Monday, September 03, 2012

Some believe Obama will take over using the military... (Notes from the Daily Caller)

... well, folks, that's not going to happen.

The military of this country, as a whole, despises him.  It took him months to finally allow Valerie Jarrett to push the button on the Bin Laden scam... a scam in the sense that it seems the White House, surprisingly enough, lied about what happened there.

Obama may see himself as some sort of General Maximus.  But few have done more damage to the military, allowed more troops to be killed, maimed, or wounded; screwed up a foreign policy likely to INCREASE those chances of spilling our blood; weakened military morale, engaged in their mid-war progressive social engineering,  with their moronic implementation of the gay agenda (ANOTHER decision that is going to cost blood) along with abortive efforts to have wounded troops pay their own health care premiums AND jacking up the paid-by-troop costs of dependent health care... just to name a few of the issues.

When we enlist or re-enlist, when we're commissioned... we take an oath.  And compared to The Oath, Obama isn't even a footnote.

No... no military takeover on this clown's watch.
Obama speech to soldiers met with silence




US President Barack Obama addresses troops inside the 1st Aviation Support Battalion Hangar August 31, 2012 at Fort Bliss, Texas. (Photo: MANDEL NGAN/AFP/Getty Images)
President Barack Obama was greeted with fleeting applause and extended periods of silence as he offered profuse praise to soldiers and their families during an Aug. 31 speech in Fort Bliss, Texas.
His praise for the soldiers — and for his own national-security policies — won cheers from only a small proportion of the soldiers and families in the cavernous aircraft-hangar.

The audience remains quiet even when the commander-in-chief thanked the soldiers’ families, and cited the 198 deaths of their comrades in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The audience’s reaction was so flat that the president tried twice to elicit a reaction from the crowd.
“Hey, I hear you,” he said amid silence.

The selected soldiers who were arrayed behind the president sat quietly throughout the speech.
CNN and MSNBC ended their coverage of the speech before it was half-over.
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