Don't we have the right to know with whom the VP of the U.S. is meeting with?
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We have the right to know what they are doing and how to keep all this from happening again.
From a 1977 book entitled Top Secret: National Security and the Right to Know Halperin wrote with Daniel Hoffman.
Another proposal now in California would give Internet users the right to know the information private firms collect about them.
Companies in those sectors should expect increased regulatory scrutiny regardless of when (or even whether) the Right to Know regulations are implemented.
Freedom of Information: The Right to Know, was the theme of the 2010 celebration of World Press Freedom Day, held in Brisbane, Australia.
This, he said after the court's verdict, means that "in the end Kenyans lost the right to know what indeed happened" in the counting of votes.
She called for further research into the issue - saying that women had the right to know the full consequences of the operation before opting to undergo it.
In India, freedom of information legislation resulted from grassroots demand for political accountability, following a growing awareness that the right to know facilitates access to all other rights.
Supported by the local media, Livni and Olmert have denied the public the right to know what they are discussing on our behalf and so prevented any public debate about their actions.
This year, UNESCO will celebrate World Press Freedom Day with an international conference of media professionals entitled Freedom of Information: the Right to Know, in Brisbane (Australia) on 2 and 3 May.
The speakers agreed that media can play a crucial role in furthering women's rights through enhanced information, although this should not lead to the conclusion that the right to know only concerns the press.
"We need to change the law urgently to save lives, " she told peers, and give women and men at risk of domestic violence the right to know if their partner has any previous convictions.
The measure's supporters say that proxy votes are the most direct way to influence corporate governance, and that investors have the right to know whether a fund manager has voted in their best interests.
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Stahl asked Zuckerberg if he felt that because he was asking the half a billion Facebook users to share personal information on his social network, that they had the right to know a lot about him personally.
Senator John McCain of Arizona agrees, saying it's important that, in his words, we stand by 200 years of legal precedence concerning classified information, because the defendant should have the right to know what evidence is being used.
Of course, Republicans agree, women should have direct access to a gynaecologist or obstetrician (instead of having to see a primary-care doctor first), and of course patients should have guaranteed access to emergency-room treatment and the right to know all the medical options and appeal against an insurer's decision.
At the very least, the public has the right to know the extent of the risks posed to future U.S. and Western security interests and the additional costs imposed on U.S. defense expenditures likely to result from access to extremely sensitive technologies afforded the military establishments of the Soviet Union, Iraq, Libya and other potential adversaries by our German friends.
"I believe in the case of teachers, the parents' right to know outweighs the teachers' right to privacy, " the governor said Tuesday in Albany.
"These leaks clearly were not done in the interest of national security or to reveal corrupt or illegal actions about which the public has a right to know, as in the case of legitimate whistleblowers, " McCain said.
Each person considering going into Exodus programs has the complete right to know what chances of having any good or desired outcome, really are.
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But the public has a right to know the scope of what Washington does with all these rules and diktats: what they are supposed to achieve, what their costs are--and what they actually achieve.
During the campaign, they fought for the people's right to know where the two presidential candidates stood on education, prescription drugs and other issues that matter most to America's families.
He said the BMA supported the principle of "right to know" but warned the time doctors spent away from patients to deal with the paperwork "must be minimised".
Young journalist Amila Prabodha Gamage thinks that while journalists may need to consider national security - as the country is at war - that doctrine should not unduly interfere with the public's right to know the truth.
The people have a right to know how the money is spent and to believe that they are being spent prudently.
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It is what we've called for since the outbreak in 2005 and I believe the public have a right to know if the food they're eating is safe.
At issue is whether the public has a right to know what chemicals are used in the extraction process and whether EPA has the ability to oversee wastewater disposal from oil and gas production.
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