13, May 2015 Unequal
justice
With prosecutions of whistleblowers like Chelsea Manning,
Edward Snowden, Thomas Drake, John Kiriakou and others, Federal prosecutors
have charged more public servants for leaking classified information to
journalists than all previous administrations. However, leaking classified
information to the Press to advance self-serving political agendas is fairly
common.
It can be argued that many whistleblowers seem to have
been motivated by genuine concerns of the unlawful actions of our government
such as spying on its citizens and torture. The sinister activities of the
National Security Agency and the abuses of the Patriot Act would not have been
possible without the courageous revelations made by Snowden.
Contrast these harsh prosecutions of low-level
whistleblowers with the light sentence of General Petraeus who gave his
biographer and lover, Paula Broadwell, access to notes containing highly
classified information. He avoided jail
time in exchange for a guilty plea of mishandling classified information. He
has retained his position as a partner in a New York private
equity firm and a consultant to the White House. The wide disparity
in sentencing smacks of an unhealthy double standard. Reporters must have free,
unimpeded access to their sources for a healthy democracy. If only
whistleblowers could have pierced through the bogus official claims of Saddam’s
WMD’s we could have avoided the Iraq debacle and the birth of ISIS, an opinion
vigorously endorsed by President Obama.
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