Senator Tuberville just put this QAnon Maniac in charge of military promotions. Screeching Horns did not want Joseph Biden to be the New Commander in Chief. Have you had enough?


The Creative Royal Fleet Sets Sail
Posted on April 16, 2018by Royal Rosamond Press

9 One night the Lord said to Paul in a vision, “Don’t be afraid. Continue speaking. Don’t be silent. 10 I’m with you and no one who attacks you will harm you, for I have many people in this city.” 11 So he stayed there for eighteen months, teaching God’s word among them. Acts 1
Let’s play – WHAT IF?
- What if Trump won and Putin invaded Ukraine? Would President Trump do anything? Would the U.S.A. come to the aide of other NATO Nations that would now be threatened?
- What if Trump’s Insurrection had succeeded? Would Putin back the Insurrection, then invade Ukraine?
- What if Jesus was thrown off that cliff – and died? Would God have to reborn Himself all over again so His Children will murder him, and He anoint Paul, a serial killer to take His message to Gentiles?
- What if the crucifixions’ of God did not happen, and, it’s a lie?
- What if Christian leaders in America and Russia noticed a decline in their flocks, and if a million more leave the church, the power of the Red State Neo-Confederate Preacher Man would be – at an end? I suspect Russian Christians approached our Chrisitan leaders, and they made a plan. Was art of that plant to make abortion illegal?
- Do you believe Dead Jesus spoke to Paul? I don’t, n did the Corintian church who insistedPaul provide proof Jesus is speaking to him. This is AD 53. Paul’s church is in trouble. He threaten to use force.
- Do you think any Christian Radical should be allowed to hold moral power over our military while our real President is in Europe negotiating a peace – and welcoming Sweden to NATO?
John Presco
A lone Senate Republican’s bid to reverse a Pentagon policy ensuring abortion access for service members is delaying the smooth transfer of power at the highest echelons of the armed forces, including in the ranks of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, as a monthslong partisan dispute over social policy drags on.
Senator Tommy Tuberville, a conservative from Alabama, has been single-handedly blocking hundreds of promotions for high-ranking generals and admirals since February, refusing to relent unless the Defense Department scraps a policy — instituted after the Supreme Court struck down the constitutional right to abortion last year — offering time off and travel reimbursement to service members who need to go out of state for abortions.
Now, Mr. Tuberville’s tactics are on the brink of disrupting the Pentagon’s ability to fill its top ranks. More than half of the current Joint Chiefs are expected to step down from their posts during the next few months without a Senate-approved successor in place, leaving the president’s chief military advisory body in an unprecedented state of flux at a time of escalating tensions with China and Russia.
The Biden administration and Senate Democrats have vociferously condemned Mr. Tuberville’s blockade as dangerous and misplaced. But while many Republicans are deeply uncomfortable with his tactics, G.O.P. leaders’ criticism has been more restrained.
They all worked with leather. 4 Every Sabbath he interacted with people in the synagogue, trying to convince both Jews and Greeks. 5 Once Silas and Timothy arrived from Macedonia, Paul devoted himself fully to the word, testifying to the Jews that Jesus was the Christ. 6 When they opposed and slandered him, he shook the dust from his clothes in protest and said to them, “You are responsible for your own fates! I’m innocent! From now on I’ll go to the Gentiles!” 7 He left the synagogue and went next door to the home of Titius Justus, a Gentile God-worshipper. 8 Crispus, the synagogue leader, and his entire household came to believe in the Lord. Many Corinthians believed and were baptized after listening to Paul.
9 One night the Lord said to Paul in a vision, “Don’t be afraid. Continue speaking. Don’t be silent. 10 I’m with you and no one who attacks you will harm you, for I have many people in this city.” 11 So he stayed there for eighteen months, teaching God’s word among them.
https://www.biblegateway.com/resources/ivp-nt/Complaints-Pauls-Critics
https://www.learnreligions.com/introduction-to-the-book-of-corinthians-701028
Now I call upon God as my witness that I am telling the truth. The reason I didn’t return to Corinth was to spare you from a severe rebuke.
1 Corinthians 4:21
Which do you prefer? Shall I come to you with a rod, or in love and with a gentle spirit?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Epistle_to_the_Corinthians
Authorship[edit]
Further information: Authorship of the Pauline epistles
There is a consensus among historians and theologians that Paul is the author of the First Epistle to the Corinthians (c. AD 53–54).[6] The letter is quoted or mentioned by the earliest of sources and is included in every ancient canon, including that of Marcion of Sinope.[7] Some scholars point to the epistle’s potentially embarrassing references to the existence of sexual immorality in the church as strengthening the case for the authenticity of the letter.[8][9]
However, the epistle does contain a passage that is widely believed to have been interpolated into the text by a later scribe:[10]
As in all the churches of the saints, women should be silent in the churches. For they are not permitted to speak, but should be subordinate, as the law also says. If there is anything they desire to know, let them ask their husbands at home. For it is shameful for a woman to speak in church.
