The scandal in which the highest-ranking Trump defense and intelligence officials planned a war on their cell phones and, inexplicably, dragged in a journalist as they did so continued to be the hottest topic of conversation yesterday. The two most notable threads of it all involve (a) the people involved in it claiming that nothing classified was discussed on the chat; and (b) people on the right trying to personally discredit the journalist who was included, Jeffrey Goldberg of The Atlantic, for some reason.
The claims that the chat did not contain classified material are ridiculous on their face. They literally planned an act of war, discussed its strategy and the president's thinking, and then went into detailed specifics regarding targets and stuff while also identifying covert CIA operatives by name. I understand that lie, lie, lie, lie has generally been a winning strategy for Republicans for the past ten years but anyone who believes this particular lie is either a blithering idiot or they're just saying they believe it in order to help circle the political wagons.
The attempts to discredit Goldberg, while predictable, are bizarre. Partially because, as noted yesterday, everyone involved already admitted that what he wrote was true. But also because the more disgraceful Republicans make Goldberg out to be " or the more they claim they have no idea who he is " the worse it looks for the people involved in the chat in the first place. I mean:
Mike Waltz lies that he's "never met, don't know, never communicated with" Jeffrey Goldberg
bsky.app
Isn't it worse for Waltz that he added a complete stranger to that chat than it would be for him to accidentally added the wrong contact? I feel like that would be worse.
Or how about this from Donnie Jr:
x.com
OK, you coked-out moron, let's assume you're right! Indeed, let's assume you're understating things! Let's assume that not only is Goldberg a Democrat with ties to Hillary Clinton but that he's a time-traveling spy from the 1950s Soviet Union who has "Death to America!" tattooed on his forehead! That's be fun! But wouldn't that also make the National Security Advisor adding him to a group chat and top governmental officials not noticing him as they share top secret national security plans even worse? You do see how that would make things worse, right?
None of this changes a thing, of course. Indeed, the more these guys focus on Goldberg the farther they stray from the actual point: a journalist's presence notwithstanding, these guys are running national security on their unsecured cell phones. What else is being run on unsecured cell phones? What other acts of comical irresponsibility are they engaging in that we don't yet know about because they haven't been intentionally and directly broadcast to the Beltway media?
As I said yesterday, this is a scandal that, before 2016, would end a presidency. It would, at the very least, lead to multiple high-level forced-resignations. And it's all happening because these guys are stupid as hell and are even more arrogant than they are stupid, which is a pretty special combination. So it tracks that their half-assed defenses of their actions here are also infected with stupidity and arrogance.
Testimony raises questions about Pete Hegseth's handling of secrets and sensitive communications
www.nbcnews.com
...Rep. Don Bacon, R-Neb., a retired Air Force general, scoffed at Hegseth's assertion that no war plans had been shared on the text chain.
"That's baloney,' Bacon told reporters. "Just be honest and own up to it." ...
Nine years ago, Hegseth, speaking on Fox News on Election Day in 2016, harshly criticized Hillary Clinton's use of a private email server.
"Any security professional, military, government, or otherwise, would be fired on the spot for this type of conduct and criminally prosecuted for being so reckless with this kind of information," he said. ...
Houthi group chat: What top Trump officials claimed vs. what the texts show
www.axios.com
... "No classified info"
Gabbard under oath to the Senate Intelligence Committee: "I can attest to the fact that there were not classified or intelligence equities that were included in that chat group at any time."
- - - Ratcliffe concurred, though both officials later deferred to Hegseth as the ultimate authority for classifying and declassifying Defense Department materials.
The texts include highly detailed information about the sequencing of an attack that had yet to take place.
- - - Under intelligence community guidelines, information "providing indication or advance warning that the U.S. or its allies are preparing an attack" should be treated as "Top Secret."
State of play: The president and senior officials like the secretary of defense have considerable discretion over what information is classified, and whether to declassify it after the fact.
- - - But Gabbard and Ratcliffe declined to offer any explanation in the hearing as to why this information would not have been considered classified at the time it was inadvertently shared with Goldberg. ...
Source:
www.reddit.com
The Signal controversy reveals a deeper structural failure in American governance"one where critical national decisions are increasingly being made through emotional urgency rather than long-term strategy. Instead of relying on formal institutional channels that emphasize oversight, accountability, and deliberative planning, key actors are using encrypted group chats to coordinate actions like military strikes and geopolitical maneuvers. This shift reflects not just a communication breach, but a breakdown in trust within the system itself. When senior officials feel the need to bypass established processes, it signals that they prioritize speed, optics, and internal loyalty over legal procedure or strategic modeling.
This emotionally driven decision-making loop leads to instability on multiple fronts. Public trust erodes when actions appear impulsive or tribal, rather than rational and transparent. Foreign nations struggle to interpret U.S. policy when decisions are made in secret, informal forums with unclear lines of authority. As a result, global actors are left guessing who is truly in control"and whether decisions represent the state, a faction, or a momentary mood.
The most dangerous consequence is that strategy becomes reactive and performative. Decisions are no longer about shaping the future, but about sending messages, managing perception, or reinforcing in-group consensus. Governance becomes a feedback loop of emotional impulses disguised as policy. If left unchecked, this trend will accelerate the collapse of institutional legitimacy and deepen the fragmentation of global order.