OK no. Come on, she didn't attend a political rally, she attended a riot.
Her actual culpability can't be determined here (ie did she stay back and not go into the Capitol?) and would be up to the appropriate UCMJ authority to determine.
From what I see she resigned voluntarily and wasn't denied due process at all. I don't blame her, because I suspect she realized that association with something like this is NOT something you can easily recover from (probably bottom of the pack in every rack and stack while she's at that command for poor judgment).
Let's not use hyperbole, because that's exactly what got us here in the first place.
I agree the Congressman's opinion is not "helpful" but I would have a hard time disagreeing that a PSYOPs Captain in the SF who can't recognize misinformation probably isn't going to be very effective at her job in support of the SF mission.
A few points.
1. Are you saying that attendance at the rally is automatic attendance at the riot at the Capitol? Because they’re two separate events, and the headline of that article would tell you so. What constitutes attendance? A passerby on the street who stops and listens? Did you need to be holding a sign? Bottom line, no one knows, except her, whether or not she was present at the Capitol that day. An investigation will likely determine that in due course.
2. The congressman was urging the denial of due process. That should concern you. That was the first article I read where it said she has resigned, and I doubt very much whether or not he was aware of her resignation when he posted that unless she had let him know personally.
3. What, exactly, is the misinformation that she is unable to recognize? She attended the rally as a private citizen, not as an Army Captain going to listen to her Commander-in-Chief. She is entitled, just like you, to have political interests and beliefs, she just may not attend political events in uniform. She is clearly very educated about what is and is not allowed in that sense.
4. The point of all of this is not whether you personally agree with what she did, or what she believes. Those are both inconsequential and immaterial. She was allowed (by law) to attend the rally, and she is allowed (again, by law) to have her own political beliefs. Those rights should not be infringed upon by anyone. The fact that I keep hearing fellow officers advocating for censorship and denying guaranteed protections is unsettling.