Nine Exemptions Essay

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What is it with the activists and advocates who claim “Americans have the right to know”? Reality works in such a way that by experiencing something firsthand, one can absorb information richly infused with context, laid onto a foundation of experience and opinion. According to FOIA.gov, the Freedom of Information Act “is often described as the law that keeps citizens in the know about their government. Federal agencies are required to disclose any information requested under the FOIA unless it falls under one of nine exemptions which protect interests such as personal privacy, national security, and law enforcement”.
The nine exemptions are not supposed to be nebulous in their institution, but apart from the fact that the public likely believes that the Constitution states that ‘we have the right to know everything because we live in the USA’, many feel that the nine exemptions are much more flexible than they are. The exceptions can be read below, …show more content…

Domestically, police officers are commonly recognizable as the most hated profession in America, though the statistics that prove their goodness are put aside in favor of hatred and ignorance. Fewer than 200 black Americans died at police officers’ hands in 2015, though 736 whites died, and 642 of those whites were unarmed while around half of the blacks had weapons. We are not discussing citizen-on-citizen violence though those statistics are monumental as well. Prison stats-by-race make up nearly the same proportions as the deaths: twice as many whites are incarcerated and killed annually than are blacks, but race-baiters like ‘reverend’ Al Sharpton and United States Attorney General Eric Holder preach hatred and fear. I mentioned before the “pattern wheel” of American social attitudes, and looking back, cops have not been the only victims of the United States media machine in

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