I Resigned From The Military Because Of Trump

Did this general allegedly commit a crime? If not, there's no reason to go after him. Why are you trying to make hay out of nothing?
Neither did Comey, you imbecile.

Trump and his MAGA Nazis just made shit up about Comey. Damn, you're stupid.
 
What Trump & you MAGA mouth breathers want is a military akin to N. Korea's where they are used to terrorize civilians into submission who don't swear allegiance to the Dear Leader.

Until they come after YOU. And they WILL.
No if he feels that way we are better off without him.
 
Tell me again when Antifa tried to steal an election, traitor?

Please tell me all about their elaborate fake elector scheme......MAGA imbecile.
The ANTIFA riots are more violent more destructive and kill people. The are funded by democrats
 
There have been many stories from people who have worked in government, including several from people who worked directly for Trump, who faced a terribly difficult decision -- Do I resign because I cannot be a part of this, or is it better that I stay so that my replacement doesn't enable it further?

I imagine that very question was being asked in Europe around 90 years ago.

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Neither did Comey, you imbecile.

Trump and his MAGA Nazis just made shit up about Comey. Damn, you're stupid.

they just indicted comey, what are you talking about?

Lol, youre going through great lengths to try and drum up some scenarios where trump will go after this colonel simply for resigning because he didnt agree with trump. Its not going to happen.
 
In a Washington Post Op-Ed today, Col Doug Krugman explains why he recently retired from the Marine Corps after 24 years.

Pardoning of the Jan 6 defendants had a lot to do with it. --

On Sept. 30, at an unprecedented gathering of senior military leadership, President Donald Trump said, “If you don’t like what I’m saying, you can leave the room — of course, there goes your rank, there goes your future.” I wasn’t invited to be in the room that day, and I had decided months earlier that I had to leave. By coincidence, Sept. 30 was my last day as a colonel in the United States Marine Corps. I gave up my career out of concern for our country’s future.

United States military officers take an oath to defend the Constitution without mental reservation or purpose of evasion. I swore or repeated that oath under five presidents, starting with former president Bill Clinton. I risked my life for it, serving as an infantry officer in two wars. I watched Marines die for it.

No commander in chief is perfect. President Clinton’s moral failures are well known. President George W. Bush’s invasion of Iraq might be one of the worst errors in U.S. history. All recent presidents share responsibility for our failure in Afghanistan. I continued to serve despite all that because I believed the Constitution brought the country more success than failure, and I believed our presidents took their oaths to it seriously.

With President Trump, I no longer believe that. During his first term, his actions became increasingly difficult for me to justify, culminating with the Jan. 6 attack on Congress as it tried to execute its duties. I hoped he had learned from those errors, but it only took a few days of his second term for me to realize he had not. I could not swear without reservation to follow a commander in chief who seemed so willing to disregard the Constitution.

My departure was not about policy disagreements, which exist in every administration. President Trump won in 2024 and has the right to implement his policies within the law.


My first reservations were about promises and actions that I thought were morally wrong even if they were possibly legal. The Constitution gives the president the power to pardon, but pardoning roughly 1,600 of those who tried to violently overthrow the results of an election didn’t help defend the Constitution. Likewise, I didn’t see it as moral to deny refuge to Afghans who risked their lives to support us, which he did on Jan. 22. Ignoring reality to take advantage of vague laws to assume emergency powers is also immoral. For those who believe in honoring their word, breaking promises our country has made — including some trade agreements President Trump made himself — is not moral. These are not the kinds of actions that I’m willing to risk my life to defend.

Worse than immorality, however, has been President Trump’s willingness to disregard the law and Constitution to achieve his goals. When asked in May about the Fifth Amendment requirements for due process and if he needed to uphold the Constitution as president, the first words out of his mouth were “I don’t know.”

This month, National Guard officers received orders from the defense secretary that their governors opposed. A federal judge intervened, citing the lack of apparent emergency and the 10th Amendment. Those commanders and units were stuck between competing orders with no clear answer. When the president’s orders push or cross legal limits and put commanders in these situations, cohesion within our military is at risk.


President Trump’s description of Portland as a “war zone” is as fantastical as his belief that the June protests in a few blocks of Los Angeles would somehow “obliterate” the massive city of nearly 4 million. In both cases, his words had little connection to reality. Every dubious basis he gives for an order creates more room for doubt, more room for reservations and more threats to our unity.


If Trump orders you to do illegal things, then sure retire.

Trump what are we doing.webp
 
To bad, sadly though, recuitment hit an all time low under Xiden, folks just didn't want to serve him.

