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BumRushDaShow

(153,283 posts)
Mon May 12, 2025, 03:14 PM May 12

Justice Department's Todd Blanche appointed acting Librarian of Congress

Source: CBS News

Updated on: May 12, 2025 / 1:17 PM EDT


The Department of Justice's second-in-command can add "librarian" to his résumé. Todd Blanche has been appointed acting Librarian of Congress, the Justice Department confirmed Monday. Blanche is President Trump's former personal criminal attorney. It is unclear if the career lawyer has previously done work involving the Dewey Decimal System (or the Library of Congress Classification system). Two other Justice Department officials have also added Library of Congress positions to their portfolios.

Associate Deputy Attorney General Paul Perkins has been assigned acting register of copyrights, and Blanche's deputy chief of staff Brian Nieves was appointed acting deputy librarian of Congress. The three lawyers now lead the largest library in the world, housing millions of books, films, audio recordings, photographs, manuscripts and other documents. The library serves as Congress's primary main research arm, and the nation's copyright office. Perkins is replacing Shira Perlmutter, who took over as register of copyrights in October 2020, during the first Trump administration.

Last week, Perlmutter and her office issued a lengthy report expressing concerns about the use of copyrighted material by artificial intelligence programs. Blanche served as lead attorney during Mr. Trump's 2024 New York criminal trial, in which a unanimous jury found Mr. Trump guilty of 34 felony charges of falsifying business records. Mr. Trump has denied the allegations and appealed his conviction. Blanche's appointment comes after the firing May 8 of Carla Hayden, who had been librarian of Congress since 2016. She was the first woman and first Black person to hold the position.

Robert Newlen, a Library of Congress staffer for more than 40 years, was initially tapped to replace Hayden in an acting capacity. In a Monday morning email to colleagues, obtained by CBS News, he addressed the turmoil in the library's top ranks. "You may have read that the White House has appointed a new acting Librarian," Newlen wrote. "Currently, Congress is engaged with the White House, and we have not yet received direction from Congress about how to move forward. We will share additional information as we receive it."

Read more: https://www.cbsnews.com/news/todd-blanche-trump-attorney-librarian-of-congress/



I saw this - https://www.democraticunderground.com/10143457935

But multiple sources are confirming the 3 -

AP - Deputy attorney general who defended Trump in hush money trial is named acting librarian of Congress

Forbes - Trump Names His Former Defense Attorney As Temporary Librarian Of Congress After Ousting Predecessor

Reuters - US deputy attorney general tapped to serve as acting librarian of Congress

Axios - Trump naming his former defense attorney as acting Librarian of Congress
40 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Justice Department's Todd Blanche appointed acting Librarian of Congress (Original Post) BumRushDaShow May 12 OP
How better to burn the books? And the Declaration of Independence, The Constitution, ... erronis May 12 #1
The theft of priceless American artifacts. Irish_Dem May 12 #2
The theft in many formats... slightlv May 12 #15
The scope and depth of the crimes is mind boggling. Irish_Dem May 13 #19
The crime spree keeps finding levels I couldn't have fathomed, yellow dahlia May 13 #30
I kept warning that Trump was a vicious, ruthless psychopath. Irish_Dem May 13 #34
Writers are going to have to up their writing game on crime novels slightlv May 13 #37
Except no one would believe a crime novel along the lines of the Trump Crime Family. Irish_Dem May 13 #38
Media critical of Trump and republicans will be off the shelves. And supportive DEI material. Norrrm May 12 #3
This is to let Elon steal copyrighted materials for his AI firm. SunSeeker May 12 #4
Not just Elon. All the AI bros. highplainsdem May 12 #6
it's all a joke Karch May 12 #5
Nothing is sacred, anymore. littlemissmartypants May 12 #7
Nothing is sacred - exactly. yellow dahlia May 13 #29
Can't wait to see who the next Poet Laureate is BaronChocula May 12 #8
OOOOH! Pick Kid Rock!! Pick Kid Rock!!! BurnDoubt May 12 #11
Oh my BaronChocula May 12 #16
The grift continues - he gets a justice department salary as well as the library of congress salary. And the MAGAts iluvtennis May 12 #9
It's like they meet every night just to decide bluestarone May 12 #10
I just read a post indicating this is a Legislative Branch Appointment... BurnDoubt May 12 #12
I saw the same thing about 30 minutes ago BumRushDaShow May 12 #13
this is what is being reported by Rachel NJCher May 12 #14
By statute the Librarian of Congress is appointed by the President with the advice and consent of Congress onenote May 12 #17
45 doesn't care, nor do the DOGE people, as none have a clue about the web of laws that created these agencies/Boards BumRushDaShow May 13 #22
No doubt, But my post wasn't directed at Trump or Doge onenote May 13 #24
"the president can't name the register of copyrights -- by law, that authority is vested in the Librarian of Congress." BumRushDaShow May 13 #31
We know Trump ignores the law. But that doesn't mean it isn't important to point out what the law actually is onenote May 13 #35
And his intransigence was my point BumRushDaShow May 13 #36
The congress doesn't care. choie May 13 #32
Yup BumRushDaShow May 13 #33
With respect to the Librarian, the post you saw is inaccurate. See post #24 onenote May 13 #25
It's like they're using AI to figure out how to break things fast. mahina May 13 #28
Congress is not executive branch department. Guess who's Library? (other than ultimately US citizen's in trust). . . nt Bernardo de La Paz May 13 #18
The Librarian is a Presidentially appointed 10-year termed person though BumRushDaShow May 13 #23
The courts disagree onenote May 13 #27
Thanks. Iinterested to see who the Senate confirms -- Blanche or Newlen. ancianita May 13 #20
Have they hired someone to dust the librarian's chair? JustABozoOnThisBus May 13 #21
I actually gave a lecture and served on a panel lapfog_1 May 13 #26
No more Dewey Decimal System kskiska May 13 #39
The Library of Congress has its own classification system onenote May 13 #40

