Originally published Sunday, December 27, 2009 at 4:00 PM
Comments (0)
E-mail article
Print
Share
David Sirota / Syndicated columnist
Democracy's baseline need for transparency
We cannot fully snuff out spin, and we will never be able to guarantee perfect results from policy choices, writes columnist David Sirota. But we can increase the chances for successful societal decision-making when we at least know the facts.
Syndicated columnist
This month, a British government report admitted that one of the major rationales for invading Iraq — the claim that Saddam could deploy WMDs in 45 minutes — probably came from a cabdriver. Had the public originally been told about this sketchy sourcing, there may have been a more, ahem, forceful mass opposition to pre-emptive war in the Middle East.
It's a good lesson about the need for transparency. We cannot fully snuff out spin, and we will never be able to guarantee perfect results from policy choices. But we can increase the chances for successful societal decision-making when we at least know the facts.
That's the common sense rationale behind our sunshine laws. While courts say we can't ban politicians from raising private money, we can force politicians to disclose who their benefactors are so that we know what they really represent. We may not bar sugary foods — but we do require nutrition labels so we can know what we are eating.
More often than not, this was the American compromise: We fought about regulations and mandates, but there had been consensus support for transparency.
"Had been," mind you, is the key phrase — and the cab-driver-induced war is only the beginning.
In 2008, The New York Times' David Barstow reported that 75 retired military officers regularly appearing on television "have ties to military contractors vested in the very war policies they are asked to assess on air."
Collectively, the group represented "more than 150 military contractors either as lobbyists, senior executives, board members or consultants," and here's the kicker: "Those business relationships are hardly ever disclosed to viewers."
Had networks reacted to Barstow's blockbuster with better disclosure, we could have rested easy. Instead, the deceptions persist.
The Huffington Post recently showed how "major television networks continue to host retired generals as military analysts without alerting viewers to their extensive ties to defense contractors."
Additionally, Wired magazine reports that neoconservative think-tankers who directly helped craft the Pentagon's Afghan escalation are now appearing throughout the media as allegedly disinterested analysts of the escalation — again, without any mention of their concurrent work.
Considering the sometimes murky relationship between advertisers and newsrooms, it's easy to think this opacity is the exclusive transgression of commercial media. Unfortunately, it's not — it has bled into the country's single most powerful economic institution, the Federal Reserve.
This is the bank currently lobbying against congressional oversight by arguing it must preserve its "independence" — the same institution whose regional board members are elected by the private banks they regulate and whose chairman, Ben Bernanke, quietly cavorts with the bank CEOs he's supposed to be independent from. Even worse, the Fed is paying many of the ostensibly objective economists who sculpt the debate about Fed policy.
Huffington Post ace reporter Ryan Grim found that the Fed today doles out roughly $400 million a year for "research" — much of it to outside economists who then advocate for the Fed's agenda without disclosing their Fed ties. For instance, seven of the eight economists on a recent anti-oversight letter to Congress failed to note they are or were on the Fed's payroll.
That blatant chicanery, though, is not the worst of it. The real subterfuge is how the Fed's shadowy pay scheme bakes an invisible pro-Fed consensus into our public discourse. Through its academic largesse, Grim notes the Fed "so thoroughly dominates the field of economics that real criticism of the central bank has become a career liability for members of the profession."
Ronald Reagan, of course, warned us to "trust, but verify." It was good advice, except for one hitch: What happens when the verifiers are the ones who can no longer be trusted?
David Sirota is the author of "Hostile Takeover" and "The Uprising." He blogs at OpenLeft.com. E-mail him at ds@davidsirota.com
NEW - 5:04 PM
A Florida U.S. Senate candidate and crimes against writing
NEW - 5:05 PM
Guest columnist: Washington Legislature is closing budget gap with student debt
Guest columnist: Seattle Public Schools must do more than replace the chief
Leonard Pitts Jr. / Syndicated columnist: The peril of lower standards in the 'new journalism'
Neal Peirce / Syndicated columnist: How do states afford needed investment and budget cuts?

Entertainment | Top Video | World | Offbeat Video | Sci-Tech
nwautos
The Dodge Challenger SRT 392, left, and Dodge Charger SRT8 for 2012. (Chrysler) America is flexing its muscle. Sales of modern-day muscle cars are sur...
Post a comment
- Chinatown ID restaurateurs say longer parking hours cut business
- A look at possible Mariners lineup | Mariners Blog
- Dustin Ackley on Taijuan Walker after facing him in BP: "He's close to ready" | The Hot Stone League
- Ichiro's style change is bigger news than his lineup change | Larry Stone
- McGinn addresses murder 'emergency' in annual speech
- Chone Figgins taking all the heat off of Ichiro as Mariners go in bold new direction | Mariners Blog
- Italy: Divers find 8 more bodies in ship wreckage
- Injured Seattle firefighter's award of $12.75 million upheld by court
- Landscape beneath former Lake Aldwell revealed | Field Notes
- Elks lodges are hot again in Seattle
- Judge: State can't make druggists sell Plan B contraceptive
557 - Chinatown ID restaurateurs say longer parking hours cut business
328 - The overdue split among Democrats on education reform
232 - Speculators blamed for rising oil, gas prices
173 - Chone Figgins taking all the heat off of Ichiro as Mariners go in bold new direction
133 - AP source: Obama seeks 28 percent corp. tax rate
128 - Seattle's hopes of luring NBA's Kings here takes a hit
127 - Elks lodges are hot again in Seattle
85 - Seattle full-day kindergarten fees to increase 15%
79 - Brendan Ryan and Munenori Kawasaki having fun and working hard at Mariners camp
57
- Elks lodges are hot again in Seattle
- Spaghetti squash can be a side or main dish
- Deaths highlight boom in backcountry skiing
- Japan quake studies suggest harder jolt to NW possible
- Seattle surprises in James Beard nominations | All You Can Eat
- Head of Madigan removed from command amid PTSD probe
- Ichiro's style change is bigger news than his lineup change | Larry Stone
- Zumba's Latin rhythms on the move in the fitness world
- 'Oklahoma' seen in a new light | Nicole Brodeur
- Four dead in avalanches at Stevens and Snoqualmie passes










