G.A. Heath wrote:To a degree you want officers and enlistedmen who will fire on American citizens. Examples would include in time of riots, civil war, ect. On the other hand you would not want a military who would fire on Americans as part of an illegal operation. Any use of military force on American soil against American citizens will catch the publics attention, repeated usage will most likely catch the full wrath of the American people. We could not bring our selves to effectively occupy Iraq or Afganistan long enough to do the job and ensure that we will not have to go back later, how can anyone think that the same government will be able to effectively use military power internally against a very angry and very well armed population? Am I worried they might try something? Yes, You have to worry about this in order to ensure it doesn't happen. Do I believe that this administration is stupid enough to try using the military against the public? No, except maybe Biden (He is an idiot). I suspect that every president in the last 50 years or more has wanted a "Yes" when they asked their generals that question. Don't get me wrong, I dislike this administration as much as the next person, but I will not toss reason out the window because I dislike a single man and the people he has surrounded himself with. To do so will cause you to under estimate what he can and will do and then you have some real problems.
I'm not disputing your statement in its concept, but I worry about its execution.
IF, for instance, those citizens were radical islamists attempting a religious war, or perhaps armed communists attempting to overthrow democracy, then
MAYBE I would uphold the idea of military personnel firing on them (although I tend to favor civilians lynching them). But the problem is, who gets to decide whether such a use of force is just or unjust, legal or illegal? Obviously, the only person who gets to make that determination INITIALLY is the president. Whether or not the individual soldier/marine/airman/squid (sorry I couldn't help myself) has to make that decision for themselves for real, they will never be faced with the decision unless the president has first made that decision.
Here is how that question translates, and it is the ONLY way it should be translated, when a president requires that question be answered: "Is your primary loyalty to ME, or is it to The People?"
That is why organizations like Oath Keepers are so important. I can say this entirely without meaning to insult a single soul, but I do think that there are people serving in the military who, if confronted with having to make such a decision, would decide that these are difficult times and that they only thing they can hold onto is that their chain of command
must be right; because if they are NOT right, then what else can they have faith in? They
want to do the right thing, and they
want their chain of command to tell them what that means. That is not to say that the military has no independent thinkers. They DO. But not everybody is going to fit that mold.
“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.”
― G. Michael Hopf, "Those Who Remain"
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