Author Topic: Over 200 Vets, Active Duty Forces Vow to Hold Military Leaders Accountable for COVID-19 Vaccine Mand  (Read 453 times)

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Over 200 Vets, Active Duty Forces Vow to Hold Military Leaders Accountable for COVID-19 Vaccine Mandate

Kristina Wong 1 Jan 2024

More than 200 military veterans, active-duty members, former officials, and military spouses released an open letter on January 1 in which they vowed to do everything in their power to hold senior military leaders responsible for forcing the COVID-19 vaccine mandate on troops.

They wrote in the letter, released on social media Monday:

    While implementing the COVID-19 vaccine mandate, military leaders broke the law, trampled constitutional rights, denied informed consent, permitted unwilling medical experimentation, and suppressed the free exercise of religion. Service members and families were significantly harmed by these actions. Their suffering continues to be felt financially, emotionally, and physically. Some service members became part of our ever-growing veteran homeless population, some developed debilitating vaccine injuries, and some even lost their lives. In an apparent attempt to avoid accountability, military leaders are continuing to ignore our communications regarding these injuries and the laws that were broken.

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https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2024/01/01/over-200-vets-active-duty-forces-vow-hold-military-leaders-accountable-covid-19-vaccine-mandate/
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Brad Miller
@BradMiller1010
3️⃣ years ago today was the most important day of my @USArmy career. It was the day I had to make good on my oath to support & defend the Constitution. It was the greatest achievement of all my years in uniform.

On October 22, 2021, I was fired from my command of the 21st Brigade Engineer Battalion in the 3rd Brigade Combat Team of the 101st Airborne Division for non-compliance with the covid shot mandate.

That morning, a Friday, I received a text from my boss (the brigade commander) that said something like: "Brad, I've been told to suspend you from command today." By "told" he meant his boss, the division commander, directed it. I knew this moment would eventually come & here it was. I acknowledged the text & asked if I could have till the end of the day to shift my command duties around & say farewell to my battalion. He agreed & told me to see him at the end of the day, which I did.

The next day, a Saturday when no one was around, I went & cleared out my office (which was mostly bare anyway because from the day I took command I knew I'd eventually be fired over the mandate). I then turned over the key & left my command HQ for the last time.

The next week, I was officially relieved of command by the division commander, Major General JP McGee. This relief did NOT occur in person but rather by a memo which I didn't actually see until 18 days after it was signed. McGee has since "earned" a 3rd star & works as the @jointstaff Director of Strategy, Plans, and Policy.

About 3 months later I resigned from the Army. It was unequivocally clear that the @DeptofDefense was lost. Soon after, I took off the uniform for good, completing 19 years, 3 months, & 15 days of active service.

I never accepted the narrative we were given about covid. My longstanding skepticism about our govt led me to conclude early on it was another op, though much larger this time.

I could see that the military was a crucial part of executing this attack against its own troops & by extension against all Americans. I couldn't be a part of it. I'm not saying I was always a perfect cadet or officer, but I certainly hadn't forgotten the meaning of the West Point motto: Duty, Honor, Country. I wasn't going to be part of the planned destruction of the military & country. I would side with truth & my countrymen rather than the dark syndicates attacking America from the shadows. If I got fired, so be it.

As I told the junior leaders of my battalion in the short time I was their commander: "I believe in doing the right thing because it's the right thing - consequences be damned."

October 22 will always be an important day for me because it marks the day the "cost" associated with my decision became apparent. I knew I'd eventually be fired for refusing to go along with the covid shot, but the cost of my refusal didn't become real...until it became real.

It's easy to do the right thing when there's no associated cost for doing so. The overwhelming feeling I experienced after being fired that Friday afternoon was enormous relief that the ordeal was finally over & pride in myself that it had ended in my victory. They might have taken my command but that's a small price to pay to keep my integrity intact & oath to the Constitution unbroken. I'd been praying that I'd have the strength to see this through, no matter how far it went. Now I had.

My whole career as a cadet & officer, I heard about leadership. Yet when it came time for military commanders to demonstrate true leadership when their country needed them most, the majority of them couldn't accept the cost associated with that true mantle of command. It's a sad indictment of our military leadership.

The covid op crucible revealed the true state of our military leaders, good & bad. I have met the most incredible people in the military community the past few years.

I've had many supporters & a fair number of haters for the decision I made. Whichever you are, thanks, & let me know below.🫡👇
10:48 AM · Oct 22, 2024


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