Another DEI Female Commander Reileved Of Command

Was it ever proven that she was a DEI hire or was Reichguide just being a misogynistic dipshit again?
 
Congratulations. Must have been rough for you at first having to set an alarm clock to wake up in the morning.
I'm not 90 like you. I don't need an alarm clock to wake me up. I'm up and on the move way before you've decided just how you're going to get out of bed.
I see no value in discussing the vagaries of military law with a civilian.
Especially when the answer is like being run through by d’Artagnan.
Your ascription and personal insults directed at veterans are noted.
I don't insult our nation's veterans or their service. I have insulted veterans who have dishonored themselves or those who have morphed into grumpy assholes, but that is on them. It's not a criticism of their honorable service.
 

Insubordinate US Space Force Colonel Relieved of Her Command​

By
M Dowling
-
April 11, 2025




Colonel Susan Meyers of the U.S. Space Force, stationed at Pituffik Space Base in Greenland, was relieved of her command following an email she sent to base personnel.

The email criticized Vice President JD Vance’s visit and expressed concerns that the issues discussed did not reflect the situation at Pituffik. According to official statements, Meyers was removed due to a “loss of confidence in her ability to lead.”
The USA armed forces have been famous for instilling the culture of initiative, of being trained to think for themselves, especially important if cut off from communications with higher command (consider Soviet and Arab military units exhibiting chicken-with-head-cut-off behaviour).

A military that doesn't heed warnings from the front lines and demands mindlessness will not serve its nation well.
 
She gets no military benefits either.
Are you sure that is correct? She can be relieved of command as a purely administrative procedure, but depriving her of all accrued benefits might require a more formal hearing.
 
Are you sure that is correct? She can be relieved of command as a purely administrative procedure, but depriving her of all accrued benefits might require a more formal hearing.
It requires a formal court martial.
 
Are you sure that is correct? She can be relieved of command as a purely administrative procedure, but depriving her of all accrued benefits might require a more formal hearing.

I'm basing that on the statements you can find almost everywhere that she was "fired."

A resignation on her part can be requested by her superiors. If so, then she retains her full benefits.

A termination, OTOH, isn't a resignation. It's a mandated separation that has terms which can be mutually agreed upon. Those terms can be that she can retain her benefits. This would be an administrative discharge.

Being "fired" doesn't fit either category above. It's a forced separation supported by cause and benefits do not accrue in either the civilian world or the military.

I could be wrong.
 
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