Trump. You are no conservative. You are acting like Daniel Ellsberg, a former Defense Department employee, only much worse: No interest to help public

Trump. You are no conservative. You are acting like Daniel Ellsberg, a former Defense Department employee, only much worse: No interest to help public

Ellsberg was called by some a hero, but there always were nits as to how he did his dump of documents , the Pentagon papers. He did it, though to in his light to help out corruption .

What Trump is doing with US documents is not to inform the public but to use the documents as LEVERAGE

quote

Justice William O. Douglas wrote that secrecy in government is “anti-democratic.” He also argued that the government’s pleas of security were too vague to allow the First Amendment to be inhibited. Justice William Brennan wrote that the First Amendment allows no prior restraints at all. He also noted that the Pentagon Papers did not cause inevitable peril, as the government argued. Justice Potter Stewart argued that while he agreed with the government’s claims about some of the documents, he did not agree that the release of the documents could lead to immediate harm. Justice Byron White and Justice Thurgood Marshall contended that the press has great power against prior restraints in order to prevent censorship.?

Dissent?

The three dissenting justices argued that the case was decided too quickly and the Court needed more time to examine the prerogatives of the Executive Branch.

end of quote

Well in this case, Trump taking the documents, to MAR A LAGO DOES cause immediate harm, there is no question of public good. It is all about HIM.

Karl Rove on Fox news is correct. This is straight out CORRUPTION and a threat to national security

I call BS on this one by Trump

quote

"RINO Karl Rove is unwatchable, very negative, and on all the time - Has a big record of losing!" Trump said. "Not an easy place to be as a Republican, especially with all of the 'pervert' purchased ads." It's unclear which ads he was referring to.

Rove served as a senior advisor and deputy chief of staff during the Bush administration in the 2000s. He has?appeared on Fox News?several times to discuss the Justice Department's investigation into?Trump's handling of government records?and the FBI's early-August search of Mar-a-Lago.

"None of these documents are his to have taken," Rove?said?last week, citing the Presidential Records Act.

end of quote

YES, it is all about POOR PITIFUL TRUMP

Not exactly


quote

OME??POLITICS

Trump accused Fox News of 'pushing' Democrats' agenda and said if CNN 'went conservative,' it'd be an 'absolute gold mine' and he'd help

Kelsey Vlamis?9 hours ago





Donald Trump lashed out at Fox News and Karl Rove after Rove critiqued his handling of documents.

  • Trump also said he would support CNN if the network decided to take a conservative approach.
  • Recent exits at CNN suggest the network is trying to appeal to a wider audience.

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Former President Donald Trump tore into Fox News on Sunday, accusing the network of amplifying a Democratic agenda and going harder on Republicans than Democrats.

"Wow! Fox News is really pushing the Democrats and the Democrat agenda. Gets worse every single day," Trump?wrote?on his social-media platform, Truth Social. "So many Dems interviewed with only softball questions, then Republican counterparts get creamed."

It's unclear what interviews Trump was referring to, but he also specifically called out Karl Rove, a former GOP White House official who is now a Fox News contributor.

"RINO Karl Rove is unwatchable, very negative, and on all the time - Has a big record of losing!" Trump said. "Not an easy place to be as a Republican, especially with all of the 'pervert' purchased ads." It's unclear which ads he was referring to.

Rove served as a senior advisor and deputy chief of staff during the Bush administration in the 2000s. He has?appeared on Fox News?several times to discuss the Justice Department's investigation into?Trump's handling of government records?and the FBI's early-August search of Mar-a-Lago.

"None of these documents are his to have taken," Rove?said?last week, citing the Presidential Records Act.

While criticizing Fox News on Sunday, Trump also said that if the network's cable-news competitor CNN adopted a conservative approach, he would support it.

"If 'low ratings' CNN ever went Conservative, they would be an absolute gold mine, and I would help them to do so!" Trump said.

Trump's comments about CNN —?a popular target of his since the early days of his presidency — come as the network appears to be shifting its strategy to try to attract a wider range of viewers.

On Friday, the longtime CNN White House correspondent?John Harwood abruptly parted ways with the network?shortly after calling Trump a "dishonest demagogue" and saying that?President Joe Biden's characterization Thursday of Trump's MAGA movement as a threat to democracy?was "true."

Brian Stelter also had a sudden exit?from CNN last month. Stelter, whose show and newsletter "Reliable Sources" covered media, was openly critical of Fox News and other right-wing outlets.

The shake-ups come after?Chris Licht took over as CEO of CNN?earlier this year following the departure of Jeff Zucker.

Several unnamed CNN employees and former staffers told?The Washington Post?they viewed the recent string of exits as evidence of plans by Licht to reposition CNN as an ideologically neutral network by limiting voices critical of Trump.

