kenberg, on 2023-January-14, 08:43, said:
This will probably be an over-simplification but perhaps it is a start: An aide to high-level person X checks out a Top Secret document on behalf of X. The document should have a number, and X should receive a notice that this document has been checked out on his behalf, and X should acknowledge receipt of this notification. X is now responsible for this document. After some length of time, perhaps six months, X could be notified that the document has not yet been returned, after which X either returns it or says no he still needs it. If X is leaving his position, maybe his term has come to an end or he is retiring or whatever, then he should get a notice that he is still in possession of unreturned Top Secret documents. He should then return them.
The above is just a first try, but the problem needs to be addressed. Secret and Top Secret documents should not just be forgotten. Documents classified as Confidential present the additional problem that, as I understand it, almost any observation of anything can get stamped "Confidential". But still, if we are going to classify documents with some secrecy rating then we should treat that classification seriously.
Short version: Sure, Trump is a problem, but that is not the only reason Top Secret documents should not be left lying around.
I am not in the slightest giving Biden or anyone else a pass for mishandling documents. I am critical of our media who will treat this as a he said /she said equivalency and allow the right ink space and air time to feign outrage, and thus selling to the not-so-interested-to-dig-deeply that you think the Democrats should win back the idea that both parties are equally crooked.
Biden did it; he shouldnt have.
Trump did it; he shouldnt have.
These actions are not the same. Do you think any of the mainstream media will bother to explain how they differ and that difference is what matters?