This statistic is absolutely staggering:

The question and legitimacy of [the] state secrets [privilege] was debated in the course of the Constitutional Convention and has been invoked by executives at least as early as the Jefferson administration. But roughly 90% of all invocations of state secrecy in court proceedings have occurred in the last eight years, a clear sign that something is terribly wrong in the Department of Justice.

  1. Dan Gilbert says:

    I agree. Staggering, but somehow not surprising. The Bush administration was the most secretive administration in my political lifetime (I'm 43). It was outrageous and absurd. I'm so glad he's gone.

    • Metavirus says:

      No kidding. That number is just mind blowing. Can you imagine, in ten years, how we're going to look back on the last eight years — after all of the whistleblowers come forward? When Republicans got all bent out of shape over Michelle Obama's "proud of America" comments, the nuance that people missed is that Bush had eroded many Americans' pride in their country's actions. With Obama, we can start to begin the healing process.

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