Obama blocks list of visitors to White House

I'm not Damo but I'll answer. When you run a (very successful) campaign that your predecessor was too secretive and that you plan to make government more transparent and then you end up following what your predecessor did it reasons you might get some heat for it. At the end of the day its far from the biggest issue facing the country but to this layman and others in this instance he is sort of becoming what he has mocked.


As I said before, you can be the most transparent president ever without giving up every single document someone asks for. The issue is whether, on balance, the Obama Administration is more secretive than the Bush Administration. Without looking at the totality of the picture, saying that Obama is becoming what he mocked based on his refusal to give up visitor logs is just plain stupid.
 
Well, as I said back then with Bush. I think that some things should be "private", however if the meetings were about the job they should be public record. We don't need to hear about every friend who stops by with a toy for the kids, to drop by his kids for a play-date... we do need to hear about who he meets with when creating policy, much like the energy meetings with Bush.

I also think that apparent hypocrisy is noticeable and does not add to his positive rating among those who are not in either Party who vote.


This is what you said during the Bush Administration:

While I disagree that the President cannot get candid advice because a list of visitors is published, I will say this one thing:

A watchdog group is entirely different than congressional committees. Congress has subpoena power regardless of the law. This group is asking for documents that are actually outside that law, just as congressmen don't have to put out their meeting schedules.

That being said, I think the argument is ridiculous. The public knowing that I visit the WH would not keep me from giving candid advice to a President. In the rare occasion that such might be the case other places can be scheduled for the meeting.


Basically, your position was that these documents were "outside the law" and that, unlike a congressional committee with subponea power, a watchdog group isn't necessarily entitled to the documents. You seem to be changing your tune now.

And there isn't necessarily a conflict between being the most transparent administration ever and keeping white house visitor logs from being public. It is possible to do both.
 
This is what you said during the Bush Administration:




Basically, your position was that these documents were "outside the law" and that, unlike a congressional committee with subponea power, a watchdog group isn't necessarily entitled to the documents. You seem to be changing your tune now.

And there isn't necessarily a conflict between being the most transparent administration ever and keeping white house visitor logs from being public. It is possible to do both.
No, I said I think hiding it was ridiculous and the argument was based on a false premise. I don't believe the watchdog group should have to ask for what I believe should be public record. I spoke then directly about the law that was referred to, and I am right watchdog groups do not have subpoena power. I then progressed to the actual point I was making. The idea that I wouldn't give candid advice simply because I was on a published visitor list? Rubbish.
"That being said, I think the argument is ridiculous. The public knowing that I visit the WH would not keep me from giving candid advice to a President. In the rare occasion that such might be the case other places can be scheduled for the meeting."
 
No, I said I think hiding it was ridiculous and the argument was based on a false premise. I don't believe the watchdog group should have to ask for what I believe should be public record.


Yes, you thought the argument was ridiculous, but you didn't think that the documents should have been public record. In fact, you said that they were "outside the law" and suggested that absent subpoena power the WH shouldn't have to give them up, "just as congressmen don't have to put out their meeting schedules."

Backslide all you like, I'm not buying it.
 
As I said before, you can be the most transparent president ever without giving up every single document someone asks for. The issue is whether, on balance, the Obama Administration is more secretive than the Bush Administration. Without looking at the totality of the picture, saying that Obama is becoming what he mocked based on his refusal to give up visitor logs is just plain stupid.

I'm referencing this instance, why is that stupid? And to me running on changing Washington (which there are obviously many people who want to fight his attempts at change but nonetheless) goes a beyond just being a little more transparent than supposedly the most secretive administration in history. This story is hardly front page news but I'm sorry if even a little criticsm of the man offends you.
 
Yes, you thought the argument was ridiculous, but you didn't think that the documents should have been public record. In fact, you said that they were "outside the law" and suggested that absent subpoena power the WH shouldn't have to give them up, "just as congressmen don't have to put out their meeting schedules."

Backslide all you like, I'm not buying it.
Again, reflecting on what the law says does not promote my opinion, the portion that promotes my opinion are the parts that say, "I think".

It is unrealistic and wearing partisan-colored glasses to suggest that pointing out what a law says means that the law is my opinion.

The law says that abortions are legal <- reflecting on the law.

I think, therefore, that the man who killed the abortion doctor would be considered an assassin or terrorist, not a vigilante. <- my opinion and why....
 
I'm referencing this instance, why is that stupid? And to me running on changing Washington (which there are obviously many people who want to fight his attempts at change but nonetheless) goes a beyond just being a little more transparent than supposedly the most secretive administration in history. This story is hardly front page news but I'm sorry if even a little criticsm of the man offends you.


Extrapolating that Obama is a mockery of what he argued against based on this one instance is stupid. As I said, the issue is whether on balance his administration is more transparent than the Bush Administration. It is entirely possible that the Obama Administration is a whole hell of a lot more transparent than the Bush Administration even though it won't divulge these particular documents. What's the big picture?

It isn't as though Obama has to pull a Costanza and do everything opposite of what Bush did to "change Washington."

And I'm not offended by the criticism at all. I'm just pointing out why I think the criticism doesn't make much sense. When people criticized the Bush approach to secrecy they at least had the goods to back it up:

The government classified 14 million new documents in fiscal 2003, an increase of 60 percent over the comparable figure for fiscal 2001. The number of documents classified increased steadily in the Clinton administration, the group points out, from 3.6 million in fiscal 1995 to 8.7 million in fiscal 2001 (which ended 19 days after 9/11 and about eight months into Bush's term). But the number of pages declassified by the Bush administration in the past two years, 43 million and 44 million respectively, is much lower than in any year from 1995 to 2001. From 1996 to 1998, the number of pages declassified hovered around 200 million a year.

