Anonymous ID: 63b456 April 18, 2020, 1:42 p.m. No.8841890   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1905

Me thinks that if DeBeers can pass US Laws to ensure they make huge diamond profits, and Healthcare lobbyists pay to get things passed to generate billions in pharma and healthcare profits (both not free market stuff) that Potus can work to protect our domestic oil industry by setting tariffs when oil gets below a certain threshold.

By removing the ability of America to defend herself by removing assets and industries and shipping them abroad, the Globalists have by design weakened us and empowered themselves.

In order to not be dependent on Globalists, we as Patriots and MAGA need to ensure we can prosper domestically.

The same groups who control our money created and manipulate markets for everything in the world, stocks, commodities and even want a C02 tax to effectively pass on taxes for breathing. The air is still free but you pay when you exhale CO2.

We need to undo their fake markets, their global grip on the media and Potus needs to create a trade block as a base, to execute a Nationalist MAGA movement worldwide.

One in which Nations establish and control things relative to Global cooperation, as opposed to the present system of Globalists controlling Nations.

We have seen the picture of what they want in the immediate future. Global surveillance/absolute control of Speech and information dissemination, bio-identifying chips perhaps through vaccines, and a class of Globalist Rulers and Their Agents who are immune from accountability and crimes they commit.

It is disheartening and sickening to a normal patriot, ceding our liberties and god given rights is horrendous in itself, but giving them up to a sick, evil and satanic cult is not something that I can accept without fighting back.

We are not in it just to survive, we need to rid the world of these people who aim to enslave us and destroy humanity as we know it forever.

Anonymous ID: 63b456 April 18, 2020, 2:10 p.m. No.8842129   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2151

Navy to Decide Fate of Fired Captain

If they find he is a Liberal/D activist SJW then I would show no mercy. If so I bet he has a book deal lined up and deals with Non-profits and Foundations. If that is the case I would lock him up for life so he cannot enjoy the rewards for his sedition.

 

The Navy’s top admiral will soon decide the fate of the ship captain who was fired after pleading for commanders to move faster to safeguard his coronavirus-infected crew on the USS Theodore Roosevelt.

 

In the glare of a public spotlight, Adm. Mike Gilday will decide whether Navy Capt. Brett Crozier stepped out of line when he went around his chain of command and sent an email pushing for action to stem the outbreak. As of Friday, 660 sailors on the aircraft carrier, now docked at Guam, had tested positive for the virus and seven were hospitalized. One sailor has died, and more than 4,000 of the ship's 5,000 crew members have been moved onto the island for quarantine.

 

Gilday's review won't be limited to Crozier. It will also look at the command climate on the ship and higher up within the Pacific-based fleet, to determine if there are broader leadership problems in a region critical to America's national security interests.

 

Gilday has many options as he reviews what was an extraordinarily rapid investigation by Adm. Robert Burke, the vice chief of naval operations. Burke and his staff finished the review in about a week, conducting interviews almost entirely online and by phone between Washington and Guam.

 

A look at some of Gilday's options, and their benefits and pitfalls.

REINSTATEMENT:

 

Gilday could decide that Crozier acted in the best interests of his crew and was unfairly removed. He could reinstate him as captain of the Roosevelt.

 

That could generate a lot of support.

 

In a widely viewed video, Roosevelt crew members applauded and chanted Crozier's name as he walked off the ship after being fired. When Thomas Modly, the acting Navy secretary who fired Crozier, traveled to the ship and criticized him in a speech to the crew, he came under fire and had to resign.

 

President Donald Trump even suggested that while Crozier shouldn't have sent the memo, he shouldn't be destroyed for having a “bad day.”

 

But reinstating Crozier has its problems.

 

It would put him back on a ship with Rear Adm. Stuart Baker, commander of the carrier strike group of which the Roosevelt is the lead ship. Officials say they did not have a good relationship and that was among the problems that triggered Crozier's memo. Gilday may worry that putting them back together would exacerbate the ship's toxic command climate.

FORGIVE AND MOVE ON:

 

Rather than return Crozier to the Roosevelt, Gilday could absolve him of wrongdoing and recommend he move on to another job. Crozier could retain his rank and standing and perhaps command another ship, leaving open the possibility that he could gain promotion and continue his Navy career.

 

This would avoid sending him back into the chain of command that likely felt betrayed by his memo. But it doesn't provide the emotional lift of seeing a popular captain stride back onto the ship for which he risked his career.

ADMINISTRATIVE ACTIONS:

 

Gilday could fault Crozier for doing the right thing the wrong way. He could determine that Crozier was unfairly fired, but that he acted rashly and went outside his chain of command and therefore did not exhibit good leadership.

 

He could put a letter in Crozier's personnel file, which usually is a career-ender. Crozier could stay in the Navy and might move on to other jobs, but would probably not be promoted.

FIRE ONE, FIRE ALL:

 

Gilday could determine that firing Crozier was appropriate. Unless that's overturned in an appeal process, that would end Crozier's Navy career. In most cases, senior officers simply retire after being relieved of command for cause.

 

But Gilday could also decide that the ship's problems extended beyond Crozier. He could recommend that Baker be fired or punished for not being receptive to Crozier's concerns.

 

Gilday's review could also dole out criticism for leaders who may have taken too long to recognize the Roosevelt's outbreak as the deadly problem it became. Those would include the 7th Fleet commander, Vice Adm. William R. Merz; the Pacific Fleet commander, Adm. John C. Aquilino, or the most senior admiral in the Pacific, Adm. Phil Davidson, head of Indo-Pacific Command.

 

William Fallon, a retired four-star admiral and former commander of U.S. Pacific Command, says Gilday’s decision is important to American interests in the Asia-Pacific region, where an aircraft carrier presence is central to U.S. strategy.

(continued–link)

 

https://www.newsmax.com/newsfront/virus-navy-outbreak-uss-roosevelt/2020/04/18/id/963507/