They said Crozier was being needlessly alarmist.https://twitter.com/ckubeNBC/status/1248212547603496961 …
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Replying to @attackerman @HotlineJosh
They said that he violated OPSEC and hurt the National Security of the United States by revealing information about the status of a key American Defense Asset in a manner that lead to it becoming public knowledge which then reached our adversaries. They are right.
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That carrier was going to be out of commission and its status was going to become public knowledge one way or the other, the only question was how many sailors would get sick and die first The basic fact of how viruses work continually escapes Team Trump
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Replying to @arthur_affect @SistroMondain and
Reminds me a lot of the British government, who appear to have been legitimately surprised that they weren't immune to the virus because "only the weak get ill, and we are strong".
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Replying to @quantum_boulder @arthur_affect and
There is no question that action needed to be taken. The Navy would have quietly taken care of the problem without creating a public spectacle that would inform our adversaries. The NavSec also handled it poorly and it is good he resigned as well.
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1) Any delay in response during a viral outbreak causes infection to increase exponentially and the number of severe cases to increase exponentially, we've learned this again and again 2) Bull fucking shit they were gonna do anything before their hand was forced
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The exact same thing happened in 1898, the government kept stonewalling until suddenly the matter became public and they mysteriously immediately found the resources to relieve the soldiers they'd been looking for all that time
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