As far as I can tell, Trump doesn’t have a notion of “other people’s stuff” at all. There is stuff that is in his possession, and stuff temporarily out of his possession, but the idea of a thing “belonging” to someone other than him is simply a non-concept; an oxymoron.
So, it’s not laziness, any more than it’s laziness if someone kept asking me to give them my car, and I kept blowing them off. That he occasionally gives in is laziness–eventually it becomes a lot of work to keep saying no.
It’s nothing to do with being the president, per-se. The presidency just gave him access to more stuff, like if a bank vault had been left open and he went in and cleared it out. But it was still his regardless, because everything is his.
Pretty much everything Michael Cohen says can be dismissed as self-promotional babbling, but he does bring attention to something that was buried in a WaPo article and hasn’t attracted much commentary: These boxes of documents were effectively Trump’s “filing system,” just disorganized collections that they’d “rummage through” when they needed something specific. The boxes would travel with Trump, unsorted and barely secured, including on foreign trips.
Cohen wildly speculates that the docs were for sale on these trips, but to my mind this better supports the alternative concept explored in this thread: “the docs are mine, I put them in these boxes because I needed them, and you can’t have them.” They were his records, so obviously and tautologically they’re his records.
At least, that’s sufficient for the initial situation. The evidence that the boxes were re-examined and re-sorted prior to the first return to the archives suggests something else.
(And the idea that these boxes traveled from hotel room to hotel room overseas is another horrifying subject entirely, but outside the scope of this thread.)
Trump has shown a single-minded attempt to profit monetarily from the presidency since the day he took office (see emoluments). While he may not have know the value of anything he was absconding with he was will to grab boxes of documents and figure out their worth later.
What other reason would such a man want them for? He certainly has no interest in reading them. He does not intend them for his library (will he even have one?). I cannot see how he can impress guests by taking them to the basement to show them boxes he says has something interesting in them.
I can only think he meant to make money from them even if he was unclear how that would work when he took them.
The actual SCIF would have probably just been one room, or a self-contained suite of rooms, that had been upgraded to meet the security requirements. I’m pretty sure the people doing that work, and approving it for use, knew their jobs a lot better than the typical Trump sycophants.
The real problem was Trump becoming president in the first place. No matter how good your systems and policies are, if they’re being overseen by an idiot with a vested interest in not following the rules, you’re going to have problems.
As much as I hate to defend Trump, the Daily Beast article you linked to in your subsequent post seems to indicate that Trump wanted to identify people to replace ODNI, presumably looking them over in search of Trump-friendly sycophants.
Not to compile a list of covert operatives to sell to Putin so he could bump them off.
The use here of the term “top spies” is misleading; it evokes cloak and dagger secret agents. “Senior ODNI employees” would be more accurate.
I know it’s common usage to refer to the DNI as the nation’s “head spy” or “top spy”. But there’s less potential for confusion there: we know that the DNI ain’t Maxwell Smart.
Without knowing how many times he called other foreign leaders, that doesn’t really mean anything.
One might also note that he’s accused of doing things like calling Raffensperger a handful of times to get him to change the vote, within the space of a week or two, still calling congressmen and other people to convince them to change the vote even now, two years later, etc.
Trump is an idiot but there are some reasons for his ability to accomplish the things that he has accomplished. One of those things is incessant whininess and a lack of shame in calling people over and over and over again to harass them for what he wants.
We don’t know a lot about those conversations. It’s obvious why Trump has those documents.
The information that President Trump has deliberately sought to conceal information on his conversations with Vladimir Putin is a major departure from previous practices. We already knew that President Trump met one-one one with Putin in Helsinki in July, without aides or note-takers present and accompanied only by his interpreter. We also knew that Trump had an earlier, initially undisclosed [hour-long conversation] with Putin at the 2017 Group of 20 meetings in Hamburg, with only the Russian translator present.
At another meeting between Trump and Putin in Hamburg, only Secretary of State Rex Tillerson was present from the U.S. side. We now know that Trump took possession of the translator’s notes from that meeting, and told the translator not to discuss what had happened with other people in the administration. Here’s why this hurts other administration officials.
I didn’t say otherwise. I said that the number “16” is meaningless without a point of comparison. My oven gets a bit toasty to crawl in for my taste but, on the scale of the universe, it’s really a pretty mild temperature. Minus a frame of reference, these numbers aren’t small nor big, they’re just numbers.