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Author: TriSec    Date: 08/25/2025 23:02:49

Good Morning.

We're back to work at ol' Bentley, so also back to my customary habit of posting this on Monday evening. I've got two stories today that should be intrinsically linked.


Since it is "back to school" season, let's consider those places where kids are going back under a military occupation. There are plenty of places around the world where this is "normal", and now it is in some parts of the USA, too.


WASHINGTON — Public schools reopened Monday in the nation’s tense capital with parents on edge over the presence in their midst of thousands of National Guard troops — some now armed — and large scatterings of federal law enforcement officers carrying out President Donald Trump's orders to make the District of Columbia a safer place.

Even as Trump started talking about other cities and again touted a drop in crime that he attributed to his extraordinary effort to take over policing in Washington, D.C., the district's mayor was lamenting the effect of Trump's actions on children.

"Parents are anxious. We’ve heard from a lot of them," Mayor Muriel Bowser said at a news conference, noting that some might keep their children out of school because of immigration concerns.

“Any attempt to target children is heartless, is mean, is uncalled for and it only hurts us,” she said. “I would just call for everybody to leave our kids alone.”

As schools opened across the capital city, parental social media groups and listservs were buzzing with reports and rumors of checkpoints and arrests.

The week began with some patrolling National Guard units now carrying firearms. The change stemmed from a directive issued late last week by his Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth.

Armed National Guard troops from Ohio, South Carolina and Tennessee were seen around the city Monday. But not every patrol appears to be carrying weapons. An Associated Press photographer said the roughly 30 troops he saw on the National Mall on Monday morning were unarmed.


I could imagine that not everyone sent their kids back to school yesterday. After all, why would you want to send them into a potential war zone, especially with the US Military backing up all those ICE Gestapo?

But of course - this is Americans occupying America. One has to wonder what all those Federalized Guard troops are thinking these days. They are professionals, of course, so one could hope it's just "doing our job." But I do wonder about those soldiers from the Old Confederacy that are now occupying our nation's capitol. Something their forebears never got to do.

They are all, of course, acting "under orders". We all know how well that defence worked out for the fascists during the war crimes trials after WWII. Encouragingly, our guys seem to know what's what.


U.S. service members take an oath to uphold the Constitution. In addition, under Article 92 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice and the U.S. Manual for Courts-Martial, service members must obey lawful orders and disobey unlawful orders. Unlawful orders are those that clearly violate the U.S. Constitution, international human rights standards or the Geneva Conventions.

Service members who follow an illegal order can be held liable and court-martialed or subject to prosecution by international tribunals. Following orders from a superior is no defense.

Our poll, fielded between June 13 and June 30, 2025, shows that service members understand these rules. Of the 818 active-duty troops we surveyed, just 9% stated that they would “obey any order.” Only 9% “didn’t know,” and only 2% had “no comment.”

When asked to describe unlawful orders in their own words, about 25% of respondents wrote about their duty to disobey orders that were “obviously wrong,” “obviously criminal” or “obviously unconstitutional.”

Another 8% spoke of immoral orders. One respondent wrote that “orders that clearly break international law, such as targeting non-combatants, are not just illegal — they’re immoral. As military personnel, we have a duty to uphold the law and refuse commands that betray that duty.”

Just over 40% of respondents listed specific examples of orders they would feel compelled to disobey.

The most common unprompted response, cited by 26% of those surveyed, was “harming civilians,” while another 15% of respondents gave a variety of other examples of violations of duty and law, such as “torturing prisoners” and “harming U.S. troops.”

One wrote that “an order would be obviously unlawful if it involved harming civilians, using torture, targeting people based on identity, or punishing others without legal process.”


It's one thing to sit on a streetcorner and "look important". Should the time ever come that the National Guard might be ordered to actually open fire? I think that might be when the revolution begins.

Consider those Minutemen at the Old North Bridge. Essentially the National Guard of the time - they opened fire on the regular army. Neither side could believe that it actually happened....and there was no going back after that.
 

2 comments (Latest Comment: 08/26/2025 15:30:46 by TriSec)
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