https://archive.li/uexvJ

Tuberville, who’s singlehandedly blocked hundreds of military promotions in protest over the Pentagon’s abortion policies, said he’s not going to change his mind and doesn’t care that people aren’t being promoted.

After the US Supreme Court reversed decades of precedent in overturning its decision in the Roe v. Wade abortion access case in 2022, the Pentagon announced its plan to reimburse service members who need to travel out-of-state to receive abortion services.

Tuberville, a Republican senator out of Alabama, took exception to the decision and said he’d use his power to stymie any military nominations and promotions he could. Since February, he’s blocked more than 300 promotions.

    • Blackbeard
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      951 year ago

      Indeed. He’s just as disingenuous, illogical, and pants-shittingly stupid as his voters. All they care about is the tantrum, and it’s about fucking time the military learned that the GOP doesn’t give a damn about anything except using them as props.

      • DigitalTraveler42
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        181 year ago

        And worse, it’s a tantrum about white supremacy, he’s punishing the military for trying to push these terrorists out of their ranks.

    • Ferris
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      1 year ago

      I cant help but to have noticed a lot of places on Lemmy where autocorrect has clearly gone wrong. We need a phone keyboard that produces options and a squiggly when it wants to correct something, maybe. I turned off my autocorrect for that reason, which raises its own set of problems lol.

      no offense intended, of course <3

      s/constitutes/constituents, likely.

  • @TransplantedSconie@lemm.ee
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    1151 year ago

    The dems need to plaster this smug fucks face leering over a dead soldiers body with the caption “Because of Republican Inaction. I Wasn’t Ready.”

    These ads write themselves.

    • @jonne@infosec.pub
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      361 year ago

      Eh, the only reason Doug Jones won in Alabama was because he ran against an admitted pedophile, and that contest was close.

      Tuberville knows he can get away with a lot of shit as long as he stays Republican.

    • @GivingEuropeASpook@lemm.ee
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      181 year ago

      God, my memory of them from when I was a kid is such that this would be a scandal in 2004. Do you think they were always like this? I don’t.

      • @YoBuckStopsHere@lemmy.world
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        431 year ago

        Conservatives are known to be pro war, but no promilitary and have never been strong supporters of military veterans since Vietnam. In fact most Veterans end up in Govt service because Republican businessmen refuse to hire veterans.

        Liberals view the military as a public service, to be used when all else fails. They would view military use for the protection of U.S. interests as necessary but are unlikely to commit a large force to accomplish the mission.

      • DigitalTraveler42
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        191 year ago

        They have always been this way, they pander to the military because too many of us in the military and veterans eat that shit up with a smile, but when it comes time for raises, better housing, lawsuits, the massive rape and harassment problem, the gang problems, pollution, and so many other problems they turn a blind eye to, instead they want to kick out people for being gay.

        • @ScrollinMyDayAway@lemm.ee
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          231 year ago

          Remember when Biden was speaking before Congress and mentioned cleaning up the toxic ‘burn pits’ that have harmed veterans, and MTG and Boebert stood up and started booing him?

          • DigitalTraveler42
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            61 year ago

            I mean those shit monkeys were booing and being trash in general, it was just poor timing for their dumbasses that they started booing about something that actually helps veterans.

    • Fish [Indiana]
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      1 year ago

      Republicans aren’t anti-military, just anti-proletarian. Soldiers aren’t wealthy people, so fuck’em

  • @knotthatone@lemmy.one
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    701 year ago

    He’s an ass, but this isn’t single-handed. He only has this power because his fellow Republicans (and Manchin, and probably Sinema) are allowing it. If a handful of Republicans wanted to fix this, they absolutely could.

    • teft
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      1 year ago

      From an NPR article:

      Why don’t the Senate leaders stop him?

      The current Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer has made it clear he considers Tuberville’s blockade an abuse and an outrage. The GOP’s McConnell has also said he does not support the “blanket hold” on military nominations. Both have acknowledged the pleas coming from the Pentagon and from the ranks, and they have done what they could to encourage Tuberville to stand down.

      But the leaders cannot simply bulldoze the senator from Alabama. Their power is restrained by Senate rules and traditions and by the sentiments of their respective caucuses.

      If the issue here were an ordinary piece of legislation, the leaders would seek a unanimous consent agreement that would bring that matter to the floor. Individual senators may object to that with a notice that they seek “extended debate” on that legislation. This is an implicit threat to filibuster, and the majority leader routinely files a cloture petition and holds a vote.

      If cloture fails, the legislation does not go to the floor. If three-fifths of the Senate supports cloture, the legislation can be brought to the floor with time limits on debate.

