The hearing yesterday was 
brought to order by Committee Chair Roger Wicker who struggles with 
speech and the English language.  I haven't been so uncomfortable 
hearing a Committee member speak since disgraced Corrine Brown left the 
House of Representatives and did a prison stint.  Like Corrine, Roger 
struggles with the most basic of words --  "contributions" to cite but 
one example -- if you need another "colleagues" and by the time he 
mangles "candidacy" (can-a-day) and mispronounced "ethos" I was done 
with the idiot.  My life will not be wasted trying to accurately portray
 the stupidity flying out of his mouth.  
He also 
reads poorly.  There's no excuse for stumbling over your own prepared 
opening statement that you're reading off a piece of paper.  There's 
also no excuse for stumbling over someone's name as though you've come 
across it for the first time. David Bellavia is a name he knew he 
was going to pronounce since it was in his prepared statement and since 
he was quoting from Bellavia's letter endorsing Hegseth. 
The
 first question that comes to mind is how did such an idiot get made 
Committee Chair? But then you think a moment and grasp how MAGA has 
infected and destroyed the GOP and you grasp that Wicker's Committee 
Chair because he is, sadly, the best that the party has. 
Ranking
 Member Jack Reed used his opening remarks to make clear that he could 
not support Hegseth's nomination.  He noted he had previously voted in 
favor of every Secretary of Defense nominees including the two Donald 
Chump nominated in his first term.  To clarify, that would be Mark Esper
 and Jim Mattis.  We have to clarify that because in his first term, 
Chump left the office vacant.  Esper replaced Mattis in July of 2019 and
 then left November 9, 2020 when Chump fired him.  There was no real 
Secretary of Defense from November 9, 2020 to the end of Chumps term 
(January 20, 2021).  Chump cared so little about the military and the 
defense of the United States that he fired a Secretary of Defense and 
then left the position open.  (Christopher Miller would be acting 
Secretary of Defense which isn't the same thing -- it's a tactic that 
thug Nouri al-Maliki perfected when he was prime minister of Iraq -- it 
let Nouri control things but it didn't protect the Iraqi people.)
Reed
 also expressed his surprise and disappointment over the fact that 
Hegseth refused to meet with any Democratic Party members of the 
Committee other than Reed.  During her time, Senator Jeanne 
Shaheen would also note the refusal to meet with Democratic senators 
other than Reed.  She pointed out that this was not the case in the 
previous Trump administration and it wasn't the case under other 
presidents.  She's served on the Committee for eleven years.
Senator Jeanne Shaheen:  Do
 you understand that if you're confirmed to be Secretary of Defense, 
that you will have a responsibility to meet with all members of this Committee, not just Republicans? 
Pete
 Hegseth: Senator, I very much appreciate and understand the 
traditionally bipartisan nature of this Committee.  There -- National 
defense is not p-partisan.  It should not be about Republicans or 
Democrats.
Shaheen 
noted that, had they been able to meet before the hearing, she was going
 to discuss the issue of women in the military with him.
Senator Jeanne Shaheen:  Because
 you've made a number of surprising statements about women serving in 
the military.  As recently as November 7, 2024 on THE SHAWN RYAN SHOW 
you said, and I quote, "I'm straight up saying that we should not have 
women in combat roles. It hasn't made us more effective."  The quote 
went on a little bit longer but that was the gist of it.  That was 
before you were nominated to be Secretary of Defense. Mr Hegseth, do you
 know what percentage of our military is comprised of women?
Pete Hegseth: Uh, [shaking his head 'no']  I believe it's 18 to 20 percent, Senator.
Senator: 
 Jeanne Shaheen: It's almost 18 percent and DoD's 2023 demographic 
report indicated that there are more women serving now and there are 
fewer separations.  So they make up a critical part of our military, 
wouldn't you agree? 
Pete
 Hegseth: Yes, ma'am.  Women in our military -- as I've said publicly --
 have and continue to make amazing contributions across all aspects of 
our battlefield.
Jeanne
 Shaheen:  Well you also write in your book THE WAR ON WARRIORS with the
 chapter "The Deadly Obsession With Women Warriors," that "Not only are 
women comparatively less effective than men in combat roles, but 
they are more likely to be objectified by the enemy and their own nation
 in the moral realms of war."  Mr Hegseth, should we take it to believe 
that you believe that the two women on this Committee who have served 
honorably and with distinction, made our military less effective and 
less capable? 
