To: Thumper1960; Poohbah
TP1960.. have you ever considered this:
If the initial mission of the Liberty were classified and STILL considered classified, the crew would end up in the basement suite at Levinworth for saying anything about it besides the official 'scripted' statment?
And yes, that is a logical conclusion.
Any soldier KNOWS that if they reveal classified info they get a free ticket to Levinworth's basement rooms. (A euphemism for PRISON, thank you.)
Having served in uniform myself, I don't blame them for keeping to teh official statement. I don't know any sane person who would risk a stay in prison, even if doing so exposed a monumental lie one way or the other.
289 posted on
07/09/2003 12:06:08 PM PDT by
Darksheare
(The Borg, the IRS of Star Trek.)
To: Darksheare
If the initial mission of the Liberty were classified and STILL considered classified, the crew would end up in the basement suite at Levinworth for saying anything about it besides the official 'scripted' statment? And yes, that is a logical conclusion. Any soldier KNOWS that if they reveal classified info they get a free ticket to Levinworth's basement rooms. (A euphemism for PRISON, thank you.)I'm familiar with Leavenworth.
However, a simple and truthful answer would be to say, "The details of our mission are classified. I can say nothing more."
Instead, they've been caught lying.
Having served in uniform myself, I don't blame them for keeping to teh official statement. I don't know any sane person who would risk a stay in prison, even if doing so exposed a monumental lie one way or the other.
The lie has already been exposed. The problem is that the crew continues to parrot the lie.
297 posted on
07/09/2003 12:26:00 PM PDT by
Poohbah
(Crush your enemies, see them driven before you, and hear the lamentations of their women.)
To: Darksheare
I've often thought of that possibility. I don't really know what the mission of the Liberty was. The "real" mission?? The incident is certainly shrouded in mystery and conflict.
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