Safety in The Military – what a bunch a bunk Now that Obama is in charge

Conservative Voices will NOT be silenced Anymore!Well, people this whole Fort Hood Islamic, Muslim Terrorist Act has my mind reeling as I’m sure it does yours.

My military career was been pretty uneventful as far as war time and here is basically how it went. Prior to attending the warrant officer academy I had a Frirst Sergeant that said “if you are not on the front line fighting the war, then you are supporting someone who is”. My friends, that is true. Eventhough I do lament about not being part and figting on foriegn soil against the GWOT I am proud of the work I did to support those “frontline” soldiers, airmen, marines, sailors, and coast guard warriors.

I joined the Army, trained active duty boot camp at Fort Jackson, SC, assumed assignment to a National Guard Unit where I was further trained active duty at Fort Bragg (home of the 82nd Airborne), Fort Benning (home of the infantry), Fort Belvoir, (home to Army Information Systems Command, Army Intelligence and Security Command, Defense Logistics Agency and Defense Technical Information Service), Connecticut Military Camp Installation, (Niantic, CT), Randolph Air Force Base (home of Air Education and Training Command for AF or DoD), Camp Shelby, Mississippi, Alabama Military Academy (Fort McClellan), 117th Regiment Tennessee Military Academy, Camp Joseph Robinson, AK, Maxwell, AFB, Gunter, AFB. Many meetings  and work in Washington,DC (the security wsa unreal(great)) I’m sure there may be more but it doesn’t really matter, what matters is:

No military Post or Base that I have ever been to, been trained at, visited, taught, conferenced at, etc., have I ever been in fear for my life.  Especially not one time in my military career have I ever feared some freakin’ Jihadist opeing fire on me and my battle buddies whilst we were going about our duties.  Now, I’ve been told and heard that soldiers are cowaring and fliniching all over their posts. You may say I’m crazy, but when I’m on Post or Base, I never lock my car doors. If you can’t trust the military who the heck can you trust?

Now, GUESS WHAT? Under the Obama administration and all this stinking political correctness you are more apt to be gunned down simply doing your duty on Post or on Base by a Muslim/Islamic Extremest Jihadist Wackjob. You know what is worse? Obama does not give a screaming crap in hell. Hey people, don’t forget Obama is a freakin Jihadist too, he’s a liar, he’s a closet muslim (amongst other closet activities of his).

Hey all you Obama Jihadist Muslim Extremist denial wackjobs, GUESS WHAT????? Obama, OBAMA tapped him to be in his (Obama’s) Home Land Security Task Force…. HOW STUPID IS THAT????? Can you say Obama is a Jihadist Sympathiser???? YES…True, True…

What does that say about his character? Not much in my opinion, why? Because Obama Hussein is not much…just a pos…

Oh, don’t forget, The Obama Administration has stopped any investigation into the Massacre at Fort Hood. What does that tell you? Huh?

Obama not forthcoming about Fort Hood Massacre

Our Country is hosed

Funny how Obama had no problem jumping to conclusions when he called the police boneheads for arresting the black Harvard professor, but doesn’t want to come to any hasty conclusions with a Muslim terrorist.

Injured Soldier at Fort Hood after Muslim/Islamic Premeditated Massacre Rampage by Terrorist Hasan

Injured Soldier at Fort Hood after Muslim/Islamic Premeditated Massacre Rampage by Terrorist Hasan

Dr. Phil and the Fort Hood Killer
His terrorist motive is obvious to everyone but the press and the Army brass.
By DOROTHY RABINOWITZ

It can by now come as no surprise that the Fort Hood massacre yielded an instant flow of exculpatory media meditations on the stresses that must have weighed on the killer who mowed down 13 Americans and wounded 29 others. Still, the intense drive to wrap this clear case in a fog of mystery is eminently worthy of notice.
The tide of pronouncements and ruminations pointing to every cause for this event other than the one obvious to everyone in the rational world continues apace. Commentators, reporters, psychologists and, indeed, army spokesmen continue to warn portentously, “We don’t yet know the motive for the shootings.”

What a puzzle this piece of vacuity must be to audiences hearing it, some, no doubt, with outrage. To those not terrorized by fear of offending Muslim sensitivities, Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan’s motive was instantly clear: It was an act of terrorism by a man with a record of expressing virulent, anti-American, pro-jihadist sentiments. All were conspicuous signs of danger his Army superiors chose to ignore.

