Obama Should Be In JAIL, Period!

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1stRambo

Gold Member
Feb 8, 2015
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Yo, this Administration is the most criminal Administration in American History!!! This Lawbreaker in the White House should be shown on National T.V. when they handcuff his sorry ass!!! He and Holder, along with other Socialist in their Party, like Hillary Clinton, etc., are hiding evidence that could incriminate them as traitors!!! Can`t wait for the first whistle blower to open their mouth!!! It will be "Party" time!

AP CEO: Government undermining 'right to know' laws
March 13, 2015

By Gary Pruitt
President and CEO
The Associated Press

It’s getting harder and more expensive to use public records to hold government officials accountable. Authorities are undermining the laws that are supposed to guarantee citizens’ right to information, turning the right to know into just plain “no.” Socialist?

Associated Press journalists filed hundreds of requests for government files last year, simply trying to use the rights granted under state open records laws and the U.S. Freedom of Information Act. What we discovered reaffirmed what we have seen all too frequently in recent years: the systems created to give citizens information about their government are badly broken and getting worse all the time. Traitor!

We’re talking about this issue now because of Sunshine Week, created a decade ago to showcase the laws that give Americans the right to know what their government is up to. These days, Sunshine Week is a time to put a spotlight on government efforts to strangle those rights.

The problem stretches from town halls through statehouses to the White House, where the Obama administration took office promising to act promptly when people asked for information and never to withhold files just because they might be embarrassing. Liar!

Act promptly? Hardly. :ahole-1:

Shortly after Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 went missing over the South China Sea, we asked the Pentagon’s top satellite imagery unit, the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, what the U.S. was doing to help the search.

Agencies are supposed to give at least a preliminary response to such questions within 20 days. A full year later, after the largest and most expensive search in aviation history, the agency is telling us only it has too many FOIA requests to meet its deadlines. :bang3:

A few months ago, the Treasury Department sent us 237 pages in its latest response to our requests regarding Iran trade sanctions. Nearly all 237 pages were completely blacked out, on the basis that they contained businesses’ trade secrets.

When was our request? Nine years ago.

It takes the State Department about 18 months to answer -- or refuse to answer -- anything other than a simple request. This week we filed a lawsuit against the department for failing to turn over files covering Hillary Rodham Clinton's tenure as secretary of state, including one request we made five full years ago.

As the president said, the United States should not withhold or censor government files merely because they might be embarrassing. :blahblah:

But it happens anyway. :boohoo:

In government emails that AP obtained in reporting about who pays for Michelle Obama’s expensive dresses, the National Archives and Records Administration blacked out one sentence repeatedly, citing a part of the law intended to shield personal information such as Social Security numbers or home addresses.

The blacked-out sentence? The government slipped and let it through on one page of the redacted documents: “We live in constant fear of upsetting the WH (White House).” :ack-1:

To its credit, the U.S. government does not routinely overcharge for copies of public records, but price-gouging intended to discourage public records requests is a serious problem in many states.

Officials in Ferguson, Missouri, billed the AP $135 an hour for nearly a day's work merely to retrieve emails from a handful of accounts about the fatal shooting of Michael Brown. That was roughly 10 times the cost of an entry-level Ferguson clerk’s salary.

Other organizations, including BuzzFeed, were told they would have to pay unspecified thousands of dollars for emails and memos about Ferguson's traffic citation policies and changes to local elections.

Last year, the executive editor of the South Florida Gay News asked the Broward County Sheriff’s Office for copies of emails that contained a derogatory word for gays. The sheriff’s office said it would cost $399,000 and take four years. “They succeeded in stonewalling me,” said the editor, Jason Parsley.

In Mississippi, the state Education Department demanded more than $70 an hour to review records when a reporter asked for its reorganization plans.

Despite head-pounding frustrations in using them, the Freedom of Information Act and state open records laws are powerful reporting tools. But it’s important to remember that they don’t exist just for journalists.

They are there for everyone. Duh!

The right to know what public officials are doing, how they’re going about it, what money they are spending and why … that right belongs to all citizens.

Government works better when the people who put it in office and pay for it with their taxes have an unobstructed view of what it is doing.

And that is why it is vital that we all fight every attempt _ from federal foot-dragging to outrageous photocopying bills _ to hide the public’s information behind a big, padlocked door. We need to let the sun shine in.
___
Gary Pruitt, president and CEO of The Associated Press, is a former First Amendment lawyer.

Yo, Obama has little Socialist all over the U.S.A. doing his dirty work!!!

"GTP"

"OBAMA HATES AMERICA""
3756132485_Obama_in_jail_answer_4_xlarge_answer_1_xlarge.jpeg
 
Our entire government is out of control, and getting worse by the day. The blatant disregard for the law and the constitution is sickening.

It won't go on forever. It will reach a critical mass, and when that day comes, we'll see a second revolution. People will only take so much.
 
Yo, this Administration is the most criminal Administration in American History!!! This Lawbreaker in the White House should be shown on National T.V. when they handcuff his sorry ass!!! He and Holder, along with other Socialist in their Party, like Hillary Clinton, etc., are hiding evidence that could incriminate them as traitors!!! Can`t wait for the first whistle blower to open their mouth!!! It will be "Party" time!

AP CEO: Government undermining 'right to know' laws
March 13, 2015

By Gary Pruitt
President and CEO
The Associated Press

It’s getting harder and more expensive to use public records to hold government officials accountable. Authorities are undermining the laws that are supposed to guarantee citizens’ right to information, turning the right to know into just plain “no.” Socialist?

Associated Press journalists filed hundreds of requests for government files last year, simply trying to use the rights granted under state open records laws and the U.S. Freedom of Information Act. What we discovered reaffirmed what we have seen all too frequently in recent years: the systems created to give citizens information about their government are badly broken and getting worse all the time. Traitor!

We’re talking about this issue now because of Sunshine Week, created a decade ago to showcase the laws that give Americans the right to know what their government is up to. These days, Sunshine Week is a time to put a spotlight on government efforts to strangle those rights.

The problem stretches from town halls through statehouses to the White House, where the Obama administration took office promising to act promptly when people asked for information and never to withhold files just because they might be embarrassing. Liar!

Act promptly? Hardly. :ahole-1:

Shortly after Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 went missing over the South China Sea, we asked the Pentagon’s top satellite imagery unit, the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, what the U.S. was doing to help the search.

Agencies are supposed to give at least a preliminary response to such questions within 20 days. A full year later, after the largest and most expensive search in aviation history, the agency is telling us only it has too many FOIA requests to meet its deadlines. :bang3:

A few months ago, the Treasury Department sent us 237 pages in its latest response to our requests regarding Iran trade sanctions. Nearly all 237 pages were completely blacked out, on the basis that they contained businesses’ trade secrets.

When was our request? Nine years ago.

It takes the State Department about 18 months to answer -- or refuse to answer -- anything other than a simple request. This week we filed a lawsuit against the department for failing to turn over files covering Hillary Rodham Clinton's tenure as secretary of state, including one request we made five full years ago.

As the president said, the United States should not withhold or censor government files merely because they might be embarrassing. :blahblah:

But it happens anyway. :boohoo:

In government emails that AP obtained in reporting about who pays for Michelle Obama’s expensive dresses, the National Archives and Records Administration blacked out one sentence repeatedly, citing a part of the law intended to shield personal information such as Social Security numbers or home addresses.

The blacked-out sentence? The government slipped and let it through on one page of the redacted documents: “We live in constant fear of upsetting the WH (White House).” :ack-1:

To its credit, the U.S. government does not routinely overcharge for copies of public records, but price-gouging intended to discourage public records requests is a serious problem in many states.

