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Senator McCaskill ‘s ideological war on men – the political campaign against the military to criminalize male sexuality and protect nobody

June 19, 2013
By

 mccaskillNCFM NOTE: Lt. Gen. Susan Helms, Air Force Academy Graduate, astronaut with four space missions, nominated by President Obama to serve as Vice Commander of the Air Force Space Command. It would seem that General Helm’s judgment would be of the highest order. The article below, at least the facts noted there, strongly support General Helm’s decision to grant clemency to an officer under her command, Capt. Matthew Herrera who had been court-martialed and convicted of aggravated sexual assault. Guilty or not, Missouri Senator McCaskill deep-sixed General Helm’s presidential nomination because of the General’s decision “sent a damaging message to survivors of sexual assault who are seeking justice in the military justice system.” Apparently, like all ideologically driven elitist feminists, justice is simply an annoyance to be avoided if it impedes their progress in taking over the world and relieving women of any responsibility for anything. Yet, Capt. Herrera’s career was destroyed; he was summarily dismissed from the military, and still standing is his conviction for a lesser charge. Never mind that the accuser lied about her interest in Herrera. Never mind that the accuser’s story was contradicted by two other officers riding in the same car during the supposed sexual assault by Herrera. Forget the indisputable fact that there was no physical evidence of a crime. Never mind truth, reality, and keeping things in proper perspective. Important to McCaskill and wicked ilk is only the opportunity to exploit the General Helm’s decision; and, force ideologically driven elitist feminist doctrine into our military institutions. This is nothing more than another skirmish in the war against men, though a well manipulated nasty one that has now damaged  one of our military commanders reputations, a commander we trusted enough to send to the Air Force Academy, rocket into space four times, and elevate her to help run our Air Force Space Command. McCaskill has a law degree and was a prosecutor with zip, nada, not one once of military service. Then there were the McCarthy hearings… Keep it real please. Thank you James Taranto for writing the following article and the Wall Street Journal for publishing it. It’s long overdue. Here’s the article:

Gen. Helms and the Senator’s ‘Hold’

An Air Force commander exercised her discretion in a sexual-assault case. Now her career is being blocked by Sen. Claire McCaskill. Why?

By JAMES TARANTO

Lt. Gen. Susan Helms is a pioneering woman who finds her career stalled because of a war on men—a political campaign against sexual assault in the military that shows signs of becoming an effort to criminalize male sexuality.

Gen. Helms is a 1980 graduate of the Air Force Academy who became an astronaut in 1990. She was a crewman on four space-shuttle missions and a passenger on two, traveling to the International Space Station and back 5½ months later. Two days after arriving at the station in 2001, she, along with fellow astronaut Jim Voss, conducted history’s longest spacewalk—8 hours, 56 minutes—to work on a docking device.

In March, President Obama nominated Gen. Helms to serve as vice commander of the Air Force Space Command. But Sen. Claire McCaskill, a Missouri Democrat who sits on the Armed Services Committee, has placed a “permanent hold” on the nomination.

At issue is the general’s decision in February 2012 to grant clemency to an officer under her command. Capt. Matthew Herrera had been convicted by a court-martial of aggravated sexual assault. Ms. McCaskill said earlier this month that the clemency decision “sent a damaging message to survivors of sexual assault who are seeking justice in the military justice system.

To describe the accuser in the Herrera case as a “survivor” is more than a little histrionic. The trial was a he-said/she-said dispute between Capt. Herrera and a female second lieutenant about a drunken October 2009 sexual advance in the back seat of a moving car. The accuser testified that she fell asleep, then awoke to find her pants undone and Capt. Herrera touching her genitals. He testified that she was awake, undid her own pants, and responded to his touching by resting her head on his shoulder.

Two other officers were present—the designated driver and a front-seat passenger, both lieutenants—but neither noticed the hanky-panky. Thus on the central questions of initiation and consent, it was her word against his.

On several other disputed points, however, the driver, Lt. Michelle Dickinson, corroborated Capt. Herrera’s testimony and contradicted his accuser’s.

Capt. Herrera testified that he and the accuser had flirted earlier in the evening; she denied it. Lt. Dickinson agreed with him. The accuser testified that she had told Lt. Dickinson before getting into the car that she found Capt. Herrera “kind of creepy” and didn’t want to share the back seat with him; Lt. Dickinson testified that she had said no such thing. And the accuser denied ever resting her head on Capt. Herrera’s shoulder (although she acknowledged putting it in his lap). Lt. Dickinson testified that at one point during the trip, she looked back and saw the accuser asleep with her head on Capt. Herrera’s shoulder.