erronis

(19,877 posts)
1. How better to burn the books? And the Declaration of Independence, The Constitution, ...
Mon May 12, 2025, 03:22 PM
May 12

This disgusts me in the extreme.

slightlv

(5,572 posts)
15. The theft in many formats...
Mon May 12, 2025, 10:31 PM
May 12

all those years of documents, video, etc., for Elon to train his AI on... all the while being able to do it with no costs incurred for the rightful owners of those copyrighted assets. This had to be one of Elon's main reasons for financing and buying trumps oval office.

Irish_Dem

(70,086 posts)
19. The scope and depth of the crimes is mind boggling.
Tue May 13, 2025, 06:36 AM
May 13

And I am certain we don't yet know the full story.

Yes the millions Musk spent installing Trump into office was the best investment ever made.
He paid peanuts to reap billions and billions of dollars.
And got off the hook from current and future investigations.

yellow dahlia

(2,446 posts)
30. The crime spree keeps finding levels I couldn't have fathomed,
Tue May 13, 2025, 12:50 PM
May 13

or even conjured in my wildest dreams.

Irish_Dem

(70,086 posts)
34. I kept warning that Trump was a vicious, ruthless psychopath.
Tue May 13, 2025, 03:13 PM
May 13

Who would stop at nothing to get what he wants.

Even I am astounded how it all keeps playing out in detail.

slightlv

(5,572 posts)
37. Writers are going to have to up their writing game on crime novels
Tue May 13, 2025, 04:09 PM
May 13

in the future. trump beats them all with real life!

Irish_Dem

(70,086 posts)
38. Except no one would believe a crime novel along the lines of the Trump Crime Family.
Tue May 13, 2025, 04:24 PM
May 13

Too outrageous.

Karch

(14 posts)
5. it's all a joke
Mon May 12, 2025, 04:10 PM
May 12

to Trump. Appointing an attorney to the position of Acting Librarian of Congress as well as other unqualified people to positions of power in the government. God help us all.

iluvtennis

(21,227 posts)
9. The grift continues - he gets a justice department salary as well as the library of congress salary. And the MAGAts
Mon May 12, 2025, 06:04 PM
May 12

are salivating that a white male has taken a job away from a black woman.

BurnDoubt

(522 posts)
12. I just read a post indicating this is a Legislative Branch Appointment...
Mon May 12, 2025, 06:14 PM
May 12

and not in his remit. Apparently Congress makes these appointments. ????? I guess you'd have to know about the Constitution to know that.--- Poo Tee Weet.