Officials in Ferguson, Missouri, billed the AP $135 an hour for nearly a day's work merely to retrieve emails from a handful of accounts about the fatal shooting of Michael Brown. That was roughly 10 times the cost of an entry-level Ferguson clerk’s salary.

Other organizations, including BuzzFeed, were told they would have to pay unspecified thousands of dollars for emails and memos about Ferguson's traffic citation policies and changes to local elections.

Last year, the executive editor of the South Florida Gay News asked the Broward County Sheriff’s Office for copies of emails that contained a derogatory word for gays. The sheriff’s office said it would cost $399,000 and take four years. “They succeeded in stonewalling me,” said the editor, Jason Parsley.

In Mississippi, the state Education Department demanded more than $70 an hour to review records when a reporter asked for its reorganization plans.

Despite head-pounding frustrations in using them, the Freedom of Information Act and state open records laws are powerful reporting tools. But it’s important to remember that they don’t exist just for journalists.

They are there for everyone. Duh!

The right to know what public officials are doing, how they’re going about it, what money they are spending and why … that right belongs to all citizens.

Government works better when the people who put it in office and pay for it with their taxes have an unobstructed view of what it is doing.

And that is why it is vital that we all fight every attempt _ from federal foot-dragging to outrageous photocopying bills _ to hide the public’s information behind a big, padlocked door. We need to let the sun shine in.
___
Gary Pruitt, president and CEO of The Associated Press, is a former First Amendment lawyer.

Yo, Obama has little Socialist all over the U.S.A. doing his dirty work!!!

"GTP"

"OBAMA HATES AMERICA""
View attachment 38118
There are multiple reasons why the kenyan should be in prison. This latest disregard for the law being just one more reason...

White House Exempting Itself From Freedom of Information Act
 
Yo, 1stRambo is a faggot who contributes nothing to this board but retardation.

Yo, it sure sounds like it, after that terrific, informative, sentence you used, WOW, are you as bright as a light bulb? Total Ass-Hole, and Brainless!!!:ahole-1:

"GTP"
 
Yo, this Administration is the most criminal Administration in American History!!! This Lawbreaker in the White House should be shown on National T.V. when they handcuff his sorry ass!!! He and Holder, along with other Socialist in their Party, like Hillary Clinton, etc., are hiding evidence that could incriminate them as traitors!!! Can`t wait for the first whistle blower to open their mouth!!! It will be "Party" time!

AP CEO: Government undermining 'right to know' laws
March 13, 2015

By Gary Pruitt
President and CEO
The Associated Press

It’s getting harder and more expensive to use public records to hold government officials accountable. Authorities are undermining the laws that are supposed to guarantee citizens’ right to information, turning the right to know into just plain “no.” Socialist?

Associated Press journalists filed hundreds of requests for government files last year, simply trying to use the rights granted under state open records laws and the U.S. Freedom of Information Act. What we discovered reaffirmed what we have seen all too frequently in recent years: the systems created to give citizens information about their government are badly broken and getting worse all the time. Traitor!

We’re talking about this issue now because of Sunshine Week, created a decade ago to showcase the laws that give Americans the right to know what their government is up to. These days, Sunshine Week is a time to put a spotlight on government efforts to strangle those rights.

The problem stretches from town halls through statehouses to the White House, where the Obama administration took office promising to act promptly when people asked for information and never to withhold files just because they might be embarrassing. Liar!

Act promptly? Hardly. :ahole-1:

Shortly after Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 went missing over the South China Sea, we asked the Pentagon’s top satellite imagery unit, the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, what the U.S. was doing to help the search.

Agencies are supposed to give at least a preliminary response to such questions within 20 days. A full year later, after the largest and most expensive search in aviation history, the agency is telling us only it has too many FOIA requests to meet its deadlines. :bang3:

A few months ago, the Treasury Department sent us 237 pages in its latest response to our requests regarding Iran trade sanctions. Nearly all 237 pages were completely blacked out, on the basis that they contained businesses’ trade secrets.

When was our request? Nine years ago.

It takes the State Department about 18 months to answer -- or refuse to answer -- anything other than a simple request. This week we filed a lawsuit against the department for failing to turn over files covering Hillary Rodham Clinton's tenure as secretary of state, including one request we made five full years ago.

As the president said, the United States should not withhold or censor government files merely because they might be embarrassing. :blahblah:

But it happens anyway. :boohoo:

In government emails that AP obtained in reporting about who pays for Michelle Obama’s expensive dresses, the National Archives and Records Administration blacked out one sentence repeatedly, citing a part of the law intended to shield personal information such as Social Security numbers or home addresses.

The blacked-out sentence? The government slipped and let it through on one page of the redacted documents: “We live in constant fear of upsetting the WH (White House).” :ack-1:

To its credit, the U.S. government does not routinely overcharge for copies of public records, but price-gouging intended to discourage public records requests is a serious problem in many states.

Officials in Ferguson, Missouri, billed the AP $135 an hour for nearly a day's work merely to retrieve emails from a handful of accounts about the fatal shooting of Michael Brown. That was roughly 10 times the cost of an entry-level Ferguson clerk’s salary.

Other organizations, including BuzzFeed, were told they would have to pay unspecified thousands of dollars for emails and memos about Ferguson's traffic citation policies and changes to local elections.

Last year, the executive editor of the South Florida Gay News asked the Broward County Sheriff’s Office for copies of emails that contained a derogatory word for gays. The sheriff’s office said it would cost $399,000 and take four years. “They succeeded in stonewalling me,” said the editor, Jason Parsley.

In Mississippi, the state Education Department demanded more than $70 an hour to review records when a reporter asked for its reorganization plans.

Despite head-pounding frustrations in using them, the Freedom of Information Act and state open records laws are powerful reporting tools. But it’s important to remember that they don’t exist just for journalists.

They are there for everyone. Duh!

The right to know what public officials are doing, how they’re going about it, what money they are spending and why … that right belongs to all citizens.

Government works better when the people who put it in office and pay for it with their taxes have an unobstructed view of what it is doing.

And that is why it is vital that we all fight every attempt _ from federal foot-dragging to outrageous photocopying bills _ to hide the public’s information behind a big, padlocked door. We need to let the sun shine in.
___
Gary Pruitt, president and CEO of The Associated Press, is a former First Amendment lawyer.

Yo, Obama has little Socialist all over the U.S.A. doing his dirty work!!!

"GTP"

"OBAMA HATES AMERICA""
View attachment 38118

Bush Chaney rumsfeld Alberto Gonzales......worst presidency in every way. Caused the great recession. Iraq and afganistan was going horribly. Bin ladin was on vacation.

Dont forget the rest of the world wants to try bush and co with war crimes. They lied us into Iraq. And dont forget got hit on 9 11 01. Yea let's put another bush in office.

Hillary 16
 
Yo, this Administration is the most criminal Administration in American History!!! This Lawbreaker in the White House should be shown on National T.V. when they handcuff his sorry ass!!! He and Holder, along with other Socialist in their Party, like Hillary Clinton, etc., are hiding evidence that could incriminate them as traitors!!! Can`t wait for the first whistle blower to open their mouth!!! It will be "Party" time!

AP CEO: Government undermining 'right to know' laws
March 13, 2015

By Gary Pruitt
President and CEO
The Associated Press

It’s getting harder and more expensive to use public records to hold government officials accountable. Authorities are undermining the laws that are supposed to guarantee citizens’ right to information, turning the right to know into just plain “no.” Socialist?

