Currently the iceberg above the surface is about the size of India...I guess that depends on whether you think there's more to the iceberg.
Well, by that logic drunk drivers should be let go as long as there is no harm.Where is the harm?
Who was hurt?
For those who say this is anything please answer these questions or admit this is nothing but a political witch hunt.
Well, by that logic drunk drivers should be let go as long as there is no harm.
So the fear is she has an addiction to this as people have with alcohol?
Maybe we can come up with another scandal-suffix for the fake attacks on Hillary?Well, some people certainly have an addiction to fake Hillary Clinton scandals.
Are you saying there isn't a "vast-right wing conspiracy" against Hillary Clinton?
Or the Benny Hill-ary show?Hillary Stoners?![]()
So your "vast-right wing conspiracy" is not vast, but it is?Are you saying there isn't a "vast-right wing conspiracy" against Hillary Clinton?
I have said that there is not a "vast...etc.", but in this instance I am making much more specific point about ... MY GOSH, no wonder her wonderfulness is being so relentless persecuted.![]()
Someone already linked an article pointing that it wasn't legal at the time. As for being "expressly prohibited", consider that Clinton can't pull it off alone. Everyone that she sends emails to at the State Department (and other branches of government) and who send emails to her would know that it's not a government address, and they'd have to be in on it. There are fifty thousand emails from Clinton's tenure at her server, and it is simply inconceivable that nobody at State Department would have raised questions about it if it was "expressly forbidden", if not for any reason than to cover their own asses.I still don't see anything except than idiocy of State Department for allowing external email servers to be used at all...
It's odd you would think this. Not only is it expressly prohibited, but it's technically illegal. If this wasn't someone "important" it wouldn't be a witch hunt. It would be a plea bargin. A lower level career government employee could actually loose their job. And that's not a easy thing to loose.
My wife works for the Federal Government. So I've heard the stories about the level of criminal activity required to eventually remove a government employee.
Someone already linked an article pointing that it wasn't legal at the time. As for being "expressly prohibited", consider that Clinton can't pull it off alone. Everyone that she sends emails to at the State Department (and other branches of government) and who send emails to her would know that it's not a government address, and they'd have to be in on it. There are fifty thousand emails from Clinton's tenure at her server, and it is simply inconceivable that nobody at State Department would have raised questions about it if it was "expressly forbidden", if not for any reason than to cover their own asses.It's odd you would think this. Not only is it expressly prohibited, but it's technically illegal. If this wasn't someone "important" it wouldn't be a witch hunt. It would be a plea bargin. A lower level career government employee could actually loose their job. And that's not a easy thing to loose.
My wife works for the Federal Government. So I've heard the stories about the level of criminal activity required to eventually remove a government employee.
Imagine what would happen if your wife suddenly started using her personal email for work. It would be impossible, because her colleagues would refuse to send her any emails (because everyone knows that it is not allowed), and if they received any would immediately either question her why she was not using proper work email, and would likely escalate and report it if such behaviour persisted. Your wife simply couldn't do it unless almost everyone she works with would either be colluding with her, or be completely clueless about the the security policies at her workplace.
Someone already linked an article pointing that it wasn't legal at the time. As for being "expressly prohibited", consider that Clinton can't pull it off alone. Everyone that she sends emails to at the State Department (and other branches of government) and who send emails to her would know that it's not a government address, and they'd have to be in on it. There are fifty thousand emails from Clinton's tenure at her server, and it is simply inconceivable that nobody at State Department would have raised questions about it if it was "expressly forbidden", if not for any reason than to cover their own asses.
Imagine what would happen if your wife suddenly started using her personal email for work. It would be impossible, because her colleagues would refuse to send her any emails (because everyone knows that it is not allowed), and if they received any would immediately either question her why she was not using proper work email, and would likely escalate and report it if such behaviour persisted. Your wife simply couldn't do it unless almost everyone she works with would either be colluding with her, or be completely clueless about the the security policies at her workplace.
Regardless, it is clearly expressly forbidden to have classified information on a personal server.
It remains to be seen whether Clinton could be found to have violated the Espionage Act, a law that the Obama administration has used repeatedly against whistleblowers. The relevant section of the law says that it is a crime to retain classified material. Clinton, for her part, said Tuesday that she did not send classified information from the personal address, and that the server she used was protected by the secret service and suffered no security breaches.
The Justice Department leveled just that charge against NSA whistleblower Thomas Drake and James Hitselberger, a former Navy linguist who sent classified documents to an archive at the Hoover Institution. Former Los Alamos scientist Wen Ho Lee also was infamously charged with 10 counts of retaining classified data for storing information on tapes.
There are two big hurdles to making such a determination in Clinton's case, said Steven Aftergood, who heads the Federation of Americans Scientists' Project on Government Secrecy. Officials have said it does not appear as if Clinton discussed classified matters over email, and the secretary of state has broad latitude to decide what is classified.
"Any email that the secretary of state sends is at least sensitive, and would be of interest to many foreign intelligence agencies, but that's not the same as it's classified or that mishandling is punishable under the Espionage Act," Aftergood said.
That would make Clinton's case different from that of former Gen. David Petraeus, who handed obviously secret material to his biographer, and recently pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor count of mishandling classified information.
Aftergood thought there was "zero chance" that Clinton would face a prosecutor based on what is currently known, but he allowed that it was possible if the material is later determined to be classified.
No the memo.
No the memo.
Hillary's Attorney: "Your honor, my client never got a memo expressly forbidding her to break federal law."
Judge: "Did your firm represent Richard Nixon?"
Hillary's Attorney: "No your honor. But it was a free legal tip from Bernie Madoff.".
No the memo.
Hillary's Attorney: "Your honor, my client never got a memo expressly forbidding her to break federal law."
Judge: "Did your firm represent Richard Nixon?"
Hillary's Attorney: "No your honor. But it was a free legal tip from Bernie Madoff.".
Anyone remember the leak of the CIA NOC-List agent under W? Or when the W Admin spilled the beans about how our drones could fire weapons? How about that time when the W Admin was playing spin when our soldiers were being blown up in Iraq between '03 and '06? Then you have Iran-Contra when the Reagan Admin illegally sold weapons to the fucking enemy.
And here we are hearing about people whining about email security. Not selling secrets. Not compromising American security. Not aiding the enemy. Email security.
What is the actual harm done by this?
Who was hurt and how?
Is the fear that as president she will continue the policy?
I fear she will continue the drone policy.
There we can see real victims and harm. A real issue.
Just curious ... if it were a Republican accused of violating document production and classification, would you be as lenient?