707guy
"You can't make this shit up..."
Well said. Now shut the fuck up, new guy.
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Classic...
Well said. Now shut the fuck up, new guy.
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...it is a picture of you with your brother.
There is grey area.
FTA: "The military has had a policy since the Civil War limiting the free speech of service members, including criticism of the commander in chief."
How is that vague or grey at all?
IIRC, the ruling from the JAGs at Legal O Skool was that single, normal-size bumper stickers are 1st Amendment protected; it's the idiot who puts a "Bush/Cheney '00" or "Obama/Biden '08" custom vinyl applique across his windshield that will get hammered. But I also think that that ruling was for more generic campaign stickers. As a Legal O, if I saw that a member of my command had a bumper sticker calling the sitting President an idiot, I would be running it by their DivO/LCPO at a minimum, and maybe the XO.So a guy in the parking lot at work has the IDIOT bumper sticker Like you can find here:
http://www.cafepress.com/+obama_idiot_bumper_sticker,394498094
He comes and goes to work in uniform. Kosher? I don't think this kind of expression is acceptable myself. Just saw it today and this thread got me thinking...
...if those people above us are not following the Constitution, is it not our duty to uphold it and call them out?
We all had our cute little training about refusing unlawful orders. But does not this still apply?
This is my point; the policy is not cut and dried. Why else would Rep Duncan Hunter become involved or the USMC seeking further from OSD?
http://www.washingtonpost.com/busin...ad-on-donkey/2012/04/05/gIQAz2oYyS_story.html
Your working knowledge of ucmj qualifies you as a constitutional scholar? I know mine sure as shit doesn't. There's a mechanism in place already for deciding if the executive and legislature are following the constitution. That's what the courts are for. It's not the job of the military to "call them out" and make decisions about national policy. You want to see what happens when armies decide that is their job, there's plenty of examples in Africa, South America, etc.
Those of us in uniform are free to debate and disagree, sure. Disrespect and disobey, you're crossing a line.
In your mind, what would be a good example of when an individual should step in and determine the constitutionality of an order or policy on their own?If the mechanism is already there then why swear us to it as well? Like a backseater ejecting, if you invoke the Constitutionality rule when not warranted, you'll only get yourself in needless trouble and look stupid. However, everyone develops their own thresholds (radalt showing 150' and pointed at a mountain on a 500' leg with no correction by the pilots after screaming at them isn't usually a specific criteria in the NATOPs) as to when to be their own seat commander. While there are plenty of military junta cases there are also plenty where the military / security force becomes a tool of a bad regime since they were loyal to a person vs principles.
This.The "illegal orders" some seem to be fulminating about exist mostly in their heads.