BumRushDaShow

(153,283 posts)
13. I saw the same thing about 30 minutes ago
Mon May 12, 2025, 06:48 PM
May 12
https://www.mediaite.com/news/trumps-attempted-library-of-congress-takeover-thwarted-as-two-of-his-appointees-were-escorted-off-the-premises-cbs-news/

Except the Library of Congress is not part of the executive branch — it’s under the legislative branch.


I expect this is like the CBO (Congressional Budget Office) and the GAO (Government Accountability Office) which are offices under Congress.

In the case of the CBO, the Speaker of the House and Senate Pro Tempore appoint someone as "Director".

In the case of the GAO, it is headed up by the Comptroller General, which is a Presidential Appointee but the office is under Congress.

Like the above CBO & GAO, the Library of Congress is under Congress but the Librarian is a 10-year termed position appointed by the President.

NJCher

(40,202 posts)
14. this is what is being reported by Rachel
Mon May 12, 2025, 09:42 PM
May 12

I was shocked when I heard it because she said a group of employees who reported to the Library were turned away!

onenote

(45,259 posts)
17. By statute the Librarian of Congress is appointed by the President with the advice and consent of Congress
Mon May 12, 2025, 11:42 PM
May 12

One issue is whether and under what circumstances, the president can fire the librarian, who by statute is appointed to a ten year term.
Another issue is whether the president can name an acting librarian and, if so, what rules apply to such an appointment.
One thing that is clear is that the authority to name the register of copyrights is vested by statute in the Librarian of Congress, not the president.

As someone who has practiced before the Copyright Office for over 40 years, it is going to be interesting to see how this mess is resolved. Folks who work at the Library, and in particular at the Copyright Office, are quite fearful of what comes next.

BumRushDaShow

(153,283 posts)
22. 45 doesn't care, nor do the DOGE people, as none have a clue about the web of laws that created these agencies/Boards
Tue May 13, 2025, 08:55 AM
May 13

But they are good at forcing OTHER PEOPLE to have to spend money to defend against the 45 administration's disdain of the government, lack of "looking something up", and the resultant damage done by the criminality.

onenote

(45,259 posts)
24. No doubt, But my post wasn't directed at Trump or Doge
Tue May 13, 2025, 10:59 AM
May 13

It was for the folks who have been posting that the president has nothing to do with the Library of Congress. In fact, the DC Circuit has held that the Librarian is a "Head of Department" within the Executive Branch. See MEDICAL IMAGING & TECHNOLOGY ALLIANCE et al v. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS et al, No. 1:2022cv00499, citing Intercollegiate Broad. Sys., Inc. v. Copyright Royalty Bd., 684 F.3d 1332, 1342(D.C. Cir.2012).

The argument could be made that while the appointment of the Librarian is a presidential power, subject to Senate confirmation, the president can't fire the Librarian without cause because by statute, the Librarian serves a ten year term. However, there is court precedent that supports the conclusion that a president can fire an appointee before the end of the appointee's statutory term.

So, it could end up being that Trump can fire the Librarian and, possibly, appoint an acting Librarian just as a president can name an "acting" replacement for other presidential appointees. If so, then the acting librarian probably can fire the deputy librarian and the register of copyrights and name their replacements.

The only thing that is clear is that the president can't name the register of copyrights -- by law, that authority is vested in the Librarian of Congress.

BumRushDaShow

(153,283 posts)
31. "the president can't name the register of copyrights -- by law, that authority is vested in the Librarian of Congress."
Tue May 13, 2025, 01:01 PM
May 13

And BY LAW the president "can't impound funds" either. As I posted 3 months ago - https://www.democraticunderground.com/?com=view_post&forum=1002&pid=20010201

--------

Nixon's Impounding of Billions in Federal Money Is Complicated Issue, Abounding in Misconceptions

By Richard D. Lyons Special to The New York Times
Oct. 7, 1973



WASHINGTON, Oct. 6—In 1970 the Missouri Highway Commission sought Federal funds due the state from gasoline taxes to help complete Interstate 44 through St Louis and for other roads. But the money was unavailable because the White House wanted to cut spending and thus put a brake on inflation.

The result of the seemingly mundane squabble was a lawsuit against the Department of Transportation that the highway commission won, a blizzard of similar suits by state and special interest groups against 10 other Federal agencies over the withholding of Federal funds, a major confrontation between the White House and Congress over which conrtols the purse strings, and the addition of the word “impoundment” to the Federal lexicon. Viewed by an accountant, the issue might only be that of money — $28‐billion worth, or $14.5‐billion, or $18‐billion or even $21‐billion, depending on who is counting and how.