Associated Press journalists filed hundreds of requests for government files last year, simply trying to use the rights granted under state open records laws and the U.S. Freedom of Information Act. What we discovered reaffirmed what we have seen all too frequently in recent years: the systems created to give citizens information about their government are badly broken and getting worse all the time. Traitor!

We’re talking about this issue now because of Sunshine Week, created a decade ago to showcase the laws that give Americans the right to know what their government is up to. These days, Sunshine Week is a time to put a spotlight on government efforts to strangle those rights.

The problem stretches from town halls through statehouses to the White House, where the Obama administration took office promising to act promptly when people asked for information and never to withhold files just because they might be embarrassing. Liar!

Act promptly? Hardly. :ahole-1:

Shortly after Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 went missing over the South China Sea, we asked the Pentagon’s top satellite imagery unit, the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, what the U.S. was doing to help the search.

Agencies are supposed to give at least a preliminary response to such questions within 20 days. A full year later, after the largest and most expensive search in aviation history, the agency is telling us only it has too many FOIA requests to meet its deadlines. :bang3:

A few months ago, the Treasury Department sent us 237 pages in its latest response to our requests regarding Iran trade sanctions. Nearly all 237 pages were completely blacked out, on the basis that they contained businesses’ trade secrets.

When was our request? Nine years ago.

It takes the State Department about 18 months to answer -- or refuse to answer -- anything other than a simple request. This week we filed a lawsuit against the department for failing to turn over files covering Hillary Rodham Clinton's tenure as secretary of state, including one request we made five full years ago.

As the president said, the United States should not withhold or censor government files merely because they might be embarrassing. :blahblah:

But it happens anyway. :boohoo:

In government emails that AP obtained in reporting about who pays for Michelle Obama’s expensive dresses, the National Archives and Records Administration blacked out one sentence repeatedly, citing a part of the law intended to shield personal information such as Social Security numbers or home addresses.

The blacked-out sentence? The government slipped and let it through on one page of the redacted documents: “We live in constant fear of upsetting the WH (White House).” :ack-1:

To its credit, the U.S. government does not routinely overcharge for copies of public records, but price-gouging intended to discourage public records requests is a serious problem in many states.

Officials in Ferguson, Missouri, billed the AP $135 an hour for nearly a day's work merely to retrieve emails from a handful of accounts about the fatal shooting of Michael Brown. That was roughly 10 times the cost of an entry-level Ferguson clerk’s salary.

Other organizations, including BuzzFeed, were told they would have to pay unspecified thousands of dollars for emails and memos about Ferguson's traffic citation policies and changes to local elections.

Last year, the executive editor of the South Florida Gay News asked the Broward County Sheriff’s Office for copies of emails that contained a derogatory word for gays. The sheriff’s office said it would cost $399,000 and take four years. “They succeeded in stonewalling me,” said the editor, Jason Parsley.

In Mississippi, the state Education Department demanded more than $70 an hour to review records when a reporter asked for its reorganization plans.

Despite head-pounding frustrations in using them, the Freedom of Information Act and state open records laws are powerful reporting tools. But it’s important to remember that they don’t exist just for journalists.

They are there for everyone. Duh!

The right to know what public officials are doing, how they’re going about it, what money they are spending and why … that right belongs to all citizens.

Government works better when the people who put it in office and pay for it with their taxes have an unobstructed view of what it is doing.

And that is why it is vital that we all fight every attempt _ from federal foot-dragging to outrageous photocopying bills _ to hide the public’s information behind a big, padlocked door. We need to let the sun shine in.
___
Gary Pruitt, president and CEO of The Associated Press, is a former First Amendment lawyer.

Yo, Obama has little Socialist all over the U.S.A. doing his dirty work!!!

"GTP"

"OBAMA HATES AMERICA""
View attachment 38118

Bush Chaney rumsfeld Alberto Gonzales......worst presidency in every way. Caused the great recession. Iraq and afganistan was going horribly. Bin ladin was on vacation.

Dont forget the rest of the world wants to try bush and co with war crimes. They lied us into Iraq. And dont forget got hit on 9 11 01. Yea let's put another bush in office.

Hillary 16

Yo, you can have Jeb Bush fool, also, forget Hillary! Did you forget? Pelosi, Reid, and the rest of the sick Democrats voted to go to war? Passed your bedtime kid!!!

"GTP"
 
Yo, this Administration is the most criminal Administration in American History!!! This Lawbreaker in the White House should be shown on National T.V. when they handcuff his sorry ass!!! He and Holder, along with other Socialist in their Party, like Hillary Clinton, etc., are hiding evidence that could incriminate them as traitors!!! Can`t wait for the first whistle blower to open their mouth!!! It will be "Party" time!

AP CEO: Government undermining 'right to know' laws
March 13, 2015

By Gary Pruitt
President and CEO
The Associated Press

It’s getting harder and more expensive to use public records to hold government officials accountable. Authorities are undermining the laws that are supposed to guarantee citizens’ right to information, turning the right to know into just plain “no.” Socialist?

Associated Press journalists filed hundreds of requests for government files last year, simply trying to use the rights granted under state open records laws and the U.S. Freedom of Information Act. What we discovered reaffirmed what we have seen all too frequently in recent years: the systems created to give citizens information about their government are badly broken and getting worse all the time. Traitor!

We’re talking about this issue now because of Sunshine Week, created a decade ago to showcase the laws that give Americans the right to know what their government is up to. These days, Sunshine Week is a time to put a spotlight on government efforts to strangle those rights.

The problem stretches from town halls through statehouses to the White House, where the Obama administration took office promising to act promptly when people asked for information and never to withhold files just because they might be embarrassing. Liar!

Act promptly? Hardly. :ahole-1:

Shortly after Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 went missing over the South China Sea, we asked the Pentagon’s top satellite imagery unit, the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, what the U.S. was doing to help the search.

Agencies are supposed to give at least a preliminary response to such questions within 20 days. A full year later, after the largest and most expensive search in aviation history, the agency is telling us only it has too many FOIA requests to meet its deadlines. :bang3:

A few months ago, the Treasury Department sent us 237 pages in its latest response to our requests regarding Iran trade sanctions. Nearly all 237 pages were completely blacked out, on the basis that they contained businesses’ trade secrets.

When was our request? Nine years ago.

It takes the State Department about 18 months to answer -- or refuse to answer -- anything other than a simple request. This week we filed a lawsuit against the department for failing to turn over files covering Hillary Rodham Clinton's tenure as secretary of state, including one request we made five full years ago.

As the president said, the United States should not withhold or censor government files merely because they might be embarrassing. :blahblah:

But it happens anyway. :boohoo:

In government emails that AP obtained in reporting about who pays for Michelle Obama’s expensive dresses, the National Archives and Records Administration blacked out one sentence repeatedly, citing a part of the law intended to shield personal information such as Social Security numbers or home addresses.

The blacked-out sentence? The government slipped and let it through on one page of the redacted documents: “We live in constant fear of upsetting the WH (White House).” :ack-1:

To its credit, the U.S. government does not routinely overcharge for copies of public records, but price-gouging intended to discourage public records requests is a serious problem in many states.

Officials in Ferguson, Missouri, billed the AP $135 an hour for nearly a day's work merely to retrieve emails from a handful of accounts about the fatal shooting of Michael Brown. That was roughly 10 times the cost of an entry-level Ferguson clerk’s salary.

Other organizations, including BuzzFeed, were told they would have to pay unspecified thousands of dollars for emails and memos about Ferguson's traffic citation policies and changes to local elections.

