Controlling Custodianship of Information is How Agency Records Management Programs Limit Bureaucratic Power
Without a trustworthy agency records management system, Federal bureaucrats can deny access to agency information to anyone - even the agency's Secretary
🧵1/7
For many years after the 1950 passage of the Federal Records Act (FRA), agency records, almost exclusively maintained on paper, were routinely separated by records management staff between ‘active’ records and ‘dormant’ records.
Control of active agency records - these were the records in desk drawers, inboxes, office file cabinets, etc. - remained with the individual or organization that originally created them for as long as the records remained in active use.
After active records use began to drop - typically over a short period - these paper records would be recategorized as ‘dormant’. In compliance with the FRA, this change in status had two important implications.
First, the paper record was physically moved from wherever it was maintained in its active status to the agency’s onsite records preservation facility or an affiliated regional Federal Records Center.
Second, control (technically speaking, ‘custodianship’) of the paper record was legally transferred from the individual or organization that created the record to the agency, represented by the agency’s records management program.
2/7
Once custodianship had been transferred to the agency and the record was physically moved into a compliant preservation facility, the record was secured there through the remainder of its National Archives and Records Administration (NARA)-approved retention period, and access to the record was only granted by the agency’s records management program.
Even the record’s original creator could not access the record without express permission from the proper agency records management officials.
The transfer of custodianship to the agency and the accession of the paper record to a secure facility served a critically important purpose that very few members of the American public understand. As a country founded by The People, for The People, all recorded Federal government information belongs to the American people. It does not belong to the government. The government is only responsible for its faithful stewardship as servants of the American people.
As I noted a few weeks ago in the post below, the procedures for managing electronic Federal records were designed to closely follow the procedures that had been in place for paper records for decades. This included a digital agency ‘records center’ created to meet the Department of Defense’s DoD 5015.2 specification for an electronic agency records repository.
It was into these records repositories that dormant electronic records were to be accessioned, and custodianship of the record was to be transferred.
Earlier this month, the nation’s top vaccine regulator, FDA vaccine chief Dr. Peter Marks, was forced to resign after he refused to provide access to records in the agency’s Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) to associates of his boss, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
Dr. Marks had no right to deny Secretary Kennedy’s associates access to the VAERS records they were looking for because he was no longer custodian according to Federal records management regulations.
The VAERS records to which Dr. Marks denied Secretary Kennedy access should have been removed from the VAERS system and transferred to the FDA’s 36 CFR § 1236.20-compliant electronic records repository, where custodianship of the records would have been transferred to the agency. Because the dormant VAERS records now belonged to the agency, Secretary Kennedy’s associates would never have needed to ask Dr. Marks for permission to access them. 4/7 msn.com/en-us/news/pol…
But, as reported in this March 2020 Epoch Times article, no Federal agency - including the FDA - ever deployed DoD 5015.2-certified electronic records repositories into an agency production environment.
This meant that the VAERS records never left the system in which they were originally created. And their custodianship remained in the hands of government bureaucrats - likely forever - who were able to alter, hide, or destroy them anytime they wanted…or deny access to them, even to the Secretary of Health and Human Services. theepochtimes.com/us/the-illusio…
5/7
This same problem has occurred consistently at every Federal agency across the Executive Branch of the government since the earliest days of the Obama administration. It has resulted in empowering unelected government bureaucrats in ways the Founding Fathers never intended. And the damage it has done to our liberties cannot possibly be overstated. x.com/DonLueders/sta…
6/7
If Federal agencies don’t implement top-to-bottom reform of their records management programs, and limit bureaucratic custodianship of electronic agency records, the Federal Administrative State will have more power than the President and they will continue to wield that power against anyone they see as a threat, including the American middle and working classes.
7/7
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
DOGE Says NIH Has 700 IT Systems That Don't Communicate with Each Other
It's the same at every other agency, too. And it is the single biggest source of inefficacy in the Federal government. Here's how we got here.
🧵1/10
The massive, expensive electronic records management repositories that I designed, built, and sold during the 2000s were based on a Department of Defense electronic records management application standard called the DoD 5015.2.
These repositories were designed to mirror the information lifecycle management processes used by the government for decades with paper records. This included an electronic ‘records center’ identical in concept to an agency’s paper records warehouse.
2/10
In March, a team from the Department of Government Efficiency (@DOGE), including its leader, @elonmusk, reported on Fox News that the National Institute of Health (@NIH) had 700 IT systems that did not communicate with each other.
