Opinion: Why I'm Handing in My Pentagon Press Pass
Posted3 months agoActive3 months ago
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A Pentagon reporter shares their opinion on why they're handing in their press pass, sparking discussion on press policy and government transparency; commenters debate the implications and motivations behind the decision.
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Oct 14, 2025 at 1:34 PM EDT
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I am personally unsure of the value of these press pools in the face of modern 'PR'; as far as I can tell, all they do is generate 'clippable' videos.
>I've held my Pentagon press pass for 28 years. For most of that time, when I wasn't overseas in combat zones embedding with troops, I walked the halls, talking to and getting to know officers from all over the globe, at times visiting them in their offices.
Without press credentials, the above becomes impossible.
You seem to be under the impression that these folks sit in waiting areas until a "press conference" is announced, then copy down whatever some talking head says and publishes that and only that.
There may well be some who do so, but that's not journalism, friend.
Upon what evidence do you base your suspicions?
I'd note that Tom Bowman (the author of TFA) has been publishing stories based upon such details for nearly three decades.
Can you point to any stories that he published, based on such information from Pentagon-based military personnel, that turned out not to be factual?
If so, please share that information. We'd all like to know.
Which podcasts? Which ex-military officers?
That's not a "gotcha," I want to listen to those myself.
edit: some NASA astronaut interviews contain interesting info about (retired) military astronauts’ careers, which tend to be interesting as well.
Can you be just slightly more specific? The two podcasts you actually named have ~650 episodes between them. Heaven knows how many are in the podcasts you didn't name.
There are definitely counter-examples (of officers who do spill real dirt to reporters), such as United States Air Force Colonel James G. Burton, but they are uncommon, don't seem exclusive to Pentagon-pool reporters, and there don't seem to be many these days.
I don't take notes on the podcasts I listen to, so I don't have episode-specific citations for you.
Very much the opposite - the press pool generates a massive amount of cross-verified content for distribution to all news agencies. The agencies then clip and edit and nip and tuck the press pool coverage as they see fit.
Obviously the press pool only gets all the talking points they want them to, but also the press pool is literally there following around the president all day, so it's also really hard to hide things from the press pool.
For example, the press pool knew of Obama's smoking or FDR's wheelchair or RFK's... indulgences. As part of the unwritten gentleman's agreement they never broke news on this stuff, but they were also witness to it and recorded it for later.
> No reputable news organization signed the new rule — not mainstream outlets like NPR, The Washington Post, CNN, and The New York Times, nor the conservative Washington Times or the right-wing Newsmax, run by a noted ally of President Trump.
New York Times, AP, Newsmax and others say they won't sign new Pentagon rules
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45575755
Retreat from the corridors of power in a democracy is NOT how "they win". Giving up privilege for the sake of your values is a key element of integrity and your own freedom.
A responsible journalist reports what he thinks is the important story. When the stories of the War Dept become less important than the lack of transparency of the War Dept as the government conducts the "people's business", which do you endeavor to report? The War Dept propaganda? Or do you confer and coordinate with others to determine what's important and about the visible edge of policy as it relates to what's important?
If you are confused about what's important, or don't know, then no sense in lamenting anything but your own lack of clarity.
Can you connect with someone who is closer to the clarity you need?
Ultimately, your society is as good you are; if you believe it can be better, do so, otherwise what's the point of your travail?
So is you think the WH Presscorp are becoming factotums or automatons (which they are and become by design) and you can no longer work as such, then meet people who are a step away from the presscorp and report on them.
Freedom is building the story at whatever proximity to power and depth that you can muster.
Determined creativity and insight will find a home, and if not, you died trying.
Maybe along the way you will discover that contrary to all the cultural hyperbole that you are not free?
Or maybe that you are freer than you can manage?
Try ordinary existential reasoning: work with what's at hand, take responsibility for your work, hold yourself to account, stand up for your values. Such orientation was once core a conservative principle.
Unfortunately, it seems that due to a combination new media, inter generational confusion, intellectual laziness, and childish greed, what once was common sense conservative principle has been abandoned for the spoils of reactionary political mania.
It may take another generation or so to rediscover a value system.
> In the 10 months that the Trump administration has been in office, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has given just two briefings.
Even setting aside policy differences, it cannot be understated how lazy the current administration is. A "day at work" is writing sending some text messages and looking at yourself on camera for a few hours. Anyone seen doing actual work is seen as nerd who is making them look bad.
Kicking out journalists is such a stupid move - you have access to tell them anything you want them to hear! But that would require, you know, work. This administration would literally just rather kick them out.
This is America's first "influencer" administration.
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