20/04/06 09:28 Filed by Saswat Pattanayak in:
Saswat | Political
| Editorial
By Saswat Pattanayak
“This is our function. Our
Founding Fathers understood that government by its
nature tends to oppress those it has power over. Our
Founding Fathers decided that there must be, there
had to be, there should be and there is, an
institution that keeps an eye on government. That is
what we do. There is nothing in the Constitution
about the freedom to practice law. There is nothing
in the Constitution about the freedom to practice
medicine. There is nothing in the Constitution about
the freedom to engage in commerce. There is nothing
in the Constitution about teaching or learning. But
there is something in the Constitution about the
freedom of the press. Our Founding Fathers understood
that it would be necessary to have a watchdog on
government, and that is our role: to keep a watch
out.”
--Jack Anderson (1922-2005) in a speech at Utah State
University six years ago.
Even the legendary Anderson was under the illusion!
And as the documents of one of the greatest
investigative journalists, are now being accessed by
FBI for editing, his thundering words of trust in the
freedom of press falls short of vindication.
Anderson’s family wants to donate his papers to
George Washington University.
And NPR reports that the FBI wants to review the
archive and remove items it deems confidential.
Question is not about the onus of ownership. It’s
certainly neither about the authenticity of what
should be considered ‘confidential’. It’s not even
about respecting the right of Anderson’s family to
put forth the request.
What’s at stake is what’s being excavated. What’s at
stake is the nature of materials that Anderson had
access to, both as the friend of McCarthy, and
subsequently as his nemesis. As being member of the
then American President’s notorious list. As
arch-enemy of the then FBI’s director, possibly the
most illustrious director of all time. As someone
constantly distancing himself from the powerful and
always aligning himself with the working class
sources. As an example, today completely lacking
among mediocre media showbiz.
Anderson attested how the so-called ‘cold war’ has
been fraught with several hot-blooded wars that have
caused millions of deaths. And Anderson’s
contribution to exposing at least parts of that
cannot be undermined.
Recently official documents released by White
House showed America’s active role in
destabilizing Indian subcontinent. It confirmed the
Nobel Prize for Peace winner Henry Kissinger’s actual
Warmongering motives.
It showed how misunderstandings were being
deliberately created between Vietnam, China and USSR,
for gains that would cause genocides in
Bangladesh.
And coming into light of these knowledge is no mean
achievement. For one, it clearly demonstrate that
so-called democratic regimes are not governed either
by its peoples (most Americans are peace-loving
working class people), or for its peoples (most
Americans suffer the burdens of international
terrorism). And most importantly, Anderson’s
documents clearly deconstruct the larger narrative of
North-South, First World-Third World dichotomies,
where traditionally, even according to primary
textbooks, people from the “underdeveloped” economies
are mean-minded savages. Anderson’s documents prove
quite an upset to that.
Anderson also exposed CIA conspiracy to assassinate
Fidel Castro. He too exposed threadbare the FBI
Hoover’s various dubious, and often monstrous links.
He traced to core the position of Mafia in American
political circles. As the longest running and widest
read political commentator of the country, his
readers believed he
and his team investigated daily, what Woodward and
Bernstein did just once in Watergate.
And many of the papers, apart from their gory
portrayals of sinister cold war period, could
actually educate the entire country on more authentic
history of the peoples, from the lens someone who
stood in the circle of the people, than basked in the
glories of the official press lobby. And for these
acts of conviction, during his lifetime, his murder
was attempted by top political agents. And today,
after his death, its way ironic, that he would even
to this day haunted by the people in power for his
documents.
For in his lifetime, he would not have let anyone
take possession of the papers, in order to hide them.
For an investigative journalist, the entity lies in
“exposing” the findings to the public and
“concealing” the source. Not, exposing the sources,
and concealing the findings. No matter, the
intentions of the founding fathers, as Anderson
quotes, the foundation understanding of press
functions lack authenticity today.
Tags: Saswat, Media, USA, Academic, Communism, Capitalism