01/03/10
from Web Warrior Online
When to Shoot the Colonels
by Tom Baugh
Saturday, 02 January 2010 14:24 administrator
"At ease, Marines, and be seated" orders the gruff Gunnery Sergeant. "Now turn
to Chapter 8 in your Military Constitutional Law text," he continues. "Today we
discuss the appropriate conditions for shooting a colonel who is issuing an
order which would violate the Constitutional rights of American citizens. Our
first scenario involves gun seizures..."
Absurd, isn't it, to think that this sort of education is conducted among our
armed forces? Yet, millions of citizens indulge this unspoken fantasy each time
they imagine that the military exists to preserve our freedoms.
When I was at the Naval Academy in the mid-80s, and a Marine officer in the late
1980s and early 1990s, discussion of such issues was considered taboo. One
fellow junior officer even scoffed that "Congress can change that Constitution
any time they like." This isn't to say that there wasn't an undercurrent among
most of the warfighters that issues such as gun control and preservation freedom
of speech might one day pose a crisis of command. Yet this undercurrent was kept
carefully concealed, and tended to become a more and more uncomfortable subject
as the ranks of one's company became more elevated. Fortunately, with the
Soviets and the threat of global thermonuclear war, these issues seemed far
removed and safe from serious discussion.
Not so today. In the aftermath of Katrina, armed and uniformed soldiers
patrolled the streets and disarmed Americans. Some uniformed soldiers were
captured on film lamenting that "I can't believe that we're doing this to
Americans." Yet, they did it anyway, lamentations notwithstanding. But why?
To answer that, we need to understand the principles of military command and
education. For veterans, this discussion is unnecessary. For the vast number of
non-veterans, especially those who harbor that most dangerous and ill-advised
fantasy of a Constitutionally-aware military, this discussion is essential to
survival.
American military education is one of the most finely tuned and adapted
mechanisms in the world for instilling knowledge into its students. No other
school or university can come close to the efficiency at which military
knowledge is imparted to novices. There are even courses, such as Principles of
Military Instruction, for how to teach military courses. These courses even
teach how to develop such courses from scratch. The famous John Saxon math
courses, popular among homeschoolers, exhibit these techniques, courtesy of that
former Air Force officer and academy instructor. Military courses developed
along these lines tend to be highly effective at teaching motivated students.
Students motivated to learn how to do things such as extinguish fires or shoot
missiles. Or shoot you.
As a result, if it is worth teaching to soldiers, sailors, airmen or Marines, it
is worth embodying in a course. Captured as a course or in official manuals,
such instruction is available to all for review and comment to make sure that
the correct instruction is given, and given correctly. Conversely, if it doesn't
exist as a course, it isn't being taught. And if it isn't being taught, it isn't
even on the radar of the military mind. At least not the minds of those in
command. Good luck finding a course such as "When to Shoot the Colonels" in a
military instruction catalogue.
Even basics such as reading and writing and math are available as courses. But
not shooting colonels. What colonel would even authorize such a thing? Only a
colonel who realizes that one day he might have to shoot a general, of course.
But that would require a separate course for command grades, entitled "When to
Shoot the Generals." And who would authorize that? We can keep climbing this
chain all the way up, if we like, but at some point the absurdity makes its
point. No one in a position of command or power is going to surrender that power
for something as irrelevant as your rights.
And what if a particular soldier scored highly on such a course? What colonel
would hand out high efficiency reports on his potential executioner?
Another aspect of this problem that needs to be clearly understood is that all
modern American military officers are political appointees. Surprised? You
shouldn't be. As a practical exercise ask one to read his commission document to
you. Pay particular attention to the "follow lawful orders" part, along with the
"serve at the pleasure of the President" phrase. Oath of office notwithstanding,
nothing in that document says anything about what to do about unlawful orders.
Or even lawful orders, such as "seize all guns because Congress authorized it,"
which haven't yet stood the test of the judicial branch to adjudge
Constitutionality. And like that 1stLt said, enough Congressmen can get together
and change that Constitution. The Constitution itself says so.
