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Politics & Power Quote by Hugo Black

"In revealing the workings of government that led to the Vietnam War, the newspapers nobly did precisely that which the Founders hoped and trusted they would do"

About this Quote

“Nobly” is doing heavy lifting here. Hugo Black isn’t merely complimenting the press; he’s staking out a constitutional worldview in the middle of a national fever dream. When the Supreme Court confronted the Pentagon Papers in 1971, the government argued that stopping publication was a matter of national security. Black’s line flips that claim: the true security interest, he implies, is an informed public capable of resisting executive drift.

The specific intent is legal and moral at once. Black frames investigative disclosure not as a reckless breach but as the press fulfilling a job assignment written into the American origin story. By invoking “the Founders,” he wraps a contemporary controversy in founding-era legitimacy, a rhetorical move designed to make censorship sound not merely unwise but un-American. He also draws a bright line around what the press is for: not cheerleading “the workings of government,” but exposing them when those workings manufacture catastrophe.

The subtext is a rebuke to the modern presidency. Vietnam had become a case study in incremental escalation, bureaucratic secrecy, and public misrepresentation across administrations. Black’s phrasing suggests that the rot wasn’t a single bad decision but a system of decision-making insulated from scrutiny. “Revealing” becomes a civic antidote: the press as a check not after the fact, but during the slide into war.

Context sharpens the edge. A justice shaped by earlier battles over free speech, Black treats prior restraint as the signature sin. His praise is also a warning: when courts or presidents ask for silence in the name of crisis, democracy is already being negotiated away.

Quote Details

TopicFreedom
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Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
In revealing the workings of government that led to the Vietnam war, the newspapers nobly did precisely that which the Founders hoped and trusted they would do. (Page 717 (403 U.S. 717) in Justice Hugo L. Black’s concurring opinion). This quote is from Justice Hugo L. Black’s concurring opinion (joined by Justice Douglas) in New York Times Co. v. United States, decided June 30, 1971 (403 U.S. 713). Although many modern reproductions capitalize “War” and use “Vietnam War,” the wording in the opinion is “Vietnam war” (lowercase w). The earliest publication of this wording is the Court’s decision/opinions as issued in 1971 and subsequently printed in the official reporter, United States Reports, volume 403.
Other candidates (1)
The Mediated World (David T. Z. Mindich, 2023) compilation98.1%
... Hugo Black , clearly supported the newspapers ' right to publish : In ... In revealing the workings of government...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Black, Hugo. (2026, February 15). In revealing the workings of government that led to the Vietnam War, the newspapers nobly did precisely that which the Founders hoped and trusted they would do. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/in-revealing-the-workings-of-government-that-led-54257/

Chicago Style
Black, Hugo. "In revealing the workings of government that led to the Vietnam War, the newspapers nobly did precisely that which the Founders hoped and trusted they would do." FixQuotes. February 15, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/in-revealing-the-workings-of-government-that-led-54257/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"In revealing the workings of government that led to the Vietnam War, the newspapers nobly did precisely that which the Founders hoped and trusted they would do." FixQuotes, 15 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/in-revealing-the-workings-of-government-that-led-54257/. Accessed 22 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

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Hugo Black (February 27, 1886 - September 25, 1971) was a Judge from USA.

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