by James E. Miller
If there were a prize for the best “do as I say, not
as I do” politician, the latest winner would be California Senator Dianne Feinstein.
Senator Feinstein, who is currently leading a crusade to
plug
the White House’s recent spring of classified military leaks,
is the Chairwoman of the powerful Select Committee on Intelligence. Because of
her position of power, she has become “deeply disturbed by the continuing leaks
of classified information to the media.” In other words, Ms.
Feinstein finds it appalling that the American public is finding out about the
not-so-glamorous doings of its own government. Her scorn for disinfecting
sunlight has inspired her to call for the
prosecution of Wikileaks founder Julian
Assange for espionage.
This
talk of super secretive government would be all fine and good for a minion of
the security state except for one thing: Senator Feinstein is one of the biggest
leakers in Congress herself. And
it just so happens that her husband has benefited financially from contracting with the U.S.
military. For all her talk of protecting the American people, Feinstein
is just another well-connected thief in the societal racket known as the
state. As Salon’s Glenn Greenwald trenchantly observes:
That the powerful Senator who has devoted herself to criminally punishing low-level leakers and increasing the wall of secrecy is herself “one of the biggest leakers in Congress” is about as perfect an expression as it gets of how the rule of law and secrecy powers are sleazily exploited in Washington



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