I am remiss to go against Catturd but there's another side to the story that we should be paying attention to.
"His comments infuriated the military’s legal community.
“He uses sedition and treason very broadly and inappropriately,” said David Frakt, a retired air force officer and attorney in the judge advocate general (JAG) corps, the military justice branch.
“The irony is that if anyone committed sedition or treason, it was the people that he urged to overthrow the government on January 6 [2021] – and you know, he pardoned all of those people and calls them patriots and martyrs and all the rest.”
The rhetoric of execution places the safety of lawmakers at risk, Frakt said. “I think all of those people are very likely in fear for their life now, not because Trump would actually prosecute them for something because they didn’t actually commit a crime … but that they’re the ‘enemy of the people,’ and [the administration is] going to go after them. They’re going to say, ‘Well, Trump will pardon me.’”
He expressed a shared anger with the Democrats in the video about the legal environment facing US service members, citing as an example the recent actions by the US government
to blow up the vessels of alleged drug trafficking boats off the coast of Venezuela,
in the Caribbean and Pacific,
which he said is illegal and “not a close call in any way … it is laughable.”
Sinking these boats is “murder, not combat,” he said.
“Adherence to the law is taking a back seat.”
“I think those are clearly unlawful orders, but for those that are dealing with this, they’re in a tough position, because the last thing that in my mind they want is to have this to be an issue in the criminal court, where a court system determines whether or not that’s a lawful order.”
Indeed, while military attorneys are outraged at Trump’s comments, some expressed concern for the fate of service members who take the burden of refusing an order upon themselves.
“If a service member thinks an order is unlawful, they can disobey it, but they disobey at their peril,” said Rachel VanLandingham, a law professor at Southwestern Law School in Los Angeles and a retired air force lieutenant colonel who served as a military attorney.
Facing a questionable order, a service member’s first responsibility is to get clarification from their chain of command, she said. Following that, they should seek guidance from a military chaplain or a member of the judge advocate general’s corps.
However, given that one of the first acts of incoming secretary of defense Pete Hegseth was to fire or demoting legal advisors to the service branches, there are concerns that the JAG corps is becoming politicized, too."
Experts infuriated by president accusing Democrats of ‘sedition’ for urging soldiers to refuse illegal orders
www.theguardian.com