Want Better Journalism and Less B.S.? Demand Stronger Public Record Laws.
Even if you despise the media, you should be rooting for better public record laws.

It's Sunshine Week—the week when reporters complain more than usual about government stonewalling and the government brags that it doesn't stonewall quite as often as it used to.
Sunshine Week intentionally coincides with the birthday of President James Madison, who wrote in 1822, "A popular government without popular information, or the means of acquiring it, is but a prologue to a farce or a tragedy."
To mark the event, the Justice Department announced that it was updating its guidance to federal agencies on applying the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), the landmark law that guarantees public access to government records. Specifically, the Justice Department clarified how agencies should apply a presumption of openness and the "foreseeable harm" standard, which was codified into law in 2016. These standards were supposed to direct agencies to release public records, even when an exemption could apply, unless it foresees that disclosure would harm an interest protected by one of the nine FOIA exemptions.
"The guidelines make clear that the Justice Department will not defend nondisclosure decisions that fail to apply such a presumption," Associate Attorney General Vanita Gupta said this week. "And the guidelines also emphasize the importance of proactive disclosures and removing barriers to accessing government information."
Someone should alert the federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP). The Reason Foundation, which publishes Reason, filed a FOIA lawsuit against the BOP earlier this year to pry free records of inmate deaths at two federal women's prisons that have been dogged by allegations of unconstitutional medical neglect. The BOP frivolously redacted conclusions of mortality reviews from one prison and simply failed to turn over any records from another.
Unfortunately, this is not an unusual problem. As Anne Weismann, a veteran FOIA litigator, wrote this week, while the FOIA is a powerful and vital law on paper, government delays and obfuscation have neutered it in practice. That's why Micky Dolenz of The Monkees is suing the FBI for records on himself (he's not monkeying around), and why Bloomberg News is suing to discover if former President Donald Trump actually issued a "standing order" declassifying the boxes of documents he schlepped to his Mar-a-Lago resort.
If you need more examples, the folks at the Electronic Frontier Foundation have collected the worst of government stonewalling at the federal, state, and local levels for their annual ignominious award series, The Foilies. You can read about the feds censoring paintings from Gitmo detainees and a small New Jersey town suing an elderly woman for filing too many records requests.
Even if you despise the media, you should be rooting for more government transparency. Some of the worst journalism happens when no one has hard evidence one way or another and the only sources are government press releases and anonymous officials. Take for example the months of speculation surrounding the death of U.S. Capitol Police Officer Brian Sicknick, all of which was enabled by erroneous government statements and the fact that Capitol Police records and autopsy reports were confidential. As I wrote then, "In a vacuum of primary sources, bullshit will prevail. If you want faster, more accurate reporting, demand better public record laws and more transparency from officials."
The power-hungry demagogues and partisan pundits trying to tear this country apart dream of a perfectly fact-free environment where anything can be claimed and nothing can be confirmed. Strong public record laws are the antidote to the farces and tragedies they would inflict.
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Few states have the desire as Florida, who has quite vast sunshine laws, is mocked over what it is required to report.
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So do you support or oppose de Santis' attempts to rollback and create exemptions for Florida's long standing sunshine laws?
I support the first amendment right of insane partisan hacks to sell insinuation and speculation to sub-70 IQ retarded piece of shit lying Chavista 9/11 Truther conspiracy theorists like you as if it were fact. Just don't be surprised when everyone in the other 4 quintiles just point and laugh at you.
The attitude of your comment comes out of the lowest percentile.
If STRONGLY suggests you don't support ANYONE'S rights.
How about we just start lynching "journalists" who don't cite two or more named, verifiable, sources?
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CJ's boys out harassing the people
https://twitter.com/FiatFood/status/1636698638821859328?t=fj-mgbVpHg20U9zzLISZOQ&s=19
POV two FBI agents show up at your job to talk to you about your twitter posts criticizing Pfizer pharmaceutical corporation. Yes, this actually fucking happened to me yesterday right here in New York State.
[Thread]
So an arrest warrant for Putin has been issued by the International Criminal Court.
Up next, on Cops...
Walls closing in.
Cop: Sir, why are you carrying an ICBM in your trunk?
Putin: Is not mine. I borrowed car from friend...
Cop: Wow! A Yugo! Bet that set your friend back a few Rubles.
Cop: Is that an ICBM in your shorts, or are you just glad to see me?
I thought you were gonna use that trusted joke. I am disappoint.
judging by those historically insane Russian dash-cam videos, Russian Cops would be a fucking hoot.
IIRC they did a Russia Cops episode early in the series.
Bet they arrest Trump 1st.
Some of the worst journalism happens when no one has hard evidence one way or another and the only sources are government press releases and anonymous officials.
Omegalul. Imagine writing this shit after the last 5 of the blog buying exactly that hook, line and sinker.
