查看原文
其他

【54】America: A Nation of Redaction

littleflute 漂泊者乐园 2021-10-05

Q:怎样才能每天收到优质的英语听读文章呢?

A:点击上方蓝字“漂泊者乐园”关注即可!


**->邀您加入【1元钱投资微信群】V0.1

**->邀你加入【漂泊者乐园-英语学习群】

**->邀你加入【笛声嘹亮-音乐交流群】

提示: 回复  d10 可收听查看所有《词汇故事 WORDS AND THEIR STORIES》文章。

 

WORDS AND THEIR STORIES

America: A Nation of Redaction

 

Four pages of the Mueller Report lay on a witness table in the House Intelligence Committee hearing room on Capitol Hill, in Washington, Thursday, April 18, 2019. (AP Photo/Cliff Owen)

Today, a different kind of Words and Their Stories - an examination of the word redaction.

This week, United States Attorney General William Barr released the long-awaited report by special counsel Robert Mueller. The report presents the findings of Mueller’s investigation into possible collusion between the presidential campaign of Donald Trump and Russia. It also aimed to answer whether Trump tried to obstruct justice during the investigation.

The 400-page report, however, includes “redactions.” And Congress is prepared to fight the administration to get a complete “un-redacted” report released to the public.

Dictionary publisher Merriam-Webster defines the verb “redact” as “to select or adapt (as by…removing sensitive information) for publication or release.”

The publisher said searches for the words “redact, redacted and redaction” increased 4,000 percent on March 29. The rise in searches followed Barr’s letter to Congress on the Mueller report. In the letter, Barr wrote that he was “preparing the report for release, making the redactions that are required.”

Barr said the “redactions” are needed to protect grand jury material, classified intelligence, ongoing investigations and the privacy rights of others.

The U.S. government has “redacted” things from the most sensitive information to the most harmless facts throughout history.

Tom Blanton is with the National Security Archive, an organization that calls for open government. He told the Associated Press, “We believe there are real secrets, common-sense secrets, like names of people in the field who would be killed or specifications of weapons of systems.”

Blanton added, “But redactions are also overused.”

Blanton noted that the U.S. government “redacted” information on intelligence files for Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet, who was accused of human rights abuses. In 2003, the Defense Intelligence Agency released documents that included Pinochet’s life story. Some information, however, was “redacted” for national security.

Blanton found out that the “redacted” information included Pinochet’s favorite alcoholic drinks.

David Cole is legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union. He said any government official with a security clearance would want to “redact” some information.

Cole said, “If you make a mistake and disclose something you shouldn’t have, that mistake is public. If you decide to keep something secret that doesn’t need to be secret, that mistake is private.”

The need for “redaction” is as old as the country itself.

In 1787, America’s founding fathers met in Pennsylvania to draft the nation’s Constitution behind closed doors. They wanted to speak freely and keep some information from the public.

No official papers were kept on the debate, so there was nothing to “redact.” And James Madison’s personal notes of the meeting did not come out until 1836, after Madison and other delegates were dead.

“I think they are pretty reliable,” historian Gordon Wood said of Madison’s notes. “But they may only account for a fraction of what was said at the convention.”

At the end of World War II, the U.S. became a superpower. The amount of “redacted” documents grew with the establishment of the Central Intelligence Agency and the National Security Council.

Tim Weiner wrote “Legacy of Ashes: The History of the CIA.” He said, “In 1947, when you have creation of the CIA and the NSC, you have the production of literally billions of papers and billions of secrets contained within them.”

In the years since, U.S. intelligence and other agencies have “redacted” some unlikely information from the public. The list includes:

  • A method for opening sealed letters without detection and a formula for secret ink from Germany during World War I. The information was “redacted” until 2011.

  • The “redaction” in 2014 of remarks about the Cuban Missile Crisis made by Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev. The remarks were made 50 years earlier in a public speech.

  • FBI files about actor Marilyn Monroe’s reported Communist sympathies were “redacted” until 2012, 50 years after her death.

I'm Bryan Lynn.


Hai Do adapted this story for Learning English based on Associated Press reports with additional materials from Merriam Webster and Department of Justice. Ashley Thompson was the editor.

Write to us in the Comments Section or on our Facebook page.

________________________________________________________________

Words in This Story


collusion - n. secret cooperation for an illegal or dishonest purpose

fraction - n. a part of something

sympathy - n. a feeling of support for something


  提示

 

1. 回复  president  可收听查看所有《美国总统》文章。
2. 回复  park          可收听查看所有《美国国家公园》文章。
3. 回复  zjmgyy      可收听查看所有《中级美国英语》文章。
4. 回复  bztl           可收听查看所有 《VOA标准听力》

5. 回复  news         可收听查看所有《VOA英语新闻  》文章。



长按二维码
关注我们吧



您好!既然漂到这里,就顺便把本文转到朋友圈吧!



点赞是一种鼓励 分享是最大的支持

温馨提醒

点击阅读原文,进入‘漂泊者乐园微信公众号主页’

你点的每一个“在看”,我都当成了喜欢



: . Video Mini Program Like ,轻点两下取消赞 Wow ,轻点两下取消在看

您可能也对以下帖子感兴趣

文章有问题?点此查看未经处理的缓存