Did James Rosen's Story on North Korea Do Any Harm?
It's certainly possible, but the public has insufficient information to make a definitive judgment. More »
Conor Friedersdorf is a staff writer at The Atlantic, where he focuses on politics and national affairs. He lives in Venice, California, and is the founding editor of The Best of Journalism, a newsletter devoted to exceptional nonfiction.
It's certainly possible, but the public has insufficient information to make a definitive judgment. More »
Everyone agrees that some employees acted incompetently. So how much time and money will it take to get rid of them? More »
Its long overdue admissions are paired with praise for the president's supposed commitment to transparency. More »
A national security official in the Obama Administration makes that claim to defend the treatment of James Rosen. More »
If national security journalists are neutered, secrets will flow to transparency activists and the government will have even less control. More »
Justices Hugo Black and William O. Douglas specifically addressed a section of the law at issue today. More »
A press that's able to ferret out government secrets is more important than a government that can keep secrets. More »
His concurrence in the Pentagon Papers case is worth revisiting as DOJ tries to criminalize national security journalism. More »
Treating people as ends in themselves and "doing unto others..." as a bridge between traditionalists and mainstream American youth. More »
Wars with humanitarian justifications often save fewer lives than the same amount of money could if spent elsewhere. More »
Email me your occupational horror stories -- or leave them in the comments -- and I'll publish the very best, without your name unless you ask otherwise More »
There is clear evidence that he has broken the law on multiple occasions. And not even Republicans seem to care. More »
Evaluate tax-exempt groups based on behavior rather than speculation, and compensate them for compliance costs. More »
A defense of consent as a lodestar of sexual morality More »
The alleged scandal didn't matter in Election 2012, and it is very unlikely to matter in Election 2016 either. More »
The former Obama Administration official lays it out in four parts, but is perhaps too deferential to have any impact. More »
Even if it were possible to select newcomers by intelligence it wouldn't be wise or just. More »
If the enemy already benefited from a serious leak, why can't he tell us the details that they already know? More »
Some conservatives are still clinging to the idea, but it's a foreign-policy critique that can't succeed. More »
The mysterious plane is keeping residents up at night and making them anxious. More »
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