Pookers said:
titan said:
Pookers said:
Teslag said:
Pookers said:
Teslag said:
1. Booster was never mandated
2. No soldier was ever mandated to get an experimental vaccine
You can hide behind the thin veneer of the bull**** word games pfizer and the FDA plays but everybody with two functioning brain cells knows these mRNA jabs are experimental.
Which is a fair belief to have. But those definitions have legal meaning. especially in regard to UCMJ. Rank and file simply cannot dictate their own policy. The term "above my pay grade" exists for a reason.
Gotcha, back to "just doin muh job". Personally, I'd retire or be discharged before forcing these things on people.
After making an unambiguous and loud protest. Much closer to that Lt.Col. Scheller.
There are some things worth "falling on the sword" for and this is one of them IMO.
Not an attack - Do you really want a military with an officer corps that behaves in this manner? The officers you have left after all the resignations in protest are going to be either partisans or apathetic.
As long as we have civilian oversight of the military, we are going to be subject to their directives ("orders" in UCMJ parlance...a "lawful order" under the UCMJ is not always going to be in alignment with the ethics/morals/politics of the individuals serving). Following "lawful orders" is one of the foundational tenets of American military service...an honorable profession that, for better or for worse, comes with arguably dumb/unnecessary vaccine mandates, personal risk in adherence to hamstrung ROEs, and a myriad of other moral/ethical challenges that we may not personally agree with...meaning, officers would be dropping out left & right.
One can hold Lt Col Scheller up as a hero who followed his conscience, but the fact is he's not able to lead Marines anymore...and that might be a shame, as we need leaders of character now maybe more than ever. The institution isn't going to change a thing because he quit. No one servicemember is so precious that it won't march on without them. We might have a chance if those leaders with character continue the fight inside the service to be able to make change for the better. Officers like him could have done worlds of good for their soldiers/sailors/airmen/marines by staying in but it wouldn't get as much press or attaboys. It's a thankless pursuit to do it from the inside, within the areas we control and influence, but has merit and can/will make a difference, at least for our troops.