You must disobey unlawful orders

I am pretty sure that the way the USMJ is written, which is the only thing that matters here, must refuse is wrong......it is can refuse.
 
Maybe. Maybe not. Either way, telling the country that our military is committing war crimes is a bad idea.
The truth is never a bad idea. Why do you think it would have been better to cover up My Lai? Are you in America or are you one of foreign assholes posting from a East European country?

Sgt. Ron Haeberle, a U.S. Army photographer attached to Charlie Company, documented the events of the day. He used a black-and-white camera for official Army records but shot in colour on his personal camera. Many of the black-and-white images depicted soldiers questioning prisoners, searching possessions, and burning huts; although the destruction of property violated U.S. military command directives, such actions were typical of a search-and-destroy mission and did not provide direct evidence of war crimes. Haeberle’s personal colour photographs, which he did not turn over to the Army, were later published in the Cleveland Plain Dealer and Life magazine. One graphically depicted a trail littered with the bodies of dead women, children, and infants, and another captured a group of terrified women and children moments before they were shot. These photographs served to galvanize the anti-Vietnam War movement and would become some of the most recognizable images of the war.


As the massacre was taking place, Warrant Officer Hugh Thompson was flying a scout helicopter at low altitude above My Lai. Observing wounded civilians, he marked their locations with smoke grenades and radioed for troops on the ground to proceed to those positions to administer medical aid. After refueling, Thompson returned to My Lai only to see that the wounded civilians subsequently had been killed. Spotting a squad of U.S. soldiers converging on more than a dozen women and children, Thompson landed his helicopter between the two groups. Thompson’s door gunner, Lawrence Colburn, and his crew chief, Glenn Andreotta, manned their weapons as Thompson hailed other helicopters to join him in ferrying the civilians to safety. In 1998 Thompson, Colburn, and Andreotta (posthumously) were awarded the Soldier’s Medal for acts of extraordinary bravery not involving contact with the enemy.
 
Not what happened but an honorable idea if war crimes were being committed, and we'll see if the boat killings keep happening.
So, Marty, you want the boats to continue bringing drugs into our country, killing millions, including children.

Not to worry, enough drugs will get through to keep you supplied.

These Narco-terrorists have been designated to be terrorists and are open game, on land and sea.

Why are you giving support to Narco-terrorists who are killing our people?

Why, Marty?

.
 
I love how topics like this expose how deeply stupid magats are.

Vaccines have been mandated in the US military for decades now and tested in court numerous times and RULED LEGAL many times.

So magats see that and say 'see this is an example of telling service members to follow an ILLEGAL order'.

You cannot make this shit up. They go from the 'proof it is legal' to then citing it as proof it is NOT legal, without a brain cell in their head telling them how laughably dumb this is and how posting this says the opposite of what they think it does.
:rofl2: :rofl2: :rofl2:
 
We have been killing those designated as terrorists for decades.

No Miranda warnings by Obama, Bush, Clinton, the vegetable, or president Trump.

Killing terrorists is an honorable and necessary act when barbarians are at the gate.
 
The truth is never a bad idea. Why do you think it would have been better to cover up My Lai? Are you in America or are you one of foreign assholes posting from a East European country?

Sgt. Ron Haeberle, a U.S. Army photographer attached to Charlie Company, documented the events of the day. He used a black-and-white camera for official Army records but shot in colour on his personal camera. Many of the black-and-white images depicted soldiers questioning prisoners, searching possessions, and burning huts; although the destruction of property violated U.S. military command directives, such actions were typical of a search-and-destroy mission and did not provide direct evidence of war crimes. Haeberle’s personal colour photographs, which he did not turn over to the Army, were later published in the Cleveland Plain Dealer and Life magazine. One graphically depicted a trail littered with the bodies of dead women, children, and infants, and another captured a group of terrified women and children moments before they were shot. These photographs served to galvanize the anti-Vietnam War movement and would become some of the most recognizable images of the war.


As the massacre was taking place, Warrant Officer Hugh Thompson was flying a scout helicopter at low altitude above My Lai. Observing wounded civilians, he marked their locations with smoke grenades and radioed for troops on the ground to proceed to those positions to administer medical aid. After refueling, Thompson returned to My Lai only to see that the wounded civilians subsequently had been killed. Spotting a squad of U.S. soldiers converging on more than a dozen women and children, Thompson landed his helicopter between the two groups. Thompson’s door gunner, Lawrence Colburn, and his crew chief, Glenn Andreotta, manned their weapons as Thompson hailed other helicopters to join him in ferrying the civilians to safety. In 1998 Thompson, Colburn, and Andreotta (posthumously) were awarded the Soldier’s Medal for acts of extraordinary bravery not involving contact with the enemy.

There's been no cover-up. There's been no charges brought. No judicial body has said that war crimes have been committed.

For Congress to come out and imply that there have a been war crimes committed is irresponsible and dangerous.
 
We have been killing those designated as terrorists for decades.

No Miranda warnings by Obama, Bush, Clinton, the vegetable, or president Trump.

Killing terrorists is an honorable and necessary act when barbarians are at the gate.
Yes agreed.

But never has a POTUS simply declared drug dealers, CRIMINALS, will now be considered terrorists and that means the US can summarily execute them without a trial.

Those accused of moving mass amounts of drugs within America or even foreigners caught bringing them in to America GET A TRIAL currently and sometime they win those trials, getting a not guilty verdict, which should destroy the argument Trump and his Admin alone can decide and pass sentence and then execute, when they cannot even jail a 'narco terrorist' within America and would be OBLIGATED to give them a trial.

So you are conflating different things that are not the same.
 
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