Classified docs found in Biden's office before midterms

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4th and Inches
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Sam Lowry
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whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

if he didn't have a hand in classifying them, then yes, he cannot have them at all as a Senator or vice president.
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But senators and vice presidents can have classified documents. How can they do their jobs otherwise?
After they leave office? Whoops.
We don't disagree.


Don't disagree

Lol. I love playing those word games with people. Drives them insane.
Ha, I just take it as his way of admitting he was incorrect to claim the distinctions I made were wrong.
Or it's my polite way of not saying you backpedaled faster than a hooker in Skechers.

What changed? My contention has always been that Trump had clearance to have the documents that the NA packed for him upon leaving office and Biden, as Senator and VP had no such clearance to take and keep classified documents upon leaving office, as he obviously did. Your only contention was that Biden COULD have been the person, as Senator and Vice President, who classified the documents in the first place which would make possession legal. That's it. You tried to debunk the facts as we know them with a technicality that has an astronomically low chance of being reality.
Right, that's a false distinction. Being president didn't give Trump any more right to take documents when he left office than Biden had. Also, the NA didn't pack Trump's documents for him.
Being president allows you to declassify documents by simply picking them up from the desk, walking out of the Oval Office, and entering any number of non-SCIFsecured places: WH residence, Marine 1, AF1, limousine, etc......

The person from whom all classification/declassification authority flows is under no legal requirement to ask permission or document anything from/for anyone to handle the information as he/she sees fit. If he/she reveals it in private or in public to any person or persons, the revelation itself is a declassification.

Has always been so. Only the effort to contrive a problem here has caused some to contrive a legal problem for Trump.

And NONE of the above applies to a Senator
Incorrect. See New York Times v. CIA.
Osodecentx
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whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

if he didn't have a hand in classifying them, then yes, he cannot have them at all as a Senator or vice president.

Being president allows you to declassify documents by simply picking them up from the desk, walking out of the Oval Office, and entering any number of non-SCIFsecured places: WH residence, Marine 1, AF1, limousine, etc......

The person from whom all classification/declassification authority flows is under no legal requirement to ask permission or document anything from/for anyone to handle the information as he/she sees fit. If he/she reveals it in private or in public to any person or persons, the revelation itself is a declassification.

Has always been so. Only the effort to contrive a problem here has caused some to contrive a legal problem for Trump.

And NONE of the above applies to a Senator
For purposes of this discussion, let's accept the above as true. A sitting president can declassify any documents without executing any legal document.

What would keep Biden from declassifying all of the docs he stole/took? As POTUS, under your reasoning, couldn't Biden declassify the docs he took when he was a senator?
Wangchung
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Osodecentx said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

if he didn't have a hand in classifying them, then yes, he cannot have them at all as a Senator or vice president.

Being president allows you to declassify documents by simply picking them up from the desk, walking out of the Oval Office, and entering any number of non-SCIFsecured places: WH residence, Marine 1, AF1, limousine, etc......

The person from whom all classification/declassification authority flows is under no legal requirement to ask permission or document anything from/for anyone to handle the information as he/she sees fit. If he/she reveals it in private or in public to any person or persons, the revelation itself is a declassification.

Has always been so. Only the effort to contrive a problem here has caused some to contrive a legal problem for Trump.

And NONE of the above applies to a Senator
For purposes of this discussion, let's accept the above as true. A sitting president can declassify any documents without executing any legal document.

What would keep Biden from declassifying all of the docs he stole/took? As POTUS, under your reasoning, couldn't Biden declassify the docs he took when he was a senator?
No, it doesn't work retroactively after the documents were stolen by that same person when they didn't have clearance to take them to begin with.
Osodecentx
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Wangchung said:

Osodecentx said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

if he didn't have a hand in classifying them, then yes, he cannot have them at all as a Senator or vice president.

Being president allows you to declassify documents by simply picking them up from the desk, walking out of the Oval Office, and entering any number of non-SCIFsecured places: WH residence, Marine 1, AF1, limousine, etc......

The person from whom all classification/declassification authority flows is under no legal requirement to ask permission or document anything from/for anyone to handle the information as he/she sees fit. If he/she reveals it in private or in public to any person or persons, the revelation itself is a declassification.

