Browsing: it requires defenders willing to stand against tyranny cloaked in patriotism. And if generals must choose between obeying a man or upholding the Constitution

    The U.S. Constitution—not any man, office, or political party—remains the supreme law of this land. When U.S. military generals take their oath, they swear not to a president, but to “support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic.” This sacred oath binds their allegiance to principle, not personality—to law, not loyalty.