COMMUNITY United States Politics Thread: Trump's Second Term

I caught the last few minutes of the hearing. That was a shit show. How does the heads of our intelligence agencies get away with saying they don’t recall so much in a hearing. Their business is to know shit.

And I know they know, but to not be prepared with at least intelligent deflections is just crazy.
 
I caught the last few minutes of the hearing. That was a shit show. How does the heads of our intelligence agencies get away with saying they don’t recall so much in a hearing. Their business is to know shit.

And I know they know, but to not be prepared with at least intelligent deflections is just crazy.
I watched it. Shit is hilarious

I think there was too much to go over that they forgot about the fact that messages were set to disappear after a certain time

Like there's so much illegality of it that they couldn't cover everything. It's so sad lol
 
Hire a Drunk Frat Boy man child as the United States Secretary of Defense 🤣🤣🤣🤦🏾‍♂️
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President Trump's Ukraine and Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff was in Moscow, where he met with Russian President Vladimir Putin, when he was included in a group chat with more than a dozen other top administration officials — and inadvertently, one journalist — on the messaging app Signal, a CBS News analysis of open-source flight information and Russian media reporting has revealed.

Russia has repeatedly tried to compromise Signal, a popular commercial messaging platform that many were shocked to learn senior Trump administration officials had used to discuss sensitive military planning.

NSA warned of vulnerabilities in Signal app a month before Houthi strike chat​


The National Security Agency sent out an operational security special bulletin to its employees in February 2025 warning them of vulnerabilities in using the encrypted messaging application Signal, according to internal NSA documents obtained by CBS News.

News of the NSA bulletin comes amid the continued fallout from an explosive articlepublished Monday in The Atlantic. The publication's editor-in-chief, Jeffrey Goldberg, detailed how Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth inadvertently disclosed war plans to him in an encrypted Signal chat group two hours before the U.S. military launched attacks against Houthi militia in Yemen. Goldberg wrote that Hegseth's messages included "precise information about weapons packages, targets, and timing."
 
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