As someone with more than 25 years of experience supporting Federal agency information management technologies, I can tell you that every other agency suffers from this same debilitating problem. youtube.com/watch?v=uX7xFk…
3/10
AI Technologies Aren't Just Destroying Federal Records – They’re Also Creating Them
Microsoft's Copilot AI technology is creating Federal records with no human oversight or transparency. Over time, this could change the very nature of our government.
🧵1/8
The Federal government uses many different complex AI technologies for a host of unique requirements. But Microsoft's Copilot - a repackaged version of OpenAI's ChatGPT-4 series of large language models implemented on Microsoft's enterprise information management platform, M365, and Azure cloud environments - is far and away the leader in Federal government AI solutions.
Copilot is a solid, sophisticated AI technology, with a long list of impressive capabilities.
Some of these capabilities include:
- Summarizing long email threads
- Taking notes during a meeting
- Creating a summary of a Teams meeting
2/8
But from a government records management perspective, these capabilities create new, troubling concerns. For the first time in our history, machines will be creating original agency records, and they will be doing it without human intervention or transparency into the key decisions that the AI made to determine the content of the record.
Within a year or two, this will change the basic philosophies of our federal agencies and could become a threat to our Constitutional Republic. Here’s why.
3/8
[I posted this last year, but it was quickly suppressed. Seems like a good time to post again.]
The Ruling Elite, the National Archives, and the 1984 Blueprint for Tyranny
Orwell was right about building an authoritarian state...and the people in power were listening.
🧵1/9
“Is there somewhere or other a place, a world of solid objects, where the past is still happening?”
“No.”
“Then where does the past exist, if at all?”
“In records. It is written down.”
“In records. And-?”
“In the mind. In human memories.”
“In memory. Very well, then. We, the Party, control all records, and we control all memories. Then we control the past, do we not?”
- O'Brien interrogates Winston Smith, '1984'
To their credit, our ruling elite have long been studious followers of George Orwell. They understood, as Orwell did, that any authoritarian regime requires just two things to gain and maintain power: a system to control the minds of the people and a means to deny and obliterate their own understanding of their history.
Sometime in 2007, soon after powerful leftist politicians and members of the intelligence community decided that Barack Obama would be the Democratic Presidential nominee - and eventual winner - the ruling elite launched their plan for an authoritarian takeover of this country based on Orwell’s ‘1984’ blueprint.
Their first task was easy. They already had a system in place to control the minds of the American people: A compliant mainstream media that would obediently promote any narrative their tyrannical masters fed to them.
What the ruling elite didn’t have was a means to destroy the American public’s understanding of its past.
2/9
As students of Orwell, they knew 1984’s protagonist, Winston Smith, was a records manager at Oceania’s ironically named Ministry of Truth, where he routinely destroyed government records (via the ‘memory hole’), and replaced them with new, revised records that fit the Party’s latest version of Oceania’s past.
America’s ruling elite were drooling at the thought of having this ability, too.
So, continuing to follow the 1984 Blueprint, they began to plan their corruption of our own version of Oceania’s Ministry of Truth, the National Archives and Records Administration.
3/9
[Given the recent reporting from @julie_kelly2 and others, I thought I would repost this piece on the MAL raid from last August.]
The Truth About Donald Trump's Presidential Records Matter You Won't Find Anywhere Else
The paper documents at Mar-a-Lago were not Presidential records by the government's own definition, and the National Archives had no right to claim them.
After more than 23 years managing White House and Federal agency records at the highest levels of the government, I am widely regarded by industry leaders and members of the Federal records management community as an authority on the policies, procedures, and technologies required for complying with the Presidential Records Act.
Here’s the truth about Donald Trump’s Presidential records matter that you won’t get from anyone else.
🧵
By the National Archives and Records Administration’s own rules, Presidential records born digitally must be preserved through their entire natural lifecycle - creation, distribution, use, maintenance, and disposition - in their native electronic format.
This is true for many reasons, but here are the two most important ones:
1. All electronic records contain metadata (i.e., information about the record and its content). Records management industry standards and National Archives policy state that no electronically created record is complete without including its associated metadata. Paper printouts of electronically created records would only provide the contents of the record, not the metadata, and so, would be unacceptable under the government’s own definition of a Presidential record.
2. Unlike paper records, which are two dimensional, records created electronically are three dimensional. This means you can dive into an electronic record in ways that you can’t using paper-based records. An embedded link in a PDF or Word document is an obvious example of this. But a less obvious example might be a formula in a spreadsheet. If a spreadsheet displays a value in a cell, all you would see in a printout of that spreadsheet is the value. In order to understand how that value was derived, you would have to drill into the cell to see the formula that created the value, something not possible in a paper printout.