Last year, the executive editor of the South Florida Gay News asked the Broward County Sheriff’s Office for copies of emails that contained a derogatory word for gays. The sheriff’s office said it would cost $399,000 and take four years. “They succeeded in stonewalling me,” said the editor, Jason Parsley.

In Mississippi, the state Education Department demanded more than $70 an hour to review records when a reporter asked for its reorganization plans.

Despite head-pounding frustrations in using them, the Freedom of Information Act and state open records laws are powerful reporting tools. But it’s important to remember that they don’t exist just for journalists.

They are there for everyone. Duh!

The right to know what public officials are doing, how they’re going about it, what money they are spending and why … that right belongs to all citizens.

Government works better when the people who put it in office and pay for it with their taxes have an unobstructed view of what it is doing.

And that is why it is vital that we all fight every attempt _ from federal foot-dragging to outrageous photocopying bills _ to hide the public’s information behind a big, padlocked door. We need to let the sun shine in.
___
Gary Pruitt, president and CEO of The Associated Press, is a former First Amendment lawyer.

Yo, Obama has little Socialist all over the U.S.A. doing his dirty work!!!

"GTP"

"OBAMA HATES AMERICA""
View attachment 38118

Bush Chaney rumsfeld Alberto Gonzales......worst presidency in every way. Caused the great recession. Iraq and afganistan was going horribly. Bin ladin was on vacation.

Dont forget the rest of the world wants to try bush and co with war crimes. They lied us into Iraq. And dont forget got hit on 9 11 01. Yea let's put another bush in office.

Hillary 16
 
Yo, this Administration is the most criminal Administration in American History!!! This Lawbreaker in the White House should be shown on National T.V. when they handcuff his sorry ass!!! He and Holder, along with other Socialist in their Party, like Hillary Clinton, etc., are hiding evidence that could incriminate them as traitors!!! Can`t wait for the first whistle blower to open their mouth!!! It will be "Party" time!

AP CEO: Government undermining 'right to know' laws
March 13, 2015

By Gary Pruitt
President and CEO
The Associated Press

It’s getting harder and more expensive to use public records to hold government officials accountable. Authorities are undermining the laws that are supposed to guarantee citizens’ right to information, turning the right to know into just plain “no.” Socialist?

Associated Press journalists filed hundreds of requests for government files last year, simply trying to use the rights granted under state open records laws and the U.S. Freedom of Information Act. What we discovered reaffirmed what we have seen all too frequently in recent years: the systems created to give citizens information about their government are badly broken and getting worse all the time. Traitor!

We’re talking about this issue now because of Sunshine Week, created a decade ago to showcase the laws that give Americans the right to know what their government is up to. These days, Sunshine Week is a time to put a spotlight on government efforts to strangle those rights.

The problem stretches from town halls through statehouses to the White House, where the Obama administration took office promising to act promptly when people asked for information and never to withhold files just because they might be embarrassing. Liar!

Act promptly? Hardly. :ahole-1:

Shortly after Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 went missing over the South China Sea, we asked the Pentagon’s top satellite imagery unit, the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, what the U.S. was doing to help the search.

Agencies are supposed to give at least a preliminary response to such questions within 20 days. A full year later, after the largest and most expensive search in aviation history, the agency is telling us only it has too many FOIA requests to meet its deadlines. :bang3:

A few months ago, the Treasury Department sent us 237 pages in its latest response to our requests regarding Iran trade sanctions. Nearly all 237 pages were completely blacked out, on the basis that they contained businesses’ trade secrets.

When was our request? Nine years ago.

It takes the State Department about 18 months to answer -- or refuse to answer -- anything other than a simple request. This week we filed a lawsuit against the department for failing to turn over files covering Hillary Rodham Clinton's tenure as secretary of state, including one request we made five full years ago.

As the president said, the United States should not withhold or censor government files merely because they might be embarrassing. :blahblah:

But it happens anyway. :boohoo:

In government emails that AP obtained in reporting about who pays for Michelle Obama’s expensive dresses, the National Archives and Records Administration blacked out one sentence repeatedly, citing a part of the law intended to shield personal information such as Social Security numbers or home addresses.

The blacked-out sentence? The government slipped and let it through on one page of the redacted documents: “We live in constant fear of upsetting the WH (White House).” :ack-1:

To its credit, the U.S. government does not routinely overcharge for copies of public records, but price-gouging intended to discourage public records requests is a serious problem in many states.

Officials in Ferguson, Missouri, billed the AP $135 an hour for nearly a day's work merely to retrieve emails from a handful of accounts about the fatal shooting of Michael Brown. That was roughly 10 times the cost of an entry-level Ferguson clerk’s salary.

Other organizations, including BuzzFeed, were told they would have to pay unspecified thousands of dollars for emails and memos about Ferguson's traffic citation policies and changes to local elections.

Last year, the executive editor of the South Florida Gay News asked the Broward County Sheriff’s Office for copies of emails that contained a derogatory word for gays. The sheriff’s office said it would cost $399,000 and take four years. “They succeeded in stonewalling me,” said the editor, Jason Parsley.

In Mississippi, the state Education Department demanded more than $70 an hour to review records when a reporter asked for its reorganization plans.

Despite head-pounding frustrations in using them, the Freedom of Information Act and state open records laws are powerful reporting tools. But it’s important to remember that they don’t exist just for journalists.

They are there for everyone. Duh!

The right to know what public officials are doing, how they’re going about it, what money they are spending and why … that right belongs to all citizens.

Government works better when the people who put it in office and pay for it with their taxes have an unobstructed view of what it is doing.

And that is why it is vital that we all fight every attempt _ from federal foot-dragging to outrageous photocopying bills _ to hide the public’s information behind a big, padlocked door. We need to let the sun shine in.
___
Gary Pruitt, president and CEO of The Associated Press, is a former First Amendment lawyer.

Yo, Obama has little Socialist all over the U.S.A. doing his dirty work!!!

"GTP"

"OBAMA HATES AMERICA""
View attachment 38118

Bush Chaney rumsfeld Alberto Gonzales......worst presidency in every way. Caused the great recession. Iraq and afganistan was going horribly. Bin ladin was on vacation.

Dont forget the rest of the world wants to try bush and co with war crimes. They lied us into Iraq. And dont forget got hit on 9 11 01. Yea let's put another bush in office.

Hillary 16

Yo, you can have Jeb Bush fool, also, forget Hillary! Did you forget? Pelosi, Reid, and the rest of the sick Democrats voted to go to war? Passed your bedtime kid!!!

"GTP"
We were all lied to. Remember they sent Powell to the UN and ruined his reputation?
 
Yo, this Administration is the most criminal Administration in American History!!! This Lawbreaker in the White House should be shown on National T.V. when they handcuff his sorry ass!!! He and Holder, along with other Socialist in their Party, like Hillary Clinton, etc., are hiding evidence that could incriminate them as traitors!!! Can`t wait for the first whistle blower to open their mouth!!! It will be "Party" time!

AP CEO: Government undermining 'right to know' laws
March 13, 2015

By Gary Pruitt
President and CEO
The Associated Press

It’s getting harder and more expensive to use public records to hold government officials accountable. Authorities are undermining the laws that are supposed to guarantee citizens’ right to information, turning the right to know into just plain “no.” Socialist?

Associated Press journalists filed hundreds of requests for government files last year, simply trying to use the rights granted under state open records laws and the U.S. Freedom of Information Act. What we discovered reaffirmed what we have seen all too frequently in recent years: the systems created to give citizens information about their government are badly broken and getting worse all the time. Traitor!

