Biden: People know I take Classified Documents, seriously.

No, I like classic stock ride height. The 1964 suicide door Lincoln convertible was the car after which I lusted as a high school senior.
Needless to say, I didn't get one as a graduation gift!

Full frame conversion is necessary for modern suspension and steering. [I wouldn't need it for brakes, of course.]
It's not a little Mustang with tons of aftermarket support to upgrade as a unibody

I can't drive the Corvette during Boston winters unless I want to slide sideways like a crab.
Of course, if we build the phaeton, that would be a summer car, too.

I don't know. Even if we don't do it, in deference to the kids' inheritance, it's fun to plan it out;
I've got some great ideas.
I realize, however, that restomods are consumption, not investment.
You can't recoup the cost of building a really good one at an estate auction.
Why the hell would you drive a nice car on salted roads? Get a jeep or something for winter driving. Save the Lincoln for the rest of the year.
 
Why did Biden have them in his office, his garage in a room next to his garage in his home office and only god knows where else for 6-14 years. At least Trump's were guarded by the Secret Service.

They were also double locked, the FBI had him purchase a lock for the door of the room they were stored in. They were protected by the Secret Service, inside a house most folks cannot get into, and in a locked room as requested, locked front door, blocked by secret service agents, locked in a room in a basement... somewhat secure. Stupid that he kept them, because Trump isn't the smartest man we ever elected and it seemed he wanted to "win" so much that the right thing was no longer an option.

At Brandon's house though, they were in the garage, next to his car. The "right thing" only became the thing to do after he spent time in September "shocked" at how it "happened" and how much HE would never have done anything like that... Suddenly we have documents that have been there since he was a frikkin' Senator, and those shouldn't be there at all, they do not get to take home documents as Senators or Congresscritters, they have need to know and get access within a SCIF at the Capitol.
 
No, I like classic stock ride height. The 1964 suicide door Lincoln convertible was the car after which I lusted as a high school senior.
Needless to say, I didn't get one as a graduation gift!

Full frame conversion is necessary for modern suspension and steering. [I wouldn't need it for brakes, of course.]
It's not a little Mustang with tons of aftermarket support to upgrade as a unibody

I can't drive the Corvette during Boston winters unless I want to slide sideways like a crab.
Of course, if we build the phaeton, that would be a summer car, too.

I don't know. Even if we don't do it, in deference to the kids' inheritance, it's fun to plan it out;
I've got some great ideas.
I realize, however, that restomods are consumption, not investment.
You can't recoup the cost of building a really good one at an estate auction.

Don't forget about the length of time it takes to build one.
You might not be able to drive it by the time it's finished.
If you do, I doubt it would be any better in the winter than
the Vette would be. Well, maybe for a short distance...
 
Why the hell would you drive a nice car on salted roads? Get a jeep or something for winter driving. Save the Lincoln for the rest of the year.
I'm ahead of you. My daily driver is a Grand Cherokee. The little Corvette is in hibernation right now...where it belongs.

I'd really love to commission the Lincoln build, but it's probably a selfish thing to do.
Still, it lingers in my head.
 
Joe took Classified documents when he was a Senator. THAT WAS AT LEAST 14 YEARS AGO. Slow Joe wasn't supposed to be removing classified documents from the SCIF where he viewed them AT ALL. How did he get them out of there? And the White House didn't tell the DOJ the National Archives told the DOJ. How cold he have been so irresponsible. They say the recent search was warrantless . That is only because they knew the FBI had plenty of cause for a warrant. So Biden had no real choice.
Yes Joe we know you take classified documents and you have been doing it for at least 14 years. Seriously!

Folks you have heard it first here first. This is going to prove to be part of Joe's influence peddling scheme.

yes......seriously.....he knows people who take classified documents.....
 
They were also double locked, the FBI had him purchase a lock for the door of the room they were stored in. They were protected by the Secret Service, inside a house most folks cannot get into, and in a locked room as requested, locked front door, blocked by secret service agents, locked in a room in a basement... somewhat secure. Stupid that he kept them, because Trump isn't the smartest man we ever elected and it seemed he wanted to "win" so much that the right thing was no longer an option.