What is hard to ignore, now, is the growing derangement on all matters involving terrorism and Muslim sensitivities. Its chief symptoms: a palpitating fear of discomfiting facts and a willingness to discard those facts and embrace the richest possible variety of ludicrous theories as to the motives behind an act of Islamic terrorism. All this we have seen before but never in such naked form. The days following the Fort Hood rampage have told us more than we want to know, perhaps, about the depth and reach of this epidemic.
One of the first outbreaks of these fevers, the night of the shootings, featured television’s star psychologist, Dr. Phil, who was outraged when fellow panelist and former JAG officer Tom Kenniff observed that he had been listening to a lot of psychobabble and evasions about Maj. Hasan’s motives.
A shocked Dr. Phil, appalled that the guest had publicly mentioned Maj. Hasan’s Islamic identity, went on to present what was, in essence, the case for Maj. Hasan as victim. Victim of deployment, of the Army, of the stresses of a new kind of terrible war unlike any other we have known. Unlike, can he have meant, the kind endured by those lucky Americans who fought and died at Iwo Jima, say, or the Ardennes?

It was the same case to be presented, in varying forms, by guest psychologists, the media, and a representative or two from the military, for days on end.

The quality and thrust of this argument was best captured by the impassioned Dr. Phil, who asked us to consider, “how far out of touch with reality do you have to be to kill your fellow Americans . . . this is not a well act.” And how far out of touch with reality is such a question, one asks in return—not only of Dr. Phil, but of the legions of commentators like him immersed in the labyrinths of motive hunting even as the details of Maj. Hasan’s proclivities became ever clearer and more ominous.

To kill your fellow Americans—as many as possible, unarmed and in the most helpless of circumstances, while shouting “Allahu Akbar” (God is great), requires, of course, only murderous hatred—the sort of mindset that regularly eludes the Dr. Phils of our world as the motive for mass murder of this kind.

As the meditations on Maj. Hasan’s motives rolled on, “fear of deployment” has served as a major theme—one announced as fact in the headline for the New York Times’s front-page story: “Told of War Horror, Gunman Feared Deployment.” The authority for this intelligence? The perpetrator’s cousin. No story could have better suited that newspaper’s ongoing preoccupation with the theme of madness in our fighting men, and the deadly horrors of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, than this story of a victim of war pressures gone berserk. The one fly in the ointment—Maj. Hasan had of course seen no war, and no combat.

Still, with a bit of stretching, adherents of Maj. Hasan-as-war-victim theme found a substitute of sorts—namely the fears allegedly provoked in him by his exposure, as an army psychiatrist, to the stories of men who had been deployed. The thesis then: Maj. Hasan’s mental stress, provoked by the suffering of Americans who had been in combat, caused him to go out and butcher as many of these soldiers as he could. Let’s try putting that one before a jury.
By Sunday morning, Gen. George Casey Jr., Army chief of staff, confronted questions put to him by ABC’s George Stephanopolous—among them the matter of the complaints about Maj. Hasan’s anti-American tirades that were made by fellow students in military classes, as well as other danger signs ignored by officials when they were reported, apparently for fear of offense to a Muslim member of the military.
These were speculations, Gen. Casey repeatedly cautioned. We need to be very careful, he explained, “We are a very diverse army.” Mr. Stephanopolous then helpfully summarized matters: This case then was either a case of premeditated terror—or the man just snapped.

The general was not about to address such questions. He was there to recite the required pieties, and describe the military priorities . . . which are, it appears, a concern above all for the sensitivities of a diverse army, a concern so great as to render even the mention of salient facts out of order, as “speculation.’” “This terrible event,” Gen. Casey noted, “would be an even greater tragedy if our diversity becomes a casualty.”

To hear this, and numerous other such pronouncements of recent days, was to be reminded of all those witnesses to the suspicious behavior of the 9/11 hijackers who held their tongues for fear of being charged with discrimination. It has taken Maj. Hasan, and the fantastic efforts to explain away his act of bloody hatred, to bring home how much less capable we are of recognizing the dangers confronting us than we were even before September 11.
Corrections & Amplifications: Maj. Hasan is a psychiatrist. An earlier version of the article stated he was a psychologist.
Read WSJ Article Here

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