Author Topic: Gen. James N. Mattis  (Read 28898 times)


ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 19776
    • View Profile
another one who echoes VDH on Gen Mattis
« Reply #51 on: December 25, 2018, 05:30:20 AM »
https://pjmedia.com/spengler/michael-griffin-for-secretary-of-defense/

I don't recall Obamster firing Mattis without warning in the past .

Of course MSM is ignoring this.
OTOH Trumps' doing it by tweet IS ridiculous.

ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 19776
    • View Profile
Re: Gen. James N. Mattis
« Reply #52 on: December 25, 2018, 06:30:05 AM »
thinking about it
wah if Trump had given a state of union address
or other address and laid out the case for removing US forces in Syria and let his team know in advance
3/4 of the "controversy " would have been avoided.

Instead he tweets impulsively at night making himself and everyone on his team look bad.
Why can't this guy learn anything?

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 72329
    • View Profile
Re: Gen. James N. Mattis
« Reply #53 on: December 25, 2018, 06:56:07 AM »
"State of the Union" is not the right name for it, but an address to the nation from the Oval Office would have been the wise call.

Ditto on "The Wall" and the "Shutdown".

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 72329
    • View Profile
Gen. James N. Mattis seen on both sides now
« Reply #54 on: December 27, 2018, 08:18:07 PM »


a) https://foreignpolicy.com/2018/12/27/james-mattis-wasnt-ready-to-serve-in-a-democracy/?fbclid=IwAR2L4nDfn3p6isFCJiFZ-EP-8hr8X5TevDLEn6SihsQgBEWH0o7bwtU79G0

b) opposed leaving Paris Accords;

c) opposed leaving the Baraq-Kerry deal with Iran;

d) opposed President Trump's plan to reconsider transgender policies;

e) opposed President Trump's parade (well, he was right about that one!)

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 72329
    • View Profile
Newt on Gen. James N. Mattis
« Reply #55 on: January 05, 2019, 11:55:44 PM »
General Jim Mattis: An American Patriot

General Jim Mattis has served his country for his entire life. He is one of the most important and respected military leaders of the last half-century.

He also has the distinction of being the only person I know who has been fired by both Presidents Obama and Trump. In both cases, it was to the administration’s – and the country’s – detriment. However, in both cases, General Mattis also knew his duty was to the United States. That made him feel comfortable in disagreeing with his commander in chief.

I first knew General Mattis during the Iraq war under President George W. Bush, when Mattis was part of the Marine detachment in Kuwait. I was immediately impressed. I later watched him continually adjust and adapt in the battle of Fallujah, which led him to a decisive victory.

His 44-year career as a Marine, which began when he enlisted in 1969 at age 18, has been stunning. He led Marine forces on the ground in some of the most dangerous places on the planet – including Iraq in 1991 and 2003 and Afghanistan in 2001. His success eventually led him to become the Commander of all Marine Forces in the Middle East and later the Commander of U.S. Joint Forces Command, NATO’s Supreme Allied Command for Transformation, and U.S. Central Command. His non-combat service for the Department of Defense has been equally impressive.

I have greatly enjoyed and deeply appreciated working with him as he has served as U.S. Secretary of Defense. Few people alive today have embodied valor, courage, and sheer patriotism that matches General Jim Mattis.

One of my fondest memories with General Mattis was drinking wine and talking with him for a few hours after a meeting with then-Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman John McCain. When I told Mattis about my grandson’s fascination with Waterloo, he told me that he had never fully understood the conflict until he had read the Sharpe novel series by Bernard Cornwell about a British officer fighting in the Napoleonic Wars, which I passed on to my grandson.

I have come to know General Mattis as a remarkable intellectual – and perhaps the best-read officer the Marine Corps has ever produced.

The respect for him at the Department of Defense is tremendous. The respect he has garnered around the world – from both our allies and enemies is breathtaking.

Anyone who questions his patriotism or service is simply wrong.

General Jim Mattis is an American patriot. We should all be deeply thankful for the lifetime of service he has devoted to our country – and saddened that his service as Secretary of Defense has come to an end.

Your Friend,
Newt

   

DougMacG

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 19462
    • View Profile
Re: Newt on Gen. James N. Mattis
« Reply #56 on: January 06, 2019, 08:30:21 AM »
Agree.  He kept us safe, made rogue nations think twice before messing with US interests.  He left the Defense Dept better and stronger than he found it.  He served and left in a dignified manner.  We will be lucky to find someone with his wisdom and backbone to replace him.


Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 72329
    • View Profile
Gen. James N. Mattis: Duty, Democracy, and the threat of Tribalism
« Reply #58 on: August 28, 2019, 02:29:06 PM »
https://www.wsj.com/articles/jim-mattis-duty-democracy-and-the-threat-of-tribalism-11566984601?mod=trending_now_1


By Jim Mattis
Updated Aug. 28, 2019 8:43 am ET


In late November 2016, I was enjoying Thanksgiving break in my hometown on the Columbia River in Washington state when I received an unexpected call from Vice President-elect Mike Pence. Would I meet with President-elect Donald Trump to discuss the job of secretary of defense?

I had taken no part in the election campaign and had never met or spoken to Mr. Trump, so to say that I was surprised is an understatement. Further, I knew that, absent a congressional waiver, federal law prohibited a former military officer from serving as secretary of defense within seven years of departing military service. Given that no waiver had been authorized since Gen. George Marshall was made secretary in 1950, and I’d been out for only 3½ years, I doubted I was a viable candidate. Nonetheless, I felt I should go to Bedminster, N.J., for the interview.

I had time on the cross-country flight to ponder how to encapsulate my view of America’s role in the world. On my flight out of Denver, the flight attendant’s standard safety briefing caught my attention: If cabin pressure is lost, masks will fall…Put your own mask on first, then help others around you. In that moment, those familiar words seemed like a metaphor: To preserve our leadership role, we needed to get our own country’s act together first, especially if we were to help others.

The next day, I was driven to the Trump National Golf Club and, entering a side door, waited about 20 minutes before I was ushered into a modest conference room. I was introduced to the president-elect, the vice president-elect, the incoming White House chief of staff and a handful of others. We talked about the state of our military, where our views aligned and where they differed. Mr. Trump led the wide-ranging, 40-minute discussion, and the tone was amiable.


Afterward, the president-elect escorted me out to the front steps of the colonnaded clubhouse, where the press was gathered. I assumed that I would be on my way back to Stanford University’s Hoover Institution, where I’d spent the past few years doing research. I figured that my strong support of NATO and my dismissal of the use of torture on prisoners would have the president-elect looking for another candidate.

Standing beside him on the steps as photographers snapped away, I was surprised for the second time that week when he characterized me to the reporters as “the real deal.” Days later, I was formally nominated.

During the interview, Mr. Trump had asked me if I could do the job. I said I could. I’d never aspired to be secretary of defense and took the opportunity to suggest several other candidates I thought highly capable. Still, having been raised by the Greatest Generation, by two parents who had served in World War II, and subsequently shaped by more than four decades in the Marine Corps, I considered government service to be both honor and duty. When the president asks you to do something, you don’t play Hamlet on the wall, wringing your hands. To quote a great American company’s slogan, you “just do it.” So long as you are prepared, you say yes.

When it comes to the defense of our experiment in democracy and our way of life, ideology should have nothing to do with it. Whether asked to serve by a Democratic or a Republican, you serve. “Politics ends at the water’s edge”: That ethos has shaped and defined me, and I wasn’t going to betray it, no matter how much I was enjoying my life west of the Rockies and spending time with a family I had neglected during my 40-plus years in the Marines.


When I said I could do the job, I meant I felt prepared. I knew the job intimately. In the late 1990s, I had served as the executive secretary to two secretaries of defense, William Perry and William Cohen. In close quarters, I had gained a personal grasp of the immensity and gravity of a “secdef’s” responsibilities. The job is tough: Our first secretary of defense, James Forrestal, committed suicide, and few have emerged from the job unscathed, either legally or politically.

We were at war, amid the longest continuous stretch of armed conflict in our nation’s history. I’d signed enough letters to next of kin about the death of a loved one to understand the consequences of leading a department on a war footing when the rest of the country was not. The Department of Defense’s millions of devoted troops and civilians spread around the world carried out their mission with a budget larger than the GDPs of all but two dozen countries.

On a personal level, I had no great desire to return to Washington, D.C. I drew no energy from the turmoil and politics that animate our capital. Yet I didn’t feel overwhelmed by the job’s immensities. I also felt confident that I could gain bipartisan support for the Department of Defense despite the political fratricide practiced in Washington.