Some Congressmen have pictured the impoundment issue as an embattled Senate and House pitted against the “one‐man rule” of President Nixon, as House Speaker Carl Albert put it. Some constitutional authorities may regard impoundment merely as the interpretation of that section of Article I that states that “no money shall be drawn from the treasury but in consequence of appropriations made by law.” And to some in state government the issue is not only money but also deception, even outright “lying,” by some Federal agencies about the amounts of Federal money due their local counterparts.

The impoundment issue is complicated, in part because of practices dating back 170 years, to the conflicting wording of even recently enacted legislation, to the lack of a clear decision by the Supreme Court, and to the current struggle between the President and Congress over unrelated matters such as the Watergate tapes.

(snip)



This resulted in Congress passing a law to clarify what can and cannot be done. This law actually created the CBO (Congressional Budget Office), moved the federal fiscal year to begin October 1st instead of July 1st, AND forbid the President from arbitrarily "impounding" funds appropriated by Congress without approval. I believe it fully took effect in 1976.

H.R.7130 - Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act of 1974

Public Law No: 93-344 (07/12/1974)
(LATEST SUMMARY)

Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act - Declares the purposes of this Act. Sets forth the definitions of terms used in the Act.

=Title I: Establishment of House and Senate Budget Committees= - Establishes a Standing Committee of the Senate to be known as the Committee of the Budget. Establishes such a Committee of the House. Outlines the composition and duties of the committees. Provides that each such committee shall make a continuing study of the effects of budget outlays and devise methods of coordinating tax policies with budget outlays.

=Title II: Congressional Budget Office= - Creates a Congressional Budget Office and outlines the duties of such Office. States that the function of the Office is to provide information to the Budget Committees of the two Houses and to other Committees of the two Houses with respect to the budget, appropriation bills, and other bills providing budget authority or tax expenditures.

Abolishes the Joint Committee on Reduction of Federal Expenditures. Provides for public access to budget data.

Directs the Director of the Office to submit to the Committees on the Budget of the House of Representatives and the Senate a report, for the fiscal year commencing on October 1 of that year, with respect to fiscal policy, including new budget authority, total outlays, levels of tax expenditures under existing law, projected economic factors, and any changes in such levels based on proposals in the budget submitted by the President for such fiscal year.

Authorizes the Director of the Office to: (1) equip the Office with up-to-date computer capability; (2) obtain the services of experts and consultants in computer technology; and (3) develop techniques for the evaluation of budgetary requirements.

=Title III: Congressional Budget Process= - Sets forth a timetable with respect to the congressional budget process for any fiscal year. Prescribes, under such timetable, the rules for consideration of concurrent resolutions on the budget. Requires that concurrent resolutions on the budget must be adopted before appropriations and changes in revenues and the public debt limit are made. Sets forth exceptions to this provision.

=Title IV: Additional Provisions to Improve Fiscal Procedures= - Provides that it shall not be in order for either House to consider any bill which provides new advance spending authority unless that bill provides that such authority is to be effective only to the extent as is provided in appropriation Acts.

Requires the Director of the Congressional Budget Office, to the extent practical, to prepare an estimate of costs expected to be incurred in carrying out each bill or resolution.

Defines "new spending authority" for purposes of this Act. Provides that it shall not be in order for either the Senate or House to consider any bill authorizing a new budget authority for any fiscal year unless such bill or resolution is reported on or before May 15 preceding the beginning of such fiscal year.

=Title V: Change of Fiscal Year= - Changes the fiscal year of the Treasury, beginning on October 1, 1976, to commence on October 1 of each year and to end on September 30 of the folowing year. Provides for the conversion of authorizations of appropriations to comply with the new fiscal year.

=Title VI: Amendments to Budget and Accounting Act, 1921= - Provides that the Presidential budget shall include the same elements as the Congressional Budget. Provides for five-year budget projections.

=Title VII: Program Review and Evaluation= - Requires the Comptroller General, upon request, to assist any Congressional committee in developing a statement of legislative objectives and goals, methods of assessment, and the feasibility of pilot testing. Requires the Comptroller General, when requested, to assist Congressional committees in analyzing program reviews or evaluation studies prepared by and for any Federal agency.