We’re talking about this issue now because of Sunshine Week, created a decade ago to showcase the laws that give Americans the right to know what their government is up to. These days, Sunshine Week is a time to put a spotlight on government efforts to strangle those rights.

The problem stretches from town halls through statehouses to the White House, where the Obama administration took office promising to act promptly when people asked for information and never to withhold files just because they might be embarrassing. Liar!

Act promptly? Hardly. :ahole-1:

Shortly after Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 went missing over the South China Sea, we asked the Pentagon’s top satellite imagery unit, the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, what the U.S. was doing to help the search.

Agencies are supposed to give at least a preliminary response to such questions within 20 days. A full year later, after the largest and most expensive search in aviation history, the agency is telling us only it has too many FOIA requests to meet its deadlines. :bang3:

A few months ago, the Treasury Department sent us 237 pages in its latest response to our requests regarding Iran trade sanctions. Nearly all 237 pages were completely blacked out, on the basis that they contained businesses’ trade secrets.

When was our request? Nine years ago.

It takes the State Department about 18 months to answer -- or refuse to answer -- anything other than a simple request. This week we filed a lawsuit against the department for failing to turn over files covering Hillary Rodham Clinton's tenure as secretary of state, including one request we made five full years ago.

As the president said, the United States should not withhold or censor government files merely because they might be embarrassing. :blahblah:

But it happens anyway. :boohoo:

In government emails that AP obtained in reporting about who pays for Michelle Obama’s expensive dresses, the National Archives and Records Administration blacked out one sentence repeatedly, citing a part of the law intended to shield personal information such as Social Security numbers or home addresses.

The blacked-out sentence? The government slipped and let it through on one page of the redacted documents: “We live in constant fear of upsetting the WH (White House).” :ack-1:

To its credit, the U.S. government does not routinely overcharge for copies of public records, but price-gouging intended to discourage public records requests is a serious problem in many states.

Officials in Ferguson, Missouri, billed the AP $135 an hour for nearly a day's work merely to retrieve emails from a handful of accounts about the fatal shooting of Michael Brown. That was roughly 10 times the cost of an entry-level Ferguson clerk’s salary.

Other organizations, including BuzzFeed, were told they would have to pay unspecified thousands of dollars for emails and memos about Ferguson's traffic citation policies and changes to local elections.

Last year, the executive editor of the South Florida Gay News asked the Broward County Sheriff’s Office for copies of emails that contained a derogatory word for gays. The sheriff’s office said it would cost $399,000 and take four years. “They succeeded in stonewalling me,” said the editor, Jason Parsley.

In Mississippi, the state Education Department demanded more than $70 an hour to review records when a reporter asked for its reorganization plans.

Despite head-pounding frustrations in using them, the Freedom of Information Act and state open records laws are powerful reporting tools. But it’s important to remember that they don’t exist just for journalists.

They are there for everyone. Duh!

The right to know what public officials are doing, how they’re going about it, what money they are spending and why … that right belongs to all citizens.

Government works better when the people who put it in office and pay for it with their taxes have an unobstructed view of what it is doing.

And that is why it is vital that we all fight every attempt _ from federal foot-dragging to outrageous photocopying bills _ to hide the public’s information behind a big, padlocked door. We need to let the sun shine in.
___
Gary Pruitt, president and CEO of The Associated Press, is a former First Amendment lawyer.

Yo, Obama has little Socialist all over the U.S.A. doing his dirty work!!!

"GTP"

"OBAMA HATES AMERICA""
View attachment 38118

Bush Chaney rumsfeld Alberto Gonzales......worst presidency in every way. Caused the great recession. Iraq and afganistan was going horribly. Bin ladin was on vacation.

Dont forget the rest of the world wants to try bush and co with war crimes. They lied us into Iraq. And dont forget got hit on 9 11 01. Yea let's put another bush in office.

Hillary 16

Yo, you can have Jeb Bush fool, also, forget Hillary! Did you forget? Pelosi, Reid, and the rest of the sick Democrats voted to go to war? Passed your bedtime kid!!!

"GTP"
We were all lied to. Remember they sent Powell to the UN and ruined his reputation?

Yo, who lied? It wasn`t Bush!!!

"GTP"
 
Yo, this Administration is the most criminal Administration in American History!!! This Lawbreaker in the White House should be shown on National T.V. when they handcuff his sorry ass!!! He and Holder, along with other Socialist in their Party, like Hillary Clinton, etc., are hiding evidence that could incriminate them as traitors!!! Can`t wait for the first whistle blower to open their mouth!!! It will be "Party" time!

AP CEO: Government undermining 'right to know' laws
March 13, 2015

By Gary Pruitt
President and CEO
The Associated Press

It’s getting harder and more expensive to use public records to hold government officials accountable. Authorities are undermining the laws that are supposed to guarantee citizens’ right to information, turning the right to know into just plain “no.” Socialist?

Associated Press journalists filed hundreds of requests for government files last year, simply trying to use the rights granted under state open records laws and the U.S. Freedom of Information Act. What we discovered reaffirmed what we have seen all too frequently in recent years: the systems created to give citizens information about their government are badly broken and getting worse all the time. Traitor!

We’re talking about this issue now because of Sunshine Week, created a decade ago to showcase the laws that give Americans the right to know what their government is up to. These days, Sunshine Week is a time to put a spotlight on government efforts to strangle those rights.

The problem stretches from town halls through statehouses to the White House, where the Obama administration took office promising to act promptly when people asked for information and never to withhold files just because they might be embarrassing. Liar!

Act promptly? Hardly. :ahole-1:

Shortly after Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 went missing over the South China Sea, we asked the Pentagon’s top satellite imagery unit, the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, what the U.S. was doing to help the search.

Agencies are supposed to give at least a preliminary response to such questions within 20 days. A full year later, after the largest and most expensive search in aviation history, the agency is telling us only it has too many FOIA requests to meet its deadlines. :bang3:

A few months ago, the Treasury Department sent us 237 pages in its latest response to our requests regarding Iran trade sanctions. Nearly all 237 pages were completely blacked out, on the basis that they contained businesses’ trade secrets.

When was our request? Nine years ago.

It takes the State Department about 18 months to answer -- or refuse to answer -- anything other than a simple request. This week we filed a lawsuit against the department for failing to turn over files covering Hillary Rodham Clinton's tenure as secretary of state, including one request we made five full years ago.

As the president said, the United States should not withhold or censor government files merely because they might be embarrassing. :blahblah:

But it happens anyway. :boohoo:

In government emails that AP obtained in reporting about who pays for Michelle Obama’s expensive dresses, the National Archives and Records Administration blacked out one sentence repeatedly, citing a part of the law intended to shield personal information such as Social Security numbers or home addresses.

The blacked-out sentence? The government slipped and let it through on one page of the redacted documents: “We live in constant fear of upsetting the WH (White House).” :ack-1:

To its credit, the U.S. government does not routinely overcharge for copies of public records, but price-gouging intended to discourage public records requests is a serious problem in many states.

Officials in Ferguson, Missouri, billed the AP $135 an hour for nearly a day's work merely to retrieve emails from a handful of accounts about the fatal shooting of Michael Brown. That was roughly 10 times the cost of an entry-level Ferguson clerk’s salary.

Other organizations, including BuzzFeed, were told they would have to pay unspecified thousands of dollars for emails and memos about Ferguson's traffic citation policies and changes to local elections.

Last year, the executive editor of the South Florida Gay News asked the Broward County Sheriff’s Office for copies of emails that contained a derogatory word for gays. The sheriff’s office said it would cost $399,000 and take four years. “They succeeded in stonewalling me,” said the editor, Jason Parsley.

