R.I.P. Scout26
It was, he said, a reaction to “what I considered a smug and self-congratulatory gesture by a first-class passenger toward a uniformed soldier.”
The best way to support troops is not with symbolic gestures and first-class seats, but by bringing them home safely, by ensuring that women in uniform are not subjected to what is an epidemic of sexual assault, and by providing dignified medical and psychological care. Those who today claim to demand respect for the troops show little in the way of respect for how they are treated in and out of the military.
He's pretty good at telling other people how to support our troops. One good way for him to show support is to not go off the deep end when someone else shows them kindness. Not blaming all of them for what happened in Mosul would be another. I wouldn't be surprised if he threw "baby killers" into his next tweet.
“What I don’t respect is a brutal invasion and occupation of Iraq that has not made our world any safer — a war that has taken advantage of economically disadvantaged Americans, a war that has given the world ISIS, and a war that has wrought carnage like that seen in Mosul and elsewhere,”
IIRC, he's the same guy who tweeted his support of white genocide last year.
Research misconduct investigation[edit]The controversy attracted increased academic attention to Churchill's research, which had already been criticized by the legal scholar John LaVelle and historian Guenter Lewy.[45][57][58] Additional critics were the sociologist Thomas Brown, who had been preparing an article on Churchill's work, and the historians R.G. Robertson and Russell Thornton, who claimed that Churchill had misrepresented their work.