Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Trump actually has the Presidential Records Act as an argument.
Biden does not have that argument - especially as a Senator since some of the classified material dates back to his Senate days.
Biden threw classified documents about the Afghanistan withdrawal by/on an old, broken down dog crate.
What the report includes:
The report covers what materials have been uncovered, what's known about how they were handled — going back to Biden's time as vice president — as well as the legal arguments around whether charges were appropriate.
There are photos of the boxes that contained classified materials, including one damaged box with documents about Afghanistan that was found in the garage of Biden's home in Delaware "near a collapsed dog crate, a dog bed, a Zappos box, an empty bucket, a broken lamp wrapped with duct tape, potting soil, and synthetic firewood."
The bulk of the report focuses on two types of classified materials — documents about military and foreign policy in Afghanistan; and notebooks that Biden used throughout his presidency for a combination of personal reflections, meeting notes and other writings.
Biden relied on his notebooks in particular while writing his memoir Promise Me, Dad, which was published in 2017 and reflects on the year his older son Beau died of cancer, two years earlier.
In conversations with his ghostwriter for the book, he read from those notebooks — and on at least three occasions shared classified material while doing so.
https://www.npr.org/2024/02/09/1230333392/biden-classified-documents-highlights#:~:text=There%20are%20photos%20of%20the,tape%2C%20potting%20soil%2C%20and%20synthetic
And he got away with it because they’ve decided he’s mentally incompetent
None of those arguments are substantiated by the Special Counsel's report. The findings were that there were no meaningful violations and that Biden fully cooperated, that Biden worked with the appropriate people immediately the second he became aware of anything potentially classified, and that all of his testimony to the Special Counsel was "clear and compelling" in the Counsel's own words as he summarized his findings - clear and compelling as in not the confusions of someone with dementia. And, the case is now closed. No amount of "yabut" from the peanut gallery of DCUM will change that.
And he could not remember when he was Vice President nor within years of when his son died. This is material because he decides if we go to nuclear war. I could care less about the f$cking documents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Trump actually has the Presidential Records Act as an argument.
Biden does not have that argument - especially as a Senator since some of the classified material dates back to his Senate days.
Biden threw classified documents about the Afghanistan withdrawal by/on an old, broken down dog crate.
What the report includes:
The report covers what materials have been uncovered, what's known about how they were handled — going back to Biden's time as vice president — as well as the legal arguments around whether charges were appropriate.
There are photos of the boxes that contained classified materials, including one damaged box with documents about Afghanistan that was found in the garage of Biden's home in Delaware "near a collapsed dog crate, a dog bed, a Zappos box, an empty bucket, a broken lamp wrapped with duct tape, potting soil, and synthetic firewood."
The bulk of the report focuses on two types of classified materials — documents about military and foreign policy in Afghanistan; and notebooks that Biden used throughout his presidency for a combination of personal reflections, meeting notes and other writings.
Biden relied on his notebooks in particular while writing his memoir Promise Me, Dad, which was published in 2017 and reflects on the year his older son Beau died of cancer, two years earlier.
In conversations with his ghostwriter for the book, he read from those notebooks — and on at least three occasions shared classified material while doing so.
https://www.npr.org/2024/02/09/1230333392/biden-classified-documents-highlights#:~:text=There%20are%20photos%20of%20the,tape%2C%20potting%20soil%2C%20and%20synthetic
And he got away with it because they’ve decided he’s mentally incompetent
None of those arguments are substantiated by the Special Counsel's report. The findings were that there were no meaningful violations and that Biden fully cooperated, that Biden worked with the appropriate people immediately the second he became aware of anything potentially classified, and that all of his testimony to the Special Counsel was "clear and compelling" in the Counsel's own words as he summarized his findings - clear and compelling as in not the confusions of someone with dementia. And, the case is now closed. No amount of "yabut" from the peanut gallery of DCUM will change that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Trump actually has the Presidential Records Act as an argument.
Biden does not have that argument - especially as a Senator since some of the classified material dates back to his Senate days.
Biden threw classified documents about the Afghanistan withdrawal by/on an old, broken down dog crate.
What the report includes:
The report covers what materials have been uncovered, what's known about how they were handled — going back to Biden's time as vice president — as well as the legal arguments around whether charges were appropriate.
There are photos of the boxes that contained classified materials, including one damaged box with documents about Afghanistan that was found in the garage of Biden's home in Delaware "near a collapsed dog crate, a dog bed, a Zappos box, an empty bucket, a broken lamp wrapped with duct tape, potting soil, and synthetic firewood."
The bulk of the report focuses on two types of classified materials — documents about military and foreign policy in Afghanistan; and notebooks that Biden used throughout his presidency for a combination of personal reflections, meeting notes and other writings.
Biden relied on his notebooks in particular while writing his memoir Promise Me, Dad, which was published in 2017 and reflects on the year his older son Beau died of cancer, two years earlier.
