look who's choking now
This entry was posted on 6/5/2005 11:03 PM and is filed under uncategorized.
I don’t like to talk politics. And I don’t like to write about anything
that isn’t funny, but I have to comment on this Deep Throat debacle.
This is what “Deep Throat” Mark Felt said when interviewed.
"It
would be contrary to my responsibility as a loyal employee of the FBI
to leak information," he told journalist Timothy Noah six years ago,
when questioned about his possible role as Deep Throat. I have to
wonder how he managed to get that comment out without laughing.
But it’s the comments now about how Felt is the unsung hero that have really chapped me. Hero, my ass. This is more like it.
Wounded
that he was passed over for the top job, furious at Nixon's choice of
an outsider, Assistant Attorney General L. Patrick Gray III, as acting
FBI director, and determined that the White House not be allowed to
steer and stall the bureau's Watergate investigation, Mark Felt slipped
into the role that would forever alter his life.
I hate to
cloud the issue with the facts, but what about the law? You know, that
agreement he made with the government when he got his job as a special
agent? That he would uphold and defend the constitution and that he
would not illegal disclose any information he received under the
auspices of his employ?
When I was young, I used to ask my uncle
about his work in the aerospace engineering field as a civilian
employee for the navy. He was instrumental in engineering a fighter
jet. His response was always the same—“Ten years and/or $10,000.” The
penalty for disclosing top secret information. Not that I was asking
for TS information. I wouldn’t have even known what the hell he was
talking about. I had just seen Top Gun and thought it was cool that my
uncle was the reason the plane flew.
It doesn’t appear that
Felt’s actions were based on his heartfelt belief that a great
injustice was being committed and the American people were being
shafted. There was no nobility in his actions. He was pissed off
because he got passed over for a job he wanted. I hardly thing that the
anti-war protestors that were on the receiving end of his loose
construction of the 4th amendment are thinking he is a hero now.
Don’t
get me wrong. There is no justification for Nixon’s behavior. He was
stupid and got caught. To believe that he was the first president to
conspire as he did, or that he was the last, is naïve at best. One
politician cheating on another? Big deal.