LowTek

retard
Members of 82nd and other military units are being refused leave to go and help their families and townships affected by the hurricane. They however are on active 72 hour notice. (They have to be ready to leave for Israel in 72 hours. - 82nd and other quick deployment units are supposed to be in a foreign theater in 72 hours)

So can't help family, but you can die for the fucking jews. Time to kick out all the jews.

They can't really do shit, if the whole unit desserts.

They need to nut up, just this once.

they couldn't keep track of them very well if they run to the disaster areas to help family.



My grandfather deserted WW2 to be with my grandmother.

They were going to send him to japan in the last days of the war.

If he hadn't have done that.
My whole family would not exist.
 
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Call Me Tim

Dramacrat
They can't really do shit, if the whole unit desserts.
This is a level of coordination that is just impossible. 82nd is enormous. Not to mention all the support groups. If you're E5 Sgt youre most likely going to be a lifer. Plus, felony-like conviction on your record. Dishonorable Discharge is worse than a felony in many aspects.
My grandfather deserted WW2 to be with my grandmother.

They were going to send him to japan in the last days of the war.

If he hadn't have done that.
My whole family would not exist.
Now I know my life's purpose. To go back in time to stop your grandfather.
 

LowTek

retard
This is a level of coordination that is just impossible. 82nd is enormous. Not to mention all the support groups. If you're E5 Sgt youre most likely going to be a lifer. Plus, felony-like conviction on your record. Dishonorable Discharge is worse than a felony in many aspects.

Now I know my life's purpose. To go back in time to stop your grandfather.

To stop my grandfather deserting zog, back in WW2 to to be with my grandmother.

Would be like trying to stop uncle Adolf from being an artist
 

Call Me Tim

Dramacrat
To stop my grandfather deserting zog, back in WW2 to to be with my grandmother.
No. I would steer him towards the Coast Guard, and the problem would salve itself. Alternate timeline theroy.

Would be like trying to stop uncle Adolf from being an artist

If Adolph went and completed art school he would been better trained to illustrate how the Holohoax didn't happen.
 
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LowTek

retard
This is a level of coordination that is just impossible. 82nd is enormous. Not to mention all the support groups. If you're E5 Sgt youre most likely going to be a lifer. Plus, felony-like conviction on your record. Dishonorable Discharge is worse than a felony in many aspects.


It was the same punishment or much worse in the 1940s.

What is your life worth?


I'm not suggesting or advocating anything, but to take care of yourself.
And do what's right for your own personal situation.

Every individual is different and has a unique situation.

Things are about to get pretty crazy for everyone.
 
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Call Me Tim

Dramacrat
It was the same punishment or worse in the 1940s.

What is your life worth?
depends. desertion during wartime is punishable by death. And yes the US executed military personnel from all branches for desertion. But it would have to be really blatant and for an extended length of time and or there would be a heinous crime attached to it.

for example, Emmit Till. Yes that one the innocent dindu nuffins that sexually harassed a white woman who happened to be married to a local cop, was lynched and had his story sensationalized and the facts grossly altered by a jewish reporter, to overly lend sympathy to the black rapist to be and cause a nearly an 80 year long outrage?

His father, Louis Till, liked to brutalize his wife and beat her.

While he was in the Army overseas, he while in Italy, 1944, decided to plan and execute a home invasion, in the process raped two women and killed one of them.
Fruit from the poison tree.
 
depends. desertion during wartime is punishable by death. And yes the US executed military personnel from all branches for desertion.
sorry, there was only ONE execution during wwii for desertion, Eddie Slovik (they "made an example of him")
the rest were for murder, rape and other crimes

maybe you're thinking of the civil war? soldiers were shot or hanged for all kinds of crazy things
it was an extra-premium crazy war, we don't even know how many were executed
 
depends. desertion during wartime is punishable by death. And yes the US executed military personnel from all branches for desertion. But it would have to be really blatant and for an extended length of time and or there would be a heinous crime attached to it.

for example, Emmit Till. Yes that one the innocent dindu nuffins that sexually harassed a white woman who happened to be married to a local cop, was lynched and had his story sensationalized and the facts grossly altered by a jewish reporter, to overly lend sympathy to the black rapist to be and cause a nearly an 80 year long outrage?

His father, Louis Till, liked to brutalize his wife and beat her.

While he was in the Army overseas, he while in Italy, 1944, decided to plan and execute a home invasion, in the process raped two women and killed one of them.
Fruit from the poison tree.

Fat
 

Call Me Tim

Dramacrat
sorry, there was only ONE execution during wwii for desertion, Eddie Slovik (they "made an example of him")
the rest were for murder, rape and other crimes

maybe you're thinking of the civil war? soldiers were shot or hanged for all kinds of crazy things
it was an extra-premium crazy war, we don't even know how many were executed
So during the US Civil War there wasn't a military?
 

Call Me Tim

Dramacrat
You just shot a hole in the bottom of your own boat.
So the US didn't have a military during the US Civil War?

Most executions did not give a reason. There is no reason that desertion wasn't the cause.

Death Penalty was "suspended" in 1961.

On April 13, 1961, U.S. Army Private John A. Bennett was hanged after being convicted of rape and attempted murder. (R. Serrano, “Last Soldier to Die at Levenworth Hanged in an April Storm,” Los Angeles Times, July 12, 1994)

By the Numbers: Military Death Penalty Cases

SOURCE: Dallas Morning News, Nov. 9, 2009

49: military cases in which the death penalty was sought since 1984

15: convictions in capital trials since then

2: times among the 15 that the commanding general has commuted the sentence to life

8: times an appeals court has reversed the conviction, commuted the sentence or ordered a new trial

5: defendants on death row, 3 of whom have appeals pending in military courts

2: condemned servicemen who have exhausted their military appeals. One has had his conviction upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court and awaits an order from the president to be executed. The other had his death writ signed by President George W. Bush, but his case has been appealed to federal district court.



While yes Eddie Slovak was the only one executed for desertion, we can't really know that because the lack of evidence.
 
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