My career in the Marines brought me to that moment and prepared me to say yes to a job of that magnitude. The Marines teach you, above all, how to adapt, improvise and overcome. But they expect you to have done your homework, to have mastered your profession. Amateur performance is anathema.

The Marines are bluntly critical of falling short, satisfied only with 100% effort and commitment. Yet over the course of my career, every time I made a mistake—and I made many—the Marines promoted me. They recognized that these mistakes were part of my tuition and a necessary bridge to learning how to do things right. Year in and year out, the Marines had trained me in skills they knew I needed, while educating me to deal with the unexpected.

Beneath its Prussian exterior of short haircuts, crisp uniforms and exacting standards, the Corps nurtured some of the strangest mavericks and most original thinkers I encountered in my journey through multiple commands and dozens of countries. The Marines’ military excellence does not suffocate intellectual freedom or substitute regimented dogma for imaginative solutions. They know their doctrine, often derived from lessons learned in combat and written in blood, but refuse to let that turn into dogma.

Woe to the unimaginative one who, in after-action reviews, takes refuge in doctrine. The critiques in the field, in the classroom or at happy hour are blunt for good reasons. Personal sensitivities are irrelevant. No effort is made to ease you through your midlife crisis when peers, seniors or subordinates offer more cunning or historically proven options, even when out of step with doctrine.

In any organization, it’s all about selecting the right team. The two qualities I was taught to value most were initiative and aggressiveness. Institutions get the behaviors they reward.

During my monthlong preparation for my Senate confirmation hearings, I read many excellent intelligence briefings. I was struck by the degree to which our competitive military edge was eroding, including our technological advantage. We would have to focus on regaining the edge.

I had been fighting terrorism in the Middle East during my last decade of military service. During that time, and in the three years since I had left active duty, haphazard funding had significantly worsened the situation, doing more damage to our current and future military readiness than any enemy in the field.

The 26th Secretary of Defense

I could see that the background drummed into me as a Marine would need to be adapted to fit my role as a civilian secretary. It now became even clearer to me why the Marines assign an expanded reading list to everyone promoted to a new rank: That reading gives historical depth that lights the path ahead. Books like the “Personal Memoirs of Ulysses S. Grant,” “Sherman” by B.H. Liddell Hart and Field Marshal William Slim’s “Defeat Into Victory” illustrated that we could always develop options no matter how worrisome the situation. Slowly but surely, we learned there was nothing new under the sun: Properly informed, we weren’t victims—we could always create options.

Fate, Providence or the chance assignments of a military career had me as ready as I could be when tapped on the shoulder. Without arrogance or ignorance, I could answer yes when asked to serve one more time.

When I served as Supreme Allied Commander Transformation, a new post created in 2002 to help streamline and reform NATO’s command structure, I served with a brilliant admiral from a European nation. He looked and acted every inch the forceful leader. Too forceful: He yelled, dressing officers down in front of others, and publicly mocked reports that he considered shallow instead of clarifying what he wanted. He was harsh and inconsiderate, and his subordinates were fearful.

I called in the admiral and carefully explained why I disapproved of his leadership. “Your staff resents you,” I said. “You’re disappointed in their input. OK. But your criticism makes that input worse, not better. You’re going the wrong way. You cannot allow your passion for excellence to destroy your compassion for them as human beings.” This was a point I had always driven home to my subordinates.

“Change your leadership style,” I continued. “Coach and encourage; don’t berate, least of all in public.”

But he soon reverted to demeaning his subordinates. I shouldn’t have been surprised. When for decades you have been rewarded and promoted, it’s difficult to break the habits you’ve acquired, regardless of how they may have worked in another setting. Finally, I told him to go home.

When you’re going to a gunfight, bring all your friends with guns.

An oft-spoken admonition in the Marines is this: When you’re going to a gunfight, bring all your friends with guns. Having fought many times in coalitions, I believe that we need every ally we can bring to the fight. From imaginative military solutions to their country’s vote in the U.N., the more allies the better. I have never been on a crowded battlefield, and there is always room for those who want to be there alongside us.

A wise leader must deal with reality and state what he intends, and what level of commitment he is willing to invest in achieving that end. He then has to trust that his subordinates know how to carry that out. Wise leadership requires collaboration; otherwise, it will lead to failure.