Has always been so. Only the effort to contrive a problem here has caused some to contrive a legal problem for Trump.

And NONE of the above applies to a Senator
For purposes of this discussion, let's accept the above as true. A sitting president can declassify any documents without executing any legal document.

What would keep Biden from declassifying all of the docs he stole/took? As POTUS, under your reasoning, couldn't Biden declassify the docs he took when he was a senator?
No, it doesn't work retroactively after the documents were stolen by that same person when they didn't have clearance to take them to begin with.
So you say Trump can't retroactively declassify documents he says he didn't know he had?
Doc Holliday
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Look at all the ridiculous posts defending our child sniffing, dementia ridden puppet president.

Trump has ruined y'all's ability to be rational.
Osodecentx
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Doc Holliday said:

Look at all the ridiculous posts defending our child sniffing, dementia ridden puppet president.

Trump has ruined y'all's ability to be rational.
I believe Biden acted horribly and inappropriately as senator and VP in re: possession of classified documents..

My point is that the defense you guys are using for Trump also works for Biden. It shouldn't, but you'll have to twist yourselves into pretzels to distinguish the cases.
Wangchung
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Osodecentx said:

Wangchung said:

Osodecentx said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

if he didn't have a hand in classifying them, then yes, he cannot have them at all as a Senator or vice president.

Being president allows you to declassify documents by simply picking them up from the desk, walking out of the Oval Office, and entering any number of non-SCIFsecured places: WH residence, Marine 1, AF1, limousine, etc......

The person from whom all classification/declassification authority flows is under no legal requirement to ask permission or document anything from/for anyone to handle the information as he/she sees fit. If he/she reveals it in private or in public to any person or persons, the revelation itself is a declassification.

Has always been so. Only the effort to contrive a problem here has caused some to contrive a legal problem for Trump.

And NONE of the above applies to a Senator
For purposes of this discussion, let's accept the above as true. A sitting president can declassify any documents without executing any legal document.

What would keep Biden from declassifying all of the docs he stole/took? As POTUS, under your reasoning, couldn't Biden declassify the docs he took when he was a senator?
No, it doesn't work retroactively after the documents were stolen by that same person when they didn't have clearance to take them to begin with.
So you say Trump can't retroactively declassify documents he says he didn't know he had?
Did Trump have clearance to take them to begin with? Yes. Did Biden, as senator? No. Did Biden as Vice President? No.
Sam Lowry
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Wangchung said:

Osodecentx said:

Wangchung said:

Osodecentx said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

if he didn't have a hand in classifying them, then yes, he cannot have them at all as a Senator or vice president.

Being president allows you to declassify documents by simply picking them up from the desk, walking out of the Oval Office, and entering any number of non-SCIFsecured places: WH residence, Marine 1, AF1, limousine, etc......

The person from whom all classification/declassification authority flows is under no legal requirement to ask permission or document anything from/for anyone to handle the information as he/she sees fit. If he/she reveals it in private or in public to any person or persons, the revelation itself is a declassification.

Has always been so. Only the effort to contrive a problem here has caused some to contrive a legal problem for Trump.

And NONE of the above applies to a Senator
For purposes of this discussion, let's accept the above as true. A sitting president can declassify any documents without executing any legal document.

What would keep Biden from declassifying all of the docs he stole/took? As POTUS, under your reasoning, couldn't Biden declassify the docs he took when he was a senator?
No, it doesn't work retroactively after the documents were stolen by that same person when they didn't have clearance to take them to begin with.
So you say Trump can't retroactively declassify documents he says he didn't know he had?
Did Trump have clearance to take them to begin with? Yes. Did Biden, as senator? No. Did Biden as Vice President? No.
Or more accurately...yes.
Sam Lowry
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Osodecentx said:

Doc Holliday said:

Look at all the ridiculous posts defending our child sniffing, dementia ridden puppet president.

Trump has ruined y'all's ability to be rational.
I believe Biden acted horribly and inappropriately as senator and VP in re: possession of classified documents..

My point is that the defense you guys are using for Trump also works for Biden. It shouldn't, but you'll have to twist yourselves into pretzels to distinguish the cases.
Bingo.
Doc Holliday
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Osodecentx said:

Doc Holliday said:

Look at all the ridiculous posts defending our child sniffing, dementia ridden puppet president.

