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  1. ultralightdude on

    The entirety of the article…
    >Of the many questions posed by those gathered in U.S. District Judge Richard Leon’s courtroom last week, the most obvious one of all never came up: Why on earth was anyone here in the first place?

    >Until now, the military has pursued only a tiny number of criminal cases against retirees for actions that occur after military service has ended. Until now, the idea that the secretary of defense would accuse a lawmaker of treason simply for disagreeing with him would be laughable. Until now, any free-speech debates concerning sitting members of Congress have led to the conclusion that lawmakers ought to have—to borrow from former Chief Justice Earl Warren—the widest possible latitude to express themselves.

    >And yet there we all were anyway, gathered to see Mark Kelly—the fighter pilot turned astronaut turned U.S. senator—defend his First Amendment rights against an attempt by the Pentagon chief, Pete Hegseth, to silence him and knock down his military retirement rank and pay.

  2. Positive-Room7421 on

    With everything going on, I had completely forgotten about this. And it’s a big deal!

  3. ilevelconcrete on

    Wow, I can’t believe that the U.S. military, an institution that has murdered millions of innocent civilians over the years in pursuit of private profit, is acting immorally. Who’d have thunk?

  4. monkeywithgun on

    >And yet there we all were anyway, gathered to see Mark Kelly—the fighter pilot turned astronaut turned U.S. senator—defend his First Amendment rights against an attempt by the Pentagon chief, Pete Hegseth, to silence him and knock down his military retirement rank and pay.

    Pete Hegseth; an alcoholic washed up Fox News personality pretending to be a tough guy. What a messed up reality.

  5. Kelley paraphrased the US Manual for Courts-Martial, which states that military requirements to obey orders do not apply “to a patently illegal order, such as one that directs the commission of a crime”. I’m curious how the military can punish someone for quoting their manual.

  6. Cyanopicacooki on

    I’ll bet he says that to all the girls…

    Even if he wins though, someone else will be targetted with Trumped up shite, and again, and again, until one judge lets evil triumph and precedent is set. When you’re up against the state, no matter how right you are, they will win. And they will get support. And we all lose.

  7. TheBatemanFlex on

    I’m not sure about bigger than it seems, but it gets lost in the consistent and relatively large scandals uncovered weekly.

  8. I hope that Mark Kelly becomes Secretary of DEFENCE in a future administration and spends four years hauling Kegsbreath from one court case to another, non-stop, including a similar stripping of any rank he holds (he has something from his days in the army, right?) and then a complete and utter court martialing.

  9. Ok-disaster2022 on

    Senator  quoting from US military manual gets his retirement demoted, but vet storming the capital to overthrow the US government gets millions for her family. 

  10. Seagoon_Memoirs on

    this could be a „Have you no decency sir “ moment

    >In the spring of 1954, McCarthy picked a fight with the U.S. Army, charging lax security at a top-secret army facility. The army responded that the senator had sought preferential treatment for a recently drafted subcommittee aide. Amidst this controversy, McCarthy temporarily stepped down as chairman for the duration of the three-month nationally televised spectacle known to history as the Army-McCarthy hearings.

    >The army hired Boston lawyer Joseph Welch to make its case. At a session on June 9, 1954, McCarthy charged that one of Welch’s attorneys had ties to a Communist organization. As an amazed television audience looked on, Welch responded with the immortal lines that ultimately ended McCarthy’s career: „Until this moment, Senator, I think I never really gauged your cruelty or your recklessness.“ When McCarthy tried to continue his attack, Welch angrily interrupted, „Let us not assassinate this lad further, senator. You have done enough. Have you no sense of decency?“

    [https://www.senate.gov/about/powers-procedures/investigations/mccarthy-hearings/have-you-no-sense-of-decency.htm](https://www.senate.gov/about/powers-procedures/investigations/mccarthy-hearings/have-you-no-sense-of-decency.htm)

  11. PresentAwareness745 on

    the actual video and what he actually said should get the case dismissed… but we live in their world now apparently

  12. BlokeInTheMountains on

    > “They don’t care what the courts say, because they’re going to depict them as liberal, woke courts,” he said. (Judge Leon was appointed by George W. Bush.)

  13. Sweethomebflo on

    This source is compromised and unreliable: the Atlantic. All up in that Epstein business

  14. Ok_Lettuce_7939 on

    I’m here for eventually revenge against Kegstand for him to get busted down to CPT for writing his dumbass book.

  15. The Kelly case is meant to shut up anyone who was in or who was a part of the military, who may speak out against the administration. They did the same thing to colleges and news stations.

  16. No_Warthog_3584 on

    I’m a retired military officer and the prospect of the Pentagon curtailing my free speech is chilling.

  17. Acceptable-Print-254 on

    You can donate to Mark Kelly’s legal defense. Even $5 goes to a worthy cause.

  18. I’m sure the owner of the Atlantic would like this case to have as much attention as possible after photos of her lounging on Epstein’s island dropped.

  19. It’s over America, been great, hope you enjoyed it!! Please dont leave your boundaries until one side or the other has won. We need a bit of time to arm ourselves! Better luck next time

  20. Oh, I see you people are still arguing with this like it’s normal for a Fox News host to de-rank a combat vet over the vet citing the rules.

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