0–to–ad hominem in no time flat!
Quote:
Originally Posted by
jmm99
opine and pontificate all you want about religion and everything else under the Sun. But, don't quote me for subject matter which is not in the post.
Personally I think your comments belong in the junior fuzz stickery category; but, as you "rarely overthink statements related to religion made by my fellow Americans", I rarely overthink offhand statements made by you.
Regards
Mike
Decorum, counselor! I sense we are at cross-purposes here. Let’s just drop it.
The other side of the debate
Many willing to cut Afghan shooting suspect slack
Quote:
On the website of Iraq Veterans Against the War, organizer Aaron Hughes declared that Afghan war veterans "believe that this incident is not a case of one 'bad apple' but the effect of a continued U.S. military policy of drone strikes, night raids, and helicopter attacks where Afghan civilians pay the price." Those veterans, he wrote, "hope that the Kandahar massacre will be a turning point" in the war.
http://apnews.myway.com//article/201...D9TJ77TG0.html
Bales' Platoon Leader Names Himself
From AP, Army capt.: Afghan killing suspect has saved lives (by Gene Johnson, March 17, 2012):
Quote:
SEATTLE—A former platoon leader for the soldier accused of killing 16 Afghan civilians says the allegations are "100 percent out of character" for the man, whom he described as a model soldier who saved other soldiers' lives.
Army Capt. Chris Alexander, 32, said Robert Bales worked as a stock trader before the Sept. 11 attacks motivated him to enlist in the Army.
"I've always admired him for that -- he had a good thing going, and he dropped it to serve his country," Alexander said Saturday in a phone interview.
Bales enlisted about two months after 9/11 and had served with the 3rd Stryker Brigade based at Joint Base Lewis-McChord since Sept 11, 2002.
He became a staff sergeant in April 2008, following his second deployment in Iraq. He went to Iraq one more time before his fourth deployment, to Afghanistan. ...Alexander was Bales' platoon leader during one of his Iraq missions. He described Bales as "one of the best guys I ever worked with."
"He always made sure his team was ready, that they were briefed on the mission, that the equipment was checked," Alexander said. "Anything he was given to do, you never had to worry about it getting done and done well."
Alexander said he and others who served with Bales are stunned by the allegations. ...
More in story, but substantially the same as the Free Republic posts.
Regards
Mike
A comparison that may be made
Amidst the reporting, some clearly inspired, I found a reference to what could become an issue - comparing the case of Aafia Siddiqui, who got 86yrs jail for attempting to shoot US soldiers in Afghanistan and what may happen to Staff. Sgt. Bale.
Wikipedia on her:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aafia_Siddiqui