Trump has ruined y'all's ability to be rational.
I believe Biden acted horribly and inappropriately as senator and VP in re: possession of classified documents..

My point is that the defense you guys are using for Trump also works for Biden. It shouldn't, but you'll have to twist yourselves into pretzels to distinguish the cases.
The particular warrant against Trump only deals with the espionage act, and if the materials were previously declassed, their removal is not a crime.

Presidents can declare virtually anything as their own privileged records, even if they involve classified materials.

https://m.washingtontimes.com/news/2022/aug/22/tapes-stored-bill-clintons-sock-drawer-could-affec/

Biden was not President when he took these. He was a VP and a Senator. We're also looking at potentially hundreds or even thousands of documents he took.
Wangchung
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Sam Lowry said:

Wangchung said:

Osodecentx said:

Wangchung said:

Osodecentx said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

if he didn't have a hand in classifying them, then yes, he cannot have them at all as a Senator or vice president.

Being president allows you to declassify documents by simply picking them up from the desk, walking out of the Oval Office, and entering any number of non-SCIFsecured places: WH residence, Marine 1, AF1, limousine, etc......

The person from whom all classification/declassification authority flows is under no legal requirement to ask permission or document anything from/for anyone to handle the information as he/she sees fit. If he/she reveals it in private or in public to any person or persons, the revelation itself is a declassification.

Has always been so. Only the effort to contrive a problem here has caused some to contrive a legal problem for Trump.

And NONE of the above applies to a Senator
For purposes of this discussion, let's accept the above as true. A sitting president can declassify any documents without executing any legal document.

What would keep Biden from declassifying all of the docs he stole/took? As POTUS, under your reasoning, couldn't Biden declassify the docs he took when he was a senator?
No, it doesn't work retroactively after the documents were stolen by that same person when they didn't have clearance to take them to begin with.
So you say Trump can't retroactively declassify documents he says he didn't know he had?
Did Trump have clearance to take them to begin with? Yes. Did Biden, as senator? No. Did Biden as Vice President? No.
Or more accurately...yes.
Debunked. A Vice President or a Senator does not have the declassification powers of the president.
Sam Lowry
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Wangchung said:

Sam Lowry said:

Wangchung said:

Osodecentx said:

Wangchung said:

Osodecentx said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

if he didn't have a hand in classifying them, then yes, he cannot have them at all as a Senator or vice president.

Being president allows you to declassify documents by simply picking them up from the desk, walking out of the Oval Office, and entering any number of non-SCIFsecured places: WH residence, Marine 1, AF1, limousine, etc......

The person from whom all classification/declassification authority flows is under no legal requirement to ask permission or document anything from/for anyone to handle the information as he/she sees fit. If he/she reveals it in private or in public to any person or persons, the revelation itself is a declassification.

Has always been so. Only the effort to contrive a problem here has caused some to contrive a legal problem for Trump.

And NONE of the above applies to a Senator
For purposes of this discussion, let's accept the above as true. A sitting president can declassify any documents without executing any legal document.

What would keep Biden from declassifying all of the docs he stole/took? As POTUS, under your reasoning, couldn't Biden declassify the docs he took when he was a senator?
No, it doesn't work retroactively after the documents were stolen by that same person when they didn't have clearance to take them to begin with.
So you say Trump can't retroactively declassify documents he says he didn't know he had?
Did Trump have clearance to take them to begin with? Yes. Did Biden, as senator? No. Did Biden as Vice President? No.
Or more accurately...yes.
Debunked. A Vice President or a Senator does not have the declassification powers of the president.
Possession and declassification are two different issues. You've flip-flopped between them enough times that I'm starting to think it's intentional.
Wangchung
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Sam Lowry said:

Wangchung said:

Sam Lowry said:

Wangchung said:

Osodecentx said:

Wangchung said:

Osodecentx said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

if he didn't have a hand in classifying them, then yes, he cannot have them at all as a Senator or vice president.

Being president allows you to declassify documents by simply picking them up from the desk, walking out of the Oval Office, and entering any number of non-SCIFsecured places: WH residence, Marine 1, AF1, limousine, etc......

