Interesting, that report. From my reading, it did not substantiate that Mr. Biden's actions in regard to having documents at his homes are worthy of prosecution. The report noted that it has been common practice for presidents to 'take home' documents for various purposes, and a process exists for turning them back in. Seems that Mr. Biden's error was 'forgetting' to do that. It was noted that Mr. Trump is the one and only president who willfully and repeatedly has refused to turn requested documents in, for which he is under investigation.
I take note of David's use of the term "brain dead", which reflects his misunderstanding, of the term. Clearly Mr. Biden was not "brain dead" during his vice presidency nor during his presidency. He was alert, breathing, moving purposefully (walking, talking, eating). Nowhere close to "brain dead."
Memory loss, dementia, even coma, none of those meet the medical nor legal diagnosis of brain death, no matter how much one may dislike or disagree with a person with those conditions. If a person is alert at any level, even the severest level of dementia, he is not "brain dead."
If one is attempting to convince another of something using cogent persuasive arguments, use of "brain dead" to characterize a target of the debate would be inappropriate, erroneous. It can be assumed that readers 'get' the point being attempted, but it doesn't lend credibility.
Candy