Originally posted by skekUng
But, as I pointed out, allowing every US citizen to have access to that information doesn't prevent the representatives of other governments from also getting that information.Of the articles I've read and reports I've heard, the leaks reveal that US diplomats have actually been doing a pretty good job and are being fairly straight forward with us about what they're doing. But, again, I'm not just addressing this round of leaks. Perhaps in the next one he might leak information that should be known only to those specific individuals involved on one side of the diplomatic process. It's a fine line, but one that is sometimes necessary.
you bring up a good point, and it remains to be seen if that happens
the problem is, without someone like Asange, we rely only on the government to determine what should and shouldn't be seen. As the previous leaks have shown, they aren't making things confidential to hide secrets that we really don't need to know, but really to hide corruption and embarassment.
Like, if wikileaks had released something like, US troop movements in Iraq or Afghanistan, I could see your point. But it doesn't. wikileaks has some documents it wont release for that very reason.
I don't think anyone is arguing, including Asange and wikileaks, that everything the state does should be 100% transparent, but the fact is, the pendulum has swung so far in favor of government secrecy, that even to release a bunch of memos that, as you point out, aren't really that bad, is considered an international incident.
Ultimately, some type of institutionalized leak system would be nice, but the more formal it is made, the more likely it will just become a bloated beuracracy.