Authorizes the Comptroller General to establish an Office of Program Review and Evaluation within the General Accounting Office. Authorizes the employment of up to ten experts.

Provides for a continuing study of additional budget reform proposals designed to improve and facilitate methods of congressional budget-making. Requires that such proposals shall include the following: (1) improving the information base required for determining the effectivness of new programs by such means as pilot testing, survey research, and other experimental and analytical techniques; (2) improving analytical and systematic evaluation of the effectivness of existing programs; (3) establishing maximum and minimum time limitations for program authorization; and (4) developing techniques of human resource accounting and other means of providing noneconomic as well as economic evaluation measures.

=Title VIII: Fiscal and Budgetary Information and Controls= - Provides that the Secretary of the Treasury, and the Director of the Office of Management and Budget, in cooperation with the Comptroller General of the United States, shall develop, establish and maintain information systems for fiscal, budgetary, and related information. Provides that such information shall be furnished to Congressional committees upon request.

=Title IX: Miscellaneous Provisions: Effective Dates= - Makes technical and conforming amendments to the provisions of the Legislative Reorganization Act of 1946.

Provides for the application of the Congressional budget process to the fiscal year 1976.

=Title X: Impoundment Control= - Impoundment Control Act provides that nothing contained in this Act, or in any amnendments made by this Act, shall be construed as: (1) asserting or conceding the constitutional powers or limitations of either the Congress or the President; (2) ratifying or approving any impoundment heretofore or hereafter executed or approved by the President or any other Federal officer or employee, except insofar as pursuant to statutory authorization then in effect; (3) affecting in any way the claims or defenses of any party to litigation concerning any impoundment; or (4) superseding any provision of law which requires the obligation of budget authority or the making of outlays thereunder.

Makes technical amendments to the Antideficiency Act. Repeals the existing impoundment reporting provision of the Budget and Accounting Procedure Act of 1950.


---------

Point being - They. Don't. Care. And I'll go further to say, and don't give a shit, because "unlimited pardon power".

onenote

(45,259 posts)
35. We know Trump ignores the law. But that doesn't mean it isn't important to point out what the law actually is
Tue May 13, 2025, 03:24 PM
May 13

Last edited Tue May 13, 2025, 05:36 PM - Edit history (1)

And to provide correct information on this site.

I am confident you don't think that, just because Trump ignores the law, whether it is in firing people or impounding funds or any number of other things he does folks shouldn't challenge those decisions in the courts. But to challenge them, it is important to know what the law actually is.

BumRushDaShow

(153,283 posts)
36. And his intransigence was my point
Tue May 13, 2025, 03:57 PM
May 13


And as you have seen, I *do* try to post links/excerpts to applicable portions of the Constitution, the laws, and the Regulations in the statutes (CFR), and will dig up and post links to any motions/complaints/filings etc., referenced in OP articles.

choie

(5,500 posts)
32. The congress doesn't care.
Tue May 13, 2025, 01:15 PM
May 13

Most of this shit wouldn’t be able to be done without Congress’ silence.

BumRushDaShow

(153,283 posts)
33. Yup
Tue May 13, 2025, 01:24 PM
May 13

They (the GOP) are busy trying to take from the poor and give to the billionaires. Literally lifting up every sofa cushion looking for "loose change" and combing through every file to find some obscure agency to gut.

onenote

(45,259 posts)
25. With respect to the Librarian, the post you saw is inaccurate. See post #24
Tue May 13, 2025, 11:00 AM
May 13

The Librarian is not appointed by the legislative branch. The position is filled by presidential appointment with Senate confirmation. The register of Copyrights is appointed by the Librarian.

A lot of folks assume that because it is the Library of "Congress" it is a part of the legislative branch. It is not.

mahina

(19,763 posts)
28. It's like they're using AI to figure out how to break things fast.
Tue May 13, 2025, 11:33 AM
May 13

I’m sure there’s a way for us to find out what is done I want to. Does anybody here know how to track what they are doing?

Bernardo de La Paz

(56,038 posts)
18. Congress is not executive branch department. Guess who's Library? (other than ultimately US citizen's in trust). . . nt
Tue May 13, 2025, 04:44 AM
May 13

BumRushDaShow

(153,283 posts)
23. The Librarian is a Presidentially appointed 10-year termed person though
Tue May 13, 2025, 09:00 AM
May 13

But the actual running of it is under Congress (like the CBO and GAO).

onenote

(45,259 posts)
27. The courts disagree
Tue May 13, 2025, 11:28 AM
May 13

See post #24.

