ZitatA retired Air Force sergeant who in April was dragged from a military retirement ceremony as he recited a traditional passage honoring the flag is demanding an apology and threatening a lawsuit.
Senior Master Sgt. Oscar Rodriguez was invited to speak at the April 3 ceremony by an outgoing fellow master sergeant from the 749th Aircraft Maintenance Squadron. In a story first reported by FoxNews.com days later, video showed Rodriguez being forcibly removed by service members at Travis Air Force Base.
"This was one of the most humiliating experiences of my life,” Rodriguez told FoxNews.com. “All I wanted to do was honor Master Sgt. [Charles] Roberson, his guests, and the flag, with my speech."
Rodriguez believes his recitation of an old version of "Flag Folding Ceremony Air Force Script," which was later scrubbed because of religious references, prompted his ouster. The version read by Rodriguez contained religious references.
“Let us pray that God will reflect with admiration the willingness of one nation in her attempts to rid the world of tyranny, oppression, and misery," it read in part. "It is this one nation under God that we call, with honor, the United States of America,” reads the flag-folding speech which closes with the words, “God bless our flag. God bless our troops. God bless America.”
Even though the Air Force revised the script in 2006, Rodriguez believes it was his right - and the right of Roberson - to invoke the older version.
"To have the Air Force throw me off the base, simply because my speech included the word ‘God,' was devastating,” he said.
The 50-second video clip showing Rodriguez being hauled away was first posted by JQPublicBlog.com, which called the footage “a disgraceful spectacle” during what is usually a calm send off. A source who was present at the event told the military blog that Rodriguez was there at the request of the retiree, but had been banned from the base by the squadron commander.
A spokesman from the reserve said that the confrontation stemmed from “an unplanned participation” at the event.
"Rodriguez ignored numerous requests to respect the Air Force prescribed ceremony and unfortunately was forcibly removed," a Travis official said in a statement to FoxNews.com.
According to an official with the United States Air Force, flag folding scripts that are religious in nature can be used for retirement ceremonies.
"I can't speak to the specific incident," Ann Stefanek, a Air Force Spokeswoman tells Fox News. "[But] Air Force personnel may use a flag folding ceremony script that is religious for retirement ceremonies."
"Since retirement ceremonies are personal in nature, the script preference for a flag folding ceremony is at the discretion of the individual being honored and represents the member's views, not those of the Air Force."
Stephan Sila, who identified himself as the officiating officer at the ceremony and a 28-year Air Force veteran, wrote in a Facebook post published on the military blog at the time that Rodriguez simply planned to read a statement honoring the flag and that his appearance had been cleared through the proper chain of command.
Legal watchdog First Liberty Institute is representing Rodriguez in his quest for a formal apology for what it claims was a violation of his First Amendment rights.
“We took this case because the government has no right to throw a citizen, much less a 33-year military veteran, off a military base because they don’t want him to mention ‘God,'" Mike Berry, director of military affairs for First Liberty, told Foxnews.com in a statement. “The military broke the law and abused its power.”
There are several versions of this story now out there so let me give you some additional facts:
(1) Senior Master Sgt. Oscar Rodriguez, the man ejected, had 33 years of service in our military. 33 years.
(2) The honoree, Master Sgt. Charles Roberson, had invited Rodriguez to attend and they had agreed Rodriguez would recite the traditional passage.
(3) The three thugs who forced him out were not, according to reports, military police and had no legal authority to do what they did. There was only one person known to object to the traditional passage and that was the unit's squadron commander, Lt Col Michael Sovitsky. One can assume he suspected what was going to happen and sent in his goons to enforce his will.
(4) As noted in this article the Air Force recognizes the appropriateness of the traditional passage.
Sovitsky should be court martialed and each member of his goon squad ought get an Article 15 with fine and reduction in rank.
Here is a long article that includes analysis of globalists. It is written from a secular point of view but includes includes references to natural law and satan.
Are Globalists Evil Or Just Misunderstood? Wednesday, 18 May 2016 02:59 Brandon Smith
"To define evil, we would have to look at those ideas and actions that are opposite inherent conscience. The globalists have basically constructed a festering belief system around everything that is contrary to our moral compass. I will attempt to dissect some elements of that belief system from a secular point of view. Wish me luck…'"
"The Lucifer mythology is one of rebellion, a rebellion against the Christian God. But how would this translate to elitist behavior? They define inherent conscience and moral compass (checks and balances put in place by God?) as a “restriction” or imprisonment of the individual, and they seem to only esteem individuals as those seeking their own “Godhood.”
The way liberty proponents value individualism is very different from the way elitists value individualism . Lucifer as an archetypal figure represents a rebellion against almost EVERYTHING, including nature. Of course, nature is not a toy to be played with selfishly because catastrophe inevitably results. "