I have a different take on the email controversy.
Let me start with one quote from the statement by Comey:
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While not the focus of our investigation, we also developed evidence that the security culture of the State Department in general, and with respect to use of unclassified e-mail systems in particular, was generally lacking in the kind of care for classified information found elsewhere in the government.
Lots of people think that way too many documents are getting classified as "secret" or "top secret". I would expect many people in the state department to agree with that statement, but very few among the FBI. Hence I would expect that state department official might occasionally slip and discuss "top secret" matters over a communication system that is not classified to discuss "top secret" matters. I would expect someone from the FBI to get outraged if he found out about that. Seems to me that this is exactly what happened. I mean, let the FBI comb through 60,000 emails by any top government official who isn't themselves from a law enforcement or military background, and I'd expect the FBI to find 52 that are officially classified "top secret" and would not be allowed to discussed on the given systems security classification. (Also note that on this part, the private email server is a bit of a red herring - it would have been equally against regulations to do that on the department email servers.)
I find the following two quotes in combination self-righteous and outrageous:
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there is evidence that they [Secretary Clinton and her colleagues] were extremely careless in their handling of very sensitive, highly classified information.
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Opinions are irrelevant [...] Only facts matter, and the FBI found them here in an entirely apolitical and professional way.
With all respect to the director of the FBI, which information is "very sensitive" is a political judgement that he shouldn't be making without presenting us the evidence. It may also be a matter of opinion what constitutes "extremely careless" handling of information. I mean, just consider the fact that we know that the state department email servers got hacked, and there is no evidence that Clinton's email server got hacked.
With a little less respect to the director of the FBI, I think he is overstepping his role. His role was to determine the facts, and to decide whether to bring an indictment against Clinton. It wasn't to make a political judgement on her behaviour. And if he really wants to make such a judgement, he at least should provide us with the evidence. He is a Re
Secondly, I would bet that email systems provided by government agencies at the time were completely unusable for anyone sending a large amounts of email per day. I mean, I certainly always tried to avoid using University-provided email servers back then when that was possible and allowed! "Convenience" is a completely sufficient explanation for why she decided to do that.
(Of course, that does not make it a wise decision!)
Finally:
barmar, on 2016-July-07, 08:39, said:
The conservative news channels, as well as late night comedy programs, have been having a field day with a montage that intercuts her claims with the report's findings that directly contradict them. But she didn't make those statements during official testimony, just stump speaches, so she can't be accused of perjury. Lying during campaigns may not be required by law, but it's a practical necessity.
Can you give an example of such a lie, where it is clear that it was an intentional lie?
The easiest way to count losers is to line up the people who talk about loser count, and count them. -Kieran Dyke