enhanced_deficit
Member
- Joined
- Mar 17, 2013
- Messages
- 28,575
The 'top people' that POTUS called out have got to stop, war crimes are a big no-no in this age of social justice and diversity promotions. Trump's nominating First African-American US Air Force Chief in history recently may change the direction of things radically too potentially.
As U.S. air war in Afghanistan surged, investigations into civilian harm plunged
Asadullah Mubaris, 31, stands near the graves of people whose families say they were killed by a U.S. airstrike in Afghanistan's Herat province in January. At least 10 civilians died in the strike, according to Afghan officials. The U.S. military assessed that no civilians were killed. (Lorenzo Tugnoli for The Washington Post)
By Susannah George
September 4, 2020
washingtonpost.com/world/2020/09/04/afghanistan-civilian-casualties-us-airstrikes/
US blocks UN call for independent probe of Gaza protests
16h ago
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pK9LWhsd3QI
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MRdKk00Uj5Y
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/...nternational-yemen-saudi-arabia-a7635506.html
Related
New Top People Trump is bringing at Pentagon support Social Justice and Diversity
Just as confederacy symbols are being demolished across US and Confederate flags display has been banned by US Navy, NASCAR, another historic pro-diversity move by Trump.
Trump nominee to be Air Force chief of staff says he navigates 'two worlds' as an African American man
By Kaelan Deese - 06/05/20
Gen. Charles Brown, commander of Pacific Air Forces and President Trump's nominee to be the next Air Force chief of staff, said in a video released Friday that he navigates "two worlds" as an African American and that he's "thinking about how I can make improvements" institutionally.
"As the commander of Pacific Air Forces, a senior leader in our Air Force, and an African American, many of you may be wondering what I'm thinking about the current events surrounding the tragic death of George Floyd," Brown said.
The general said he has been thinking about living in "two worlds, each with their own perspective and views."
"I'm thinking about how my nomination provides some hope, but also comes with a heavy burden. I can't fix centuries of racism in our country, nor can I fix decades of discrimination that may have impacted members of our Air Force," he said.
Brown said he is thinking about how he can make improvements both "personally, professionally, and institutionally," so that current and future airmen "appreciate the value of diversity."
https://thehill.com/homenews/media/5...-as-an-african
U.S. Navy to ban all public displays of the Confederate flag
June 10
As U.S. air war in Afghanistan surged, investigations into civilian harm plunged
Asadullah Mubaris, 31, stands near the graves of people whose families say they were killed by a U.S. airstrike in Afghanistan's Herat province in January. At least 10 civilians died in the strike, according to Afghan officials. The U.S. military assessed that no civilians were killed. (Lorenzo Tugnoli for The Washington Post)
By Susannah George
September 4, 2020

washingtonpost.com/world/2020/09/04/afghanistan-civilian-casualties-us-airstrikes/

US blocks UN call for independent probe of Gaza protests
16h ago
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pK9LWhsd3QI
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MRdKk00Uj5Y
Donald Trump could be complicit in war crimes, warns Amnesty International
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/...nternational-yemen-saudi-arabia-a7635506.html
(AP) Trump’s recycling program: War crimes and war criminals, old and (potentially) new
Rebecca Gordon
April 3, 2018
A barely noticed anniversary slid by on March 20th. It’s been 15 years since the United States committed the greatest war crime of the twenty-first century: the unprovoked, aggressive invasion of Iraq. The New York Times, which didn’t exactly cover itself in glory in the run-up to that invasion, recently ran an op-ed by an Iraqi novelist living in the United States entitled “Fifteen Years Ago, America Destroyed My Country,” but that was about it. The Washington Post, another publication that (despite the recent portrayal of its Vietnam-era heroism in the movie "The Post") repeatedly editorialized in favor of the invasion, marked the anniversary with a story about the war’s “murky” body count. Its piece concluded that at least 600,000 people died in the decade and a half of war, civil war, and chaos that followed — roughly the population of Washington, D.C.
Related
New Top People Trump is bringing at Pentagon support Social Justice and Diversity
Just as confederacy symbols are being demolished across US and Confederate flags display has been banned by US Navy, NASCAR, another historic pro-diversity move by Trump.
Trump nominee to be Air Force chief of staff says he navigates 'two worlds' as an African American man
By Kaelan Deese - 06/05/20
Gen. Charles Brown, commander of Pacific Air Forces and President Trump's nominee to be the next Air Force chief of staff, said in a video released Friday that he navigates "two worlds" as an African American and that he's "thinking about how I can make improvements" institutionally.
"As the commander of Pacific Air Forces, a senior leader in our Air Force, and an African American, many of you may be wondering what I'm thinking about the current events surrounding the tragic death of George Floyd," Brown said.
The general said he has been thinking about living in "two worlds, each with their own perspective and views."
"I'm thinking about how my nomination provides some hope, but also comes with a heavy burden. I can't fix centuries of racism in our country, nor can I fix decades of discrimination that may have impacted members of our Air Force," he said.
Brown said he is thinking about how he can make improvements both "personally, professionally, and institutionally," so that current and future airmen "appreciate the value of diversity."
https://thehill.com/homenews/media/5...-as-an-african
U.S. Navy to ban all public displays of the Confederate flag
June 10
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