Nations with allies thrive, and those without them wither. Alone, America cannot protect our people and our economy. At this time, we can see storm clouds gathering. A polemicist’s role is not sufficient for a leader. A leader must display strategic acumen that incorporates respect for those nations that have stood with us when trouble loomed. Returning to a strategic stance that includes the interests of as many nations as we can make common cause with, we can better deal with this imperfect world we occupy together. Absent this, we will occupy an increasingly lonely position, one that puts us at increasing risk in the world.

It never dawned on me that I would serve again in a government post after retiring from active duty. But the phone call came, and on a Saturday morning in late 2017, I walked into the secretary of defense’s office, which I had first entered as a colonel on staff 20 years earlier. Using every skill I had learned during my decades as a Marine, I did as well as I could for as long as I could. When my concrete solutions and strategic advice, especially keeping faith with our allies, no longer resonated, it was time to resign, despite the limitless joy I felt serving alongside our troops in defense of our Constitution.

We all know that we’re better than our current politics.

Unlike in the past, where we were unified and drew in allies, currently our own commons seems to be breaking apart. What concerns me most as a military man is not our external adversaries; it is our internal divisiveness. We are dividing into hostile tribes cheering against each other, fueled by emotion and a mutual disdain that jeopardizes our future, instead of rediscovering our common ground and finding solutions.

All Americans need to recognize that our democracy is an experiment—and one that can be reversed. We all know that we’re better than our current politics. Tribalism must not be allowed to destroy our experiment.

Toward the end of the Marjah, Afghanistan, battle in 2010, I encountered a Marine and a Navy corpsman, both sopping wet, having just cooled off by relaxing in the adjacent irrigation ditch. I gave them my usual: “How’s it going, young men?”

“Living the dream, sir!” the Marine shouted. “No Maserati, no problem,” the sailor added with a smile.

Their nonchalance and good cheer, even as they lived one day at a time under austere conditions, reminded me how unimportant are many of the things back home that can divide us if we let them.

On each of our coins is inscribed America’s de facto motto, “E Pluribus Unum”—from many, one. For our experiment in democracy to survive, we must live that motto.

—Gen. Mattis served as secretary of defense during the Trump administration and served in the U.S. Marine Corps for more than four decades. This essay is adapted from his forthcoming book “Call Sign Chaos: Learning to Lead,” co-authored with Bing West, which will be published Sept. 3 by Random House.
« Last Edit: August 28, 2019, 08:07:42 PM by Crafty_Dog »

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 72329
    • View Profile
« Last Edit: October 14, 2019, 10:31:28 AM by Crafty_Dog »


Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 72329
    • View Profile


Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 72329
    • View Profile
Re: Gen. James N. Mattis
« Reply #63 on: June 03, 2020, 07:00:47 PM »
In Union There Is Strength

I have watched this week’s unfolding events, angry and appalled. The words “Equal Justice Under Law” are carved in the pediment of the United States Supreme Court. This is precisely what protesters are rightly demanding. It is a wholesome and unifying demand—one that all of us should be able to get behind. We must not be distracted by a small number of lawbreakers. The protests are defined by tens of thousands of people of conscience who are insisting that we live up to our values—our values as people and our values as a nation.

When I joined the military, some 50 years ago, I swore an oath to support and defend the Constitution. Never did I dream that troops taking that same oath would be ordered under any circumstance to violate the Constitutional rights of their fellow citizens—much less to provide a bizarre photo op for the elected commander-in-chief, with military leadership standing alongside.

We must reject any thinking of our cities as a “battlespace” that our uniformed military is called upon to “dominate.” At home, we should use our military only when requested to do so, on very rare occasions, by state governors. Militarizing our response, as we witnessed in Washington, D.C., sets up a conflict—a false conflict— between the military and civilian society. It erodes the moral ground that ensures a trusted bond between men and women in uniform and the society they are sworn to protect, and of which they themselves are a part. Keeping public order rests with civilian state and local leaders who best understand their communities and are answerable to them.

James Madison wrote in Federalist 14 that “America united with a handful of troops, or without a single soldier, exhibits a more forbidding posture to foreign ambition than America disunited, with a hundred thousand veterans ready for combat.” We do not need to militarize our response to protests. We need to unite around a common purpose. And it starts by guaranteeing that all of us are equal before the law.

