Posted on 09/28/2017 4:34:02 AM PDT by Godebert
The U.S. needs military officers who are skilled and intellectually curious and predisposed to challenging groupthink. Correspondingly, the Army shouldn't overreact in punishing 2nd Lt. Spenser Rapone for his apparent endorsement of communism.
(Excerpt) Read more at washingtonexaminer.com ...
Those oaths are pretty clear.
The problem is that communism as a political belief does not violate those oaths any more than the 2016 Democrat party platform does. Political beliefs are not chargeable. His other actions are. The smart move here is to remove the politics completely.
Lemme guess, fag ? Definitely looks the part, and the political ideology especially.
He’s trying to overthrow the Constitution!
Review the oaths. Communism is not comportable with the Constitution.
He’s a communist piece of sh*t subversive. I’ve got a few suggestions as to what should happen to him.
But you already know what I’d say.
Drawn and quartered and then a dishonorable discharge.
CLose.
But there’s urine involved...
You don’t get kicked out for promoting genocide?
I agree.
The gumby table in lieu of hanging or firing squad should suffice.
A GCM is not the place for an intellectual exercise. Charge under Art. 88, 133, and 134 and be guaranteedthe verdict. Don’t muddy the water or give him a political platform.
He should be scourged and parachuted into North Korea.
At the very least he needs to be kicked the hell out our military as he is an avowed enemy of the United States.
RE vid:
So.... he empties an entire AK magazine (30 rounds), a full Makarov mag, RELOADS the Makarov, empties that... and doesn’t hit Stallone...
Stallone, on the other hand, one pluck of the bowstring... Boom...
Yup. That’s about right. :^)
And the rest of his network and like-minded buddies. They’re like Lice. Where there’s one, there’s more.
The following is a very recent letter Col. Heffington wrote and included on a West Point forum. According to the letter, West Point is in a total shambles and no long the Academy it was 20 years ago.........
Dear Sir/Maam,
Before you read any further, please understand that the following paragraphs come from a place of intense devotion and loyalty to West Point. My experience as a cadet had a profound impact upon who I am and upon the course of my life, and I remain forever grateful that I have the opportunity to be a part of the Long Gray Line. I firmly believe West Point is a national treasure and that it can and should remain a vitally important source of well trained, disciplined, highly educated Army officers and civilian leaders. However, during my time on the West Point faculty (2006-2009 and again from 2013-2017), I personally witnessed a series of fundamental changes at West Point that have eroded it to the point where I question whether the institution should even remain open. The recent coverage of 2LT Spenser Raponean avowed Communist and sworn enemy of the United Statesdramatically highlighted this disturbing trend. Given my recent tenure on the West Point faculty and my direct interactions with Rapone, his mentors, and with the Academys leadership, I believe I can shed light on how someone like Rapone could possibly graduate.
First and foremost, standards at West Point are nonexistent. They exist on paper, but nowhere else. The senior administration at West Point inexplicably refuses to enforce West Points publicly touted high standards on cadets, and, having picked up on this, cadets refuse to enforce standards on each other. The Superintendent refuses to enforce admissions standards or the cadet Honor Code, the Dean refuses to enforce academic standards, and the Commandant refuses to enforce standards of conduct and discipline. The end result is a sort of malaise that pervades the entire institution. Nothing matters anymore. Cadets know this, and it has given rise to a level of cadet arrogance and entitlement the likes of which West Point has never seen in its history.
Every fall, the Superintendent addresses the staff and faculty and lies. He repeatedly states that We are going to have winning sports teams without compromising our standards, and everyone in Robinson Auditorium knows he is lying because we routinely admit athletes with ACT scores in the mid-teens across the board. I have personally taught cadets who are borderline illiterate and cannot read simple passages from the assigned textbooks. It is disheartening when the institutions most senior leader openly lies to his own facultyand they all know it.
The cadet honor code has become a laughingstock. Cadets know they will not be separated for violating it, and thus they do so on a daily basis. Moreover, since they refuse to enforce standards on each other and police their own ranks, cadets will rarely find a cadet at an honor hearing despite overwhelming evidence that a violation has occurred.
This in turn has caused the staff and faculty to give up even reporting honor incidents. Why would a staff or faculty member expend the massive amount of time and energy it takes to report an honor violationincluding writing multiple sworn statements, giving interviews, and testifying at the honor hearingwhen they know without a doubt the cadet will not be found (or, if found, the Superintendent will not separate the cadet)? To make matters worse, the senior leadership at West Point actively discourages staff and faculty from reporting honor violations.