— 1 Corinthians 14:34–35, New Revised Standard Version[11]
Alabama Senator Tommy Tuberville argued that the definition of white nationalism is “some people’s opinion” while appearing on CNN Monday night, and instead described the term as a “cover word” for Democrats.
The Republican’s remarks came in response to a question posed by CNN’s Kaitlan Collins, who offered Tuberville a chance to clarify a statement he made during a May interview with Birmingham radio station WBHM. During the previous interview, Tuberville was asked if he believed white nationalists should be allowed to serve in the military, to which he responded, “I call them Americans.”
Objections to the 2020 U.S. presidential election[edit]
After taking office in January 2021, Tuberville joined a group of Republican senators who announced they would formally object to counting electoral votes won by Democratic president-elect Joe Biden in the 2020 presidential election.[85] The objections were part of a continued effort by Trump and his allies to overturn his defeat in the election.
When the Electoral College count was held on January 6, pro-Trump rioters stormed the Capitol, forcing officials to evacuate their chambers before the count was completed. Trump contacted Tuberville during the riot through the cell phone of Utah senator Mike Lee, whom Trump misdialed.[86] The count resumed that evening once the Capitol was secured.
Tuberville voted in support of an objection to Arizona’s electoral votes and an objection to Pennsylvania’s electoral votes, both of which were won by Biden. He was one of six Republican senators to support the former objection and one of seven to support the latter; the remainder of the Senate defeated the objections.[87][88] No further objections to the electoral votes were debated and the count concluded on the morning of January 7, certifying Biden’s victory over Trump.
2021 storming of the United States Capitol[edit]
On May 28, 2021, Tuberville voted against creating an independent commission to investigate the 2021 United States Capitol attack.[89]
Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization[edit]
When Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization came before the Supreme Court in 2022, Tuberville signed an amicus brief supporting the overturning Roe v. Wade and its federal protection of the right to abortion. After Roe v. Wade was overturned in June 2022, Tuberville called it a “victory for life.”[90]
Same-sex marriage[edit]
In 2022, Tuberville responded to a question about the Respect for Marriage Act, which would federally codify same-sex marriage, by saying there was “no need for legislating on gay marriage”. He also said, “I’m all about live life the way you want to. It’s a free country.”[91] He voted against the bill,[92] which passed and was signed into law.
LGBTQ+ policy[edit]
Tuberville has backed several bills intended to restrict various activities by transgender people.
In February 2023, he co-sponsored a bill to prevent people with a history or diagnosis of gender dysphoria from serving in the U.S. military, with limited exceptions.[93][94]
In March 2023, he reintroduced a bill to forbid public schools from allowing a person assigned male at birth to participate in a girl’s or women’s sport. Co-sponsored by 19 Republicans, the act says gender would be “recognized based solely on a person’s reproductive biology and genetics at birth” rather than how a person identifies.[95]
On March 25, 2023, Tuberville complained publicly about a video showing Lieutenant Junior Grade Audrey Knutson, who identifies as nonbinary, reading a poem during a spoken-word event aboard the aircraft carrier USS Gerald R. Ford. The video had gone viral after the U.S. Navy posted it to its Instagram page. After Tuberville told the Senate Armed Services Committee that he had “a lot of problems with the video”, Admiral Mike Gilday, chief of naval operations, said he was “particularly proud of this sailor” and added that if someone is “willing to serve and willing to take the same oath that you and I took to put their life on the line, then I’m proud to serve beside them.”[96][97]

Hold on military nominations[edit]
In February 2023, Tuberville announced he would block all military promotions requiring confirmation by the Senate in the wake of DoD policy changes due to the June 2022 U.S. Supreme Court decision Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization,[98] which held that the Constitution does not confer a right to abortion.
Over the next few months, the hold slowed the filling of hundreds of senior positions. “Without these leaders in place, these holes severely limit the department’s ability to ensure the right person is in place at the right time, and to ensure a strategic readiness and operational success”, Pentagon deputy press secretary Sabrina Singh said on June 20, 2023,[99][a]
Comments on white nationalists[edit]
On May 10, 2023, Birmingham-area radio station WBHM broadcast an interview in which Tuberville was asked whether he believed white nationalists should be allowed to serve in the military. Tuberville said the Biden administration “call[s] them that. I call them Americans.” Later that day, his Congressional staff released a statement that said Tuberville “was being skeptical of the notion that there are white nationalists in the military, not that he believes they should be in the military.”[103][104] But U.S. military leaders have said white nationalism and white supremacy in the ranks are growing.[105] For example, an October 2020 Pentagon report said there were “white supremacist inroads in the U.S. military”.[106] Much independent reporting indicates this as well.[107
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