Should active duty military personnel be allowed to join a political party?
I remember at the end of the Carter Administration it was almost a consensus that President Carter sucked as President. The feelings were so intense that servicemen were becoming more open about it.
Barring harassment and the Rush Limbaugh Show is not harassment then the ability to voice your feelings is a right. I would opt to be quiet on duty because it is possible that your boss directly over you might feel upset and that might make your life miserable.
Plus being respectful is always the right thing.
https://theconversation.com/no-youre-not-entitled-to-your-opinion-9978


I'm more worried that if the military became a political entity, we would go the way of the Banana Republics or even the Roman Republic (the fall of the Republic was a direct result of the legions loyalty being supplanted to would be emperors vs to the nation)
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Capt. M.
I believe that both party's leaderships are polarizing. I have to remind people that President Bush was called a 'monkey' and I think this nation is going the wrong with all the hyperbole. Likewise hate talk against the president differs from just saying you do not like him or disagree with his views.
It is like we need civics classes to remediate and teach people to work together. If anything the differences are light years apart and increasing proportionately.
Sir, I don't think the active component hinders political involvement much at all. I can donate money to any candidate I want, I can attend a political rally when off duty and out of uniform, and I have a voting assistance officer to help me get my absentee ballot sent off in time. Obviously I can't make official endorsements using my rank and position because when I wear the uniform I represent not just the Army but the United States of America itself. In my opinion, the law is clear and I don't believe there should be politicians in uniform. It reminds me too much of the Soviet "political officers" they had in each unit to ensure all the Soldiers were good communists. I don't think politics needs a uniform. But I have always encouraged my Soldiers to exercise their right to vote and to do so "in accordance with the dictates of your own conscience."
Per FM 27-14 "Legal Guide for Soldiers", page 2, section entitled "Participating in Political Activities":
You may vote and express your opinions on politics privately and informally. You may
attend political rallies and political club meetings and may even join political clubs, but you must never wear your uniform when participating in political activities. The reason is to prevent the public from incorrectly assuming that your participation represents the Army.
You may not—
Seek election to a political office.
Campaign for a political candidate.
Speak to political rallies or clubs.
Hold office in political clubs.
Per section entitled "Demonstrating" on the same page (2):
Your uniformed attendance at a public demonstration may also give the appearance that the Army approves of or sponsors the demonstration. To preclude this appearance, you may participate only when you are off duty. You may not wear the Army uniform at any demonstration, and you may not—
Attend a demonstration held on a military post.
Attend a demonstration in a foreign country.
Participate in a demonstration where law and order might be breached, such as traffic
being blocked or police being assaulted.
I remember reading a very interesting 1970's piece on the Military as a profession similar to doctors and lawyers. The core idea was non-productive specialization that provided an essential service to society and which featured profession-internal education systems and quality control.
One thing the article pointed out is that 1950's Officer would not exercise their right of citizenship at the polling booth out of principle. The same ideal applies to "service earns citizenship" in the novel Starship Troopers: the right to vote begins with the termination of service.
I have a hard time when I vote as I tend to vote along the lines of my personal beliefs and switch party allegiance based on perceived candidate quality and larger strategic ramifications (single party controlled legislative and executive, etc). I don't have a hard time choosing, but I have a hard time justifying my choice.
Is it SSG Beutler that wants the hawkish post-imperialist President and Congress or is it Carl Beutler? Does Carl Beutler believe that entitlement spending must be reformed before it swallows up the entire budget or is it SSG Beutler's fear that his career will be curtailed by reduction in military spending in response to entitlement growth?
I am but one voice in a sea of citizens, so my personal struggle to do what I think is right with my ballot is unlikely to affect the larger outcome.
However, if I cannot differentiate between what is right for America (my number one priority in my definition of service) and what is right for me & the DOD; should I be trusted to use the stature given to me by virtue of service and servant-leadership in connection to the political agenda of one party or another?
There are historical and contemporary examples of high ranking officers assuming the mantle of a specific party and using their credentials to fend for their vision of America. I will not judge them. However, each of those is after retirement. Before the exit from honorable service in uniform, my political action must be subordinate to the civilian leadership as long as they are in compliance with the Constitution I have sworn to uphold & defend. Agitation on behalf of ideology not inherent to my obligations of service dilutes the purity of my action.
Even the Chief of Staff doesn't make foreign policy or set the aim for the war effort; the CoS advises the CinC and then executes whichever policy the POTUS then adopts. MacArthur pretty much called out his own commander.
The three-branch division of government requires that the monopoly of force rests with the executive as authorized by the legislative and is then employed by means of the military. Once the military is officially involved with setting the legislative policy we create a situation in which the system is no longer balanced.

Politics
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