      Presidential nominations have been largely exempt from this since 2013 when a Democratic Senate majority decided only nominations to the Supreme Court would be subject to filibusters. In 2017, a Republican majority decided to extend that exemption to include Supreme Court nominations.

      Nonetheless, Tuberville’s maneuver has the effect of freezing confirmations for the current backlog presidential nominations because they are submitted in batches for group consideration and approval. The batching procedure itself requires unanimous consent, allowing even one senator to stand in the way.

      The Senate majority leader could bring the nominations to the floor one by one for consideration by regular procedure, but that would require two to three days for each. Had the Senate tried to individually process even the first 150 promotions Tuberville blocked back in February, it could have done little else in the months since – and it would still be far behind on confirmations. That is scarcely practical when the military alone submits hundreds a year and the larger executive branch far more.

      Moreover, just as the Pentagon bristles at having a single senator dictate its personnel policy, so the Senate leaders are loath to have individual senators deciding when and if the Senate can proceed with normal business using its usual procedures – such as the batching of nominations.

      • @jonne@infosec.pub
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        391 year ago

        Translation: there’s nothing really stopping us from going around Tuberville, but we feel the senate’s stupid arcane rules are more important than national security and having responsible people in charge if Trump tries to do a coup again.

        • @GivingEuropeASpook@lemm.ee
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          251 year ago

          Literally. Oh, it’s too long to do it one by one? Maybe prioritize then? Confirm 2-3 of the biggest promotions in order to prevent the Senate from abdicating it’s Constitutional responsibility and ceding control of the military entirely to the executive.

          I really don’t care about US military readiness but I do value checks and balances, and right now the Senate is refusing to serve as one.

          • @evatronic@lemm.ee
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            91 year ago

            You know what happens when I have a lot of work to do and not enough time in the workday? I stay late. I work weekends. I drink a lot of coffee and get that shit done.

            “It takes too long”? Fuck you, keep the Senate in session and do nomination after nomination until these geriatric fucks pass out.

            • Jackie's Fridge
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              21 year ago

              Seriously! If I worked the same way these idiots do, my entire organization would grind to a halt.

              …oooohhhhhhhhhh

      • NotAFuckingBot
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        171 year ago

        Republicans are the biggest batch of corrupt pussies I’ve seen in my fucking life.

      • @onionbaggage@lemmynsfw.com
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        71 year ago

        So fucking take them to the floor one by one and do the damn thing. It’s not like you’re legislating anyway with a Republican House.

  • @gmtom@lemmy.world
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    621 year ago

    If the dems were smart they would use this to campaign to military people, along with the dozens of things Trump has done to piss them off.

    But the dems are physically incapable of advertising themselves to the Republic core audience, while simultaneously harping on about compromise and reaching across the ilse.

    • @DigitalFrank@lemmy.world
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      131 year ago

      I doubt most military people care. Those positions are being filled by acting commanders until people are promoted to fill them permanently, in most cases by the people nominated to fill them. They aren’t just vacant.

      Retired military here, and I just can’t get too worked up over someone filling that position is getting 2-star pay instead of 3-star pay, or Colonel pay instead of 1-star pay.

      • @RagingRobot@lemmy.world
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        91 year ago

        It sucks if you are the one in line for a promotion though. To have all your hard work go to waste for some stupid political issue unrelated to you

      • @pythonoob@programming.dev
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        71 year ago

        Yeah that’s the thing here. Congress promotes officers. The enlisted corp ain’t gonna give a flying fuck. Promotion rates for enlisted have been shit for a couple years now

    • ineedaunion
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      111 year ago

      Every time I say something “extreme” I am bombarded by people who think taking the high road is the answer while the GOP would literally sell them into slavery or beat them to death with baseball bats for fun.

      • @PickTheStick@lemmy.world
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        01 year ago

        Perhaps we can create a new extreme sport of beating yourself with a baseball bat, and advertise it exclusively in areas where mind rot has bloomed in the population. Oh, wait…

    • @ZombieTheZombieCat@lemm.ee
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      31 year ago

      “Republicans did something fucking stupid that’s bad for their constituents.”

      “Oh but but the dems…”

      This is why there’s those posts asking how many Russian bots have made it to Lemmy.

    • @books@lemmy.world
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      11 year ago

      I mean, why not just make YouTube ads for them? Should be easy enough to grab snippets, add audio voice over and put them on the Internet and target red leaning people

  • HomebrewHedonist
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    601 year ago

    I believe that there is an active conspiracy to destroy the USA from within and this is proof of that. Follow the money and you’ll uncover who is behind it. My guess, China, Russia and maybe some Oligarchs around that.

