Sunday, March 28, 2010

Secular Secrecy Cults In Government

One of the definitions of "cult" is: "an instance of great veneration of a person, ideal, or thing, esp. as manifested by a body of admirers"; a synonym for cult is: "party".

In the world of memetics, it is called a "meme-complex".

When we add the word "secrecy" to these descriptions, we derive "secrecy cult", "secrecy party", or "secrecy meme-complex".

The structure of the construct denotes an affinity to secrecy.

Like most issues, there is good secrecy and bad secrecy.

At first blush a statement, made by a person who is well versed in the many and varied complications of the bizarre secrecy world, seems to be comical:
[A]s we know, there are known knowns; there are things we know we know. We also know there are known unknowns; that is to say we know there are some things we do not know. But there are also unknown unknowns — the ones we don’t know we don’t know. And if one looks throughout the history of our country and other free countries, it is the latter category that tend to be the difficult ones.
(Donald Rumsfeld, Secretary of Defense). But one legal scholar indicates that the comment is less comical than it appears, at first blush, to be:
[Rumsfeld's statement] contained a valid insight. There are things we know we know, things we know we do not know, and things we do not know we do not know. And, in fact, the secrets in the latter category tend to be the most difficult ones for a free society. They are deep secrets.

Their obscurity in the literature is surprising. The proper scope of government secrecy is a classic question in legal and political theory. In recent years, the question has taken on special urgency.
New technologies and new adversaries have increased the potential costs of disclosing government-controlled information, at the same time as the rise of online media, changing social norms, and a worldwide “transparency lobby” have increased the demand for it. The Bush administration aggressively challenged the gains of the open-government movement and linked these efforts to an extreme vision of executive power. The use of state secrets appears both more pervasive in practice and more discredited in the public mind than at any point in history. Across many parts of the globe, there has never been such popular and academic interest in separating out legitimate secrecy from illegitimate secrecy.
(Deep Secrecy, David E. Pozen, emphasis added). The reason for the struggle for open government is no secret, it is because democracy dies when there is no accountability due to secrecy.

The main stream media is part of keeping the details secret when the government tells them to, as is shown over and over again by their 9/11 denial psychological problems.

We know what truth the main stream media can't handle:
Does Farmer have cooperation and agreement from other members of the Commission? Yes. Did they say Bush ordered 9/11? No. Do they say that the 9/11 Commission was lied to by the FBI, CIA, Whitehouse and NORAD? Yes. Is there full documentary proof of this? Yes.

Farmer [9/11 Commission Official] states ...“at some level of the government, at some point in time … there was an agreement not to tell the truth about what happened ... I was shocked at how different the truth was from the way it was described …. The [Norad air defense] tapes told a radically different story from what had been told to us and the public for two years. This is not spin.”

The 9/11 Commission head, Thomas Kean, was the Republican governor of New Jersey. He had the following to say ... “We to this day don’t know why NORAD [the North American Aerospace Command] told us what they told us, it was just so far from the truth ... " When Bush's own handpicked commission failed to go along with the cover up and requested a criminal investigation, why was nothing done?

...

In 2006, The Washington Post reported ... "Suspicion of wrongdoing ran so deep that the 10-member commission, in a secret meeting at the end of its tenure in summer 2004, debated referring the matter to the Justice Department for criminal investigation, according to several commission sources. Staff members and some commissioners thought that e-mails and other evidence provided enough probable cause to believe that military and aviation officials violated the law by making false statements to Congress and to the commission ..."

What does Farmer's book tell us? Farmer offers no solutions, only a total and full rejection of what was told and his own his own ideas concerning the total failure of honesty on the part of the government, a government with something to hide.
(Salem-News, emphasis added). Criminals inside and outside of government thrive on secrecy, because without evidence there is no criminal case against them, no accountability, thus, without accountability the criminal enterprise grows to the demise of the nation.

The next post in this series is here.

2 comments:

  1. Talk about a politial bombshell. If this were to lead where it certainly must (a criminal conspiracy and converup within the Bush administartion with global implications), I doubt we could withstand the repercussions. I think a lot of key witnesses would turn up missing should a serious inquiry ever take place and/or the investigation would simply be whitewashed for national security reasons.

    There's no way that any official investigation ever cracks this one, although independent one's probably will get close. Then they'll be labeled "conspiracy theories," a la JFK, and simply dismissed. Proof: Obama's unwillingness to even investigate torture allegations, which are clearly open and shut.

    Hell, I wouldn't be surprised if Obama's already been briefed on all this in minute detail. Probably been told it's a state secret, the revealing of which will result in his death as well. He changed dramatically as soon as he was elected. Only question in my mind is, is he in on the take, is he afraid for his life, or both. There's something very strange going on in DC right now, and I'm sure its MUCH more far reaching and complex than we in the public have been able to piece together yet.

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  2. disaffected,

    I report, you decide ... ;)

    spread the word bro ...

    Let me say one thing before I get back to the lawn and garden ... Read this:

    The Criminally Insane Epoc Arises ...

    ReplyDelete