funhusker
Active member
I've never served in the military, so I'm probably missing something.Unbelievable.
But his sailors obviously had great respect. What did Capt. Crozier do that got him this? Did he step outside chain of command, or what?
I've never served in the military, so I'm probably missing something.Unbelievable.
I've never served in the military, so I'm probably missing something.
But his sailors obviously had great respect. What did Capt. Crozier do that got him this? Did he step outside chain of command, or what?
He is the one that wrote a letter sounding the alarm about the COVID-19 outbreak on his ship. Supposedly, a high percentage of the sailers were sick with COVID and the military wasn't doing anything about it. His letter precipitated many being evacuated off the ship.I've never served in the military, so I'm probably missing something.
But his sailors obviously had great respect. What did Capt. Crozier do that got him this? Did he step outside chain of command, or what?
Christine Spears My son is on this ship. One of his berthmates was tested and pulled off a few days ago, two cots down from him. There is no way to quarantine. This was spreading and would continue to spread without getting them off ship and completely isolated. I'm sure the captain raised his concerns and got little to no (or a slow) reaction from those people, so he felt he had no choice but to go beyond for the men and women counting on his leadership. It seems to be a hallmark of his career, caring for his sailors. Thank you Captain Crozier.
@knapplc @BigRedBuster
I mean I knew who he is, just wasn't sure why a letter like that would get him fired. It's definitely a "bad look" (VERY bad in my civilian opinion). But this article seems to explain it pretty well.
https://www.defenseone.com/threats/2020/04/aircraft-carrier-captain-fired-poor-judgement-over-coronavirus-letter/164336/?oref=d-river
In our eyes, yes.He did not exercise poor judgment. He's a career officer, and he knew very well what that letter would do.
He understood the risk to his crew was greater than the risk to his career, and he chose to save his crew.
He's a hero.
I've never been in the military either. But, my understanding is that a commander has the duty to follow orders.....unless they are illegal or he feels that the situation puts his own men/women in unnecessary danger. He didn't feel the military was dealing with the situation properly. So, he took his own actions to keep his sailers safe. It affected his career. But, I bet if asked, he would do it all again for their sake.In our eyes, yes.
But the military is weird...
Agree 100%.I've never been in the military either. But, my understanding is that a commander has the duty to follow orders.....unless they are illegal or he feels that the situation puts his own men/women in unnecessary danger. He didn't feel the military was dealing with the situation properly. So, he took his own actions to keep his sailers safe. It affected his career. But, I bet if asked, he would do it all again for their sake.
Ummm.....a large part of why he wrote the letter is because it's impossible to social distance on the boat.I know those sailors are already at risk and have been exposed and I get they want to support their Capitan. I may be way off base here but maybe don't gather so many people so close together and further expose yourself? Ultimately they shouldnt even still be on the boat but still
I get that part but I really don't think that means they should give up on even trying. Again, maybe I'm way off base but it seems to me if you are in a tough position with social distancing in the first place you should be taking every precaution possible since its more likely a good percentage of people are infectedUmmm.....a large part of why he wrote the letter is because it's impossible to social distance on the boat.