So the reason given is that Gen. Milley delayed the response to Jan 6. If thats true, then theres good reason for a dishonorable discharge, possibly some time in Leavenworth. Execution is a bit much, but it is the traditional punishment for military members committing treason.
The entire thing was about 2.5 hours. National guard members need to be called in, fitted out, and given a coordinated mission. Every other riot in history where they used National guard the response time was days instead of hours.
They are calling to hang this guy because he took more than an hour to ensure that at least some plan was in place before sending the military against citizens.
If you want to blame military leaders, how about the commander in chief that set it in action and happily watched without doing a single damn thing to try to stop it.
So the reason given is that Gen. Milley delayed the response to Jan 6.
And that he is a "sodomoy promoting", "homosexual-promoting-BLM-activist".
The only reason somebody says something like that in the context of calling for execution is when they find these things as reasons for execution. Calling for the deaths of homosexuals is fascism, and the GOP is openly embracing it when they support people like Gosar.
Also feel the need to mention that hes a politician, so hes probably lying or at least stretching and bending the truth.
That's supposed to be comforting? "Oh don't worry about this congress man calling for the death of a military general based in part on LGBTQ hatred, he's probably just lying about his true intentions"
As if he doesn't have worse intentions than what he believes to be publicly acceptable.
We also know that Milley bragged about secretly being in touch with the Chinese military reassuring them that it the head of the military ordered them to do something they'd refuse to do it.
You might like these things because you agree with them, but America isn't supposed to be a military dictatorship, it isn't their call to disregard the civilian leadership, and it isn't their job to be doing diplomacy with countries America is hostile towards.
Accepting such actions has a dangerous precedent. The military had planned project Northwoods, an operation to attack civilian targets in the US to justify a war. It was the civilian leadership of the military who put a stop to that plan, and everyone agrees that's a good thing.
Presumably, in 2023 instead of the civilian leadership stopping such a plan, the military would just go through with it.
I don't agree with the anti-gay rhetoric, but it's true that in many other ages, a high ranking military man openly telling a hostile countrys military he'd disregard any orders to act against them would be treason, and the penalty for that would be death.
If we keep letting the military go rogue, we might reach a point we wish we'd acted decisively sooner, when a leader we didn't control previously marches on Washington. Then the truly imperial phase of America shall begin.