I was unfortunate enough to experience this first hand during my first tour on the faculty, when the Commandant of Cadets called my office phone and proceeded to berate me in the most vulgar and obscene language for over ten minutes because I had reported a cadet who lied to me and then asked if we could just drop it. Of course, I was duty bound to report the cadets violation, and I did. During the course of the berating I received from the Commandant, I never actually found out why he was so angry. It seemed that he was simply irritated that the institution was having to deal with the case, and that it was my fault it even existed. At the honor hearing the next day, I ended up being the one on trial as my character and reputation were dragged through the mud by the cadet and her civilian attorney while I sat on the witness stand without any assistance. In the end, of course, the cadet was not found (despite having at first admitted that she lied), and she eventually graduated. Just recently a cadet openly and obviously plagiarized his History research paper, and his civilian professor reported it.
The evidence was overwhelmingthere was not the slightest question of his guilt, yet the cadet was not found. The professor, and indeed all the faculty who knew of the case, were completely demoralized. This is the new norm for the cadet honor system. In fact, there is now an addition to the honor system (the Willful Admission Process) which essentially guarantees that if a cadet admits a violation, then separation is not even a possibility. In reality, separation is not a possibility anyway because the Superintendent refuses to impose that sanction. Academic standards are also nonexistent.
I believe this trend started approximately ten years ago, and it has continued to get worse. West Point has stated standards for academic expectations and performance, but they are ignored. Cadets routinely fail multiple classes and they are not separated at the end-of-semester Academic Boards. Their professors recommend Definitely Separate, but those recommendations are totally disregarded.
I recently taught a cadet who failed four classes in one semester (including mine), in addition to several she had failed in previous semesters, and she was retained at the Academy. As a result, professors have lost hope and faith in the entire Academic Board process. It has been made clear that cadets can fail a multitude of classes and they will not be separated. Instead, when they fail (and they do to a staggering extent), the Dean simply throws them back into the mix and expects the faculty to somehow drag them through the academic program until they manage to earn a passing grade. What a betrayal this is to the faculty! Also, since they get full grade replacement if they must retake a course, cadets are actually incentivized to fail.
They know they can re-take the course over the summer when they have no other competing requirements, and their new grade completely replaces the failing one. STAP (Summer Term Academic Program) is also now an accepted summer detail assignment, so retaking a course during the summer translates into even more summer leave for the deficient cadet.
Even the curriculum itself has suffered. The plebe American History course has been revamped to focus completely on race and on the narrative that America is founded solely on a history of racial oppression. Cadets derisively call it the I Hate America Course. Simultaneously, the plebe International History course now focuses on gender to the exclusion of many other important themes. On the other hand, an entire semester of military history was recently deleted from the curriculum (at West Point!). In all courses, the bar has been lowered to the point where it is irrelevant. If a cadet fails a course, the instructor is blamed, so instructors are incentivized to pass everyone. Additionally, instead of responding to cadet failure with an insistence that cadets rise to the challenge and meet the standard, the bar for passing the course itself is simply lowered. This pattern is widespread and pervades every academic department.
Conduct and disciplinary standards are in perhaps the worst shape of all. Cadets are jaded, cynical, arrogant, and entitled. They routinely talk back to and snap at their instructors (military and civilian alike), challenge authority, and openly refuse to follow regulations. They are allowed to wear civilian clothes in almost any arena outside the classroom, and they flaunt that privilege. Some arrive to class unshaven, in need of haircuts, and with uniforms that look so ridiculously bad that, at times, I could not believe I was even looking at a West Point cadet.
However, if a staff or faculty member attempts to correct the cadet in question, that staff/faculty member is sure to be reprimanded for harassing cadets. For example, as I made my rounds through the barracks inspecting study conditions one evening as the Academic Officer in Charge, I encountered a cadet in a company study room. He was wearing a pair of blue jeans and nothing else, and was covered in tattoos. He had long hair, was unshaven, and I was honestly unsure if he was even a cadet. He looked more like a prison convict to me. When I questioned what he was doing there, he remained seated in his chair and sneered at me that he was authorized because he was a First Class cadet. I proceeded to correct him and then reported him to the chain of command the next morning. Later that day I received an email from the Brigade Tactical Officer telling me to stay in my lane. I know many other officers receive the same treatment when attempting to make corrections. It is extremely discouraging when the response is invariably one that comes to the defense of the cadet.
That brings me to another point: cadets versions of stories are always valued more highly by senior leaders than those of commissioned officers on the staff and faculty. It is as if West Points senior leaders believe their job is to protect cadets from the staff and faculty at all costs. This might explain why the facultys recommendations are ignored at the Academic Boards, why honor violations are ignored (and commissioned officers are verbally abused for bringing them to light), and why cadets always win when it comes to conduct and disciplinary issues.
