An arrest has been made for a soldier that leaked classified information. If convicted, the penalty should be harsh, including the death penalty. First, they should find out if he's being railroaded by those that are looking for a sacrificial goat. With the current government, it's a possibility, since they can't even drum out an officer that dresses in drag.
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Ayyyy, yes. Is he being scapegoated or is this a "look over here moment" that was planned or...who knows.
ReplyDeleteCan't trust anything from this admin.
Dave Drake
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I'm wondering how he had access, if the allegations are true. Was he a hacker? Did he have access due to the stupidity of a commanding officer?
DeleteSo when will they find the Supreme Court leak?
ReplyDeleteI'm not thrilled with this guy betraying the trust placed in him, but the penalty should be just as harsh for the administration that has us in the position documented by the leak.
American soldiers fighting in Ukraine?
With the Supreme Court leak being slow walked, one of the justices knows, or is protecting somebody they suspect.
DeleteNEVER punish the government criminals violating their oath, waging illegal and unconstitutional wars, but for sure punish the guy with the courage to expose the truth. LOL
ReplyDeleteI'm thinking the real criminals in this investigation are being protected by railroading an airman.
DeleteTeach young Americans that their country is awful and also that it hates them and . . . what do they expect?
ReplyDeleteIt makes me wonder about the motive of all involved.
DeleteIt's EXTREMELY unlikely that a National Guardsman that age would have access to and clearance for such Intel. It's HIGHLY likely that he is being scapegoated to protect the real leaker. Odds are good he gets Epsteined before he has a chance to clear his name.
ReplyDeleteThat's one of my thoughts, too. It's easier to create evidence, charge someone without a clue, and get rid of them before they can clear their name.
DeleteBCE is calling BS on this and I am tending to agree. A junior officer? With access to stuff like this? Pull my other finger.... and now supposedly, General Milley is 'stepping down'. When a guy like that bails out to 'spend more time with his family in retirement' you KNOW something is up.
ReplyDeleteThis one stinks to high heaven - even the 'info' is bogus. Something is going on... and I suspect chaos reigns in the Globohomo power centres. The wheels are coming off and and as the depth, width and scope of the Ukranian fiasco becomes known... nobody wants to get any on themselves...
Hackers are good at what they do, and with just a little extra access, they can hack into what are probably computers never checked for security concerns. After all, it's the government that handles the computers, and they can't even balance their checkbook.
Deletethese days they allow access to low ranks b/c they have the skill/training to operate these systems. but before we condemn any low rate, when is brandon going to answer for the semi-trailer load of ts docs they recovered from chinatown and the college?
DeleteI think the lower ranking military members with clearance are surprised at the subterfuge, some may feel the need to expose what they find, and the real fact is too much is going on that has nothing to do with national security, such as the Ukraine debacle.
DeleteThe current president is so deep in the pockets of others, hiding his documents is how he attempts to avoid prosecution. With an honest U.S. Attorney, the amounts of indictments would be astounding, and he wouldn't be insulated from prosecution.