In conversations with his ghostwriter for the book, he read from those notebooks — and on at least three occasions shared classified material while doing so.
https://www.npr.org/2024/02/09/1230333392/biden-classified-documents-highlights#:~:text=There%20are%20photos%20of%20the,tape%2C%20potting%20soil%2C%20and%20synthetic
And he got away with it because they’ve decided he’s mentally incompetent
None of those arguments are substantiated by the Special Counsel's report. The findings were that there were no meaningful violations and that Biden fully cooperated, that Biden worked with the appropriate people immediately the second he became aware of anything potentially classified, and that all of his testimony to the Special Counsel was "clear and compelling" in the Counsel's own words as he summarized his findings - clear and compelling as in not the confusions of someone with dementia. And, the case is now closed. No amount of "yabut" from the peanut gallery of DCUM will change that.
UNLIKE Trump, who did not cooperate, fought the investigation every step of the way, Trump who lied repeatedly, tried to hide documents from investigators, enlisted others to help him in his scheme to steal documents and keep them from investigators, and so on.
+2
And Trump who gave away or sold those documents, getting god knows how many of our assets killed.
Anonymous wrote:Boy. If not being president and stealing plus holding classified documents isn’t a crime the Trump case is over.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Trump actually has the Presidential Records Act as an argument.
Biden does not have that argument - especially as a Senator since some of the classified material dates back to his Senate days.
Biden threw classified documents about the Afghanistan withdrawal by/on an old, broken down dog crate.
What the report includes:
The report covers what materials have been uncovered, what's known about how they were handled — going back to Biden's time as vice president — as well as the legal arguments around whether charges were appropriate.
There are photos of the boxes that contained classified materials, including one damaged box with documents about Afghanistan that was found in the garage of Biden's home in Delaware "near a collapsed dog crate, a dog bed, a Zappos box, an empty bucket, a broken lamp wrapped with duct tape, potting soil, and synthetic firewood."
The bulk of the report focuses on two types of classified materials — documents about military and foreign policy in Afghanistan; and notebooks that Biden used throughout his presidency for a combination of personal reflections, meeting notes and other writings.
Biden relied on his notebooks in particular while writing his memoir Promise Me, Dad, which was published in 2017 and reflects on the year his older son Beau died of cancer, two years earlier.
In conversations with his ghostwriter for the book, he read from those notebooks — and on at least three occasions shared classified material while doing so.
https://www.npr.org/2024/02/09/1230333392/biden-classified-documents-highlights#:~:text=There%20are%20photos%20of%20the,tape%2C%20potting%20soil%2C%20and%20synthetic
And he got away with it because they’ve decided he’s mentally incompetent
None of those arguments are substantiated by the Special Counsel's report. The findings were that there were no meaningful violations and that Biden fully cooperated, that Biden worked with the appropriate people immediately the second he became aware of anything potentially classified, and that all of his testimony to the Special Counsel was "clear and compelling" in the Counsel's own words as he summarized his findings - clear and compelling as in not the confusions of someone with dementia. And, the case is now closed. No amount of "yabut" from the peanut gallery of DCUM will change that.
UNLIKE Trump, who did not cooperate, fought the investigation every step of the way, Trump who lied repeatedly, tried to hide documents from investigators, enlisted others to help him in his scheme to steal documents and keep them from investigators, and so on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Trump actually has the Presidential Records Act as an argument.
Biden does not have that argument - especially as a Senator since some of the classified material dates back to his Senate days.
Biden threw classified documents about the Afghanistan withdrawal by/on an old, broken down dog crate.
What the report includes:
The report covers what materials have been uncovered, what's known about how they were handled — going back to Biden's time as vice president — as well as the legal arguments around whether charges were appropriate.
There are photos of the boxes that contained classified materials, including one damaged box with documents about Afghanistan that was found in the garage of Biden's home in Delaware "near a collapsed dog crate, a dog bed, a Zappos box, an empty bucket, a broken lamp wrapped with duct tape, potting soil, and synthetic firewood."
The bulk of the report focuses on two types of classified materials — documents about military and foreign policy in Afghanistan; and notebooks that Biden used throughout his presidency for a combination of personal reflections, meeting notes and other writings.
Biden relied on his notebooks in particular while writing his memoir Promise Me, Dad, which was published in 2017 and reflects on the year his older son Beau died of cancer, two years earlier.
In conversations with his ghostwriter for the book, he read from those notebooks — and on at least three occasions shared classified material while doing so.
https://www.npr.org/2024/02/09/1230333392/biden-classified-documents-highlights#:~:text=There%20are%20photos%20of%20the,tape%2C%20potting%20soil%2C%20and%20synthetic
And he got away with it because they’ve decided he’s mentally incompetent
None of those arguments are substantiated by the Special Counsel's report. The findings were that there were no meaningful violations and that Biden fully cooperated, that Biden worked with the appropriate people immediately the second he became aware of anything potentially classified, and that all of his testimony to the Special Counsel was "clear and compelling" in the Counsel's own words as he summarized his findings - clear and compelling as in not the confusions of someone with dementia. And, the case is now closed. No amount of "yabut" from the peanut gallery of DCUM will change that.
UNLIKE Trump, who did not cooperate, fought the investigation every step of the way, Trump who lied repeatedly, tried to hide documents from investigators, enlisted others to help him in his scheme to steal documents and keep them from investigators, and so on.
