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The Declassification Engine
The Declassification Engine: What History Reveals About America's Top Secrets | Matthew Connelly
2 posts | 2 read | 3 to read
Every day, thousands of new secrets are created by the United States government. What is all this secrecy really for? And whom does it benefit? A brilliant, deeply unsettling look at the history and inner workings of the dark state'.... At a time when federal agencies are increasingly classifying or destroying documents with historical significance, this book could not be more important. Eric Schlosser, New York Times best-selling author of Command and Control Before World War II, transparent government was a proud tradition in the United States. In all but the most serious of circumstances, classification, covert operations, and spying were considered deeply un-American. But after the war, the power to decide what could be kept secret proved too tempting to give up. Since then, we have radically departed from that open tradition, allowing intelligence agencies, black sites, and classified laboratories to grow unchecked. Officials insist that only secrecy can keep us safe, but its true costs have gone unacknowledged for too long. Using the latest techniques in data science, historian Matthew Connelly analyzes a vast trove of state secrets to unearth not only what the government really does not want us to know but also why they dont want us to know it. Culling this research and carefully examining a series of pivotal moments in recent history, from Pearl Harbor to drone warfare, Connelly sheds light on the drivers of state secrecyespecially incompetence and criminalityand how rampant overclassification makes it impossible to protect truly vital information. What results is an astonishing study of power: of the greed it enables, of the negligence it protects, and of what we lose as citizens when our leaders cannot be held to account. A crucial examination of the self-defeating nature of secrecy and the dire state of our nations archives, The Declassification Engine is a powerful reminder of the importance of preserving the past so that we may secure our future.
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RamsFan1963
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43/150 I found this book extremely infuriating. I know the government lies, and I know that government keeps secrets, that's a given. However, so much of what is stamped "classified-National Security" is just to cover up the government's ignorance, incompetence, corruption and greed. Every administration since FDR has promised that they would be transparent, they would be the government
of the people. Sadly, millions (billions?) ⬇️⬇️

RamsFan1963 of tax payers dollars have been spent by these same administrations to not only hide this information but to make it legally impossible for anyone to gain access to it even decades later. Democrats or Republicans, it doesn't matter, they all lie about transparency. 5 🌟 2y
RamsFan1963 1st book finished for #MarvelousMay readathon @Andrew65 2y
Reggie So it doesn‘t say who killed JFK? 2y
RamsFan1963 @Reggie Sadly no, but he does bring up a good point. As much as the government leaks information, if Kennedy's assassination had been a government job, there was NO WAY it would still be a secret 60 years later. 2y
AllDebooks This sounds great, albeit liable to induce raging in the reader. 2y
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