Biden’s Pentagon Can’t Recruit New Soldiers and That Threatens Us All​

But, once Trump was elected, we saw a surge of new recuits, setting records for how fast the DoD met it's goals

Army meets fiscal year 2025 recruiting goals four months early​


Marines Say They Hit Recruiting Goals and Point to 'Unapologetic' Standards​

PROBLEM.
HUGE RECUITMENT$$$$ BENNIFITS.& OTHER Gifts
 
In a Washington Post Op-Ed today, Col Doug Krugman explains why he recently retired from the Marine Corps after 24 years.

Pardoning of the Jan 6 defendants had a lot to do with it. --

On Sept. 30, at an unprecedented gathering of senior military leadership, President Donald Trump said, “If you don’t like what I’m saying, you can leave the room — of course, there goes your rank, there goes your future.” I wasn’t invited to be in the room that day, and I had decided months earlier that I had to leave. By coincidence, Sept. 30 was my last day as a colonel in the United States Marine Corps. I gave up my career out of concern for our country’s future.

United States military officers take an oath to defend the Constitution without mental reservation or purpose of evasion. I swore or repeated that oath under five presidents, starting with former president Bill Clinton. I risked my life for it, serving as an infantry officer in two wars. I watched Marines die for it.

No commander in chief is perfect. President Clinton’s moral failures are well known. President George W. Bush’s invasion of Iraq might be one of the worst errors in U.S. history. All recent presidents share responsibility for our failure in Afghanistan. I continued to serve despite all that because I believed the Constitution brought the country more success than failure, and I believed our presidents took their oaths to it seriously.

With President Trump, I no longer believe that. During his first term, his actions became increasingly difficult for me to justify, culminating with the Jan. 6 attack on Congress as it tried to execute its duties. I hoped he had learned from those errors, but it only took a few days of his second term for me to realize he had not. I could not swear without reservation to follow a commander in chief who seemed so willing to disregard the Constitution.

My departure was not about policy disagreements, which exist in every administration. President Trump won in 2024 and has the right to implement his policies within the law.


My first reservations were about promises and actions that I thought were morally wrong even if they were possibly legal. The Constitution gives the president the power to pardon, but pardoning roughly 1,600 of those who tried to violently overthrow the results of an election didn’t help defend the Constitution. Likewise, I didn’t see it as moral to deny refuge to Afghans who risked their lives to support us, which he did on Jan. 22. Ignoring reality to take advantage of vague laws to assume emergency powers is also immoral. For those who believe in honoring their word, breaking promises our country has made — including some trade agreements President Trump made himself — is not moral. These are not the kinds of actions that I’m willing to risk my life to defend.

Worse than immorality, however, has been President Trump’s willingness to disregard the law and Constitution to achieve his goals. When asked in May about the Fifth Amendment requirements for due process and if he needed to uphold the Constitution as president, the first words out of his mouth were “I don’t know.”

This month, National Guard officers received orders from the defense secretary that their governors opposed. A federal judge intervened, citing the lack of apparent emergency and the 10th Amendment. Those commanders and units were stuck between competing orders with no clear answer. When the president’s orders push or cross legal limits and put commanders in these situations, cohesion within our military is at risk.


President Trump’s description of Portland as a “war zone” is as fantastical as his belief that the June protests in a few blocks of Los Angeles would somehow “obliterate” the massive city of nearly 4 million. In both cases, his words had little connection to reality. Every dubious basis he gives for an order creates more room for doubt, more room for reservations and more threats to our unity.



Col. Wokester didn't have a problem with Auto Pen pardoning his entire Crime Family.
 
So far I don't see much done. Before the election, It went from " all 30 million have to go back home, to after the election" if you been here a couple years have a job, you can stay bs.
Locking up a few criminals and building facilities to house illegal's is not what Trump promised. What he basically promised was another ' Operation *******' type of deportation.
What Trump has done is given the net leadership an extra 30,000000 more votes and a third world replacement of American citizens.


I'm more and more apt to think George was right, minus the f words, "it a club and you ain't in it".
 
Trump's corrupt government buying 10% of Intel?

Trump's massive interference with the U.S. economy with his bullshit tariffs?

Trump is the most Communist president this country has ever had. Hell, this cadet might be a Trump fan.
Prove it, liar.
 
In a Washington Post Op-Ed today, Col Doug Krugman explains why he recently retired from the Marine Corps after 24 years.