Pete Hegseth: I'm 
incredibly grateful for the two -- two women that served our military in
 uniform and including in the Central Intelligence Agency contributions 
on the battlefield -- uh-uh -- 
Pete Hegseth: Senator I would like to clarify
[crosstalk]
Pete Hegseth: -- effects readiness which is what I care about the most
Jeanne Shaheen: I understand --
Pete Hegseth: -- readiness 
[cross talk]
Senator Jeanne Shaheen: Your
 statements publicly have not been to that effect.  After your 
nomination you did say to a group of reporters that you "support all 
women serving in our military today who do a fantastic job across the 
globe including combat."  So what I'm confused about, Mr Hegseth,  which
 is it?  Why should women in our military, if you were the Secretary of 
Defense, believe that they would have a fair shot and an equal 
opportunity to rise through the ranks?  If on the one hand, you say that
 women are not competent, they make our military less effective and on 
the other hand you say 'Oh, no, now that I've been nominated to be the 
Secretary of Defense, I've changed my view on women in the military  
what do you have to say to the almost 400,000 women who are serving 
today about your position on whether they should be capable to rise 
through the highest ranks of our military. 
He talks nonsense and then she asks him if he's familiar with a law, The Women Peace and Security Agenda?
Pete Hegseth:  Yes, ma'am, I am. 
Senator
 Jeanne Shaheen: This is a law that was signed during president-elect 
Trump's first term.  It was legislation that I sponsored with Republican
 Senator Capato of West Virginia.  It was co-sponsored by Marco Rubio, 
the nominee for to be the president elect's  Secretary of State.  It was
 led in the House of Representatives by Kristi Noam, the president 
elect's nominee to be the Secretary of Homeland Security.  It mandates 
that women be included in all aspects of our national security including
 conflict resolution and peace negotiations.  And at the Dept of 
Defense, it has been the law under both the Trump and Biden 
administrations.  The DoD has incorporated women throughout its decision
 making as a result.  Every single combatant commander across two 
administrations has told this Committee that this law and its 
implementation at the Dept of Defense provides them a strategic 
advantage operationally.   Based on your comments, it appears that the 
example you would like to set not only for women in this country but for
 women across the globe, 50% of the world's population as the 
prospective nominee to lead the most combat credible military in the 
entire world is that women should not have an equal opportunity in our 
military.  So will you commit to preserving The Women Peace and Security
 Agenda law at DoD and including in your budget the requisite funding to
 continue and resource these programs throughout the DoD. 
Pete
 Hegseth: Senator, I will commit to reviewing that program and ensuring 
it alings with America First national securities priorities, 
meritocracy, legality and readiness.  And if it advances American 
interests, it's something we would advance.  If it doesn't, it's 
something will look at it.
 
Senator Jeanne Shaheen: Since former president Trump signed the law, I hope he agrees with you. 
Right there, he demonstrates that he is not qualified to serve in any federal government capacity.  
I don't know why the Sheehan exchange is not what the press ran with. 
Do you understand the two sentences I just dictated?
I hope you do but Hegseth doesn't.
Now
 he evaded and he lied throughout.  And after we saw what Trump's 
Supreme Court Justices did -- despite lies that they told in their 
confirmation hearings -- that should be troubling.  I'm not rolling that
 out.  His sexism and his stupidity was on display throught and I 
believe Senator Tammy Duckworth more than established that in her 
questioning.
But stop everything for just a moment.
For
 a nominee to tell a Senate confirmation committee anything other than 
"Yes, I will" when asked if they will follow the law?  
That's disqualfying.
I really don't care what the drunk thinks about the law.
It is the law.
If confirmed, he would have to take an oath to uphold the law.
As a Cabinet Secretary, he does not get to pick and choose what laws to follow.  Nor does he make law.
Congress does.  They passed the law in 2017, Trump signed it into law.
It's now the law of the land.
And
 yet the drunk sat there sweating through his hearing and asked if he 
would follow the law, he responded that he would have to review it to 
make sure it fits with his own beliefs.
That's not how the law works.
I'm
 sure many crooks wish it did work that way.  'Yes, I killed the man 
but, your honor, I don't believe in the law that murder is a crime.'
It doesn't work that way.
The law is the law.