At Brandon's house though, they were in the garage, next to his car. The "right thing" only became the thing to do after he spent time in September "shocked" at how it "happened" and how much HE would never have done anything like that... Suddenly we have documents that have been there since he was a frikkin' Senator, and those shouldn't be there at all, they do not get to take home documents as Senators or Congresscritters, they have need to know and get access within a SCIF at the Capitol.

We do not know how classified Biden's documents were. We do know that he was not using them for a nefarious purpose like Trump, since they were sitting around for years, They were just misplaced. Not all classified docs require a SCIF. That is for very highly classified.
We know Trump stole some of the most highly classified documents we have.
 
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They were also double locked, the FBI had him purchase a lock for the door of the room they were stored in. They were protected by the Secret Service, inside a house most folks cannot get into, and in a locked room as requested, locked front door, blocked by secret service agents, locked in a room in a basement... somewhat secure. Stupid that he kept them, because Trump isn't the smartest man we ever elected and it seemed he wanted to "win" so much that the right thing was no longer an option.

At Brandon's house though, they were in the garage, next to his car. The "right thing" only became the thing to do after he spent time in September "shocked" at how it "happened" and how much HE would never have done anything like that... Suddenly we have documents that have been there since he was a frikkin' Senator, and those shouldn't be there at all, they do not get to take home documents as Senators or Congresscritters, they have need to know and get access within a SCIF at the Capitol.

Thats a complete lie, and you know it. I just posted a story showing trump kept his documents in a closet along with lawn and garden equipment. He also kept them on his office desk for anyone to see. Does every one of you spend the day lying on this site? Oh yes, there were more docs found in trumps NY office.
 
I'm ahead of you. My daily driver is a Grand Cherokee. The little Corvette is in hibernation right now...where it belongs.

I'd really love to commission the Lincoln build, but it's probably a selfish thing to do.
Still, it lingers in my head.
The 1964 suicide door Lincoln convertible is a sweet ride. I particularly like how the rear windows automatically roll down when you open the door.
 
I don’t want to draw any equivalence between Biden’s actions and Trump’s, and I don’t want to provide excuses for either president’s conduct, but both of these episodes are in part the result of a totally broken classification system. Far too much information is classified, and many of the things that are classified are classified for the wrong reasons — not because their disclosure would harm national security, but because their disclosure would be embarrassing or inconvenient or simply because it’s easier for bureaucrats to classify them than not to.

When everything is classified, then nothing is classified.Given the number of classified secrets, and the number of people who have access to those secrets, it’s just practically impossible for the national security bureaucracy to keep track of them.

It is not even against the rules or laws to duplicate the Classified Documents, so long as the ones receiving the copies have the right security clearance.

These classified documents could be in the garages of anyone who ever was in a Classified Briefing and received a copy. People stuff them in their brief case and who really knows what happens to them. I mean that's like many thousands of people out there.

These things show up at every presidential library, and have to be accounted for, and declassified. Presidential Libraries hold more than 30 million pages of textual classified materials and more than 1,000 rolls of classified microfilm from the Franklin D. Roosevelt through George W. Bush Presidential administrations. In addition, the Libraries hold more than three terabytes of classified electronic records.

In the case of whistleblowers charged under the Espionage Act, the accused are not even permitted to explain their motive for leaking or publishing classified materials that expose government abuses or crimes. These cases are relegated to a technical yes-or-no question about mishandling classified intelligence. And the criminal sentences have been extreme. In 2018, Reality Winner, who tried to blow the whistle about Russian attempts to penetrate software used in some U.S. voting systems, was sentenced to more than five years in prison after pleading guilty to one felony count of unauthorized transmission of national defense information. Drone whistleblower Daniel Hale was given a 45-month sentence in 2021 after pleading guilty to the same charge as Winner. Both were prosecuted under the Espionage Act.

There have also been recent cases*in which government employees have been prosecuted for taking classified documents for more mundane purposes. In early 2020, Asia Janay Lavarello, a civilian Defense Department employee on temporary assignment at the U.S. Embassy in the Philippines, was working on a classified thesis in a secure facility in the embassy when Covid-19 restrictions limited her access. In March, she took home three other classified theses, which she said she wanted to use as models for her own project, as well as notes she made during classified meetings in the embassy. In a plea agreement, Lavarello also admitted to emailing notes to her personal email and to making false statements to FBI agents. She went to prison for three months. Lavarello’s lawyer said she regretted her actions and did not intend to harm the U.S. “Government employees authorized to access classified information should face imprisonment if they misuse that authority in violation of criminal law as Ms.*Lavarello did in this case,” said U.S. Attorney Clare E. Connors. “Such breaches of national security are serious violations of criminal law, and we will pursue them.”