Best of the Web Today columnist James Taranto on Lt. General Susan Helms, a victim of Missouri Sen. Claire McCaskill’s war on men. Photos: AJ Mast

In addition, the accuser exchanged text messages with Capt. Herrera after the incident. She initially claimed to have done so only a “couple times” but changed her testimony after logs of the text traffic revealed there were 116 messages, 51 of them sent by her.

Based on all this, Gen. Helms concluded that the defendant was a more reliable witness than the accuser, and that prosecutors had failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Capt. Herrera did not reasonably believe the accuser had consented. He did not escape punishment: Gen. Helms accepted a reduced plea of guilty to an “indecent act.” Capt. Herrera was thereby spared the lifelong stigma of being listed on a sex-offender registry—but not of involuntary discharge from the service, which took effect in December.

“Immediately after this incident, there was no indication by any party that a sexual assault had taken place,” Gen. Helms wrote in a Feb. 24, 2012, memo explaining her decision. “The time delay between the event and the court-martial was approximately two years, and none of the witnesses, including the accused and the [alleged] victim, knew for at least a year that a court-martial would be convened for it.”

In the interim, another servicewoman, Staff Sgt. Jennifer Robinson, had come forward to accuse Capt. Herrera of sexual assault. In her case, the incident had occurred in his bedroom, where she voluntarily accompanied him. The court-martial acquitted him of that charge on the ground that she had consented. (Sgt. Robinson, who has since been promoted to technical sergeant, revealed her identity in a March interview with the Air Force Times.)

It’s fair to say that Capt. Herrera seems to have a tendency toward sexual recklessness. Perhaps that makes him unsuitable to serve as an officer in the U.S. Air Force. But his accusers acted recklessly too. The presumption that reckless men are criminals while reckless women are victims makes a mockery of any notion that the sexes are equal.

More important, Sen. McCaskill’s blocking of Gen. Helms’s nomination makes a mockery of basic principles of justice. As the general observed in her memo: “Capt Herrera’s conviction should not rest on [the accuser’s] view of her victimization, but on the law and convincing evidence, consistent with the standards afforded any American who finds him/herself on trial for a crime of this severity.”

On Friday the House passed a defense bill that would strip commanders of the authority to grant clemency. That would be a mistake. The Herrera case demonstrates that the authority offers crucial protection for the accused.

Military officers and lawmakers alike swear an oath to “support and defend the Constitution of the United States.” In the case of Matthew Herrera, Gen. Helms lived up to that commitment. Will Sen. McCaskill?

Mr. Taranto, a member of the Journal’s editorial board, writes the Best of the Web Today column for WSJ.com.

A version of this article appeared June 18, 2013, on page A19 in the U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: Gen. Helms and the Senator’s ‘Hold’.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324021104578549891063938034.html?mod=wsj_valettop_email

Re published here under the Fair Use Doctrine

mccaskill

Senator McCaskill doesn’t seem to know fairness from fairytale.

Now, McCaskill wants to change the way our military does business so female members of the military can make allegations against men at will without repercussions for lying. The good people of Missouri elected her. Harry Truman must be turning face down in his grave from shame.

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5 Responses to Senator McCaskill ‘s ideological war on men – the political campaign against the military to criminalize male sexuality and protect nobody

  1. TerraMercenary on June 22, 2013 at 8:31 AM

    Thanks for information, you can be assured I will not donate any more money to this site. This is looking like another so called Men’s organization ran by feminists.

    • NCFM on June 25, 2013 at 12:00 AM

      Terra, according to our records you have not donated any money to this site. If you really think it is run by feminists then you have not read anything about NCFM and you know nothing about the mens movement. However, thank you for your comment. Comments such as yours causes others to take a closer look in the search for truth from fantasy.

  2. TerraMecenary on June 21, 2013 at 10:02 AM

    Although Helms’s is getting treated unjustly, shouldn’t the emphasis of your energy be focused on helping Men and only Men, not a female general? This is a Men’s site for Men, right?

    • NCFM on June 21, 2013 at 10:51 AM

      NCFM is a site about fairness and equality. We extend respect to those who believe in those concepts regardless of gender. By doing so not only do we help men but also those that care about them or treat them respectfully. Lt. General Howe, based on what evidence is before us, acted in a fair and equitable manner– she upheld her oath of office, righted a wrong, and in the process kept a man off the sexual assault index. The controversy surrounding her just decision is exposing the rigidity of those who oppose fairness and equal treatment, especially as is generally the case where men accused of something is concerned. The good general deserves all the support she can get since she stood tall and did the right thing. By the way, the Treasurer of NCFM, the one who has access to all our funds, is a women. We have women chapter presidents, advisers, board members, and members at large. NCFM is about all of us, all of us concerned with making the world a better place. We are also a men’s rights organization. The two are not mutually exclusive. Thank you for your question. We hope you can appreciate the answer.

  3. theoutside on June 21, 2013 at 7:47 AM

    What about getting her removed from office?

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