pa-outdoorsman
Member
- Joined
- Aug 14, 2023
- Messages
- 587
He was AWOL and needs to be held to the same standard as his subordinates.
So why would the Biden Administration say they didn’t find out until days later?Surely WRNMMC has a system in place which informs a patient's chain of command of hospital admissions. That should be easy since there's only one above the SECDEF in the org chart.
I was thinking along those same lines. If my DS had a planned surgery over his Christmas leave, he might not necessarily tell his CoC but if anything that caused him to not be available, as planned, and he didn't let his CoC know asap, he would (at a minimum) be reamed a new orifice. And he's a lowly ensign and of little consequence.If a military member has a procedure coming up, elective or not, you inform the chain of command, ensure duties are covered, estimate sick leave required, keep CoC updated on any departures from planned absence days.
THAT... is a good question.So why would the Biden Administration say they didn’t find out until days later?
My daughter is in San Juan, temperature 84 degrees, for a work conference. All week.It’s all puzzling.
Including that his 2nd in command was delegated as ‘in charge’, and she didn’t even know. And in Puerto Rico?? Weird.
Apparently DoD didn't see the need in talking about it either.Other than potentially some poor subordinate getting canned, nothing is going to happen so don't see the need in talking about it.
Boy, we missed you!Apparently DoD didn't see the need in talking about it either.
Thank you. I once was lost but now I'm found.Early sign of a bad relationship. You play hide and seek and no one bothers to look for you for four or five days.
Good to see you back Doc.