Anonymous wrote:
Trump actually has the Presidential Records Act as an argument.
Biden does not have that argument - especially as a Senator since some of the classified material dates back to his Senate days.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Trump actually has the Presidential Records Act as an argument.
Biden does not have that argument - especially as a Senator since some of the classified material dates back to his Senate days.
Biden threw classified documents about the Afghanistan withdrawal by/on an old, broken down dog crate.
What the report includes:
The report covers what materials have been uncovered, what's known about how they were handled — going back to Biden's time as vice president — as well as the legal arguments around whether charges were appropriate.
There are photos of the boxes that contained classified materials, including one damaged box with documents about Afghanistan that was found in the garage of Biden's home in Delaware "near a collapsed dog crate, a dog bed, a Zappos box, an empty bucket, a broken lamp wrapped with duct tape, potting soil, and synthetic firewood."
The bulk of the report focuses on two types of classified materials — documents about military and foreign policy in Afghanistan; and notebooks that Biden used throughout his presidency for a combination of personal reflections, meeting notes and other writings.
Biden relied on his notebooks in particular while writing his memoir Promise Me, Dad, which was published in 2017 and reflects on the year his older son Beau died of cancer, two years earlier.
In conversations with his ghostwriter for the book, he read from those notebooks — and on at least three occasions shared classified material while doing so.
https://www.npr.org/2024/02/09/1230333392/biden-classified-documents-highlights#:~:text=There%20are%20photos%20of%20the,tape%2C%20potting%20soil%2C%20and%20synthetic
And he got away with it because they’ve decided he’s mentally incompetent
None of those arguments are substantiated by the Special Counsel's report. The findings were that there were no meaningful violations and that Biden fully cooperated, that Biden worked with the appropriate people immediately the second he became aware of anything potentially classified, and that all of his testimony to the Special Counsel was "clear and compelling" in the Counsel's own words as he summarized his findings - clear and compelling as in not the confusions of someone with dementia. And, the case is now closed. No amount of "yabut" from the peanut gallery of DCUM will change that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Trump actually has the Presidential Records Act as an argument.
Biden does not have that argument - especially as a Senator since some of the classified material dates back to his Senate days.
Biden threw classified documents about the Afghanistan withdrawal by/on an old, broken down dog crate.
What the report includes:
The report covers what materials have been uncovered, what's known about how they were handled — going back to Biden's time as vice president — as well as the legal arguments around whether charges were appropriate.
There are photos of the boxes that contained classified materials, including one damaged box with documents about Afghanistan that was found in the garage of Biden's home in Delaware "near a collapsed dog crate, a dog bed, a Zappos box, an empty bucket, a broken lamp wrapped with duct tape, potting soil, and synthetic firewood."
The bulk of the report focuses on two types of classified materials — documents about military and foreign policy in Afghanistan; and notebooks that Biden used throughout his presidency for a combination of personal reflections, meeting notes and other writings.
Biden relied on his notebooks in particular while writing his memoir Promise Me, Dad, which was published in 2017 and reflects on the year his older son Beau died of cancer, two years earlier.
In conversations with his ghostwriter for the book, he read from those notebooks — and on at least three occasions shared classified material while doing so.
https://www.npr.org/2024/02/09/1230333392/biden-classified-documents-highlights#:~:text=There%20are%20photos%20of%20the,tape%2C%20potting%20soil%2C%20and%20synthetic
And he got away with it because they’ve decided he’s mentally incompetent
Anonymous wrote:The White House just delisted the press conference video on YouTube.
Unprecedented.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Trump actually has the Presidential Records Act as an argument.
Biden does not have that argument - especially as a Senator since some of the classified material dates back to his Senate days.
Biden threw classified documents about the Afghanistan withdrawal by/on an old, broken down dog crate.
What the report includes:
The report covers what materials have been uncovered, what's known about how they were handled — going back to Biden's time as vice president — as well as the legal arguments around whether charges were appropriate.
There are photos of the boxes that contained classified materials, including one damaged box with documents about Afghanistan that was found in the garage of Biden's home in Delaware "near a collapsed dog crate, a dog bed, a Zappos box, an empty bucket, a broken lamp wrapped with duct tape, potting soil, and synthetic firewood."
The bulk of the report focuses on two types of classified materials — documents about military and foreign policy in Afghanistan; and notebooks that Biden used throughout his presidency for a combination of personal reflections, meeting notes and other writings.
Biden relied on his notebooks in particular while writing his memoir Promise Me, Dad, which was published in 2017 and reflects on the year his older son Beau died of cancer, two years earlier.
In conversations with his ghostwriter for the book, he read from those notebooks — and on at least three occasions shared classified material while doing so.
https://www.npr.org/2024/02/09/1230333392/biden-classified-documents-highlights#:~:text=There%20are%20photos%20of%20the,tape%2C%20potting%20soil%2C%20and%20synthetic
Anonymous wrote:
Trump actually has the Presidential Records Act as an argument.
Biden does not have that argument - especially as a Senator since some of the classified material dates back to his Senate days.