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Pittsburgh Post-GazetteThursday, October 30, 2003
Last year, Congress authorized the creation of the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States to investigate the events that led to and occurred on Sept. 11, 2001. Given the Bush administration's reaction to the bipartisan commission's repeated requests for information, one can reasonably surmise that the executive branch has something to hide.
Nobody knows why, but stinginess with information has been this administration's modus operandi from the beginning. President (sic) Bush presides over the most information-averse White House in recent memory, which is a virtue only if you believe government should not be accountable.
Perhaps the crisis that engulfed the president and his advisers on Sept. 11 confirmed a dangerous notion that the White House harbored even before the attack: Information is too precious a commodity to share with the governed unless it has been thoroughly sanitized.
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-Lori Price
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