Sometimes government exposes facts by accident or omission.
https://www.realclearwire.com/articles/2023/03/15/feds_foreign-agent_double_standard_protective_of_bidens_even_as_they_bore_down_on_trumpworld_885544.html
"DOJ later used information obtained from the searches and wiretaps – which included conversations with the current President’s son and brother – to convict Ho of bribery and money laundering, as part of a separate corruption case involving United Nations officials. But it declined to tap into its trove of evidence – including “over 100,000 emails” – to explore the connections between Ho and the Bidens, who received millions of dollars from Ho and a Chinese intelligence front and discussed sharing office space.
At Ho’s 2018 trial, prosecutors hid Hunter’s connection to Ho, redacting his name from court exhibits (see sidebar) while describing Ho as “the person who flies around the world paying bribes to advance the interest of the oil company [CEFC China Energy],” according to hearing transcripts.
A federal database shows the Bidens failed to register as foreign agents while engaged in activities on behalf of CEFC, a state-owned entity suspected of being a front for Chinese intelligence. Federal anti-spying laws require anyone acting as a lobbyist for a foreign power to register with the Justice Department under the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA).
The DOJ did not prosecute either Biden family member for potential violations of FARA for representing the interests of the Chinese.
This stands in stark contrast to the DOJ's aggressive pursuit of alleged FARA violations involving no fewer than six Trump campaign officials. In August of 2016, shortly after receiving a tip that a low-level Trump campaign volunteer, George Papadopoulos, had allegedly been told that the Russians might have dirt on Hillary Clinton, the bureau opened FARA investigations into Papadopoulos and three other Trump associates with no clear ties to Papadopoulos: national security adviser Michael Flynn; campaign manager Paul Manafort; and campaign adviser Carter Page. The FBI subsequently investigated Manafort's deputy Rick Gates; and Trump's Mideast adviser Walid Phares under the same statute. "
>>Want Better Journalism and Less B.S.?
lol open a barn door, why don'tcha?
see ... you woke up Gaear
Yeah I got your better journalism right here.
https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/former-australian-pm-savages-rubbish-aukus-deal-us-worst-deal-history
That's when he concluded that ultimately, "This is what [Aukus] is about, the maintenance of the US strategic hegemony in Asia."
In reference to the deal announced and confirmed by President Joe Biden on Monday in San Diego while standing beside his Australian and British counterparts, Keating wrote, "For $360 billion, we're going to get eight submarines. It must be the worst deal in all history."
He took direct aim at the current Australian PM and other top officials, writing the following:
"This week, Anthony Albanese screwed into place the last shackle in the long chain the United States has laid out to contain China."
"No mealy-mouthed talk of 'stabilisation' in our China relationship or resort to softer or polite language will disguise from the Chinese the extent and intent of our commitment to United States's strategic hegemony in East Asia with all its deadly portents."
"History will be the judge of this project in the end. But I want my name clearly recorded among those who say it is a mistake. Who believes that, despite its enormous cost, it does not offer a solution to the challenge of great power competition in the region or to the security of the Australian people and its continent."
Wow. Turns out there's lots of better journalism out there no FOIA required.
https://www.zerohedge.com/political/jacob-chansleys-lawyers-confront-dojs-claim-it-didnt-suppress-jan-6-evidence
Chansley’s lawyers disagreed with the DOJ’s claims, saying that the bar for suppression is lower than what the government claims it to be.
“Suppression … is not the nefarious burying of evidence,” Bill Shipley, Jacob Chansley’s current counsel, said in an interview with The Epoch Times on Monday. “It just means it wasn’t brought to light by the government. The government knew what was there and did not illuminate the fact that it was there.”
Shipley says that the government may have violated Brady because they did not identify the tapes and their nature as potentially exculpatory evidence during Chansley’s trial. Making them available without making sure the defendant knows of the existence of the tapes may constitute suppression, according to Shipley.
“Suppression simply means it went undiscovered by the defendant beyond a point at which it could be made use of,” Shipley, who was a federal prosecutor for 21 years, said. “If the government produced thousands of hours of video and said, ‘There’s a minute of evidence that’s favorable to Jacob Chansley—good luck,’ that production is not an effective Brady disclosure.”
The tapes are relevant for reasons beyond proving Chansley’s innocence or guilt, Shipley told The Epoch Times, noting that they are important to answering the question of whether Chansley’s sentence was fair under due process considerations.
“The question is: were Jacob Chansley’s rights to due process and effective assistance of counsel violated? Were the procedural requirements complied with such that the process and outcome of his case was a fair proceeding?” Shipley challenged.
“They’re clearly the kinds of videos that, had Judge [Royce Lamberth] seen them at sentencing, he might have concluded that Mr. Chansey is not the personification of evil in the way the government has made him out to be,” the attorney added. Judge Royce Lamberth presided over Chansley’s trial.
“That might have caused Judge Lambert to think that maybe 41 months was too much time to give him, taking into consideration all of his conduct, as opposed to just the precise conduct the government gave,” Shipley said.