Pardoning of the Jan 6 defendants had a lot to do with it. --

On Sept. 30, at an unprecedented gathering of senior military leadership, President Donald Trump said, “If you don’t like what I’m saying, you can leave the room — of course, there goes your rank, there goes your future.” I wasn’t invited to be in the room that day, and I had decided months earlier that I had to leave. By coincidence, Sept. 30 was my last day as a colonel in the United States Marine Corps. I gave up my career out of concern for our country’s future.

United States military officers take an oath to defend the Constitution without mental reservation or purpose of evasion. I swore or repeated that oath under five presidents, starting with former president Bill Clinton. I risked my life for it, serving as an infantry officer in two wars. I watched Marines die for it.

No commander in chief is perfect. President Clinton’s moral failures are well known. President George W. Bush’s invasion of Iraq might be one of the worst errors in U.S. history. All recent presidents share responsibility for our failure in Afghanistan. I continued to serve despite all that because I believed the Constitution brought the country more success than failure, and I believed our presidents took their oaths to it seriously.

With President Trump, I no longer believe that. During his first term, his actions became increasingly difficult for me to justify, culminating with the Jan. 6 attack on Congress as it tried to execute its duties. I hoped he had learned from those errors, but it only took a few days of his second term for me to realize he had not. I could not swear without reservation to follow a commander in chief who seemed so willing to disregard the Constitution.

My departure was not about policy disagreements, which exist in every administration. President Trump won in 2024 and has the right to implement his policies within the law.


My first reservations were about promises and actions that I thought were morally wrong even if they were possibly legal. The Constitution gives the president the power to pardon, but pardoning roughly 1,600 of those who tried to violently overthrow the results of an election didn’t help defend the Constitution. Likewise, I didn’t see it as moral to deny refuge to Afghans who risked their lives to support us, which he did on Jan. 22. Ignoring reality to take advantage of vague laws to assume emergency powers is also immoral. For those who believe in honoring their word, breaking promises our country has made — including some trade agreements President Trump made himself — is not moral. These are not the kinds of actions that I’m willing to risk my life to defend.

Worse than immorality, however, has been President Trump’s willingness to disregard the law and Constitution to achieve his goals. When asked in May about the Fifth Amendment requirements for due process and if he needed to uphold the Constitution as president, the first words out of his mouth were “I don’t know.”

This month, National Guard officers received orders from the defense secretary that their governors opposed. A federal judge intervened, citing the lack of apparent emergency and the 10th Amendment. Those commanders and units were stuck between competing orders with no clear answer. When the president’s orders push or cross legal limits and put commanders in these situations, cohesion within our military is at risk.


President Trump’s description of Portland as a “war zone” is as fantastical as his belief that the June protests in a few blocks of Los Angeles would somehow “obliterate” the massive city of nearly 4 million. In both cases, his words had little connection to reality. Every dubious basis he gives for an order creates more room for doubt, more room for reservations and more threats to our unity.

Don't let the door hit you in the ass on the way out the door.
 
So far I don't see much done. Before the election, It went from " all 30 million have to go back home, to after the election" if you been here a couple years have a job, you can stay bs.
Locking up a few criminals and building facilities to house illegal's is not what Trump promised. What he basically promised was another ' Operation *******' type of deportation.
What Trump has done is given the net leadership an extra 30,000000 more votes and a third world replacement of American citizens.


I'm more and more apt to think George was right, minus the f words, "it a club and you ain't in it".
If this is true, then the post-World War 2 generation have condemned their children if still alive and definitely their grandchildren and after.
 
15th post
If this is true, then the post-World War 2 generation have condemned their children if still alive and definitely their grandchildren and after.

I hope it's not but who knows what's going to happen. I chose Trump out of desperation, and I'm a conservative nationalist.
 
The ANTIFA riots are more violent more destructive and kill people. The are funded by democrats
There is no "ANTIFA", fucktard.

The BLM protesters didn't try to steal an election....they were protesting something REAL -- police brutality.

You MAGA cry baby pussies protested something FAKE on Jan 6 -- the 2020 "stolen" election. Because you Nazis can't accept losing an election.

******* idiots.
 
There is no "ANTIFA", fucktard.

The BLM protesters didn't try to steal an election....they were protesting something REAL -- police brutality.

You MAGA cry baby pussies protested something FAKE -- the 2020 "stolen" election.

******* idiots.
Those Domestic Terrorists killed dozens, and ruined the businesses and livelihoods of thousands of black business owners.

And your racist Cult clapped and cheered.

Scum, you are all scum.
 

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