Fred Kaplan wonders aloud about the perils of writing history in the e-mail era. I see what he’s getting at, but this argument cuts both ways. If in fact someone is saving administration e-mail correspondence (a big if, I know, but consider folks like Harold Ickes and Sidney Blumenthal in the Clinton White House), then there should be plenty of e-mails of conversations that would have been held on the phone throughout most of the twentieth century. Plus, so much more of government (at the highest levels, at least) is televised now, from subcommittee hearings on C-SPAN2 to Dubya’s 4pm photo-op with the Boy Scouts. Historians of the future should have their hands full.
One thought on “The Recycle Bin of History.”
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I remember reading a story about Dubya sending a message to all of his friends and family about how he wasn’t going to be emailing them at all as long as he was in office, because email was a privacy risk he couldn’t afford to take or something like that.
Maybe that’s a good thing — I know I would totally forward people an email from the PUSA if he sent me a chain letter, or worse yet, one of those weird internet hoaxes that Snopes debunked years ago but is still going around.