|
|
|
|
|
by nonrandomstring
976 days ago
|
|
> I'm unconvinced that private, smoke-filled backrooms don't have an
essential place as the grease that keeps things running well. I hear that, and there's a case for it. Diplomacy, maneuvering and negotiation
require secrets and enclaves. So to allow for that you need a few things; - Strict official records of affairs
- Strong penalties for fraud, malinfluence, intimidation
- Whistleblower protection
The last of these essential checks-and-balances has gone to shit our
culture. Even if we pardoned Edward Snowden and made him a "hero of
democracy" tomorrow, it's still a mountain of work to restore the
essential sense of civic responsibility, patriotism and duty that
allows those people who discover or witness corruption to step-up and
challenge it safe in the knowledge that the law and common morality
are on their side. |
|
Record and share everything immediately = no room for deals
Record nothing = too much room for corruption
So we land at... record everything + only review with just cause + strict whistleblower protections.
Which seems a nice splitting of the matter, but requires a strong, independent third party (e.g. judicial branch) to arbitrate access requests. With tremendous pressure and incentives to breach that limit.