Monday, February 04, 2002

America and Anti-Americans It would be easy for America, in the present climate of hostility, to fail to respond to constructive criticism, or worse: to start acting like the overwhelming superpower it is, making decisions and throwing its weight around without regard for the concerns of what it perceives as an already hostile world. The treatment of the Camp X-Ray detainees is a worrying sign. Secretary of State Colin Powell's reported desire to determine whether, under the Geneva Convention, these persons should be considered prisoners of war was a statesmanlike response to global pressure � but Mr. Powell has apparently failed to persuade President Bush and Donald Rumsfeld. http://www.nytimes.com/2002/02/04/opinion/04RUSH.html

When Government Doesn't Tell Last year, to the dismay of historians, Mr. Bush signed an executive order restricting public access to the papers of former presidents. Attorney General John Ashcroft also established more restrictive rules governing what agencies release under the Freedom of Information Act. The government is even refusing to give Congress the results of a survey taken after the 2000 census to calculate how many people were either missed or double-counted by the census takers � data that has nothing to do with national security, law enforcement, confidential communications or any other normal grounds for keeping data from Congress. The Commerce Department says it is not confident the figures are accurate. http://www.nytimes.com/2002/02/03/weekinreview/03ROSE.html