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Who determines if a document is classified?

submitted by Sleazy to AskUpgoat 2 monthsFeb 28, 2025 13:06:05 ago (+3/-0)     (AskUpgoat)

According to goog "The federal government has a fairly simple process for classifying documents. The originator of a document, usually a foreign policy or national security staff member, decides if it needs to be classified. In almost all cases this is a simple decision."

Seems kind of fishy to me, I wonder if there is any oversight on what is a classified document and if it really should be


7 comments block


[ - ] FreeinTX 2 points 2 monthsFeb 28, 2025 13:18:04 ago (+2/-0)

There is a criteria that they are supposed to follow and limitations. For example, you aren't supposed to be able to classify a document for no other reason than to conceal a crime. But it's a judgement call and corruption is real.

[ - ] jfroybees 1 point 2 monthsFeb 28, 2025 17:10:39 ago (+1/-0)

The bolsheviks currently in power.

[ - ] Sleazy [op] 0 points 2 monthsFeb 28, 2025 17:49:12 ago (+0/-0)

since 1871

[ - ] Thyhorrorcosmic103 1 point 2 monthsFeb 28, 2025 16:55:26 ago (+1/-0)

Technically the President is the only person with the ultimate power to classify or declassify anything, so it is probably somewhere in EO's that have been issued.

[ - ] Sleazy [op] 0 points 2 monthsMar 2, 2025 11:37:34 ago (+0/-0)

So everything that the government has classified was supposed to have been approved for classification by the president?

[ - ] Thyhorrorcosmic103 0 points 2 monthsMar 2, 2025 13:17:39 ago (+0/-0)

Technically. Because the president cannot be literally involved in everything the Executive branch handles, the rules are delegated through EO's. I believe this stems from Article II section 2 of The Constitution.

[ - ] Sleazy [op] 0 points 2 monthsMar 2, 2025 13:28:36 ago (+0/-0)

The president designates people to oversee it, makes sense