, which totaled $46,358. Other “personal” trips, including visits to Martha’s Vineyard and Miami, cost us taxpayers a whopping $169,502.

And of course there’s Joe Biden. Today, we learned that the vice-president’s six-day trip to South America and the Caribbean included one 20-hour stop in Trinidad and Tobago that cost an astounding $245,000. As has become standard, the contract was awarded without “full and open competition” because of security and logistical concerns.

Yet the scariest part is that, while the travel for administration officials sounds expensive to those of us who pay our own bills while flying coach or driving on our summer trips, these Obama appointees don’t even hold a candle to Michelle and Barack.

First, there was Michelle Obama’s 2012 President’s Day weekend ski vacation to Aspen, Colorado with her two daughters. The total cost for the Aspen ski vacation was at least $83,182.99. The bill for the U.S. Secret Service, including accommodations at the Fasching Haus deluxe condominiums and the Inn at Aspen, came to $48,950.38. The cost for the flight, per official DOD published hourly rates, was $22,583.70.  Food and miscellaneous on-flight items cost $235.44. The cost for rental cars totaled $6,442.23.

But that’s nothing. A drop in the bucket. More importantly, …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

Sunshine Week: In Celebration of Open Government

By Lisa Ellman and Melanie Ann Pustay

Ed. Note: This post is the first in a Sunshine Week series on whitehouse.gov. Sunshine Week is a national initiative to celebrate and focus on government transparency and open government.

As President Barack Obama has stated, “Openness will strengthen our democracy, and promote efficiency and effectiveness in Government.” This week, we celebrate Sunshine Week — an appropriate time to discuss the importance of open government and freedom of information, and to take stock of how far we have come, and think about what more can be done.

Over the last few weeks, we have asked for your feedback on some of our open government efforts, and you have responded, whether in meetings with civil society or via Quora, or a web form on WhiteHouse.gov. We thank you for taking the time to talk to us about this important work, and we hear you – and we will continue to consult with you.

In the spirit of Sunshine Week, the White House will highlight one initiative a day which demonstrates the Obama Administration’s continued commitment to open and accessible government. Today, we will focus on progress made improving the administration of the FOIA. As Justice Louis Brandeis wrote, “sunlight is said to be the best of disinfectants.” In our democracy, FOIA, which encourages accountability through transparency, is the most prominent expression of a profound national commitment to ensuring an open government.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at The White House

Greg Grossmeier: Secrecy is power over others

[Think of this post as something like a public draft, fittingly enough. I’m looking for feedback. Poke holes. Make it (or make me make it) better.]

Secrecy is power over others. Seems like a pretty obvious statement right? Obviously when you keep something a secret you are the one choosing whether someone else can know that thing. In some cases that isn’t a huge deal (eg: I didn’t tell anyone else that I ate the last two oranges just now) but in other cases it is a horrible act of malice (let your brain run wild for a second on this one).

Luckily, our society is starting to become more accustomed to not protecting everything as a secret. There are better places and worse places, but it seems to me that the anti-secret (or pro-knowledge) crowd is gaining support.

But it hasn’t always been that way, of course.

Not that long ago, it was common practice for cancer sufferers to not know they had cancer. Their doctors would know and sometimes part of their family would (eg: parents or kids, depending on which one was “vulnerable”), but they would die of cancer never knowing they had cancer. In fact, from a quick web search, it seems that is still not an uncommon thing in Japan.

Not that long ago it was impossible for a citizen in the USA to request information about actions the government is taking. Now we have FOIA (which is still pretty limited and there are still far too many governmental secrets, I argue all of them).

What is behind all secrecy? The notion that one person/group can know something while another person/group is too dumb/smart/vulnerable/bad/good/whatever to know it.

One group is unilaterally creating a caste system. The other (non-knowers) have no agency in this choice and have no recourse other than begging the knowers. The knowers wield power over the nonknowers in many unfathomable ways, ways not yet even known when the knowers decided to create the nonknowers.

If you are a person in the group of nonknowers, it is easy for you to feel alone and as an outcast. Someone has decided that you, personally you, are not worthy of some bit of information, no matter how inconsequential it is (and the more inconsequential it is the worse the feeling). And when that information is about you, or your place in life, you are justified in feeling that you are worthless because you aren’t even worth as much as your own information.

Now, the question becomes, what do you as a knower or a person in a position who can delineate people as knowers vs nonknowers do? Do you share with everyone all you know or do you keep some things completely to yourself and other things somewhere in between (even through enforceable means such as NDAs, contracts/licenses, and the like)?