Besides, if some uppity colonel out there decided to start authorizing
instruction about when to shoot the colonels, you can bet that pretty quick the
President would no longer be pleased. Because he or she would know where that
path must ultimately lead. Which is why uppity colonels don't stay colonels for
very long. Political appointees, my friends. That vision you have in your head
of the noble military protecting your rights is just a dangerous fantasy. A
fantasy you have to get rid of right now, before it gets you killed.
"But wait," you say, "I know Sgt. Soandso, and he would never go along with a
gun seizure." Maybe not, but then again, you might be surprised. To "not go
along" would mean that he has to violate orders. This violation would at the
very least be a career-killer, or possibly get him shot in an extreme situation.
Shot by who? By all the other sergeants who don't want to get shot, of course.
After all, the colonel only needs a handful of sergeants who are in it for a
career, and a raft of lieutenants, captains and majors who one day want to be
colonels. For you to have your rights protected would require that a sufficient
number of each of these decide, simultaneously, to put on the brakes. It is
easier just to shoot you for resisting and go about their day. Say it again,
"political appointees."
Besides, if all of these people decide in unison to protect you, and in so doing
put their own careers, freedoms and life on the line, who is going to protect
them? You? And if so, how? You needed them to protect you in the first place.
And if Sgt. Soandso gets shot protecting your rights, what about his family?
Retribution aside, who takes care of them with him out of the picture? Worse,
after Sgt. Soandso gets shot, some corporal will be there ready to pin on those
chevrons. And you can bet that to that guy, you are a minor inconvenience in his
day. You wouldn't get lucky enough to get a chain of noble soldiers to protect
you. When the day arrives, all of those political appointees will have scrubbed
the ranks of those pesky oathkeepers anyway. Those oathkeepers who remain hidden
in ranks will be in an impossible situation.
And we haven't even discussed the false-flagging of dressing foreign troops in
American uniforms to capitalize on the unwillingness of Americans to kill "our
boys." I'll save that one for later.
So if the military doesn't exist to protect our rights and freedoms, why does it
exist? The answer is simple. It exists to back our national will with force.
Most of the time, that is a good thing, particularly when our national will is
to not be attacked by jackasses who threaten us. But when the national will
turns to taking your guns away, you will be the jackass who threatens "us." Then
the military will execute that national will with cold, unthinking and
bureaucratic efficiency. And wrap itself in the flag while doing so.
Want to have some fun? Walk up to any active duty serviceman you wish, shake his
hand and thank him for his service. Then, before you release his hand, pull him
toward you slightly, look into his eyes and tell him, "now when the time comes,
don't forget what your oath really means." Do this ten times, and the reactions
of that little informal poll will tell you everything you need to know. Having
divested yourself of that little fantasy, maybe you will have a chance to
survive that gun seizure for the real battle later. At the very least you will
have looked into the eyes of some of the enemy, constituted of complacency and
obedience, you may one day face.
Last Updated on Saturday, 02 January 2010 16:41
* * * * *
Well, Mister Baugh is a pessimistic son of a bitch, isn't he? I guess I have more faith in the character and integrity of the American soldier than he does. As a member of Oath Keepers, I have seen thousands of active-duty military voluntarily join the group which swears to protect the constitution and to NOT obey orders to disarm the citizens. I trust the rest of the troops to be patriotic Americans who will not inflict violence on the people they enlisted to defend.
I suspect there will be some brain-dead zombies in the ranks, even in leadership positions. They will collect guns from the willing public and try to disarm those who resist. They may have some initial success. Some gun owners keep a gun for home defense and never practice with it. Some hobbyists shoot off a box of ammunition when they can afford it and some of the bullets actually hit the target paper by chance, because they never learned how to use their gun. I've heard that even the typical policeman only fires 100 rounds per year on the range.
Eventually the gun seizers will encounter one of many like me. I do not intend to voluntarily surrender my weapons. The military trained me to "Expert Marksman" standard, and I have maintained my skill by frequent practice. On a good day I can empty a magazine into the "10" ring on the target. That's about the size of an eye socket, - good aim point if the gun seizers are wearing body armor.
Sure, they'll get me if they send enough people, but the survivors will be really demoralized. And if things had reached that point, it would have been time for me to go anyway. As they say in New Hampshire "Live Free or Die".
EnemyoftheState
P.S. I hope I get a colonel.