So is what you are all telling me is that the Pentagon’s chief defense counsel for Military Commissions is completely ignorant of how the system works? Either he is lying about the “coincidence” comment, or we’re not getting the whole story from ya’ll messageboard experts.
It’s just a pet peeve. It also makes it harder for one of us to quote Hamlets quote of Swift. I’ts unessesary, and although in this case there is no confusion, there could be.
Or that his current boss doesn’t know (because he doesn’t have access to them) what his FitReps from Swift’s previous units said about his performance. OTOH, the promotion board does have such access.
I left out the word “not.” The first case of an active duty JA to argue a case before the Supremes was a Marine Maj. David Jonas in the case Davis v. United States, 512 U.S. 452 (1994).
I had my head up my posterior when I responded, and thought that Supreme Court = Military Court of Appeals.