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The U.S. classifies far too many secrets, obstructing democracy.
Excessive government secrecy takes many forms, from agencies needlessly claiming documents are classified to ignoring information requests and destroying records — even when the documents show government fraud or illegal conduct. This hinders a free press, effective oversight, and the public’s ability to self govern.
We need to fight for systemic improvements, and we need the press to vigorously question the government every time it says something is classified.

The public must have more detailed information about what resources and authorities the National Archives needs

Plus: The CIA drugged unsuspecting Americans as part of its mind-control research programs.

Plus: a look back at 2024

Plus: U.S. government declassifies 1960 report stating Israeli nuclear site was for weapons

Excessive secrecy over the mysterious sightings frustrates lawmakers and the public, and breeds mistrust at a time when trust in government is in decline

Many report ABC’s settlement money will pay for a Trump presidential library. Don’t be so sure

Plus: how you can help preserve federal data at risk of being deleted

Declassification diplomacy is one of US government’s most distinctive foreign policy tools, and it should be deployed as often as possible

An executive order, even issued at the eleventh hour, would do a lot of good

Today is the anniversary of the JFK assassination. Congress passed a landmark law over 30 years to release millions of pages of assassination records, even though it doesn’t normally get involved in declassification efforts.
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Thank you for urging lawmakers to stand against dangerous secrecy.
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