In Mississippi, the state Education Department demanded more than $70 an hour to review records when a reporter asked for its reorganization plans.

Despite head-pounding frustrations in using them, the Freedom of Information Act and state open records laws are powerful reporting tools. But it’s important to remember that they don’t exist just for journalists.

They are there for everyone. Duh!

The right to know what public officials are doing, how they’re going about it, what money they are spending and why … that right belongs to all citizens.

Government works better when the people who put it in office and pay for it with their taxes have an unobstructed view of what it is doing.

And that is why it is vital that we all fight every attempt _ from federal foot-dragging to outrageous photocopying bills _ to hide the public’s information behind a big, padlocked door. We need to let the sun shine in.
___
Gary Pruitt, president and CEO of The Associated Press, is a former First Amendment lawyer.

Yo, Obama has little Socialist all over the U.S.A. doing his dirty work!!!

"GTP"

"OBAMA HATES AMERICA""
View attachment 38118

Bush Chaney rumsfeld Alberto Gonzales......worst presidency in every way. Caused the great recession. Iraq and afganistan was going horribly. Bin ladin was on vacation.

Dont forget the rest of the world wants to try bush and co with war crimes. They lied us into Iraq. And dont forget got hit on 9 11 01. Yea let's put another bush in office.

Hillary 16
Oh please try to tell me you think carter still holds the title!
 
Yo, this Administration is the most criminal Administration in American History!!! This Lawbreaker in the White House should be shown on National T.V. when they handcuff his sorry ass!!! He and Holder, along with other Socialist in their Party, like Hillary Clinton, etc., are hiding evidence that could incriminate them as traitors!!! Can`t wait for the first whistle blower to open their mouth!!! It will be "Party" time!

AP CEO: Government undermining 'right to know' laws
March 13, 2015

By Gary Pruitt
President and CEO
The Associated Press

It’s getting harder and more expensive to use public records to hold government officials accountable. Authorities are undermining the laws that are supposed to guarantee citizens’ right to information, turning the right to know into just plain “no.” Socialist?

Associated Press journalists filed hundreds of requests for government files last year, simply trying to use the rights granted under state open records laws and the U.S. Freedom of Information Act. What we discovered reaffirmed what we have seen all too frequently in recent years: the systems created to give citizens information about their government are badly broken and getting worse all the time. Traitor!

We’re talking about this issue now because of Sunshine Week, created a decade ago to showcase the laws that give Americans the right to know what their government is up to. These days, Sunshine Week is a time to put a spotlight on government efforts to strangle those rights.

The problem stretches from town halls through statehouses to the White House, where the Obama administration took office promising to act promptly when people asked for information and never to withhold files just because they might be embarrassing. Liar!

Act promptly? Hardly. :ahole-1:

Shortly after Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 went missing over the South China Sea, we asked the Pentagon’s top satellite imagery unit, the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, what the U.S. was doing to help the search.

Agencies are supposed to give at least a preliminary response to such questions within 20 days. A full year later, after the largest and most expensive search in aviation history, the agency is telling us only it has too many FOIA requests to meet its deadlines. :bang3:

A few months ago, the Treasury Department sent us 237 pages in its latest response to our requests regarding Iran trade sanctions. Nearly all 237 pages were completely blacked out, on the basis that they contained businesses’ trade secrets.

When was our request? Nine years ago.

It takes the State Department about 18 months to answer -- or refuse to answer -- anything other than a simple request. This week we filed a lawsuit against the department for failing to turn over files covering Hillary Rodham Clinton's tenure as secretary of state, including one request we made five full years ago.

As the president said, the United States should not withhold or censor government files merely because they might be embarrassing. :blahblah:

But it happens anyway. :boohoo:

In government emails that AP obtained in reporting about who pays for Michelle Obama’s expensive dresses, the National Archives and Records Administration blacked out one sentence repeatedly, citing a part of the law intended to shield personal information such as Social Security numbers or home addresses.

The blacked-out sentence? The government slipped and let it through on one page of the redacted documents: “We live in constant fear of upsetting the WH (White House).” :ack-1:

To its credit, the U.S. government does not routinely overcharge for copies of public records, but price-gouging intended to discourage public records requests is a serious problem in many states.

Officials in Ferguson, Missouri, billed the AP $135 an hour for nearly a day's work merely to retrieve emails from a handful of accounts about the fatal shooting of Michael Brown. That was roughly 10 times the cost of an entry-level Ferguson clerk’s salary.

Other organizations, including BuzzFeed, were told they would have to pay unspecified thousands of dollars for emails and memos about Ferguson's traffic citation policies and changes to local elections.

Last year, the executive editor of the South Florida Gay News asked the Broward County Sheriff’s Office for copies of emails that contained a derogatory word for gays. The sheriff’s office said it would cost $399,000 and take four years. “They succeeded in stonewalling me,” said the editor, Jason Parsley.

In Mississippi, the state Education Department demanded more than $70 an hour to review records when a reporter asked for its reorganization plans.

Despite head-pounding frustrations in using them, the Freedom of Information Act and state open records laws are powerful reporting tools. But it’s important to remember that they don’t exist just for journalists.

They are there for everyone. Duh!

The right to know what public officials are doing, how they’re going about it, what money they are spending and why … that right belongs to all citizens.

Government works better when the people who put it in office and pay for it with their taxes have an unobstructed view of what it is doing.

And that is why it is vital that we all fight every attempt _ from federal foot-dragging to outrageous photocopying bills _ to hide the public’s information behind a big, padlocked door. We need to let the sun shine in.
___
Gary Pruitt, president and CEO of The Associated Press, is a former First Amendment lawyer.

Yo, Obama has little Socialist all over the U.S.A. doing his dirty work!!!

"GTP"

"OBAMA HATES AMERICA""
View attachment 38118

Bush Chaney rumsfeld Alberto Gonzales......worst presidency in every way. Caused the great recession. Iraq and afganistan was going horribly. Bin ladin was on vacation.

Dont forget the rest of the world wants to try bush and co with war crimes. They lied us into Iraq. And dont forget got hit on 9 11 01. Yea let's put another bush in office.

Hillary 16

Yo, you can have Jeb Bush fool, also, forget Hillary! Did you forget? Pelosi, Reid, and the rest of the sick Democrats voted to go to war? Passed your bedtime kid!!!

"GTP"
We were all lied to. Remember they sent Powell to the UN and ruined his reputation?

Yo, who lied? It wasn`t Bush!!!

"GTP"
How many times did the mission change?
 
Yo, this Administration is the most criminal Administration in American History!!! This Lawbreaker in the White House should be shown on National T.V. when they handcuff his sorry ass!!! He and Holder, along with other Socialist in their Party, like Hillary Clinton, etc., are hiding evidence that could incriminate them as traitors!!! Can`t wait for the first whistle blower to open their mouth!!! It will be "Party" time!

AP CEO: Government undermining 'right to know' laws
March 13, 2015

By Gary Pruitt
President and CEO
The Associated Press

It’s getting harder and more expensive to use public records to hold government officials accountable. Authorities are undermining the laws that are supposed to guarantee citizens’ right to information, turning the right to know into just plain “no.” Socialist?

Associated Press journalists filed hundreds of requests for government files last year, simply trying to use the rights granted under state open records laws and the U.S. Freedom of Information Act. What we discovered reaffirmed what we have seen all too frequently in recent years: the systems created to give citizens information about their government are badly broken and getting worse all the time. Traitor!