Instructions given by the military departments to our troops before the Normandy invasion reminded soldiers that “The Nazi slogan for destroying us...was ‘Divide and Conquer.’ Our American answer is ‘In Union there is Strength.’” We must summon that unity to surmount this crisis—confident that we are better than our politics.

Donald Trump is the first president in my lifetime who does not try to unite the American people—does not even pretend to try. Instead he tries to divide us. We are witnessing the consequences of three years of this deliberate effort. We are witnessing the consequences of three years without mature leadership. We can unite without him, drawing on the strengths inherent in our civil society.

This will not be easy, as the past few days have shown, but we owe it to our fellow citizens; to past generations that bled to defend our promise; and to our children.

We can come through this trying time stronger, and with a renewed sense of purpose and respect for one another. The pandemic has shown us that it is not only our troops who are willing to offer the ultimate sacrifice for the safety of the community. Americans in hospitals, grocery stores, post offices, and elsewhere have put their lives on the line in order to serve their fellow citizens and their country. We know that we are better than the abuse of executive authority that we witnessed in Lafayette Square.

We must reject and hold accountable those in office who would make a mockery of our Constitution. At the same time, we must remember Lincoln’s “better angels,” and listen to them, as we work to unite.

Only by adopting a new path—which means, in truth, returning to the original path of our founding ideals—will we again be a country admired and respected at home and abroad.

James Mattis

G M

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 26643
    • View Profile
Re: Gen. James N. Mattis
« Reply #64 on: June 03, 2020, 08:16:28 PM »
"Donald Trump is the first president in my lifetime who does not try to unite the American people—does not even pretend to try. Instead he tries to divide us."

I guess he missed out on "Punish our enemies" Obama's eight years.

DougMacG

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 19462
    • View Profile
Re: Gen. James N. Mattis
« Reply #65 on: June 04, 2020, 04:12:44 AM »
"We must not be distracted by a small number of lawbreakers."

Maybe he didn't "watch this week's news unfold" .

A "small number of lawbreakers" didn't burn a city to the ground.

The Japanese "must not be distracted by" small lisses in Hiroshima, Nagasaki? 

Our enemy is within, and it isn't racism or police tactics.

General, your personal grudge is showing.
« Last Edit: June 04, 2020, 04:20:12 AM by DougMacG »

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 72329
    • View Profile
Re: Gen. James N. Mattis
« Reply #66 on: June 04, 2020, 10:33:26 AM »
Mattis opposed Trump on limiting transgender costs and rights, and opposed Trump when he wanted a big annual military parade (on that I agree with him, but it was not his call to make)

Mattis supported the Obama-Kerry deal with Iran.

Mattis resigned when Trump insisted we get out of Syria.

DougMacG

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 19462
    • View Profile
Re: Gen. James N. Mattis
« Reply #67 on: June 04, 2020, 03:49:55 PM »
On Syria, that was a valid Viewpoint to take. On the Iran deal, I did not know that.

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 72329
    • View Profile
Re: Gen. James N. Mattis
« Reply #68 on: June 04, 2020, 06:15:28 PM »
Valid, yes, but my point is the extent of disagreement between them.


Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 72329
    • View Profile

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 72329
    • View Profile
Re: Gen. James N. Mattis
« Reply #71 on: June 05, 2020, 12:07:55 PM »
Trump shared the letter from Dowd to Mattis late on Thursday, which stated:

Jim:

I slept on your statement and woke up appalled and upset. You lost me. Never dreamed you would let a bunch of hack politicians use your good name and reputation earned with the blood and guts of young Marines. You did what you said you would — engage in this discourse. Marines keep their word.

The phony protesters near Lafayette park were not peaceful and are not real. They are terrorists using idle hate filled students to burn and destroy. They were abusing and disrespecting the police when the police were preparing the area for the 1900 curfew. Jim, this is the new nihilism. See Dan Henniger in WSJ today. Marines support the police in harm’s way.

Did you forget that President Bush used active duty Marines to quell the riots in LA? President Trump has countless cities and some snowflake governors and mayors wetting themselves in the use of force to protect innocent lives and property. The AG of Massachusetts thinks burning property is good protest. Three more policeman were stabbed and shot in NYC last night.

Think about it. Should he be upset about the obvious failure of leadership? Where are you, Jim?

