Posted on 06/01/2005 9:18:27 AM PDT by pickemuphere
DENVER -- On the eve of his graduation, the top cadet at the Air Force Academy sent out a religious-themed e-mail to thousands of fellow cadets, even as the school is grappling with complaints that some evangelical Christians are harassing others at the school.
The Associated Press obtained a copy of the e-mail sent Tuesday by Wing Commander Nicholas Jurewicz to the freshmen, sophomore and junior classes, which is about 3,000 cadets. "Wing commander" is the title held by the top senior at the school in military ranking.
Jurewicz lists his favorite quotations in the message, including several about Jesus. One quotation, "Bear one another's burdens, and so you will fulfill the law of Christ," is a biblical verse.
The academy has been under investigation because of complaints that evangelical Christians have harassed cadets who do not share their faith, in violation of the constitutional separation of church and state.
Cadets have been required to attend religious tolerance seminars, during which they have been reminded that Air Force policy bans the use of official e-mails for personal messages.
"We will look into it and if he violated any Air Force or academy policy we will take appropriate action after we've reviewed it," academy spokesman Johnny Whitaker said.
(Excerpt) Read more at washingtonpost.com ...
let me get this straight, if a Christian talks about his faith it's against the law, but a muslim can say or do anything he wants, and its constitutionally protected?
Yes, I believe that some people use it that way.
Do you understand the difference between preaching to your congregation to fight and preaching to your fighters to convert?
"Got it. I defend the very folks who have always ensured religious freedom on this thread and they apparently have no right to express it themselves."
After the problems that have been reported and documented at the Air Force Academy, this guy was a Grade-A fool. I would prefer to entrust things such as 2,000-pound bombs to people with a lick of common sense.
Would you be as happy with a Muslim officer telling you "Either attend mosque on Friday or you're on s**t detail" as you seem to expect non-Christians to be with a Christian officer telling them "Either attend chapel on Sunday or you're on s**t detail?"
You are full of it.
Is that really what's going on? It's not spelled out in the article.
The article just refers to some kid sending an email.
"Is that really what's going on? It's not spelled out in the article."
It's been documented at the academy.
"The article just refers to some kid sending an email."
After the events I noted, only a complete grade-A moron--i.e., someone I would not trust with such things as 2,000-pound bombs or $110-megabuck fighters--would've sent that email TO THE ENTIRE DAMN ACADEMY.
"If this was a Muslim controlled society and you were Christian the work detail would be the least of your problems."
Nice dodge. Address the issue. Does a senior officer in the Air Force have the authority to force his subordinates to adhere to his creed? Yes, or no? If yes, is that a good idea? If it is, then please explain why.
He wasn't an officer at the time, more's the pity. And his authority must be limited indeed if even his well-wishes can be deemed over-the-line.
Flunked? I don't think so; leadership often requires more than tact; sometimes it may even require guts.
"Never volunteer" evidently wasn't his credo.
They think that the military only exists to proselytize and convert in the name of their own particular branch of Christianity....
Unfortunately, a lot of AF leaders feel the same way.
Then not a word would have been spoken from the higher ups.
"And his authority must be limited indeed if even his well-wishes can be deemed over-the-line."
A lot less limited than most civilians would believe.
Go back to the sex scandals at the Academy a while back. There were some cheating scandals even further back.
They all revolved around the upperclassmen having damn-near-Godlike authority over juniors, and not being adequately supervised. The Air Force Academy has a particularly bad corporate culture in this regard.
I quoted the article as it was--I cannot believe they are separating employees into 'camps'
I think you are already in a world of hurt in a company if you even see employees as 'Christian' or 'Non-Christian'.
Sorry--I'm missing something here. Thought we were talking about Christianity not branches of paganism.
As a supervisor, would you treat your 'Christian' employees differently than your 'Non-Christian' employees?
Tell that to the hundreds of millions murdered in the name of secular ideology in the past century.
Yeah, what a total waste that they were killed for nothing instead of in the name of Allah, or God or The Great Brahma Goat like in the good ol' days....
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