We’re talking about this issue now because of Sunshine Week, created a decade ago to showcase the laws that give Americans the right to know what their government is up to. These days, Sunshine Week is a time to put a spotlight on government efforts to strangle those rights.

The problem stretches from town halls through statehouses to the White House, where the Obama administration took office promising to act promptly when people asked for information and never to withhold files just because they might be embarrassing. Liar!

Act promptly? Hardly. :ahole-1:

Shortly after Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 went missing over the South China Sea, we asked the Pentagon’s top satellite imagery unit, the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, what the U.S. was doing to help the search.

Agencies are supposed to give at least a preliminary response to such questions within 20 days. A full year later, after the largest and most expensive search in aviation history, the agency is telling us only it has too many FOIA requests to meet its deadlines. :bang3:

A few months ago, the Treasury Department sent us 237 pages in its latest response to our requests regarding Iran trade sanctions. Nearly all 237 pages were completely blacked out, on the basis that they contained businesses’ trade secrets.

When was our request? Nine years ago.

It takes the State Department about 18 months to answer -- or refuse to answer -- anything other than a simple request. This week we filed a lawsuit against the department for failing to turn over files covering Hillary Rodham Clinton's tenure as secretary of state, including one request we made five full years ago.

As the president said, the United States should not withhold or censor government files merely because they might be embarrassing. :blahblah:

But it happens anyway. :boohoo:

In government emails that AP obtained in reporting about who pays for Michelle Obama’s expensive dresses, the National Archives and Records Administration blacked out one sentence repeatedly, citing a part of the law intended to shield personal information such as Social Security numbers or home addresses.

The blacked-out sentence? The government slipped and let it through on one page of the redacted documents: “We live in constant fear of upsetting the WH (White House).” :ack-1:

To its credit, the U.S. government does not routinely overcharge for copies of public records, but price-gouging intended to discourage public records requests is a serious problem in many states.

Officials in Ferguson, Missouri, billed the AP $135 an hour for nearly a day's work merely to retrieve emails from a handful of accounts about the fatal shooting of Michael Brown. That was roughly 10 times the cost of an entry-level Ferguson clerk’s salary.

Other organizations, including BuzzFeed, were told they would have to pay unspecified thousands of dollars for emails and memos about Ferguson's traffic citation policies and changes to local elections.

Last year, the executive editor of the South Florida Gay News asked the Broward County Sheriff’s Office for copies of emails that contained a derogatory word for gays. The sheriff’s office said it would cost $399,000 and take four years. “They succeeded in stonewalling me,” said the editor, Jason Parsley.

In Mississippi, the state Education Department demanded more than $70 an hour to review records when a reporter asked for its reorganization plans.

Despite head-pounding frustrations in using them, the Freedom of Information Act and state open records laws are powerful reporting tools. But it’s important to remember that they don’t exist just for journalists.

They are there for everyone. Duh!

The right to know what public officials are doing, how they’re going about it, what money they are spending and why … that right belongs to all citizens.

Government works better when the people who put it in office and pay for it with their taxes have an unobstructed view of what it is doing.

And that is why it is vital that we all fight every attempt _ from federal foot-dragging to outrageous photocopying bills _ to hide the public’s information behind a big, padlocked door. We need to let the sun shine in.
___
Gary Pruitt, president and CEO of The Associated Press, is a former First Amendment lawyer.

Yo, Obama has little Socialist all over the U.S.A. doing his dirty work!!!

"GTP"

"OBAMA HATES AMERICA""
View attachment 38118

Bush Chaney rumsfeld Alberto Gonzales......worst presidency in every way. Caused the great recession. Iraq and afganistan was going horribly. Bin ladin was on vacation.

Dont forget the rest of the world wants to try bush and co with war crimes. They lied us into Iraq. And dont forget got hit on 9 11 01. Yea let's put another bush in office.

Hillary 16
Oh please try to tell me you think carter still holds the title!
By an insurmountable margin, Barry is the worst president in history, and illegally on top of it.
 
Yo, this Administration is the most criminal Administration in American History!!! This Lawbreaker in the White House should be shown on National T.V. when they handcuff his sorry ass!!! He and Holder, along with other Socialist in their Party, like Hillary Clinton, etc., are hiding evidence that could incriminate them as traitors!!! Can`t wait for the first whistle blower to open their mouth!!! It will be "Party" time!

AP CEO: Government undermining 'right to know' laws
March 13, 2015

By Gary Pruitt
President and CEO
The Associated Press

It’s getting harder and more expensive to use public records to hold government officials accountable. Authorities are undermining the laws that are supposed to guarantee citizens’ right to information, turning the right to know into just plain “no.” Socialist?

Associated Press journalists filed hundreds of requests for government files last year, simply trying to use the rights granted under state open records laws and the U.S. Freedom of Information Act. What we discovered reaffirmed what we have seen all too frequently in recent years: the systems created to give citizens information about their government are badly broken and getting worse all the time. Traitor!

We’re talking about this issue now because of Sunshine Week, created a decade ago to showcase the laws that give Americans the right to know what their government is up to. These days, Sunshine Week is a time to put a spotlight on government efforts to strangle those rights.

The problem stretches from town halls through statehouses to the White House, where the Obama administration took office promising to act promptly when people asked for information and never to withhold files just because they might be embarrassing. Liar!

Act promptly? Hardly. :ahole-1:

Shortly after Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 went missing over the South China Sea, we asked the Pentagon’s top satellite imagery unit, the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, what the U.S. was doing to help the search.

Agencies are supposed to give at least a preliminary response to such questions within 20 days. A full year later, after the largest and most expensive search in aviation history, the agency is telling us only it has too many FOIA requests to meet its deadlines. :bang3:

A few months ago, the Treasury Department sent us 237 pages in its latest response to our requests regarding Iran trade sanctions. Nearly all 237 pages were completely blacked out, on the basis that they contained businesses’ trade secrets.

When was our request? Nine years ago.

It takes the State Department about 18 months to answer -- or refuse to answer -- anything other than a simple request. This week we filed a lawsuit against the department for failing to turn over files covering Hillary Rodham Clinton's tenure as secretary of state, including one request we made five full years ago.

As the president said, the United States should not withhold or censor government files merely because they might be embarrassing. :blahblah:

But it happens anyway. :boohoo:

In government emails that AP obtained in reporting about who pays for Michelle Obama’s expensive dresses, the National Archives and Records Administration blacked out one sentence repeatedly, citing a part of the law intended to shield personal information such as Social Security numbers or home addresses.

The blacked-out sentence? The government slipped and let it through on one page of the redacted documents: “We live in constant fear of upsetting the WH (White House).” :ack-1:

To its credit, the U.S. government does not routinely overcharge for copies of public records, but price-gouging intended to discourage public records requests is a serious problem in many states.

Officials in Ferguson, Missouri, billed the AP $135 an hour for nearly a day's work merely to retrieve emails from a handful of accounts about the fatal shooting of Michael Brown. That was roughly 10 times the cost of an entry-level Ferguson clerk’s salary.

Other organizations, including BuzzFeed, were told they would have to pay unspecified thousands of dollars for emails and memos about Ferguson's traffic citation policies and changes to local elections.

Last year, the executive editor of the South Florida Gay News asked the Broward County Sheriff’s Office for copies of emails that contained a derogatory word for gays. The sheriff’s office said it would cost $399,000 and take four years. “They succeeded in stonewalling me,” said the editor, Jason Parsley.

In Mississippi, the state Education Department demanded more than $70 an hour to review records when a reporter asked for its reorganization plans.