And
 for a Cabinet nominee to sit in front of a Senate committee insisting 
he's qualified for a job and yet to also insist that he'd have to look 
at a law to determine whether or not he would follow it?
That's not the way it works.
With that response, just that one exchange, he is unfit to serve. 
There are many, many other reasons but with just that, he's unfit to serve. 
When
 you're nominated to a federal post, your confirmation begins and ends 
on whether or not you will follow the law.  If you say you have to 
review it, then you don't know enough about government to serve in it. 
He
 could have easily said, "I don't agree with it but it's the law. 
Therefore I will follow it."  Or, "I don't agree with it but I will 
follow it while I advocate for Congress to change it."
But to say you need to review the law before you can decide whether or not to follow it?  
That's an immediate disqualifier. 
Once
 Congress passed it and a president signed it into law, you don't get a 
choice.  That he doesn't grasp that goes to how immensely unqualified he
 is.  We do not have time, as a country, to wait for someone to give him
 a basic high school tutorial on how the government works.  He's not fit
 for the job and shouldn't be confirmed.
The
 key thread of the hearing was Hegseth's refusal to answer questions.  
He'd hem and he'd haw and he'd pretend not to remember -- such as with 
regards to the woman he previously admitted to having sex with but 
insisted he didn't rape her (though he paid her a six figure settlement 
and made her sign a NDA -- and even the most basic questions that 
required only a "yes" or a "no" were sidestepped by him.
Senator
 Elizabeth Warren, for example, noted that he had gone on record 
sometime ago with his belief that retiring generals should have to wait 
ten years after retirement before going to work in the private 
(corporate) defense industry.  Would he himself follow that guideline?  
He wouldn't answer.  At one point, he thought he was so cute, he 
informed Warren that he was not a general.  No, and he was not cute.  
That greasy hair is disgusting.  FOX "NEWS" didn't let him go on air 
like that.  Is it because he keeps sweating?  Is that why he's doing the
 greasy, wet look?  
Would he pledge to follow that guideline if he was confirmed?
Like Elizabeth Warren, we were all left without an answer. 
He'd
 just avoid answering.  Warren noted that this was on top of his refusal
 to meet with her when they could have discussed before the hearing.
The
 hearing moved on down the line with the GOP grinning manically - Wicker
 had everyone else beat in that area -- and refusing to tackle any real 
issues.  For the Democrats?  Hegseth repeatedly refused to answer 
questions -- even those requiring either a "yes" or a "no" -- and he 
came across with all the integrity of a used car salesman.  
After the hearing, Senator Reed issued the following statement:
 
“I went into today’s hearing with deep concerns about Mr. Hegseth’s 
qualifications to be Secretary of Defense, and my fears were confirmed. 
He lacks the requisite character, competence, and commitment to do this 
job. Indeed, he is the least qualified nominee for Secretary of Defense 
in modern history. 
“In addition to his own alarming statements, there are simply too 
many disturbing reports about Mr. Hegseth to ignore. A variety of 
sources accuse him of disregarding the laws of war, financial 
mismanagement, racist and sexist remarks, alcohol abuse, sexual assault,
 sexual harassment, and other troubling issues. 
“If a servicemember had the same record of misconduct, they would be 
disqualified from holding any leadership position in the military, much 
less being confirmed as the Secretary of Defense.
“Mr. Hegseth dodged and deferred questions about his conduct. He 
instead focused on complaining and calling our military weak and too 
“politically correct.” I am concerned that confirming Mr. Hegseth would 
send a message to our troops that they will be evaluated on political 
standards rather than merits, and that he will inject politics into a 
nonpartisan organization.
“Further, Mr. Hegseth failed to convince us that he is capable of 
running any organization remotely as complex as the Department of 
Defense. He financially mismanaged two veterans' organizations and 
created a workplace culture of misconduct, including several incidents 
of public intoxication. This is unacceptable behavior for a Secretary of
 Defense nominee.
“Further, he defended his recent statement that: “I’m straight up just saying we should not have women in combat roles.” 
“Finally, I am disappointed by the investigative process for Mr. 
Hegseth. The point of a thorough FBI background check is to confirm that
 there is no derogatory information that would compromise a nominee’s 
ability to do their job.
“The FBI process designed by the Trump Transition Team for Mr. 