The cost of securing classified information, which involves safeguarding facilities and personnel, has increased steadily from $3.4 billion in 1997 to $6.5 billion in 2003. And the amount of money spent on declassifying documents in the Bush administration was $113 million in 2002 and $54 million in 2003. By comparison, $231 million was spent in 2000.

More agencies are also reporting a backlog in FOIA requests. A surge in the number of requests is mostly responsible for this backlog, but the OpenTheGovernment.org report complains that spending on resources to work on FOIA requests also has not increased. Contributing to the problem is a Bush executive order in November 2001 restricting FOIA access to documents of earlier administrations.

According to Thomas Blanton, director of the National Security Archive at George Washington University, the delay in FOIA requests from Reagan Library documents has increased from 1.5 years to four years. "The ones that they would have responded to in 2001, they're now responding to in 2004 or 2005. That is a huge difference in the system," says Blanton.

The Bush administration's overall approach to the FOIA has been sharply criticized. On October 12, 2001, Attorney General John Ashcroft issued a memorandum to the heads of all departments and agencies that superseded the Justice Department policy in place since 1993. The memo states, "When you carefully consider FOIA requests and decide to withhold records, in whole or in part, you can be assured that the Department of Justice will defend your decisions unless they lack a sound legal basis." The line was widely seen as a reversal of Clinton policy; where Attorney General Janet Reno's memo said that Justice would defend an FOIA exemption only when the agency "reasonably foresees that disclosure would be harmful to an interest protected by that exemption."
 
Again, reflecting on what the law says does not promote my opinion, the portion that promotes my opinion are the parts that say, "I think".

It is unrealistic and wearing partisan-colored glasses to suggest that pointing out what a law says means that the law is my opinion.

The law says that abortions are legal <- reflecting on the law.

I think, therefore, that the man who killed the abortion doctor would be considered an assassin or terrorist, not a vigilante. <- my opinion and why....


Again, I'm not buying your backtracking bullshit. And I think it funny that you continue to call others "partisans" in light of what you are saying now as compared to what you said back then.
 
Bush was transparent.

I saw right thru him in 2000, why did it take many others 4-6 years to see thru him?
 
Again, I'm not buying your backtracking bullshit. And I think it funny that you continue to call others "partisans" in light of what you are saying now as compared to what you said back then.
I think that suggesting that talking about what a law says means that it is my opinion is desperate and weak and a direct sign of an incapacity to place yourself into another's shoes once you decide that they are "them" rather than "us", it's like AHZ saying he is pragmatic while stubbornly sticking to fighting for what will never be.

It is not difficult to see, especially with examples given, that talking about what a law says doesn't express my opinion.
 
I think that suggesting that talking about what a law says means that it is my opinion is desperate and weak and a direct sign of an incapacity to place yourself into another's shoes once you decide that they are "them" rather than "us", it's like AHZ saying he is pragmatic while stubbornly sticking to fighting for what will never be.

It is not difficult to see, especially with examples given, that talking about what a law says doesn't express my opinion.


It's not difficult to see your backtracking nonsense either. You can hide behind your convenient theory that you were merely expressing what the law says all you like if it makes you feel better about being just as partisan as those you criticize, but don't expect me to buy it.

Given that the courts ordered President Bush to release the documents that you opined were "outside the law," it is quite clear that you were expressing merely your opinion of what you believed the law said. Shockingly, your erroneous opinion of what the law said dovetailed quite nicely with the Bush Administration's position that it did not have to release the documents.

I understand why you've had a change of heart, what with the new occupant of the White House and all, but maybe you should think twice before calling others out for their "magic letter syndrome."
 
It's not difficult to see your backtracking nonsense either. You can hide behind your convenient theory that you were merely expressing what the law says all you like if it makes you feel better about being just as partisan as those you criticize, but don't expect me to buy it.

Given that the courts ordered President Bush to release the documents that you opined were "outside the law," it is quite clear that you were expressing merely your opinion of what you believed the law said. Shockingly, your erroneous opinion of what the law said dovetailed quite nicely with the Bush Administration's position that it did not have to release the documents.

I understand why you've had a change of heart, what with the new occupant of the White House and all, but maybe you should think twice before calling others out for their "magic letter syndrome."
I expect you to be intellectually honest, a paragraph about what the law says, then my opinion, that is what was quoted. In fact it was my opinion, a paragraph about the law, and then my opinion reiterated. You are simply wearing your Partisan colored glasses. Everything looks partisan colored when you don't take them off and look at something with intellectual honesty, and as I said, you really need a mirror, there's somebody that is in it that needs to hear that last sentence of yours.

You get a fly up your butt just reading any post made by me and you consistently read into it whatever you want to believe based on your own ideological view of what I should be. Instead of reading the post, you try to interpret foolishly.
 
I expect you to be intellectually honest, a paragraph about what the law says, then my opinion, that is what was quoted. In fact it was my opinion, a paragraph about the law, and then my opinion reiterated.


What you don't seem to understand is that what you believe to be a simple factual statement about what the law says was actually a statement of your opinion on what the law said. And, shockingly, your opinion of what the law said was the same as that of the Bush Administration.

Interestingly, it is also the same position of the Obama Administration. Suddenly, your tune has changed.
 
What you don't seem to understand is that what you believe to be a simple factual statement about what the law says was actually a statement of your opinion on what the law said. And, shockingly, your opinion of what the law said was the same as that of the Bush Administration.

Interestingly, it is also the same position of the Obama Administration. Suddenly, your tune has changed.
And that opinion remains the same while Obama is in office, I think the law is ridiculous, but it does say what they say it says, and the argument that says that a person wouldn't give untainted advice because they were on a guest list is retarded.

What part of this is difficult for you to catch? I know, it's the part where my opinion has not changed!
 
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