During the presidential campaign, a pattern emerged around Donald Trump and his team. It went a little something like this: Donald Trump would say something outrageous or incorrect or absolutely terrifying, and then someone from his team or even Trump himself would then claim that the thing he said, yeah, he never said it. Well, it looks like we didn't leave that behavior behind with the election. Earlier this week, our next president continued his campaign of casting doubt on the intelligence community's finding that Russian hackers meddled in our election process. But this time, he added an air of mystery and a promise of coming revelation. This comes from The Hill:

"I think it's unfair if they don't know. And I know a lot about hacking. And hacking is a very hard thing to prove. So it could be somebody else." "I also know things that other people don't know, and so they cannot be sure of the situation," Trump responded when asked why he doubts intelligence reports of Russian hacking, according to a pool reporter. When asked what Trump knows that other people don't know, Trump responded, "You'll find out on Tuesday or Wednesday."

I mean, whoa. That sure sounds like our president-elect claiming that he has some secret information that he plans to reveal to the world. The reason it sounds like that is because that's exactly what he said. So, should we expect some shocking reveal tomorrow or Wednesday? Well, of course not. And incoming press secretary Sean Spicer is here to set us straight. The section starts at 1:05.

"It's not a question necessarily of revealing.... He’s going to talk about his conclusions and where he thinks things stand. He’s not going to reveal anything that was privileged or was shared with him classified. I think he can share with people his conclusions of the report and his understanding of the situation and make sure people understand there’s a lot of questions out there."

So there you go. When Trump says he's going to tell the world something they don't know on Tuesday or Wednesday, what he means is, he will not reveal anything. Cool. Glad we had this talk. It's almost shocking that more than half of the American people polled don't think Trump is ready to handle the duties of the presidency. And before anyone starts crying partisanship, both George W. Bush and Barack Obama had numbers north of 70 percent before their inauguration.