The person from whom all classification/declassification authority flows is under no legal requirement to ask permission or document anything from/for anyone to handle the information as he/she sees fit. If he/she reveals it in private or in public to any person or persons, the revelation itself is a declassification.

Has always been so. Only the effort to contrive a problem here has caused some to contrive a legal problem for Trump.

And NONE of the above applies to a Senator
For purposes of this discussion, let's accept the above as true. A sitting president can declassify any documents without executing any legal document.

What would keep Biden from declassifying all of the docs he stole/took? As POTUS, under your reasoning, couldn't Biden declassify the docs he took when he was a senator?
No, it doesn't work retroactively after the documents were stolen by that same person when they didn't have clearance to take them to begin with.
So you say Trump can't retroactively declassify documents he says he didn't know he had?
Did Trump have clearance to take them to begin with? Yes. Did Biden, as senator? No. Did Biden as Vice President? No.
Or more accurately...yes.
Debunked. A Vice President or a Senator does not have the declassification powers of the president.
Possession and declassification are two different issues. You've flip-flopped between them enough times that I'm starting to think it's intentional.
Well the conversation pertains to not only possession but also who classified them in the first place and who declassified them at the end. We know Trump had the power to declassify therefor he has the clearance to possess them. We also know that Biden never had the authority to declassify anything, as senator or vice president, therefor his possession of them was a crime. Without the power to declassify, as Trump had, Joe Biden cannot legally possess the classified materials in the first place and try to claim he declassified them.
Sam Lowry
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Wangchung said:

Sam Lowry said:

Wangchung said:

Sam Lowry said:

Wangchung said:

Osodecentx said:

Wangchung said:

Osodecentx said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

if he didn't have a hand in classifying them, then yes, he cannot have them at all as a Senator or vice president.

Being president allows you to declassify documents by simply picking them up from the desk, walking out of the Oval Office, and entering any number of non-SCIFsecured places: WH residence, Marine 1, AF1, limousine, etc......

The person from whom all classification/declassification authority flows is under no legal requirement to ask permission or document anything from/for anyone to handle the information as he/she sees fit. If he/she reveals it in private or in public to any person or persons, the revelation itself is a declassification.

Has always been so. Only the effort to contrive a problem here has caused some to contrive a legal problem for Trump.

And NONE of the above applies to a Senator
For purposes of this discussion, let's accept the above as true. A sitting president can declassify any documents without executing any legal document.

What would keep Biden from declassifying all of the docs he stole/took? As POTUS, under your reasoning, couldn't Biden declassify the docs he took when he was a senator?
No, it doesn't work retroactively after the documents were stolen by that same person when they didn't have clearance to take them to begin with.
So you say Trump can't retroactively declassify documents he says he didn't know he had?
Did Trump have clearance to take them to begin with? Yes. Did Biden, as senator? No. Did Biden as Vice President? No.
Or more accurately...yes.
Debunked. A Vice President or a Senator does not have the declassification powers of the president.
Possession and declassification are two different issues. You've flip-flopped between them enough times that I'm starting to think it's intentional.
We also know that Biden never had the authority to declassify anything, as senator or vice president, therefor his possession of them was a crime.
When was his possession of them illegal, while he was in office or after he left?
Wangchung
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I would say when he took them from the secured location without legal clearance. As soon as he, or more likely his aids, left the building with the documents he was committing a crime.
whiterock
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Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

if he didn't have a hand in classifying them, then yes, he cannot have them at all as a Senator or vice president.
Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

But senators and vice presidents can have classified documents. How can they do their jobs otherwise?
After they leave office? Whoops.
We don't disagree.


Don't disagree

Lol. I love playing those word games with people. Drives them insane.
Ha, I just take it as his way of admitting he was incorrect to claim the distinctions I made were wrong.
Or it's my polite way of not saying you backpedaled faster than a hooker in Skechers.

What changed? My contention has always been that Trump had clearance to have the documents that the NA packed for him upon leaving office and Biden, as Senator and VP had no such clearance to take and keep classified documents upon leaving office, as he obviously did. Your only contention was that Biden COULD have been the person, as Senator and Vice President, who classified the documents in the first place which would make possession legal. That's it. You tried to debunk the facts as we know them with a technicality that has an astronomically low chance of being reality.
Right, that's a false distinction. Being president didn't give Trump any more right to take documents when he left office than Biden had. Also, the NA didn't pack Trump's documents for him.
Being president allows you to declassify documents by simply picking them up from the desk, walking out of the Oval Office, and entering any number of non-SCIFsecured places: WH residence, Marine 1, AF1, limousine, etc......