Lavarello’s case stands in stark contrast to those of Bill Clinton’s former national security adviser Sandy Berger and former CIA Director David Petraeus. Berger stole documents from the National Archives in 2003 by stuffing them inside his clothing and then destroyed some classified materials. He claimed he wanted to review the documents to prepare for his testimony before the 9/11 Commission. Petraeus was forced to resign as CIA director in 2012 after it was revealed he had improperly handled classified materials, including taking some to his home and sharing them with his biographer with whom he was having an affair. Berger was fined $50,000 by a federal judge and lost his security clearance, and Petraeus got two years probation and a $100,000 fine. “The way that breaches of classification works is too often: Strict liability for thee, impunity for me,” said the ACLU’s Wizner. “‘Thee’ being anybody who works lower down in the system, and ‘me’ being anyone who has any power.”

In a recent paper for the Knight First Amendment Institute, Jaffer argued that the sprawling classification infrastructure within the U.S. government has operated counter to democratic ideals. “In the years since 9/11, the United States has paid a staggering price for excessive secrecy. Time and again, national security policies crafted behind closed doors and shielded from public scrutiny have proved to be deeply flawed, with far-reaching consequences for life, liberty, and security,” he wrote. “The executive overclassifies for many different reasons — among them, that officials are rarely sanctioned for overclassifying information; that classifying information can afford the classifier bureaucratic advantage; and that classifying information can shield controversial decisions from scrutiny both inside and outside the government.”

Wizner, who has served as the principal legal adviser to NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden since 2013, said that this moment offers an opportunity to challenge the system of overclassification and unnecessary secrecy that has become a centerpiece of U.S. governance. “The problem with almost everything being classified is that it gives the government almost unlimited power and discretion to go after anyone who is a powerless violator and to give a free pass to the powerful,” he asserted. “Snowden’s revelations led to meaningful reforms in Congress, the courts, and the executive branch. Even former Attorney General Eric Holder has acknowledged that Snowden performed a public service.”

None of this appears to be relevant to much of the media coverage or political pontification these days, but it should be. “If history is any guide here, neither of these presidents will be seriously sanctioned for their mishandling of government secrets,” says Jaffer, a veteran civil liberties litigator who waged battles over excessive secrecy throughout the George W. Bush and Obama presidencies. “As a general rule, whistleblowers who disclose secrets in order to inform the public of government wrongdoing are prosecuted aggressively and sanctioned harshly. But senior officials who disclose secrets recklessly, or in order to manipulate public opinion about government policy, tend to be treated with kid gloves.”

Most of my comments came from the internet, and some I just threw in there for grins and giggles!
 
Don't forget about the length of time it takes to build one.
You might not be able to drive it by the time it's finished.
If you do, I doubt it would be any better in the winter than
the Vette would be. Well, maybe for a short distance...

You're right. it may take too long for me to ever enjoy it.
If we were to go ahead, which is honestly improbable at this point, it would also be a summer car like the Corvette.
We have a Grand Cherokee.

But I do love those 60's Lincolns. When the other guys were lusting for the New Stingrays [I guess the first ones were actually Sting Rays], the Lincolns were my dream.
Even as a kid, my vibe was more Sinatra than the Beach Boys!
Must have been the neighborhood.
 
Thats a complete lie, and you know it. I just posted a story showing trump kept his documents in a closet along with lawn and garden equipment. He also kept them on his office desk for anyone to see. Does every one of you spend the day lying on this site? Oh yes, there were more docs found in trumps NY office.
Wow, you are stupid.

https://www.businessinsider.com/trump-asked-lawyers-add-padlock-office-before-fbi-search-2022-8

The reality was, they were in a known room, they were shown the room, and it was that room that he was asked to add a padlock to the door on...

When reality doesn't really meet with what you think you know you just double down on stupid. Must be a sign of a Florida Man, and why they are so often in the news.
 
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