It seems that the Academys senior leaders are intimidated by cadets. During my first tour on the faculty (I was a CPT at the time), I noticed that 4th class cadets were going on leave in civilian clothes when the regulation clearly stated they were supposed to be wearing a uniform. During a discussion about cadet standards between the BTO and the Dept. of History faculty, I asked why plebes were going on leave in civilian clothes.
His answer astonished me: That rule is too hard to enforce. Yet West Point had no problem enforcing that rule on me in the mid-1990s. I found it impossible to believe that the several hundred field grade officers stationed at West Point could not make teenagers wear the uniform. This anecdote highlights the fact that West Points senior leaders lack not the ability but the motivation to enforce their will upon the Corps of Cadets.
This brings me to the case of now-2LT Spenser Rapone. It is not at all surprising that the Academy turned a blind eye to his behavior and to his very public hatred of West Point, the Army, and this nation.
I knew at the time I wrote that sworn statement in 2015 that he would go on to graduate. It is not so much that West Points leadership defends his views (Prof. Hosein did, however); it is that West Points senior leaders are infected with apathy: they simply do not want to deal with any problem, regardless of how grievous a violation of standards and/or discipline it may be. They are so reticent to separate problematic cadets (undoubtedly due to the developmental model that now exists at USMA) that someone like Rapone can easily slip through the cracks. In other words, West Points leaders choose the easier wrong over the harder right.
I could go on, but I fear that this letter would simply devolve into a screed, which is not my intention. I will sum up by saying this: a culture of extreme permissiveness has invaded the Military Academy, and there seems to be no end to it. Moreover, this is not unintentional; it is a deliberate action that is being taken by the Academys senior leadership, though they refuse to acknowledge or explain it. Conduct and behavior that would never be tolerated at a civilian university is common among cadets, and it is supported and defended by the Academys senior leaders in an apparent and misguided effort to attract more applicants and cater to what they see as the unique needs of this generation of cadets.
Our beloved Military Academy has lost its way. It is a shadow of what it once was. It used to be a place where standards and discipline mattered, and where concepts like duty, honor, and country were real and they meant something. Those ideas have been replaced by extreme permissiveness, rampant dishonesty, and an inexplicable pursuit of mediocrity. Instead of scrambling to restore West Point to what it once was, the Academys senior leaders give cadets more and more privileges in a seeming effort to turn the institution into a third-rate civilian liberal arts college. Unfortunately, they have largely succeeded. The few remaining members of the staff and faculty who are still trying to hold the line are routinely berated, ignored, and ultimately silenced for their unwillingness to go along with the program. The Academys senior leaders simply do not want to hear their voices or their concerns. Dissent is crushedI was repeatedly told to keep quiet at faculty meetings, even as a LTC, because my dissent was neither needed nor appreciated. It breaks my heart to write this.
It breaks my heart to know first-hand what West Point was versus what it has become. This is not a Corps has story; it is meant to highlight a deliberate and radical series of changes being undertaken at the highest levels of USMAs leadership that are detrimental to the institution. Criticizing these changes is not popular. I have already been labeled a traitor by some at the Academy due to my sworn statements appearance in the media circus surrounding Spenser Rapone. However, whenever I hear this, I am reminded of the Cadet Prayer:
suffer not our hatred of hypocrisy and pretense ever to diminish.
Make us to choose the harder right instead of the easier wrong,
and never to be content with a half-truth when the whole can be won.
that scorns to compromise with vice and injustice, and knows no fear when truth and right are in jeopardy.
West Point was once special, and it can be again. Spenser Rapone never should have been admitted, much less graduate, but he wasand that mistake is directly attributable to the culture of permissiveness and apathy that now exists there.
Evidently it's gone....see my last post which is a letter by Col. Heffington, one of Rapone's officer instructors......
HT, your post 137, with the letter from Col. Heffington about the state of West Point was the most disheartening thing I have read in many moons.
West Point should be best of the best, not the just OK of the slovenly, the untrustworthy and the mediocre.
Mattis needs to overhaul the entire staff there and reinstitute the standards that eight years of Obama jettisoned.
Heartbreaking to read, and more heartbreaking to realize this is what our Officer Corps will consist of in the near future.
Col. Heffington's letter needs to be read and spread thru every conservative network available.
As a side note, that explains the approval of openly homosexuals, the approval of cross dressing homosexuals and more importantly, the recent female giving birth on a naval warship..............
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