The person from whom all classification/declassification authority flows is under no legal requirement to ask permission or document anything from/for anyone to handle the information as he/she sees fit. If he/she reveals it in private or in public to any person or persons, the revelation itself is a declassification.

Has always been so. Only the effort to contrive a problem here has caused some to contrive a legal problem for Trump.

And NONE of the above applies to a Senator
Incorrect. See New York Times v. CIA.

Your interpretation of that ruling is malpractice, counselor.
whiterock
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Osodecentx said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

if he didn't have a hand in classifying them, then yes, he cannot have them at all as a Senator or vice president.

Being president allows you to declassify documents by simply picking them up from the desk, walking out of the Oval Office, and entering any number of non-SCIFsecured places: WH residence, Marine 1, AF1, limousine, etc......

The person from whom all classification/declassification authority flows is under no legal requirement to ask permission or document anything from/for anyone to handle the information as he/she sees fit. If he/she reveals it in private or in public to any person or persons, the revelation itself is a declassification.

Has always been so. Only the effort to contrive a problem here has caused some to contrive a legal problem for Trump.

And NONE of the above applies to a Senator
For purposes of this discussion, let's accept the above as true. A sitting president can declassify any documents without executing any legal document.

What would keep Biden from declassifying all of the docs he stole/took? As POTUS, under your reasoning, couldn't Biden declassify the docs he took when he was a senator?

He could indeed declass them TODAY. But he cannot retroactively declass them. At the time they were mishandled, they were classified and he did not have the power to handle them the way he did.

whiterock
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Osodecentx said:

Wangchung said:

Osodecentx said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

if he didn't have a hand in classifying them, then yes, he cannot have them at all as a Senator or vice president.

Being president allows you to declassify documents by simply picking them up from the desk, walking out of the Oval Office, and entering any number of non-SCIFsecured places: WH residence, Marine 1, AF1, limousine, etc......

The person from whom all classification/declassification authority flows is under no legal requirement to ask permission or document anything from/for anyone to handle the information as he/she sees fit. If he/she reveals it in private or in public to any person or persons, the revelation itself is a declassification.

Has always been so. Only the effort to contrive a problem here has caused some to contrive a legal problem for Trump.

And NONE of the above applies to a Senator
For purposes of this discussion, let's accept the above as true. A sitting president can declassify any documents without executing any legal document.

What would keep Biden from declassifying all of the docs he stole/took? As POTUS, under your reasoning, couldn't Biden declassify the docs he took when he was a senator?
No, it doesn't work retroactively after the documents were stolen by that same person when they didn't have clearance to take them to begin with.
So you say Trump can't retroactively declassify documents he says he didn't know he had?

Does it matter? He was POTUS when those document were in his possession outside a SCIF.

A POTUS cannot commit a security violation. The accountability is political, not legal.
whiterock
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Sam Lowry said:

Wangchung said:

Sam Lowry said:

Wangchung said:

Osodecentx said:

Wangchung said:

Osodecentx said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

if he didn't have a hand in classifying them, then yes, he cannot have them at all as a Senator or vice president.

Being president allows you to declassify documents by simply picking them up from the desk, walking out of the Oval Office, and entering any number of non-SCIFsecured places: WH residence, Marine 1, AF1, limousine, etc......

The person from whom all classification/declassification authority flows is under no legal requirement to ask permission or document anything from/for anyone to handle the information as he/she sees fit. If he/she reveals it in private or in public to any person or persons, the revelation itself is a declassification.

Has always been so. Only the effort to contrive a problem here has caused some to contrive a legal problem for Trump.

And NONE of the above applies to a Senator
For purposes of this discussion, let's accept the above as true. A sitting president can declassify any documents without executing any legal document.

