documents is the worst thing you can do. joe biden told us that himself. how anyone could be that irresponsible. and i thought what data was in there that may compromise sources and methods? it s just totally irresponsible. jesse: like a babylon bee headline joe biden is under investigation for hiding highly classified documents in a closet for the last six years. biden was stuffing classified, top secret documents at the penn biden center right in the middle of washington, d.c. right next door to steakhouse and short little walk from the chinese embassy. what were these documents? well, nothing major, just top secret intelligence involving iran, great britain, and ukraine. just taken out right when he was leaving the vice presidency in january 2017. so what was in these documents that joe biden didn t want the incoming trump administration to see? details on the iran nuke deal? that trump was set to cancel you know, the deal where obama-biden paid the iranians a half a b
a lake house. so reporters asked the white house if that s why he s not going to wilmington. guess what the now very familiar resounding response sounded like? watch. so as it relates to classified documents, information, which the president takes very seriously and you heard him speak to it when asked by colleagues in california, i d refer you to the white house counsel office for any statement coming from here. martha: yeah. basically just hit rewind and replay on that answer. takes it very seriously. so the president s lawyers found the first batch of these classified documents at the think tank in washington d.c. that was six days. i want to reiterate this. this find came six days before the mid-term elections. after all of the brouhaha, we know there s different situations. however, there s quite a few similarities, right? so why did we not learn about any of this for months? so this from the new york times. this says a lot. 68 days of silence. why the white house
Former President Trump’s menacing rhetoric toward NATO is shining a light on what little power Congress has in protecting America’s commitments to the alliance. NATO’s supporters say despite strong congressional backing for the alliance, House and Senate lawmakers have little to no power to prevent the president, as commander in chief, from making decisions about…
The Supreme Court will hear arguments this week about whether former President Donald Trump is disqualified from running for president for his role in the events of Jan. 6, 2020. As explained last week, the most likely issue Trump v. Anderson will be decided upon isn’t the hot-button issue of whether he engaged in insurrection. Instead, the Court will likely rule on seemingly mundane questions, with the most probable candidate being whether Congress is required to pass legislation that enforces Section 3 of the 14th amendment before one can be disqualified under that constitutional provision.
The Constitution's grant to the President of the power to wage war successfully, once begun, carries with it the authority to gather intelligence, through secret means if necessary. We should look skeptically at claims that radical changes in the way we make war would solve our problems, even those stemming from poor judgment, unforeseen circumstances, and bad luck.