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Wednesday, May 15, 2013

National Editorial: As new scandals show, people who love power are prone to abuse it | WashingtonExaminer.com

National Editorial: As new scandals show, people who love power are prone to abuse it | 
WashingtonExaminer.com


Conservatives and liberals have long debated the most effective way to ensure accountability in government. Conservatives, who usually view human nature as inherently flawed, automatically distrust those exercising official power. Liberals, for whom the perfectibility of man is an article of faith, argue that government is inherently benevolent -- and that officials who would abuse their power are restrained by the threat of exposure.
Attorney General Eric Holder certainly did not intend to resolve that discussion one way or the other, but he may have inadvertently done so when he allowed a trusted subordinate to approve the Justice Department's subpoena of a massive collection of Associated Press telephone records. The subpoena covered 20 telephone lines, which were used by legions of AP reporters, editors and executives, over a two-month period. That included thousands of calls, many undoubtedly involving conversations between reporters and sources.
The damage to the AP's ability to report the news could be incalculable, since sources inside and outside government must now wonder whether their past dealings with the news organization were secure and whether it's worth gambling that future conversations won't be similarly compromised. Even if the Justice Department apologizes to the AP, there are no guarantees that the breach won't happen again with the same or a different news organization under the current or a future president.

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