Originally posted by Greenday
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Just following orders
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Originally posted by Flyndaran View PostStill, I don't like how following orders is an excuse for Americans to torture and murder but not for Nazis and others.
At my former job, my co-worker was an ex-Marine. He told me that if he was ever given an unlawful order, it was not only his right, but his duty as an American soldier to say "sir, no, sir" or "with all due respect, I cannot comply with that order".
My best friend is in the US Army right now, and he served a tour in post-Saddam Iraq. He's said the same thing.
If you can't separate the idea of "unlawful order" and "lawful order" just from the terms, an analogy:
If your boss tells you to alter someone else's time card, your right, and your duty as a law-abiding citizen is to say "that is illegal, and I will not take part in it". If your boss tells you to count your drawer down before taking it out, and put a cover on it as you take it out of the cash office to the register, you do it. The former is what an unlawful order would be, and the latter a lawful order."Never confuse the faith with the so-called faithful." -- Cartoonist R.K. Milholland's father.
A truer statement has never been spoken about any religion.
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Originally posted by Arcade Man D View PostIt's not. And it never was.
At my former job, my co-worker was an ex-Marine. He told me that if he was ever given an unlawful order, it was not only his right, but his duty as an American soldier to say "sir, no, sir" or "with all due respect, I cannot comply with that order".Jack Faire
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Originally posted by Arcade Man D View PostIt's not. And it never was.
...r.
The only conclusion I can draw, is that following orders is a valid excuse.
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