Thanks for the link. Question. If you were to
Post# of 123827
Question. If you were to serve active duty in the U.S Navy who would you choose to serve under, the fired guy or the resigned guy?
I'm of course assuming duty, honor, country are uppermost in your mind..
In no branch of the armed forces is any officer taught to place his needs before the welfare of the people under his command; a precept violated almost daily by the fake Commander in Chief.
Easy call for anyone with a sense of honor. Think about it.
The Dems are on the mark with their comments on this matter.
Turn it around, I KNOW how much difficulty you righties have doing that. Obama's acting Sec of the Navy does the exact same thing under the exact circumstances. Single standards and a moral compass is all it takes. Heavy lifting, huh?
Quote:
As public pressure increased, calls among Democrats in Congress for Modly's resignation were also mounting.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Caif., called on Modly to be removed from his post, saying in a statement that he showed “a serious lack of the sound judgment and strong leadership” in firing Crozier.
"Acting Secretary Modly’s actions and words demonstrate his failure to prioritize the force protection of our troops,” Pelosi said.
Rep. Adam Smith, D-Washington, accused Modly of wanting to impress Trump.
"When I listened to the speech that Modly gave -- he was trying to do a half a--ed attempt at a speech that Trump would have given," Smith said. "He's trying to figure out 'what would the narcissist do' -- people are trying to figure out how to lead when their example is someone who is not competent or capable."
Smith continued: "Look, let me just say that I have worked with Esper and Modly for a long time -- I think very highly of them, their skill, their competence and their ability. I see Trump's creeping inserting himself, like when Trump got involved with [Eddie] Gallagher. Trump is at the top of the chain of command. "
Fox News' Andrew O'Reilly, Lucas Tomlinson, and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Gregg Re is a lawyer and editor based in Los Angeles. Follow him on Twitter @gregg_re or email him at gregory.re@foxnews.com.