      • @Dicska@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        There’s obvious Russian interest in disrupting US society and politics, but they are only able to achieve anything if there is demand for it. And oh boy, there is, unfortunately. The Russians/Chinese can dump all their money into influencing US politics if voters are intelligent and well informed enough to know better. Sadly, this is not the case.

        • @TrueStoryBob@lemmy.world
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          21 year ago

          Yeah, Israeli intelligence services attempting to nerf the USA in any way makes about as much sense as New Zealand conspiring against Australia or the DRK dealing the PRC a bad hand. Aren’t we the ones keeping Israel’s tactical nuke program an unofficial one with like blocking UN votes or something? Israel has nukes, so do the Saudis, but like internationally it’s like unrecognized because US foreign policy won’t acknowledge it.

  • @LEDZeppelin@lemmy.world
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    551 year ago

    Why are other republicans quiet on this one? Why they don’t tell Tubertool to fuck himself and vote on those promotions?

    Entire GOP is complicit in destroying the military preparedness. Republicans all are harming the armed forces, Tubertool is just a tool they are using.

    • snooggums
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      241 year ago

      Because someone is undermining the ability of the Biden administration to do things, and when it is reported most people will juat blame Biden instead of paying attention to the actual problem.

      Not doing anything benefits the Republicans.

    • TwoGems
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      41 year ago

      Well that would require telling their fellow Russian assets to stop harming the U.S. and we can’t have that!

    • AlwaysNowNeverNotMe
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      21 year ago

      Because no republicans currently in office have any reason to attack him since they aren’t running against him.

      And because I’m sure this both saves the government a couple nickels and them a couple approvals.

      • @CarbonatedPastaSauce@lemmy.world
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        51 year ago

        This absolutely does not save the government/taxpayers any money, quite the opposite. When they lose qualified staff to attrition over bullshit like this, it’s very expensive to replace them. And given enough time, it will start to impact military readiness across the board, if it hasn’t already.

        • AlwaysNowNeverNotMe
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          31 year ago

          Oh of course, it’s similar to continuously repaving roads every twenty years using materials that cost half as much as those that last a century. You “save money” on the budgets that you sign. Consequences be damned.

      • @Telodzrum@lemmy.world
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        101 year ago

        In Alabama? We have as much chance as someone in the leftmost portion of Manchin’s penumbra being elected in WV.

        • hootener
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          41 year ago

          Alabamaian here. We’re mostly all pissed at this clown. Alabama was a front runner to get the space Force command from Colorado. Recently the Biden administration elected to keep it in Colorado. The local scuttlebutt was this move was at least partially retaliation for Tuberville’s nonsense.This angered a lot of big money interests in Alabama, especially in Huntsville, which is a city built off the back of the military industrial complex.

          Tuberville fucked around and will likely find out on this one. My guess is big money interests will at least attempt to primary him with a more … coachable… republican candidate.

          • @MrPoopbutt@lemmy.world
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            31 year ago

            Lol. Alabama is the last place where anyone not an R has even a snowballs chance in hell. The democratic party basically doesn’t even bother to try in AL since they know their money and effort is better spent elsewhere.

            The one place that might be slightly more Republican is Mississippi, but that’s about it

  • @HWK_290@lemmy.world
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    241 year ago

    I wonder what his constituency thinks. I mean, the ones with more than 2 brain cells to rub together. Surely his phones should be ringing off the hook. I know he doesn’t care but I hope there’s some noise being made

    • @ATQ@lemm.eeOP
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      331 year ago

      He hates the people they hate. That’s more important to them than supporting the military, which they claim to do.

    • @NevermindNoMind@lemmy.world
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      201 year ago

      I mean, the ones with more than 2 brain cells to rub together.

      He’s from Alabama if that answers your question. Congress is on summer recess, he’s been back in Alabama at various events, and the reports I’ve seen is that he’s had a hero’s welcome.

      In Alabama the only shot a Dem has of winning in a Senate seat is of the Republican is a literal pedophile, and even then just barely as we’ve seen. A Republican Senator’s only real risk is a primary from the right. This kind of bullshit plays well with the Republican base. So here we are.

      Dems need to force this issue, either hold a vote to change the rule allowing quick passage of promotions, or start having 20 hour a day sessions 7 days a week to vote on each promotion individually. All this complaining about Tubberville and the harm he’s causing the military only plays into his hand of allowing him to cast himself as the lone warrior against the godless woke whatever the fuck.

    • hoodatninja
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      91 year ago

      “Support our troops“ is a cudgel to use against your political opponents, not an expression of any concern for the military

      • blivet
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        31 year ago

        Exactly. I understand the impulse, but catching them in a contradiction is pointless because they have no actual principles.