What can be done, though? The people tasked with holding such egregious offenses accountable have decided, purely for partisan reasons, that nothing should be done.
Not only the journalist accidently added to an off book SignalGroup with auto-message delete settings, not only side copying classified messages to family, it's also come to light that:
Hegseth had unsecured internet set up in office to connect to Signal, sources say
US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth had an internet connection that bypassed the Pentagon's security protocols set up in his office to use the Signal messaging app, sources say.
The internet line was connected to his personal computer and was at risk of potential hacking or surveillance, the sources added.
The day drinking head of the US DoD has an office computer that links both "dirty" public internet and "secure" Pentagon intranet . . .
Rumours persist that there's more revelations in the pipeline as the former weekend cable goofy piece host treats national security like axe throwing ( https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pMrVdFnjEjs ).
What can be done, though? The people tasked with holding such egregious offenses accountable have decided, purely for partisan reasons, that nothing should be done.
The French model comes to mind
Unsurprisingly, it gets worse ...
Not only the journalist accidently added to an off book SignalGroup with auto-message delete settings, not only side copying classified messages to family, it's also come to light that:
Hegseth had unsecured internet set up in office to connect to Signal, sources say
- https://www.abc.net.au/news/2025-04-25/hegseth-had-unsecured...
The day drinking head of the US DoD has an office computer that links both "dirty" public internet and "secure" Pentagon intranet . . .Rumours persist that there's more revelations in the pipeline as the former weekend cable goofy piece host treats national security like axe throwing ( https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pMrVdFnjEjs ).