Does it matter depending on the information you possess? You will undoubtedly argue yes, of course it does. I did initially.

But should that be the answer?

Let’s start to dissect the usual excuses.

1.Just because something is normally treated as a secret doesn’t mean it should continue to be a secret. See the poor souls who died of cancer and at the same time completely confused and alone. “What we’ve always done” is never an acceptable excuse. Everything is open for reassessment.

2.Just because one group thinks the information can be misinterpreted by a “less informed” or “not as smart” person doesn’t mean it should continue as a secret. This is my biggest critique of the mentality I see in many researchers, even those who are pro “open”. They continue to sometimes be paternalistic and pretentious. This mentality should be corrected as early in a person’s life as possible.

2a.Some “open” licenses even codify this. The Open Government License from the UK says one must “ensure that you do not mislead others or misrepresent the Information or its source”. That sure is burdensome. Ensuring? I need to make sure that everyone who reads my work based on your data understands me correctly? As Mike Linksvayer has said about the OGL, it is quite problematic.

3.We are starting to see that business secrets are more costly than beneficial and this will only accelerate in the future due to the mode of production asymptotically approaching 100% digital. Thus, if this is the excuse, it should be justified (and not just in a anyway that is refuted before or after this bullet).

3a.Some research in this area is starting to come out from people such as Eric Von Hippel.

4. If your reputation as a person will be hurt by the information you tend to want it secret. This one is huge and complex. Defining the “you” the “others”, along with “reputation” and “hurt”, and lastly with a new word of “justified” are tough to do in a single bullet. I may expand this and do a full blog post on it later.

4a. Are you making the choice for a company? Is the information damning to you/the business because you are/the business is doing things that are illegal or unethical? Share it. Period. No questions asked. If you have the power to share that information and you don’t you are culpable (to the greater good). If you think my assertion here is wrong, tell me why any company should get away with actions which the rest of the world/country/state/county/whatever thinks is unacceptable? If you are a libertarian, isn’t knowledge the first requisite to being able to “choose with your money?”

4b. Are you making the choice for yourself? This one is where I will allow some leeway, until I can figure out a reason not to. Again, this one I’ll revisit in more detail later.

5. Money. This one is simple: why are you hiding your expenses? People feel like their finances are personal and private for reasons I can’t quite pin down. Jealousy (either direction)? Ashamed? Something else? Why is this? Why does it matter what my salary is? You can already infer much of it based on how a person lives (what the buy, what they don’t, etc). True, there are many that live below their means, but you can also infer that as well.

5a This is doubly so for ANY type of organization. I believe that the three main points of Open-book management are almost perfect. I only make one correction: “The company should share finances as well as critical data with all employees.” This means: everyone’s salary (especially the C-level types), where the money comes from (grants, products, services, and how much from where and for what), rent, utilities, everything. It’s easy, too. That document is already circulated among the C-level types and the board at least once a year. Just add it to archive.org and be done with it.

5a-continued I know of many non-profits that make their 990s and Financial Statements easily findable. In fact, many Free Software and related orgs’ documents are collated by Bradley Kuhn in this gitorious repository (https://gitorious.org/floss-foundations). And Carl Malamud has made this much easier by providing bulk access to all of the publicly available IRS documents for Tax Exempt Organizations (non-profits), ie: their 990s.

6. What’s your excuse? Please share (really).

Based on these refutations of the above excuses it is plainly clear that most, if not all, information should be freely available. Secrecy harms more than it protects.

Let’s think of all the ways that secrecy harms individuals and our society.

1. The countless deaths from secret drone attacks.

2. The countless deaths from secret wars perpetrated by democracies.

3. The countless deaths from secrets withheld by pharmaceutical companies.

4. The countless deaths from secrets withheld by car manufacturers.

… If those weren’t enough …

5. Unable to make quality non-profit donation decisions because we don’t know the organizations current financials and roadmap(s). I complain about this every year when donation time rolls around. This year a lot of non-profits were (minimally) hurt because I chose not to give to them, even after I did last year, because of a lack of information. In some small way, their own secrecy directly hurt them.

But, I don’t want to end on such an insignificant thought like me not donating $50 to the EFF this year. So instead, I’ll let you know that I’m not the only one thinking about this (Mike Linksvayer has alluded to this idea, while I was drafting this post, no less).

And now, let me ask you a question:

What secrets are you keeping and why?

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Planet Ubuntu