Sam Lowry said:
BearlySpeaking said:
Sam Lowry said:
BearlySpeaking said:
Sam Lowry said:
BearlySpeaking said:
Sam Lowry said:
whiterock said:
VP is a strong voice for moral clarity.
Absolutely inexcusable for this person to endorse violence against his political enemies. I guess the only slightly mitigating factor is that he didn't do it publicly in front of 800 general officers.
I assume you are talking about Hegseth's speech to officers on September 30. I couldn't find anything Hegseth said to the assembled generals and admirals that advocated for the murder of a specific individual or group of individuals. Was this a different event where he said that? Can you give us the specific quote?
Trump said recently "Our cities can be the best training areasreal-life scenarios to sharpen skills against the chaos at home." Bringing order to a city plagued by riots and crime fostered by local authorities is not inherently a call for the murder of an individual or group of individuals.
I'm not seeing anything that comes anywhere close to either of them directly stating to another politician that they are contemplating murdering a state office holder and his children, let alone doubling down on it when called out on it, and receiving support from their party's national/state level politicians for doing so.
Can you give us the quotes?
I'm not interested in any of these games where each side's statements have to be matched in every semantic detail before a pattern can be observed. Trump isn't bringing order. He's fueling conflict and trying to legitimize violence against communities that are seen as Democratic strongholds. Whether he directly states it to another politician, or gets called out, or doubles down, doesn't change the fact. This is not to defend what the Democrat said. The specificity certainly raises an alarm, but unlike Trump he doesn't seem to have taken any action on his twisted fantasies.
I see, you don't have the quotes to back up your claim. Otherwise you would just state them. I didn't ask for a complete match in "semantic detail" for the observation of a pattern. I asked for the quotes themselves. People can judge the evidence for themselves once it's shown.
If you make a claim that a statement advocating violence was made by someone, then show the statements that your claim is based on. Whatever "quotes" you are hiding are foundational for the claim you are making.
You already quoted the statement about using cities for "training areas." Hegseth's statement about "ridiculous rules of engagement" is another example.
They're using anti-woke reform as cover to attack military ethics, accountability, and anything else that doesn't reek of toxic masculinity.
A position on the ongoing debate over rules of engagement that you disagree with and a statement that the Nation Guard will get practice in mobilization and deployment in protecting ICE officers who are being assaulted and shot by leftists? I'm not seeing quotes from either of them advocating murder of any people here, let alone a specific individual and his children. This isn't even enough qualify as whataboutism.
No wonder you tried the "semantic details" rhetorical dodge here.
Behind that miasma of words is a simple fact -- rules of engagement are about how and when you can kill people. They're not about anything else. Trump and Hegseth have increasingly promoted unlawful conduct, and they're now telling the generals to get on board if they don't want to face termination or prosecution.
My words are direct, clear, and smell good.
You're still trying to say that debating rules of engagement is equivalent to a state office-holder stating multiple times he wants to murder another state office-holder and his children.
It's a fact there is a trade-off between servicemen deaths and civilian deaths in ROE rules, especially since the 1960's when fighting cultures that use civilians as shields and eschew uniforms. The casualty figures in Iraq when ROE rules changed show this. The stricter the ROE, the more Americans die. Unlike you, I don't attribute support for the assassination attempts on Trump or the murder of Charlie Kirk to those who argue for stricter rules of ROE, even though it means more American deaths. Asserting support for either position in the ROE debate is so far from repeatedly advocating for the murder of a state attorney general and his children, or supporting the assassinations of Trump or conservative leaders, that you are just trolling at this point. They are so far from being equivalent that I don't think you had any quotes in mind when you made your initial claim. I think you just picked the ones I provided because you had nothing to begin with.
The president and the Secretary of War have the right to dismiss generals, and also to prosecute them if they violate the UCMJ. That has no bearing on whether the ROE debate is the same as advocating the murder of American state office-holders. It's another rhetorical dodge.
The noxious fog of words are yours.