At one point, Joe Biden identified the guy who was carrying the football.
I realize that a lot of people who railed against Hillary Clinton's scandalous mishandling of classified information really just wanted her scalp. However, I trust that most of the people here who did were -- like me -- serious about the national security issues. This stuff should cause an uproar. It's not a game for Trump and his rich golfing buddies.
Analysts familiar with nuclear policy said it was unusual for an aide to agree to be photographed with a civilian, although it was not clear he knew the image would be circulated on social media.
Sorry, but the person best situated to know what should or should not be allowed is the guy carrying the briefcase. That was my first thought: "What kind of moron allowed that?" And I wasn't thinking of someone in the administration. You want to be an aide, you need to know your job better than that.
Just sayin'. I would hope that once someone is selected to be an aide, they don't need administration officials following them around to make sure they know how to do their own job. My take is this is on the aide.
This seems like a tempest in a teapot to me. Poor judgment, but no one should be expecting civilians to know this stuff. This is part of the problem with both sides playing "gotcha" all the time. Dumb stuff gets blown way out of proportion.
...and this was what made me think you were suggesting the same thing:
This stuff should cause an uproar. It's not a game for Trump and his rich golfing buddies.
I'm not sure it should cause an uproar. A reprimand seems more in line with it, and the military guy is the one whose job it was, not to have his picture taken if that presents some kind of problem.
Trum, as King, tells Americans what to do. Not the other way around. That is the natural state of human organizations. The leaders says something and the followers do it, not the other way around.
We never saw that with Obama, just saying
ReplyDelete-Mississippi
At one point, Joe Biden identified the guy who was carrying the football.
ReplyDeleteI realize that a lot of people who railed against Hillary Clinton's scandalous mishandling of classified information really just wanted her scalp. However, I trust that most of the people here who did were -- like me -- serious about the national security issues. This stuff should cause an uproar. It's not a game for Trump and his rich golfing buddies.
Do we know how this happened? I can think of several ways - some of which would be attributable to the administration and some to this guy's C.O.
ReplyDeleteOk, after a quick Googling (from the WaPo)
ReplyDeleteAnalysts familiar with nuclear policy said it was unusual for an aide to agree to be photographed with a civilian, although it was not clear he knew the image would be circulated on social media.
Sorry, but the person best situated to know what should or should not be allowed is the guy carrying the briefcase. That was my first thought: "What kind of moron allowed that?" And I wasn't thinking of someone in the administration. You want to be an aide, you need to know your job better than that.
Just sayin'. I would hope that once someone is selected to be an aide, they don't need administration officials following them around to make sure they know how to do their own job. My take is this is on the aide.
Since I'm ranting anyway, here's the link:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.washingtonpost.com/news/checkpoint/wp/2017/02/13/nuclear-football-photo-taken-at-trumps-golf-resort-puts-the-pentagon-in-an-awkward-position/?utm_term=.0df5fcd5976a
This seems like a tempest in a teapot to me. Poor judgment, but no one should be expecting civilians to know this stuff. This is part of the problem with both sides playing "gotcha" all the time. Dumb stuff gets blown way out of proportion.
I'm not pointing at any particular individual. I'm just saying, "No."
ReplyDeleteYou'll get no argument from me on that one. But you're the only person I've seen not suggesting this is the fault of the Trump administration :p
ReplyDelete...and this was what made me think you were suggesting the same thing:
ReplyDeleteThis stuff should cause an uproar. It's not a game for Trump and his rich golfing buddies.
I'm not sure it should cause an uproar. A reprimand seems more in line with it, and the military guy is the one whose job it was, not to have his picture taken if that presents some kind of problem.
Pay for Play. If you don't pay, you don't play.
ReplyDeleteTrum, as King, tells Americans what to do. Not the other way around. That is the natural state of human organizations. The leaders says something and the followers do it, not the other way around.
ReplyDelete