Posted on 08/27/2012 8:47:27 AM PDT by HonkyTonkMan
Good “Justin” I HATE YOU GUTS! I am DAMN Glad YOU will never be an Officer in MY MILITARY!
We are known by the company we keep. Why was he out there that night in the middle of a riot?
Can he make the right decision in a split second?
No. He cannot.
Actions have consequences.
Justin is an adult who helped destroy property in the middle of a riot...for Joe Paterno, of all things.
He has no business receiving a commission.
“He spent part of his summer in jail.”
C’mon, who hasn’t?
(ducking...)
Just wow.
So the Penn St. riots killed this punk's dream -- and NOT his own destructive acts of vandalism?
What a load...
PA Ping!
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sorry. no sympathy here. nobody forced him to do what he did, it was his own free will. actions have consequences, especially if you’re supposed to be seeking a career where you go about carrying weapons.
this is a weeding out process.
Agreed 100%.
Well, Dad, then your son should not have pled guilty and fought the charges. In fact, as a future officer in training, he should have had the brain power not to be there at all.
He also has to enforce discipline in his unit and be viewed by his men and superiors as a role model. Not gonna happen. He has forfeited any moral authority.
Hopefully he and his dad will stay on this and press for the prosecution of Spanier. He and his gay agenda for PSU should not get a pass. He was part of the cover-up and needs to do some time, along with the other accomplices.
#4 great post!
...we need to entrust our loved ones in uniform,
to leaders who will make the right decision,
in that split second.
-
i’m glad his lapse happened now, instead of the future,
when someone’s life was on the line.
ROTC was correct to boot him. He showed lousy judgement and would have made a poor officer.
He’s a whiner to boot.
Someone pass along, “toughsh**” And the dad should have known better than to blame the court for the son he raised.
He still got a raw deal. He might make a better officer for knowing now that even a single bad judgment can
have horrific unintended consequences.
(My principal focus is on the DA, who apparently chose
to make examples instead of doing “justice”. A $34,000 “fine” —repayment of scholarships—plus $8000 in court costs, plus 30 days in jail, plus probation until 2015, is IMHO a bit much...)
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