We need to have sunshine laws in China, for sure. We, too, have a right to know and we want to know what the government is up to.
Well, some of you may not care about it but the thing is, when government officials know that the public knows what they’re up to, they tend to refrain from doing their worst.
That’s the main point of why China, a country with a 2,000-year feudal tradition, needs to have sunshine laws.
If you check the constitution, we seem to have them already. We seem to have everything already. Whatever the case, my point remains: We need more sunshine laws.
We need more laws in general, laws that can be implemented effectively.
But first things first, if you live in a city like Beijing, you need more sunshine first and foremost.
Weather permitting (wind, wind, wind), we, hopefully, may have more sunshine in future.
Then, hopefully, we perhaps will have more sunshine laws.
Perhaps hell, we will have them.
Alright, here are media examples for you to see “sunshine laws” in action:
1. We call them Sunshine laws, FOIAs, public records laws, right to know laws and open meeting laws.
These are the laws that shed sunlight on government operations by mandating certain meetings be open to and documents be available to the public.
Today through Saturday is Sunshine Week, when the American public and news media celebrate advances in and call for more openness in government.
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