Guilty. I nevertheless think the parallels are worth exploring. Senior governmental advisors aren't used to having clearances rescinded as political punishment, and Oppenheimer's still the best example of that. History doesn't rhyme but repeats, etc. etc.https://twitter.com/wellerstein/status/1030854372157272064 …
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Replying to @ColdWarScience
I guess I just don't think that Oppenheimer's case informs us on Brennan or the other way around. They strike me as VERY different in nearly every aspect. The similarities strike me as very superficial.
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Replying to @wellerstein @ColdWarScience
Oppenheimer's security issues weren't about high level politics or him criticizing officials or administrations. He was still an "insider" (though already transitioning to an "outsider") when he got his clearance removed. His politics was more about in-fighting more than public.
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Replying to @wellerstein @ColdWarScience
And unlike Brennan there WERE significant (if exaggerated) security issues involved in Oppenheimer's case. It wasn't just Teller not liking his judgment, which was probably the weakest part of the AEC case against Oppenheimer anyway.
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Replying to @wellerstein @ColdWarScience
Oppenheimer admitted in sworn testimony to lying to security officers, to having an affair with a known Communist while he was director of Los Alamos, and to appointing people he knew were Communists to key positions at the lab.
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Replying to @wellerstein @ColdWarScience
I'm not saying he deserved the hearing, which was indeed a farce (punctuated by illegal things like Strauss and the FBI wiretapping his confidential conversations with his lawyer), but it's more than "they didn't like his political opinions." The guy did some legit sketchy stuff!
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Whereas my understanding is that the Brennan thing appears to just be about a way to silence or humiliate critics. Oppenheimer's hearing may have *ultimately* be traced to that kind of instinct, but the buy-in from other agencies, etc., was broader for a reason.
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