Yesterday, Vanity Fair went online with the story "I am the guy they called Deep Throat" which you can read here http://www.vanityfair.com/commentary/co ... 0530roco02 . Apparently "Deep Throat" was someone who had always been one of the leading candidates; FBI second in command W. Mark Felt.
I found this revelation quite interesting for a number of reasons. First, I'd read the book "All the President's Men" some years ago and always found the magnitude of the story interesting. In an era where we attribute so many things to giant government conspiracies here is a case where the government was toppled by a conscience from within.
Secondly, in another thread here at Silly Dog the topic of urban legends just came up over memorial day weekend. The shady cloaked character in the movie "All the President's Men" had perpetuated an almost urban legend like quality around "Deep Throat". Credit Woodward & Bernstein as well as their editor with guarding this secret as they had promised until "Deep Throat's" death, or until "Deep Throat" released them from their promise. That shows tremendous integrity. But, also credit years of speculation, and people saying "so & so told me that so & so said this person was 'Deep Throat'" helping to keep this an incredibly well guarded
secret. In many of those cases it was Mark Felt's name that came up. One such instant that now seems it may carry some weight, was Carl Bernstein's own son saying it was Mark Felt. Carl Bernstein denied at the time that this was true. But many other instances where other prominent figures names came up seemed to mask the veracity of the occasions when Mark Felt's name would come up. A case of the modern role of the urban legend stifling the revelation of the very mystery it's trying to solve. Someone tell Alanis Morrisette that that's irony.
If you've ever read, "All the President's Men" you know that "Deep Throat" wasn't really the source for most of the information, but the person who was perfectly placed to confirm it. He also provided invaluable guidance to Woodward & Bernstein on what to look for. (Another factor which perpetuated the speculation that he was a composite character.) Well, he's not.
So as Memorial Day weekend came to end I had the answer to a mystery I'd long wondered about. (For the record I had never guessed that "Deep Throat's" identity was Mark Felt. So I was fooled.) I wondered what to think of him? Was he a traitor? Or was he an American hero? That's a very tough call. If I were on the jury for this. I'd hang it. Because on one hand he did help expose details of a highly sensitive investigation. But, on the other hand, he helped expose a corrupt, underhanded, strong arming, and overly powerful administration. So I guess he was a little of both. But, I hope that when people in the future look back they view him as more of a hero. After all, here in the US we are not a democracy as is often misstated. We are a democratic-republic. We put a lot of faith in the officials we elect. If they stray secretly from the job they are hired to do. It can only be someone like Mark Felt who clues us in on it. Whether through the press or any other means.
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