This is the exact type of major that made me reluctantly choose not to re-up in the Air Force.
I wanted to make AF my career, her leadership ruined it for me and I was only under her command for a year.
Article 88 that piece of shit.
Here’s some more of the Air Force idiot. Apparently, this was organized through a far-left NGO…and outgoing Congressman Al Green.
I would LOVE to be this dude’s commander. I would have some fun!😜
Communists are putting the nation in the prisoner’s dilemma.
In this dilemma, the victory ALWAYS goes to the aggressor. The one who breaks the norms by crossing the line first.
So in the current construct, they will win.
There is a revolution unfolding in the country right now. Communism spreads like WILDFIRE when unchecked.
You can’t vote your way out of it once you vote it in. It takes full advantage of our tolerance and constitution until it kills us with both.
The only way to win the prisoner’s dilemma is to counterattack. Few are going to be comfortable with what that might look like. (Think Spanish Civil War).
We objectively KNOW what happens when this goes unchecked. 100+ million dead are the proof.
The question is, what are we willing to do to stop what we know is coming?
Nobody tell the progressives, but their favorite Founding Father, Broadway star Alexander Hamilton, actually held some of the STRICTEST immigration views of the entire founding generation. He believed immigration should serve the nation, not that the nation should exist to simply serve the world. And he warned that admitting foreigners indiscriminately into citizenship would be like wheeling the Trojan Horse directly into the citadel of our liberty and sovereignty.
The vote that would create the United States was deadlocked, and the man who could break the tie was eighty miles away, dying of cancer, on the wrong side of a thunderstorm.
His name was Caesar Rodney. On the first of July 1776, while Congress argued itself toward independence in Philadelphia, he was stuck back in Delaware. He was tamping down Loyalist trouble, in constant pain from the cancer eating at his face and fighting for breath due to his asthma.
Then the letter came. Delaware's two delegates in Congress were split. One for independence, one against. Without a tiebreaker, the colonies would not stand united. And a divided front was exactly what the Crown was counting on.
He did not hesitate. He climbed onto his horse near midnight and rode straight into the storm. Lightning split the sky. The roads turned to sludge. A journey that normally took two days but he made it in eighteen hours. He stopped only to change horses, soaked with every mile.
He reached Independence Hall on the morning of July 2 just as the vote was called, still in his boots and spurs. Caked in mud. Thomas McKean never forgot the sight of him standing in the doorway.
Rodney walked in and cast his vote for independence. It broke Delaware's tie, and with that, not a single colony stood against the break from Britain.
On this day, 250 years ago, a dying man rode all night through a storm so America could be born.
America 250 🇺🇸
The older I get, the more I realize we have the strongest military protecting the most precarious and delicate idea: liberty.
That word didn’t mean much to me earlier in life. But with the resurgence of communism, it crashes into my soul like a wrecking ball.
Liberty or death.
🇺🇸 Gettysburg 163 Live: July 1st, 11:00 AM
The first Medal of Honor action of the Battle of Gettysburg unfolds.
As the 6th Wisconsin Infantry charges the deep, unfinished railroad cut, hundreds of trapped Confederate soldiers from the 2nd Mississippi find themselves unable to climb out or fire over the steep dirt walls.
Corporal Francis A. Wallar goes forward into the pit and wrestles the battle flag completely away from the Mississippi regiment's color guard.
He immediately sends the captured banner to the rear.
The trapped defenders surrender, an entire regiment.
The "Black Hats" of the Iron Brigade secure an incredible victory.
Wallar will become one of the rare soldiers to survive every single battle of the war without ever missing a single roll call.
🇺🇸 Gettysburg 163 Live: July 1st, 12:30 PM
Gettysburg resident John Burns decides he is not hiding in his cellar.
The 69-year-old civilian walks directly onto the active battlefield wearing a blue swallowtail coat and a top hat.
Armed with a personal rifle, the elderly constable reports straight to the front line and demands a place in the ranks.
Sent over to fight alongside the fierce Midwesterners of the Iron Brigade, Burns settles into the woods and opens fire.
He spends the afternoon calmly picking off targets from behind a tree, refusing to yield an inch of ground.
Despite taking three bullet wounds, the old veteran survives the onslaught to become an absolute national legend.
@scs_real Agreed. The Amendment should have had a built in expiration clause. Allowing the change by executive fiat would have been an unreasonable expansion of executive power. The Law of Unintended Consequences would eventually bite us in the ass.