The Congressional Budget Office and the GAO both are legislative branch agencies. The Library of Congress has been held to be an executive branch agency. Neither the CBO nor GAO are subject to the Administrative Procedure Act, the Library is. In the case of the CBO, the director is appointed by the Speaker of the House and the Senate's President Pro Tem. While GAO is headed by the Comptroller General, who is a presidential appointee, how the CG is appointed is the subject of a rather convoluted statutorily mandated procedure unlike anything applicable to the Librarian of Congress.

How the Comptroller General is Selected

The Congress established the current procedure for nominating a Comptroller General when it passed the GAO Act of 1980. Under the act, the Comptroller General is appointed by the President with the advice and consent of the Senate. When a vacancy occurs in the office of the Comptroller General, the Congress establishes a commission to recommend individuals to the President. The commission consists of the following:

The Speaker of the House of Representatives
The President Pro Tempore of the Senate
The majority and minority leaders of the House of Representatives and the Senate
The Chairman and Ranking Member of the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs
The Chairman and Ranking Member of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform
The commission must recommend at least three individuals to the President, and the President may request that the commission recommend additional individuals. The President then selects an individual from those recommended to nominate as the new Comptroller General. The President's nomination must be confirmed by the Senate. Comptrollers general are appointed for one nonrenewable 15-year term.

ancianita

(40,503 posts)
20. Thanks. Iinterested to see who the Senate confirms -- Blanche or Newlen.
Tue May 13, 2025, 07:10 AM
May 13

Pure speculation here, but perhaps Blanche would use the Library of Congress to a) get at any and all info that might provide mitigating context for the felon's still outstanding NY sentencing (on his 34 fraud convictions, if/when he ever decides to leave the WH, and not that the Library of Congress would necessarily have that info, but who knows),
or b) help Bondi in her ongoing investigation of Jack Smith, or c) facilitate its feeding of DOGE's AI (?).

Hopefully, any of these, besides the fact that he has no background in library science, might affect his confirmation, if the Senate ever bothers with "actings" these days.


JustABozoOnThisBus

(24,151 posts)
21. Have they hired someone to dust the librarian's chair?
Tue May 13, 2025, 08:12 AM
May 13

I'm sure Blanche will never actually sit in it. He has better things to do than "librarian stuff"

lapfog_1

(30,900 posts)
26. I actually gave a lecture and served on a panel
Tue May 13, 2025, 11:26 AM
May 13

at a Library of Congress seminar on Data Archival...

We have a major problem which has happened over the last 60 years or so... most of our data, things we would like to preserve for future generations, is electronic. Storing all of that data ( Exabytes of it now ) is one problem... actually solved by market forces and ever increasing density of new data storage devices. The problem is twofold, how do we keep the data around for 100s of years and, conversely, how do we keep providence of the data ( i.e. where is our proof that the data that is retrieved 100 years from now is still the original data ).

Both of these areas are something I happen to know quite a bit about since I was entrusted with keeping all of NASA's collected data on our solar system ( including all of the data on Planet Earth, sort of important to some the people here that are posting historical environmental data actually collected by NASA and NOAA in the MTPE ).

Your federal government spent billions of dollars getting that data... some the missions launched before I joined NASA are still sending back trickles of information to us. It would be sort of important to keep the data and make it easily usable by people in 2025 and 2050 and 2100, etc.

It's not just data storage devices that don't last that long, the computers that wrote it, the software that wrote it and can read it, the data formats, even the representation ( digital ) of the numbers has changed ( anyone remember 1's complement numeric encoding schemes? ). The only answer is to copy all of the data forward... and because you can't really determine what might be important, you have to copy it all... and port the software... and do it before the old storage hardware breaks ( just try and find 7 track 256 bpi reel to reel tape with vacuum draw tape drives... and if you could, what in the hell would you attach them to? )

Anyway, the Library of Congress sponsors research into these sorts of topics. Too bad Trump and his "personal attorney" will likely destroy it all.

onenote

(45,259 posts)
40. The Library of Congress has its own classification system
Tue May 13, 2025, 05:43 PM
May 13

The L of C and many if not most research and university level libraries rely on the L of C classification system rather than the Dewey Decimal system used by most public libraries and high school libraries.

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