The thing is. Military personnel sign their rights away, your constitutional rights away, the moment you sign that piece of paper. Trust me, I was in. You belong to the mercy of uncle Sam.
Incorrect. Being a 24yr vet, we take oath to the Constitution first, all else is secondary.
Problem is, they try and beat you down with threats enough to coerce you into doing things like this.
It takes balls to stand against it, but it can be done. I'm living proof of that. I didnt score brownie points, but i sure as hell didnt allow them to steamroll me or my men and, in the end, thats what matters. My men respected me highly for having their backs instead of plunging knives into them.
I can agree with that. I didn't stay long enough to say I had to deal with their bureaucy. They are extremely good at coercing, so that's why I probably felt I didn't have any rights. In reality we have some form of rights, but it doesn't feel like it.
They even give you an id that states property of the United States. Many people think it to mean the I’d card not realizing it’s you that are owned. Not the id.
Trust me. You can change your mind the same way imposter b iui den changed his colors from red whit blue to solid red. Nothing is permanent during war. Not your allegiance nor your loyalty. You have a God given right to protect your body which is the temple of God from an enemy trying to kill you. Now pick bbn up your weapon. Dust off your mind. Flee. Fight. Run
I left the Army with an Honorable Discharge and not one person ever gave one shit about my service. If you are worried about what people say about whether or not you had an honorable discharge, how is that any different than being worried about what people think about you getting vaxxed? If EVERYONE simply said "NO" this whole thing would be over. Stand up for yourself and others will, too. The sergeant who processed my paperwork to leave the army told me "I thought you were all ate-up, but now I've seen the light. I told them I'd rather suck a fat man's asshole until his forehead caved in than sign up for another contract with the Army." They want you to be afraid and fall in line.
The OTH discharge means you lose all Veterans Benefits like the GI bill I worked for. Also, there's a ban on federal employment. Some potential employers may care about the differences in discharge, but most dont.
It is your decision. I don't know how long you have been in or what skills you had that would lend to your life after the army. If you want to stay in, looks like you have to take it. As far as the GI Bill, all I can say is EVERYTHING I have learned academically has been through Youtube or private lessons/schools that I paid for. The GI Bill will allow you to spend years learning the basic bullshit that Universities dish out. Any specific shit you want to master will require years of focused work/study to master on your own time regardless of whether or not you have use a GI Bill for a bachelor's degree. Also, working for the government? Is that what you really want to do? It's up to you. It's a roll of the dice with the vax. I guess it really depends on what is more important to you - your principles or your paycheck. I'm a principles first guy, but it has made my life more difficult, for sure. No Bell's Palsey, though!
is it really other than honorable? Say you have converted to a religion and stick to it.. You can dispute the discharge for an honorable and pray they give you a decent lawyer and board...I know. Good luck.
Same here. Dont know how to refuse it without going the Other-Than-Honourable discharge route.
The thing is. Military personnel sign their rights away, your constitutional rights away, the moment you sign that piece of paper. Trust me, I was in. You belong to the mercy of uncle Sam.
Incorrect. Being a 24yr vet, we take oath to the Constitution first, all else is secondary.
Problem is, they try and beat you down with threats enough to coerce you into doing things like this.
It takes balls to stand against it, but it can be done. I'm living proof of that. I didnt score brownie points, but i sure as hell didnt allow them to steamroll me or my men and, in the end, thats what matters. My men respected me highly for having their backs instead of plunging knives into them.
I can agree with that. I didn't stay long enough to say I had to deal with their bureaucy. They are extremely good at coercing, so that's why I probably felt I didn't have any rights. In reality we have some form of rights, but it doesn't feel like it.
They even give you an id that states property of the United States. Many people think it to mean the I’d card not realizing it’s you that are owned. Not the id.
Trust me. You can change your mind the same way imposter b iui den changed his colors from red whit blue to solid red. Nothing is permanent during war. Not your allegiance nor your loyalty. You have a God given right to protect your body which is the temple of God from an enemy trying to kill you. Now pick bbn up your weapon. Dust off your mind. Flee. Fight. Run
I left the Army with an Honorable Discharge and not one person ever gave one shit about my service. If you are worried about what people say about whether or not you had an honorable discharge, how is that any different than being worried about what people think about you getting vaxxed? If EVERYONE simply said "NO" this whole thing would be over. Stand up for yourself and others will, too. The sergeant who processed my paperwork to leave the army told me "I thought you were all ate-up, but now I've seen the light. I told them I'd rather suck a fat man's asshole until his forehead caved in than sign up for another contract with the Army." They want you to be afraid and fall in line.
The OTH discharge means you lose all Veterans Benefits like the GI bill I worked for. Also, there's a ban on federal employment. Some potential employers may care about the differences in discharge, but most dont.
If you're dead from the vax you lose all benefits too, so there's that.
It is your decision. I don't know how long you have been in or what skills you had that would lend to your life after the army. If you want to stay in, looks like you have to take it. As far as the GI Bill, all I can say is EVERYTHING I have learned academically has been through Youtube or private lessons/schools that I paid for. The GI Bill will allow you to spend years learning the basic bullshit that Universities dish out. Any specific shit you want to master will require years of focused work/study to master on your own time regardless of whether or not you have use a GI Bill for a bachelor's degree. Also, working for the government? Is that what you really want to do? It's up to you. It's a roll of the dice with the vax. I guess it really depends on what is more important to you - your principles or your paycheck. I'm a principles first guy, but it has made my life more difficult, for sure. No Bell's Palsey, though!
The fact that it could sterilize me would be enough to say no!
Still better than dying.
Exactly. They use fear to intimidate. All the more reason they are not our guys.
is it really other than honorable? Say you have converted to a religion and stick to it.. You can dispute the discharge for an honorable and pray they give you a decent lawyer and board...I know. Good luck.
Its Orher Than Honourable since they treat it as disobeying a direct order. You can dispute to upgrade it 1 year after.
Submit a request for religious accommodation. There is a guide for each branch here https://u.pcloud.link/publink/show?code=8ab
Look into the Dr. Zelenko protocol for undoing the damage from taking the vaccine....
At least maybe you can flush the spike proteins and minimize the damage