Representatives for Fox News and CNN didn't immediately respond to requests for comment from Insider.


end of quote

Now for the Pentagon papers

https://academy4sc.org/video/new-york-times-company-v-united-states-1971/?utm_campaign=&utm_medium=ppc&utm_source=adwords&utm_term=pentagon%20papers%20case&hsa_tgt=kwd-303442252319&hsa_mt=b&hsa_acc=2755491261&hsa_grp=137644769648&hsa_ver=3&hsa_src=g&hsa_cam=15825683008&hsa_net=adwords&hsa_kw=pentagon%20papers%20case&hsa_ad=593194504013&gclid=CjwKCAjwvNaYBhA3EiwACgndguP33RmjfHXyXZY7o47lUfMnhOvjGERDFybnnQTEuy5_sbjR4MRvpxoCUQAQAvD_BwE

quote

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New York Times Company v. United States (1971)


Case

In the late 1960s and early 70s, controversy surrounding the Vietnam War plagued the nation. In 1967, United States Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara commissioned a study on the history of American involvement in Vietnam. The study consisted of seven thousand pages which were all labeled classified, and only fifteen copies were made.?

During the winter of 1971, Daniel Ellsberg, a former Defense Department employee, made copies of the study and distributed them to?New York Times?reporters. Ellsberg thought releasing the documents would turn public opinion against American involvement in Vietnam. The?New York Times?reviewed the materials for months before deciding to publish the first three installments of a ten-part series. The Nixon administration argued that the publication put national security at risk and obtained a temporary restraining order to stop further publications. At the same time,?The Washington Post?obtained the study and began publishing it as well. The study came to be known as the Pentagon Papers.

The government’s case against?The Post, United States v. Washington Post Company?(1971)?was decided alongside?New York Times Company v. United States?(1971). President Nixon and his administration acted with prior restraint, seeking to block the publication of the material, thinking it was imperative to protect the nation’s security. In response, the?New York Times?argued that its First Amendment rights, which protect free speech and press, were in jeopardy. The Supreme Court was asked to decide if the Nixon administration had violated the First Amendment by preventing the publication of what it saw as classified information.?

Decision

The Court decided that the government did not prove that prior restraint was necessary. In a Per Curiam opinion, one ruling with multiple opinions, the Court ended the temporary restraining order against the news organization, allowing it to continue publishing the Pentagon Papers. The Court acknowledged that there is little constitutional validity to prior restraint. They wrote that the government must show justification in order to claim it. However, the Court believed that the government did not meet this burden.?

The Justices did not agree on reasoning in this case, leading all six of them to write concurring opinions. Justice Hugo Black wrote that the press must be free and unrestrained in order to expose corruption. He forcefully claimed that the Executive Branch had forgotten the essential quality of the First Amendment and stressed that “the press was to preserve the governed not the governors.” Black saw the press as a way to expose government secrets and inform citizens. Additionally, he made a political statement by arguing that the press must reveal if the government is deceiving the American people by unnecessarily sending Americans to foreign countries to die in combat. He applauded the?New York Times?and the?Washington Post.?

Justice William O. Douglas wrote that secrecy in government is “anti-democratic.” He also argued that the government’s pleas of security were too vague to allow the First Amendment to be inhibited. Justice William Brennan wrote that the First Amendment allows no prior restraints at all. He also noted that the Pentagon Papers did not cause inevitable peril, as the government argued. Justice Potter Stewart argued that while he agreed with the government’s claims about some of the documents, he did not agree that the release of the documents could lead to immediate harm. Justice Byron White and Justice Thurgood Marshall contended that the press has great power against prior restraints in order to prevent censorship.?

Dissent?

The three dissenting justices argued that the case was decided too quickly and the Court needed more time to examine the prerogatives of the Executive Branch. Chief Justice Warren Burger argued that the First Amendment does not give absolute power. Justice John Marshall Harlan disagreed with the Court’s involvement in general, thinking it disrupted the separation of powers. Justice Harry Blackmun stressed that the First Amendment is only one part of the Constitution and should not be given more weight than any other part. Article II gives the Executive Branch power to protect the safety of our nation.?

Impact

The Vietnam War became even less popular after the Pentagon Papers were released. President Nixon was concerned about leaking so he created a group in the White House called the plumbers. The plumbers’ first purpose was to stop information leaking in the White House to the public, but the group ended up spying on Nixon’s political opponents. They burglarized the Democratic Party Headquarters in what came to be known as Watergate, a scandal that led to Nixon’s resignation.

The ruling itself was at first seen as a success for the press. However, the decision was ambiguous and was diluted because the Court wrote multiple majority opinions. Although some justices had thoughts on the issue, the Court did not decide if prior restraint is ever constitutional, leaving openings for censorship. However, when the government wants to censor it faces an uphill battle.?

In June of 2020, the Trump administration sued John Bolton, his former national security advisor, to stop the publication of his memoir. Bolton’s memoir details his time in the White House, and the Executive Branch claims that it contains classified information. The Trump administration was unable to use prior restraint in this case, and a federal judge allowed for the book to be released. Prior restraint was likely not used because of the precedent set in?New York Times Company v. United States?(1971).

end of quote

Andrew Beckwith, PhD

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