Hegseth has been woefully inadequate. Investigators neglected to contact
 critical witnesses and whistleblowers, and the final report has not 
been shared with other members of the committee. 
“I was also disappointed that the committee could not have a second 
round of questioning with Mr. Hegseth. There are important questions 
that remain unanswered, and I will continue to seek them.
“Today’s hearing has adjourned, but I believe the jury is still out. I
 encourage my Republican colleagues to carefully examine the facts.”
 Here's Lawrence O'Donnell reporting on the hearing.
Today, combat Veteran and U.S. Senator Tammy Duckworth (D-IL)—a 
member of the U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee who served 23 years 
in the Reserve Forces—slammed U.S. Secretary of Defense expected nominee
 Pete Hegseth on his utter lack of experience and qualifications to lead
 the Department of Defense at his confirmation hearing. Pointing to a 
framed copy of the Soldier’s Creed—a copy that hangs over her desk in 
the Senate and hung above her bed during her recovery at Walter Reed 
Medical Center after the helicopter she co-piloted was shot 
down—Duckworth urged Mr. Hegseth to follow this Creed as our 
servicemembers do every day, placing the mission above personal 
ambition. Duckworth’s full remarks can be found on the Senator’s YouTube. 
“Every day, our servicemembers follow the Soldier’s Creed as 
we ask them to leave their families, walk into enemy fire and be ready 
for the mission until their very last breath,” said Duckworth. “How
 can we ask these warriors to train to the absolute highest standard, if
 we confirm a guy who is asking us to lower the standard to make him 
Secretary of Defense? The very idea that Pete Hegseth is the person to 
lead our heroes is an insult to the troops who sacrifice so much for the
 rest of us.”
At the hearing, Duckworth demonstrated some of the areas where Mr. 
Hegseth lacks the experience or knowledge that a serious Defense 
Secretary nominee should have, grilling him on basic questions that he 
failed to answer. She asked him if he ever led an audit. He would not 
confirm. She asked him to describe at least one of the main 
international security agreements a Secretary of Defense is responsible 
for leading. He could not name any. She asked him to name at least one 
nation that is a part of ASEAN, an organization with several member 
states who have mutual defense treaties, alliances or enhanced defense 
cooperation agreements with the U.S. None of the three countries he 
named were correct.
The full text of the Soldier’s Creed reads as follows:
I am an American Soldier.
I am a warrior and a member of a team.
I serve the people of the United States, and live the Army Values.
I will always place the mission first.
I will never accept defeat.
I will never quit.
I will never leave a fallen comrade.
I am disciplined, physically and mentally tough, trained and proficient in my warrior tasks and drills.
I always maintain my arms, my equipment and myself.
I am an expert and I am a professional.
I stand ready to deploy, engage, and destroy, the enemies of the United States of America in close combat.
I am a guardian of freedom and the American way of life.
I am an American Soldier.
Since Donald Trump tapped Pete Hegseth to serve as Secretary of 
Defense, Duckworth has remained one of Hegseth’s sharpest critics. This 
week, Duckworth and U.S. Senator Mark Kelly (D-AZ)—a fellow combat 
Veteran and member of SASC—penned an op-ed
 underscoring that Pete Hegseth lacks the merits to be our next Defense 
Secretary. Last month, Duckworth joined her fellow SASC members in sending a letter
 to Susan Wiles, President-elect Donald Trump’s incoming Chief of Staff,
 about whether Pete Hegseth’s attitudes toward women and allegations of 
sexual assault and harassment disqualify him to be the next Secretary of
 Defense.
Duckworth is a proven leader and fierce advocate for our servicemembers, Veterans and their families. In the Fiscal Year (FY) 2025 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) that was signed into law, Duckworth secured
 several important provisions that support our servicemembers and their 
families, enhance strategic partnerships in the Indo-Pacific region, 
improve logistics to bolster readiness and energy resiliency as well as 
continue to restore American competitiveness.
Sorry
 that there were no overnight posts.  I got pulled into something and 
didn't realize that I hadn't done them.  There's a problem community 
wide with some sites.  This one's fine and Trina's is as well but 
there's a Blogger/Blogspot issue for the other sites.  I'm not sure I 
can fix it.  I tried last night with Mike's and had no luck.  But I 
spent about two hours on that and when I got done, I went to sleep and 
didn't realize that I hadn't done six or more posts to go up overnight.