What would keep Biden from declassifying all of the docs he stole/took? As POTUS, under your reasoning, couldn't Biden declassify the docs he took when he was a senator?
No, it doesn't work retroactively after the documents were stolen by that same person when they didn't have clearance to take them to begin with.
So you say Trump can't retroactively declassify documents he says he didn't know he had?
Did Trump have clearance to take them to begin with? Yes. Did Biden, as senator? No. Did Biden as Vice President? No.
Or more accurately...yes.
Debunked. A Vice President or a Senator does not have the declassification powers of the president.
Possession and declassification are two different issues. You've flip-flopped between them enough times that I'm starting to think it's intentional.

False dilemma
Sam Lowry
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Wangchung said:

I would say when he took them from the secured location without legal clearance. As soon as he, or more likely his aids, left the building with the documents he was committing a crime.
So you contend that the president can work with classified material at home, but the vice president would violate criminal law by doing the same thing. Under what law is this rule established?
Sam Lowry
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whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

if he didn't have a hand in classifying them, then yes, he cannot have them at all as a Senator or vice president.
Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

But senators and vice presidents can have classified documents. How can they do their jobs otherwise?
After they leave office? Whoops.
We don't disagree.


Don't disagree

Lol. I love playing those word games with people. Drives them insane.
Ha, I just take it as his way of admitting he was incorrect to claim the distinctions I made were wrong.
Or it's my polite way of not saying you backpedaled faster than a hooker in Skechers.

What changed? My contention has always been that Trump had clearance to have the documents that the NA packed for him upon leaving office and Biden, as Senator and VP had no such clearance to take and keep classified documents upon leaving office, as he obviously did. Your only contention was that Biden COULD have been the person, as Senator and Vice President, who classified the documents in the first place which would make possession legal. That's it. You tried to debunk the facts as we know them with a technicality that has an astronomically low chance of being reality.
Right, that's a false distinction. Being president didn't give Trump any more right to take documents when he left office than Biden had. Also, the NA didn't pack Trump's documents for him.
Being president allows you to declassify documents by simply picking them up from the desk, walking out of the Oval Office, and entering any number of non-SCIFsecured places: WH residence, Marine 1, AF1, limousine, etc......

The person from whom all classification/declassification authority flows is under no legal requirement to ask permission or document anything from/for anyone to handle the information as he/she sees fit. If he/she reveals it in private or in public to any person or persons, the revelation itself is a declassification.

Has always been so. Only the effort to contrive a problem here has caused some to contrive a legal problem for Trump.

And NONE of the above applies to a Senator
Incorrect. See New York Times v. CIA.

Your interpretation of that ruling is malpractice, counselor.
Let's skip my interpretation and go straight to the ruling:
Quote:

Declassification cannot occur unless designated officials follow specified procedures. Moreover, courts cannot "simply assume, over the well-documented and specific affidavits of the CIA to the contrary," that disclosure is required simply because the information has already been made public. The Shiner affidavits, in addition to justifying the two FOIA exemptions, expressly stated that no declassification procedures had been followed with respect to any documents pertaining to the alleged covert program. Moreover, the Times cites no authority that stands for the proposition that the President can inadvertently declassify information and we are aware of none. Because declassification, even by the President, must follow established procedures, that argument fails.
whiterock
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Batch Of Classified Documents Found On Walmart Clearance Shelf

https://babylonbee.com/news/batch-of-classified-documents-found-on-walmart-clearance-shelf?utm_source=The%20Babylon%20Bee%20Newsletter&utm_medium=email
whiterock
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Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

if he didn't have a hand in classifying them, then yes, he cannot have them at all as a Senator or vice president.
Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

But senators and vice presidents can have classified documents. How can they do their jobs otherwise?
After they leave office? Whoops.
We don't disagree.


Don't disagree

Lol. I love playing those word games with people. Drives them insane.
Ha, I just take it as his way of admitting he was incorrect to claim the distinctions I made were wrong.
Or it's my polite way of not saying you backpedaled faster than a hooker in Skechers.

