Soft Sedition in Sensible Shoes -Rick Wagner
So here we are, well into 2025, with Donald Trump once again occupying the Oval Office — president of the United States, sworn in, backed by the ballot, and controlling the military command chain.
And yet — despite all that — a faction of Democrats, some with previous service in uniform or intelligence, continues to issue broad, public warnings: “If the commander‑in‑chief ever gives unlawful orders, don’t follow them.” No specifics. No concrete orders in question. Just a vague advisory, dripping with distrust.
That’s not checks‑and‑balances. That’s sabotage in a suit.
Because let’s be honest — if there really were unlawful orders, there are procedures to challenge them. Members of the military can resign. Whistleblowers can go public. Courts exist. Public debate exists.
What we’re seeing instead is rhetorical pre‑emptive mutiny — the same party that spent years demanding “respect the norms” now telling servicemembers to pick and choose when those norms apply, based not on law, but on convenience.
Is it democracy when you only follow the parts you like? Or when you only obey the orders from presidents you approve of? Of course not.
This, friends, is not healthy dissent. Not patriotic oversight. Not “standing up for democracy.” It’s sedition — dressed in press‑release prose, packaged with principle, and aimed at undercutting civilian command not because wrong was done, but because someone doesn’t like who’s above them.
If the law is broken — then break it out in the open. Make it specific. Try the case. But don’t smear it across opinion columns and hope for insubordination. That’s not resistance. That’s undermining.
And when your side loses the White House — and perhaps loses it again — what will be next? More “concern”? More “warnings”? More whispers to the ranks? No. Because at that point, the damage will already be done.
We don’t need legal‑theory lectures. We need loyalty to the Constitution






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