- Dec 8, 2013
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I will bet every stupid liberal that clicks into this thread thinks it is a white conservative military male.
Nope. The marine is a black woman. Now, that is a liberal conundrum.
A court case working its way through the military justice system raises a basic question: Should a member of the military be allowed to post a religious passage in her place of work?
The case involves Monifa J. Sterling, a Marine veteran who was convicted in a court-martial at Camp Lejeune, N.C., of failing to go to an appointed place of duty, disrespecting a superior commissioned officer and four specifications of disobeying a lawful order. She was sentenced last year to a reduction in rank from lance corporal to private and given a bad-conduct discharge, a status that will stay on her military record and prohibits her from receiving benefits as a veteran.
It is a specific portion of Sterling’s past that is still in dispute, however. Sterling was found guilty of disobeying a lawful order in part because she refused to take down three signs in her workspace with the message: “No weapon formed against me shall prosper.” It’s a derivation of the biblical passage Isaiah 54:17, a motivational message that says that “no weapon that is formed against you shall prosper.”
After court-martial this Marine cites religious freedom in her continued legal fight - The Washington Post
Let see how liberals deal with this issue. Watch how they play both sides.
Nope. The marine is a black woman. Now, that is a liberal conundrum.
A court case working its way through the military justice system raises a basic question: Should a member of the military be allowed to post a religious passage in her place of work?
The case involves Monifa J. Sterling, a Marine veteran who was convicted in a court-martial at Camp Lejeune, N.C., of failing to go to an appointed place of duty, disrespecting a superior commissioned officer and four specifications of disobeying a lawful order. She was sentenced last year to a reduction in rank from lance corporal to private and given a bad-conduct discharge, a status that will stay on her military record and prohibits her from receiving benefits as a veteran.
It is a specific portion of Sterling’s past that is still in dispute, however. Sterling was found guilty of disobeying a lawful order in part because she refused to take down three signs in her workspace with the message: “No weapon formed against me shall prosper.” It’s a derivation of the biblical passage Isaiah 54:17, a motivational message that says that “no weapon that is formed against you shall prosper.”
After court-martial this Marine cites religious freedom in her continued legal fight - The Washington Post
Let see how liberals deal with this issue. Watch how they play both sides.