What changed? My contention has always been that Trump had clearance to have the documents that the NA packed for him upon leaving office and Biden, as Senator and VP had no such clearance to take and keep classified documents upon leaving office, as he obviously did. Your only contention was that Biden COULD have been the person, as Senator and Vice President, who classified the documents in the first place which would make possession legal. That's it. You tried to debunk the facts as we know them with a technicality that has an astronomically low chance of being reality.
Right, that's a false distinction. Being president didn't give Trump any more right to take documents when he left office than Biden had. Also, the NA didn't pack Trump's documents for him.
Being president allows you to declassify documents by simply picking them up from the desk, walking out of the Oval Office, and entering any number of non-SCIFsecured places: WH residence, Marine 1, AF1, limousine, etc......

The person from whom all classification/declassification authority flows is under no legal requirement to ask permission or document anything from/for anyone to handle the information as he/she sees fit. If he/she reveals it in private or in public to any person or persons, the revelation itself is a declassification.

Has always been so. Only the effort to contrive a problem here has caused some to contrive a legal problem for Trump.

And NONE of the above applies to a Senator
Incorrect. See New York Times v. CIA.

Your interpretation of that ruling is malpractice, counselor.
Let's skip my interpretation and go straight to the ruling:
Quote:

Declassification cannot occur unless designated officials follow specified procedures. Moreover, courts cannot "simply assume, over the well-documented and specific affidavits of the CIA to the contrary," that disclosure is required simply because the information has already been made public. The Shiner affidavits, in addition to justifying the two FOIA exemptions, expressly stated that no declassification procedures had been followed with respect to any documents pertaining to the alleged covert program. Moreover, the Times cites no authority that stands for the proposition that the President can inadvertently declassify information and we are aware of none. Because declassification, even by the President, must follow established procedures, that argument fails.


Doubling down on it, I see.

Your error starts at the word "inadvertent."
Wangchung
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Sam Lowry said:

Wangchung said:

I would say when he took them from the secured location without legal clearance. As soon as he, or more likely his aids, left the building with the documents he was committing a crime.
So you contend that the president can work with classified material at home, but the vice president would violate criminal law by doing the same thing. Under what law is this rule established?
When they leave office, they don't get to keep being a Senator or vice president at home. They are no longer the holder of that office. Or are you pretending we are talking about at the end of a work day when they go home for the night? Lol, tell me you aren't that stupid.
whiterock
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From my Twitter feed:


Wangchung
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Mike Pence's turn.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/lawyer-classified-documents-found-mike-172503729.html
4th and Inches
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We live in a freaking clown world..
“The Internet is just a world passing around notes in a classroom.”

Jon Stewart
Sam Lowry
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whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

if he didn't have a hand in classifying them, then yes, he cannot have them at all as a Senator or vice president.
Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

Quote:

But senators and vice presidents can have classified documents. How can they do their jobs otherwise?
After they leave office? Whoops.
We don't disagree.


Don't disagree

Lol. I love playing those word games with people. Drives them insane.
Ha, I just take it as his way of admitting he was incorrect to claim the distinctions I made were wrong.
Or it's my polite way of not saying you backpedaled faster than a hooker in Skechers.

What changed? My contention has always been that Trump had clearance to have the documents that the NA packed for him upon leaving office and Biden, as Senator and VP had no such clearance to take and keep classified documents upon leaving office, as he obviously did. Your only contention was that Biden COULD have been the person, as Senator and Vice President, who classified the documents in the first place which would make possession legal. That's it. You tried to debunk the facts as we know them with a technicality that has an astronomically low chance of being reality.
Right, that's a false distinction. Being president didn't give Trump any more right to take documents when he left office than Biden had. Also, the NA didn't pack Trump's documents for him.
Being president allows you to declassify documents by simply picking them up from the desk, walking out of the Oval Office, and entering any number of non-SCIFsecured places: WH residence, Marine 1, AF1, limousine, etc......

The person from whom all classification/declassification authority flows is under no legal requirement to ask permission or document anything from/for anyone to handle the information as he/she sees fit. If he/she reveals it in private or in public to any person or persons, the revelation itself is a declassification.

Has always been so. Only the effort to contrive a problem here has caused some to contrive a legal problem for Trump.

And NONE of the above applies to a Senator
Incorrect. See New York Times v. CIA.