Despite head-pounding frustrations in using them, the Freedom of Information Act and state open records laws are powerful reporting tools. But it’s important to remember that they don’t exist just for journalists.

They are there for everyone. Duh!

The right to know what public officials are doing, how they’re going about it, what money they are spending and why … that right belongs to all citizens.

Government works better when the people who put it in office and pay for it with their taxes have an unobstructed view of what it is doing.

And that is why it is vital that we all fight every attempt _ from federal foot-dragging to outrageous photocopying bills _ to hide the public’s information behind a big, padlocked door. We need to let the sun shine in.
___
Gary Pruitt, president and CEO of The Associated Press, is a former First Amendment lawyer.

Yo, Obama has little Socialist all over the U.S.A. doing his dirty work!!!

"GTP"

"OBAMA HATES AMERICA""
View attachment 38118

Bush Chaney rumsfeld Alberto Gonzales......worst presidency in every way. Caused the great recession. Iraq and afganistan was going horribly. Bin ladin was on vacation.

Dont forget the rest of the world wants to try bush and co with war crimes. They lied us into Iraq. And dont forget got hit on 9 11 01. Yea let's put another bush in office.

Hillary 16
Oh please try to tell me you think carter still holds the title!
By an insurmountable margin, Barry is the worst president in history, and illegally on top of it.
You wish. Bush still holds the title. What's he doing now painting? Fucking idiot.

But he got away with it so we're the idiots.
 
Yo, this Administration is the most criminal Administration in American History!!! This Lawbreaker in the White House should be shown on National T.V. when they handcuff his sorry ass!!! He and Holder, along with other Socialist in their Party, like Hillary Clinton, etc., are hiding evidence that could incriminate them as traitors!!! Can`t wait for the first whistle blower to open their mouth!!! It will be "Party" time!

AP CEO: Government undermining 'right to know' laws
March 13, 2015

By Gary Pruitt
President and CEO
The Associated Press

It’s getting harder and more expensive to use public records to hold government officials accountable. Authorities are undermining the laws that are supposed to guarantee citizens’ right to information, turning the right to know into just plain “no.” Socialist?

Associated Press journalists filed hundreds of requests for government files last year, simply trying to use the rights granted under state open records laws and the U.S. Freedom of Information Act. What we discovered reaffirmed what we have seen all too frequently in recent years: the systems created to give citizens information about their government are badly broken and getting worse all the time. Traitor!

We’re talking about this issue now because of Sunshine Week, created a decade ago to showcase the laws that give Americans the right to know what their government is up to. These days, Sunshine Week is a time to put a spotlight on government efforts to strangle those rights.

The problem stretches from town halls through statehouses to the White House, where the Obama administration took office promising to act promptly when people asked for information and never to withhold files just because they might be embarrassing. Liar!

Act promptly? Hardly. :ahole-1:

Shortly after Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 went missing over the South China Sea, we asked the Pentagon’s top satellite imagery unit, the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, what the U.S. was doing to help the search.

Agencies are supposed to give at least a preliminary response to such questions within 20 days. A full year later, after the largest and most expensive search in aviation history, the agency is telling us only it has too many FOIA requests to meet its deadlines. :bang3:

A few months ago, the Treasury Department sent us 237 pages in its latest response to our requests regarding Iran trade sanctions. Nearly all 237 pages were completely blacked out, on the basis that they contained businesses’ trade secrets.

When was our request? Nine years ago.

It takes the State Department about 18 months to answer -- or refuse to answer -- anything other than a simple request. This week we filed a lawsuit against the department for failing to turn over files covering Hillary Rodham Clinton's tenure as secretary of state, including one request we made five full years ago.

As the president said, the United States should not withhold or censor government files merely because they might be embarrassing. :blahblah:

But it happens anyway. :boohoo:

In government emails that AP obtained in reporting about who pays for Michelle Obama’s expensive dresses, the National Archives and Records Administration blacked out one sentence repeatedly, citing a part of the law intended to shield personal information such as Social Security numbers or home addresses.

The blacked-out sentence? The government slipped and let it through on one page of the redacted documents: “We live in constant fear of upsetting the WH (White House).” :ack-1:

To its credit, the U.S. government does not routinely overcharge for copies of public records, but price-gouging intended to discourage public records requests is a serious problem in many states.

Officials in Ferguson, Missouri, billed the AP $135 an hour for nearly a day's work merely to retrieve emails from a handful of accounts about the fatal shooting of Michael Brown. That was roughly 10 times the cost of an entry-level Ferguson clerk’s salary.

Other organizations, including BuzzFeed, were told they would have to pay unspecified thousands of dollars for emails and memos about Ferguson's traffic citation policies and changes to local elections.

Last year, the executive editor of the South Florida Gay News asked the Broward County Sheriff’s Office for copies of emails that contained a derogatory word for gays. The sheriff’s office said it would cost $399,000 and take four years. “They succeeded in stonewalling me,” said the editor, Jason Parsley.

In Mississippi, the state Education Department demanded more than $70 an hour to review records when a reporter asked for its reorganization plans.

Despite head-pounding frustrations in using them, the Freedom of Information Act and state open records laws are powerful reporting tools. But it’s important to remember that they don’t exist just for journalists.

They are there for everyone. Duh!

The right to know what public officials are doing, how they’re going about it, what money they are spending and why … that right belongs to all citizens.

Government works better when the people who put it in office and pay for it with their taxes have an unobstructed view of what it is doing.

And that is why it is vital that we all fight every attempt _ from federal foot-dragging to outrageous photocopying bills _ to hide the public’s information behind a big, padlocked door. We need to let the sun shine in.
___
Gary Pruitt, president and CEO of The Associated Press, is a former First Amendment lawyer.

Yo, Obama has little Socialist all over the U.S.A. doing his dirty work!!!

"GTP"

"OBAMA HATES AMERICA""
View attachment 38118

Bush Chaney rumsfeld Alberto Gonzales......worst presidency in every way. Caused the great recession. Iraq and afganistan was going horribly. Bin ladin was on vacation.

Dont forget the rest of the world wants to try bush and co with war crimes. They lied us into Iraq. And dont forget got hit on 9 11 01. Yea let's put another bush in office.

Hillary 16
Oh please try to tell me you think carter still holds the title!
By an insurmountable margin, Barry is the worst president in history, and illegally on top of it.
You wish. Bush still holds the title. What's he doing now painting? Fucking idiot.

But he got away with it so we're the idiots.

Yo, its about time you admit that your Party is stupid!!!
Carter can`t hold a stick to Obama! Obama will go down in History as the worst idiot criminal to ever live in the White House, period!!!

"GTP"
 
Bush Chaney rumsfeld Alberto Gonzales......worst presidency in every way. Caused the great recession. Iraq and afganistan was going horribly. Bin ladin was on vacation.

Dont forget the rest of the world wants to try bush and co with war crimes. They lied us into Iraq. And dont forget got hit on 9 11 01. Yea let's put another bush in office.

Hillary 16
Oh please try to tell me you think carter still holds the title!
By an insurmountable margin, Barry is the worst president in history, and illegally on top of it.
You wish. Bush still holds the title. What's he doing now painting? Fucking idiot.

But he got away with it so we're the idiots.

Yo, its about time you admit that your Party is stupid!!!
Carter can`t hold a stick to Obama! Obama will go down in History as the worst idiot criminal to ever live in the White House, period!!!

"GTP"
YObamas the man. Of course a rightys going to say he sucks just like they kept saying clinton sucked. But they defended bush for 7.5 years.
 
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