By
USA Today
June 21, 2006
Excerpt:
France, Germany and courts in Japan
could teach America a thing or two about one essential aspect of
democracy: Their governments are more willing to make sure that
journalists have the means to act as watchdogs on the people in power.
[...]
Several European nations guarantee that reporters cannot be forced to
expose sources to whom they've guaranteed confidentiality. Just last
week, Tokyo's high court upheld a Japanese reporter's refusal to reveal
the sources of a 1997 news story about a U.S. health food company.
This is just common sense. Those in power keep secrets? sometimes to
protect their power, sometimes for financial or political gain, and
sometimes for more legitimate reasons, such as national security. The
nation's Founders knew this. They created a free press in large part as
a check on that sort of power. Reporters and commentators would serve
as watchdogs.
But that history lesson seems lost on the current administration.