Your interpretation of that ruling is malpractice, counselor.
Let's skip my interpretation and go straight to the ruling:
Quote:

Declassification cannot occur unless designated officials follow specified procedures. Moreover, courts cannot "simply assume, over the well-documented and specific affidavits of the CIA to the contrary," that disclosure is required simply because the information has already been made public. The Shiner affidavits, in addition to justifying the two FOIA exemptions, expressly stated that no declassification procedures had been followed with respect to any documents pertaining to the alleged covert program. Moreover, the Times cites no authority that stands for the proposition that the President can inadvertently declassify information and we are aware of none. Because declassification, even by the President, must follow established procedures, that argument fails.


Doubling down on it, I see.

Your error starts at the word "inadvertent."
You're clutching at the same straw that the NYT did on appeal. Unfortunately the possibility of deliberate declassification by implication had already been addressed by the district court:
Quote:

Here, President Trump did not make an unequivocal statement, or any statement for that matter, indicating he was declassifying information. This should end the inquiry, but Plaintiffs argue that the plain meaning of President Trump's tweet and his statements to the Journal are sufficient to verify existence of a covert CIA program, and therefore President Trump's statements declassified the existence of the program. Yet, even when viewing the facts in a light most favorable to Plaintiffs, this argument is unsupported.

Accordingly, the Court holds that (1) absent an unequivocal statement of declassification from the President or exceptional circumstances that are not present here, the Court will not infer whether the President's statements have the legal effect of declassifying information; and (2) President Trump's public statements in this case do not rise to the level of an unequivocal statement of declassification. At best, President Trump's statements could be treated as an official acknowledgement of an alleged covert CIA program, but Plaintiffs argument on this front also fails.
Sam Lowry
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Wangchung said:

Sam Lowry said:

Wangchung said:

I would say when he took them from the secured location without legal clearance. As soon as he, or more likely his aids, left the building with the documents he was committing a crime.
So you contend that the president can work with classified material at home, but the vice president would violate criminal law by doing the same thing. Under what law is this rule established?
When they leave office, they don't get to keep being a Senator or vice president at home. They are no longer the holder of that office. Or are you pretending we are talking about at the end of a work day when they go home for the night? Lol, tell me you aren't that stupid.
You're still not answering my question. When did he commit the crime, and what law did he violate?
Harrison Bergeron
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Wangchung said:

Mike Pence's turn.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/lawyer-classified-documents-found-mike-172503729.html
Odd that the little Beta librarian with TDS only seemed capable of tracking Trump's documents ... I wonder why. I guess our national librarians are typical incompetent regressive fundamentalists.
Sam Lowry
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Harrison Bergeron said:

Wangchung said:

Mike Pence's turn.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/lawyer-classified-documents-found-mike-172503729.html
Odd that the little Beta librarian with TDS only seemed capable of tracking Trump's documents ... I wonder why. I guess our national librarians are typical incompetent regressive fundamentalists.
It was the librarian who reported Biden's documents to the DOJ.
STxBear81
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Guess Al Gore is next.
Probly reveal he invented the internet
Wangchung
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Sam Lowry said:

Wangchung said:

Sam Lowry said:

Wangchung said:

I would say when he took them from the secured location without legal clearance. As soon as he, or more likely his aids, left the building with the documents he was committing a crime.
So you contend that the president can work with classified material at home, but the vice president would violate criminal law by doing the same thing. Under what law is this rule established?
When they leave office, they don't get to keep being a Senator or vice president at home. They are no longer the holder of that office. Or are you pretending we are talking about at the end of a work day when they go home for the night? Lol, tell me you aren't that stupid.
You're still not answering my question. When did he commit the crime, and what law did he violate?
I did answer your question. Read it again.
Sam Lowry
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Wangchung said:

Sam Lowry said:

Wangchung said:

Sam Lowry said:

Wangchung said:

I would say when he took them from the secured location without legal clearance. As soon as he, or more likely his aids, left the building with the documents he was committing a crime.
So you contend that the president can work with classified material at home, but the vice president would violate criminal law by doing the same thing. Under what law is this rule established?
When they leave office, they don't get to keep being a Senator or vice president at home. They are no longer the holder of that office. Or are you pretending we are talking about at the end of a work day when they go home for the night? Lol, tell me you aren't that stupid.
You're still not answering my question. When did he commit the crime, and what law did he violate?
I did answer your question. Read it again.
You are going out of your way not to make sense. I'll circle back later.
 
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