Marines go to the fight.

No one divided this country more than Obama. He abandoned our black brothers and sisters. He gave guns to cartels. He apologized for our precious sacrifice and generosity overseas. You remember, he fired you.

President Trump has done more to help our minority brothers and sisters in three years than anyone in the last fifty. Ask the black pastors. Ask the leaders of the black colleges and universities. He got them funded. Ask them about the prison reform which ended the draconian sentences imposed on young black men by the laws enacted by Biden and his hacks. You need to bone up on your homework and stop listening to Uncle Leon.

I understand, you had to stick to the assigned narrative which did not include three years of corrupt investigations and evidence to destroy this President, his office, and his lawful free election. Nancy has no tolerance for dissent in the ranks – including those with stars.

You said nothing of the ugly, hate filled, disgraceful comments of Pelosi, Schumer, Perez, and other Democrat hacks defaming the President and his office. You said nothing of the unlawful sanctuary cities and the unlawful release of hoodlums. You said nothing of the resistance movement to paralyze our courts and our government operations. You said nothing of the obstruction and subversion of our immigration laws. You said nothing of MS-13 killers and the drug cartels who own huge sections of our major cities. Jim, do you think that hateful rhetoric and those corrupt actions were inspiring and unifying? Do you think the DI’s at Parris Island would find such behavior as unifying?

Maybe, your problem, is a lot deeper. Perhaps you ought to explain how and why you (and John Allen) as CG Central Command, did not engage and take out Iranian Major General Soleimani who roamed the Middle East and wreaked havoc and death of our American boys with his infamous IEDs?

Why did it take President Trump to have the instincts and balls to take him out (of course over the objection of the geniuses in the Pentagon)?

Looks like the Persian mullahs were a one horse sleigh and Trump nailed the horse…forever. It has been quiet ever since. Perhaps, your anger is borne of embarrassment for your own failure as the leader of Central Command. Did you applaud when the President recognized the central problem in the Middle East? Did you applaud the President when he wanted to save American lives by bringing them home in one piece?

John M Dowd

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 72329
    • View Profile




Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 72329
    • View Profile
Re: Gen. James N. Mattis
« Reply #76 on: November 24, 2020, 02:36:37 PM »
Me too.

ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 19776
    • View Profile
The new American general
« Reply #77 on: November 24, 2020, 02:41:31 PM »
our allies first

may THEY lead us.....



DougMacG

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 19462
    • View Profile
Re: Gen. James N. Mattis, oops
« Reply #78 on: November 27, 2020, 03:49:08 PM »
https://justthenews.com/accountability/political-ethics/mattis-didnt-disclose-ties-china-boosting-firm-column-slamming
----------------
I think he served the country well at the start of the Trump administration, projecting a quiet strength for the US to would be adversaries.  On the main Syria issue, I think Trump turned out to be right.  Beyond that I believe he is a registered Democrat so I don't expect to agree with him on policy. Trump's inartful way of handling departures always makes things worse.


ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 19776
    • View Profile
Re: Gen. James N. Mattis
« Reply #80 on: November 28, 2020, 02:10:49 PM »
in the end, just another bought off swamp guy




ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 19776
    • View Profile
Re: Gen. James N. Mattis
« Reply #81 on: November 28, 2020, 04:12:19 PM »
like the LA tar pits

once they step in it they don't leave and just get sucked down

all sorts of creatures animals .......

ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 19776
    • View Profile
mattis blinded by partisanship
« Reply #82 on: January 29, 2021, 06:27:08 AM »
https://www.yahoo.com/news/mattis-trump-fomented-jan-6-capitol-assault-013320418.html

the threat is from the Right

not the Left that wants to take over every lever of power in the US
government academia entertainment corporate world
and shove changes to everything down the throats of everyone

it is ok they want to fling open the borders
and monitor everyone scoring them etc
 
alter the supreme court add 4 democrat senators
alter voting forever
so the can ballot harvest a win in every election
silence opposition

But jerk off mattis sees the threat from the right

got to weed out the right leaning military types replace them with gay lesbian and trans

we can't have right leaning members of military can we?
shut down military uprising right James?

shut down all legal options we have to represent and stand up for ouselves
then be sure to disarm us too, just in case

And Mattis sees the threat from the right - another f..g a hole

my anger keeps rising daily