Quote from DAS Trader:
...Unlike many politicians, they take their oaths seriously and if they are ever ordered to shoot or jail Americans, they will refuse to do so.
No they won't refuse to do so, if they are good soldiers they will follow their orders and carry out their duty. An army cannot operate any other way and it will not tolerate soldiers contemplating and questioning orders from superior officers.
Quote from DAS Trader:
I find your statement strangely incomplete. You left out one word when describing the orders you are supposed to follow....lawful. You are supposed to follow lawful orders. You are supposed to ignore unlawful orders. Surely, someone who served three years in our military understands that they are only compelled to follow lawful orders.
I know you mean well but you are painfully naive, dwell in the theoretical realm, and have obviously never served in the military. Very simply, a lawful order is any order given to you by a superior officer that doesn't violate military regulation. In the real world, if a superior officer gives you an order it is, by definition, "lawful" and you follow it. When you enlist in the service one of the main parts of your oath addresses exactly that,
"I will obey the orders of the President of the United States and the orders of the officers appointed over me, according to regulations and the Uniform Code of Military Justice."
But maybe you're the whimsical kind who loves to dig into all the subtleties of the word "lawful" so you disobey one of those orders. In that case you can suffer extremely serious consequences. Article 90 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ) makes it a crime for a military member to WILLFULLY disobey a superior commissioned officer. Article 91 makes it a crime to WILLFULLY disobey a superior Noncommissioned or Warrant Officer. Article 92 makes it a crime to disobey any lawful order (the disobedience does not have to be "willful" under this article). In fact, under Article 90, during times of war, a soldier who willfully disobeys a superior commissioned officer can be sentenced to death.
Quote from Lucrum:
My son is a 2nd LT in the Army reserve, I have a nephew in the regular Army (both in Afghanistan) and a brother-in-law who is a combat medic in the army (two tours in Iraq).
I think I can confidently say non of them would fire on friends or family during any kind of popular revolt/uprising.
Obviously some would be willing to, but I'm of the opinion most would at least be sympathetic. Many of course would defect.
I understand what you believe given your military associations. And by the laws of probability I doubt it would ever come down to your son or nephew being in a situation where they might have to fire on "friends" or "family". But soldiers during World War II were ordered to round up thousands of Japanese-Americans and herd them off to jail/concentration camps, and I suspect many of those American citizen prisoners were someone's friends or family. And, of course, the ultimate example of American soldiers following "lawful" orders was the Civil War where over 600,000 American friends and family were killed.
Quote from pspr:
...I just can't see our guys in uniform putting down a revolution of the people should it come.
If there was a revolt/uprising I can assure you that to many in positions of authority (both civilian and military) it would be viewed as Terrorism of the highest order, totally unpatriotic, and truly a direct threat to the American way of life. Obviously not to those doing the uprising, but certainly to those charged with the responsibility of maintaining Law and Order. In such a situation both the military and police would be called upon to use
whatever force was necessary to quell the revolt, and you are kidding yourself if you think otherwise. In that scenario soldiers who disobeyed orders may well be charged with treason, disloyal to their country and the democratically elected government.