It would be nice if we had a media that was interested in public records.
No lack of FOIAs preventing anyone at Reason from reporting that biological men can't be turned into biological women (and vice versa) and that sexualizing pre-adolescents is socially deleterious. None.
But Trump's tax returns, that will have him behind bars any minute, we've got. The Top Secret documents that were seized from Mar-A-Lago that also will have him behind bars any minute, we've got. Well, not the contents of them or the contents of the warrant justifying their seizure, but you know, it's hard to find facts when the truth is locked in government vaults behind anonymous sources.
Holy shit! Where's the tylenol?
Sperry again. How does he do journalism without anonymous sources, FOIAs and links to The Bulwark?
The Biden Justice Department Stands Accused of Hiding This Evidence of Biden-China Corruption
https://www.realclearwire.com/articles/2023/03/15/the_biden_justice_department_stands_accused_of_hiding_this_evidence_of_biden-china_corruption_887223.html
Want Better Journalism and Less B.S.?
Was it an FOIA request that exposed McCarthy? Was it the media that exposed the Watergate break in? Where do you get the gall to try and extort your desires light years outside your pay grade you hack? Want a more even-handed populace less eager to lamppost the lot of you? Do a better job.
Newsflash asshole, no FOIA required, we don't work for you.
Whaddya need CJ? Do you need Ed Snowden to walk more documents out of the NSA for you? You need some no-name computer repair person to turn in a hard drive full of evidence of the President's son's illegal dealings? Do you need Joe to claim how he quid-pro-quo'ed Ukraine about Burisma without the President's knowledge in front of a room full of a hundred people?
Jesus. Fucking. Christ. GTFO with your "Without FOIAs, facts are so hard to come by!" bullshit.
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Want Better Journalism and Less B.S.?
I know, I know, more immigrants
Late term abortions and food trucks.
If you want to have better journalism and less B.S., here are a few things you can do:
Be a critical reader: It's important to be a discerning reader and to evaluate the credibility of the sources you are reading. Try to read articles from reputable sources that have a history of accurate reporting.
Fact-check the information: Before sharing any news or information, take a few minutes to fact-check the story. You can use fact-checking websites such as FactCheck.org or PolitiFact to verify the accuracy of claims made in articles.
Diversify your news sources: To get a well-rounded perspective on an issue, it's important to read news from a variety of sources. This will help you avoid bias and get a more complete understanding of the issue.
Support quality journalism: Quality journalism requires resources, so consider supporting news outlets that produce accurate and informative reporting. You can do this by subscribing to newspapers and magazines or donating to non-profit news organizations.
By following these steps, you can become a more informed reader and contribute to the overall quality of journalism.
All good suggestions.
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You can wash your hands of proven and unrepentant liars and propagandists masquerading as "journalist" and "reputable news sources". And on top of that, use some of the techniques advocated above.
Transparency is critical in a democracy and FOIA is critical to providing that transparency. It is a problem with at all levels of government and with both political parties. I would hope that as divide as we are we could agree that FOIA is critical and must be supported.
On area that is my pet peeve is that legislators often resist FOIA requests for the deliberative process in making laws. But transparency would show the people how these deliberation are influenced and would shine a light on the influencers.
I agree about transparency. In simple language don't bullshit me. You might fool me for a while but our love affair is done when I see the light.
This is outstanding! In a world where the FBI and CIA have been repeatedly caught interfering in domestic politics by lying to the public (unnamed intelligence sources), censoring what can be discussed, and even framing people for crimes for political reasons.... FOIA requests are the key to everything! Even if you think there is a little bias!
Let me ask you this....
If a FOIA request falls in the woods, and nobody is allowed to hear it.... does it make a sound?
You might note that the article talks about how it would improve journalism if reporter could get the information they asked for rather than relying on unnamed sources. This is what FOIA is all about, getting information from the government.
You’ll not that the author of the article is a journalist and while FOIAs make their lives easier, it’s not what journalism is all about. The FOIA is a red herring predicated on the notion that a government that doesn’t want the information known will begrudgingly provide you with all the plain facts and evidence you require for any given narrative because you filed the proper paperwork.
Unnamed sources aren’t a problem and Reason, collectively, knows this. The same way I can see the amount of bitcoin in an unnamed source's account, request a transfer, and see the coins show up in my account all without knowing the source’s name, journalists can confirm facts from unnamed sources independently even without an FOIA. Further, a big part of the reason why journalists can’t rely on sources named “deep throat” any more is because they’ve gone straight from the trough to print too many times and have gotten burned.
Musk/Taibbi/Weiss didn’t require an FOIA. Greenwald didn’t require an FOIA. Assange didn’t require an FOIA. It’s a
requestblatant deflecting imposition for more formal laziness from an industry that’s been not just excessively lazy, but actively compliant for going on (at least) 8 yrs. now.