Originally Posted by KMSRyana
Allheart
He could have done several things differently. Probably his best option would have been to refuse to take the oath to begin with. They would have pressured him much like bill collectors pressure debtors or how District Attorneys pressure accused to sign confession or accept plea bargains, but there would have been no real consequences. That would have been his best option to resist peer pressure or intimidation.
He could have asked to be reassigned, and likely long before he was told he would be deployed. After all he was assigned (and likely volunteered for that too) to an INFANTRY unit. Duh, fit hits the shan... combat. He knew what he was doing.
He could have gone to therapists and voiced his objections, even the military ones would work to get him out of the service or reassigned to a non combat assignment. Yes, there really are some people that will help you like that in the military.
I think it's great he voiced his opinion. It's part of our constitutional rights. But he is dead wrong for refusing to follow orders. Plenty of reporters over there would have made the story have a greater impact than it will have here. And yes, they'd have sent him to man a radar station in Alaska if he had done it that way, but he'd be out of the war and not in military prison. I still doubt they'll imprison him anyway.