Home Actress Tulsi Gabbard HD Instagram Photos and Wallpapers November 2023 Tulsi Gabbard Instagram - Zelensky now has absolute control of Ukrainian media, outlawed opposition political parties and Ukraine’s Orthodox Church, declared martial law, and uses absolute power under martial law to cancel presidential elections. So much for Biden’s false narrative that the world is in an existential fight to protect democracies from autocracies, wasting billions of US tax dollars.

Tulsi Gabbard Instagram – Zelensky now has absolute control of Ukrainian media, outlawed opposition political parties and Ukraine’s Orthodox Church, declared martial law, and uses absolute power under martial law to cancel presidential elections. So much for Biden’s false narrative that the world is in an existential fight to protect democracies from autocracies, wasting billions of US tax dollars.

Tulsi Gabbard Instagram - Zelensky now has absolute control of Ukrainian media, outlawed opposition political parties and Ukraine’s Orthodox Church, declared martial law, and uses absolute power under martial law to cancel presidential elections. So much for Biden’s false narrative that the world is in an existential fight to protect democracies from autocracies, wasting billions of US tax dollars.

Tulsi Gabbard Instagram – Zelensky now has absolute control of Ukrainian media, outlawed opposition political parties and Ukraine’s Orthodox Church, declared martial law, and uses absolute power under martial law to cancel presidential elections. So much for Biden’s false narrative that the world is in an existential fight to protect democracies from autocracies, wasting billions of US tax dollars. | Posted on 09/Nov/2023 14:34:53

Tulsi Gabbard Instagram – “My idea of war changed. The more I learned, the more I knew I wanted to learn more. Both in understanding the human costs and how those decisions really need to be made with the greatest level of care, honoring the sacrifices that our servicemen and women make. Also recognizing, in order to honor those sacrifices, when we go to war, it needs to be in service of the best interest of our country, in service of the safety, security, and freedom of the American people. Not in service of some military industrial complex profit-making venture. Not in the service of going and trying to be the policemen of the world or picking and choosing which dictator we want to overthrow and which country we’re going to try to create a mini-America in. Which, by the way, even with the best of intentions, throughout history, has caused more harm than good for the people in these countries where we go and meddle.

When it comes to war, just from my own personal experiences, coupled with a study of history, I’m asking very simple but important questions… What is our objective? What are we trying to accomplish? Can we ensure that objective serves the best interests of the United States and the American people?

Unfortunately, again, we have leaders who don’t know history, who are not interested in learning from it, who are not motivated by a desire to truly be of service — and these are the people making decisions about foreign policy, about peace and war, and about our men and women in uniform. We could speak for hours about different examples… Afghanistan. Regime-change in Iraq. Regime-change in Syria. There are so many different examples that you and I and our peers have lived through. And, frankly, our friends who have not lived through these wars. Look at how our policy leaders and even some of our military leaders have devastatingly failed us and failed the country.” — LTC Tulsi Gabbard (Army, OIF Veteran)

@tulsigabbard 
Project No. 62 
Podcast No. 52
Tulsi Gabbard Instagram – Quote 1/2 “You never really know completely what to expect on a deployment. You hear a lot, you feel like you go through an endless amount of training, but when push comes to shove, the reality is never a carbon copy of what you trained for. For me, serving in a medical unit, the realities of the human cost of war were ever present.

We were primarily at LSA (Logistical Support Area) Anaconda in Iraq. Just about everybody went through there at one point or another, and our brigade went to four different battle spaces in the country. I moved around a little bit to help our medical guys who were out supporting the other teams.

On day two, I was walking around the camp at the north gate. For those who were there, you will remember very clearly, there’s a huge sign. I don’t know who made it, but there’s a huge sign with big block letters at the gate. Before you leave every day, you see this sign that reads, ‘IS TODAY THE DAY?’ That was an ever present reminder that any day could be our last.

Personally understanding and accepting that reality of life and death, and wanting to make the most of life, not knowing how much time we have was massive for me. This was further settled in and reinforced when we had our first casualty. And again every single day, as I executed my first duty each morning — to review the latest list generated by the Force Commander for the country. Name by name, I went through the list of everyone who had been hurt or injured in the previous 24 hours, and I would look for any of the people who belonged to our brigade combat team. My job was to make sure they were getting the care they needed. Some would stay in-country, and others needed to be evacuated as quickly as possible. I would follow them until they were back home to their families.

It was tough seeing the names of people I knew, and there were a lot of people who I didn’t know, but understanding with every one of those names, there’s a loved one or a family or a child back home who were worried sick about them.” — LTC Tulsi Gabbard (Army, OIF Veteran)

@tulsigabbard 

Project No. 62
Podcast No. 52

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