NEWS
šØ READ THIS TWICE. THEN SHARE IT. šØ A billboard near Southern Command carries a message that should stop every soldier, officer, and commander in their tracks: āBlowing up boats at random and killing survivors in the water are WAR CRIMES. āI was just following ordersā is NOT a defense in a Court Martial. Google: My Lai Massacre. FAFO.ā This is not propaganda. This is not rhetoric. This is international law. ā ļø WAR CRIMES DONāT DISAPPEAR WITH UNIFORMS Letās be absolutely clear: š“ Targeting civilians š“ Attacking vessels without military necessity š“ Killing wounded or unarmed survivors in the water These are not āgray areas.ā These are explicit violations of the Geneva Conventions and the Laws of Armed Conflict. And history has already settled this argument. š āI WAS JUST FOLLOWING ORDERSā ā THE LIE THAT NEVER WORKS If you think obedience protects you, history says otherwise. In 1968, U.S. soldiers entered the village of My Lai in Vietnam. What followed was one of the most infamous atrocities of modern warfare: ⢠Unarmed civilians executed ⢠Women and children slaughtered ⢠Survivors shot while fleeing When the dust settled, the defense was familiar: š āWe were just following orders.ā The courts rejected it. The world rejected it. And history never forgot it. Google the My Lai Massacre. Then ask yourself who paid the priceāand who didnāt. āļø COURTS MARTIAL INDIVIDUALS, NOT EXCUSES Hereās the part no one likes to say out loud: š¹ Orders do not absolve responsibility š¹ Uniforms do not grant immunity š¹ Time does not erase evidence From Nuremberg to My Lai to The Hague, the precedent is ironclad: If an order is unlawful, obeying it is a crime. You will not stand trial with your commander. You will not be shielded by politics. You will stand alone, with your name, your rank, and your actions on recordāforever. š§ THIS IS A WARNING, NOT A THREAT This message isnāt aimed at civilians. Itās aimed at decision-makers and trigger-pullers alike. Because history shows us one brutal truth: š§Ø The people who give illegal orders often retire comfortably. āļø The people who carry them out face the courts. FAFO isnāt slang here. Itās historyās lessonāwritten in blood. š„ THE QUESTION THAT MATTERS When the investigations come⦠When the footage surfaces⦠When the tribunals convene⦠š Will you be able to say you refused? š Will you be able to say you protected civilians? š Will you be able to say you chose law over loyalty? Because the world will ask. š¢ CALL TO ACTION š Google the My Lai Massacre. š Read the Geneva Conventions. š² Share this messageāespecially with those who think orders excuse everything. š¬ Comment if you believe accountability mattersāeven in war. Silence enables crimes. History remembers witnesses. And justiceāeventuallyācomes for everyone.
ā ļø A BILLBOARD THAT SHOUTS WHAT HISTORY WHISPERS TOO LATE ā ļø
War Crimes Are Not Accidents. And āI Was Just Following Ordersā Will Not Save You.
Near Southern Command, a stark message stands in public viewāunpolished, unambiguous, and impossible to ignore:
Blowing up boats at random and killing survivors in the water are WAR CRIMES.
āI was just following ordersā is NOT a defense in a Court Martial.
Google: My Lai Massacre.
FAFO.
This isnāt activism dressed up as outrage.
This is law, history, and warningācompressed into a few lines that refuse to comfort anyone who hopes accountability stops with someone else.
READ IT AGAIN ā BECAUSE THIS IS NOT A METAPHOR
War crimes are not defined by politics.
They are not decided by who āstarted it.ā
They are not erased by uniforms, flags, or chain of command.
They are defined by actions.
Attacking civilians.
Destroying non-combatant vessels without military necessity.
Killing unarmed survivors in the water.
These acts are prohibitedāexplicitlyāby the Geneva Conventions, customary international humanitarian law, and military codes of justice across the world. No euphemism changes that. No slogan overrides it.
THE MOST DANGEROUS SENTENCE IN WAR
āI was just following orders.ā
It has been spoken in whispers.
It has been shouted in courtrooms.
It has been carved into defense strategies that collapsed under the weight of evidence.
This defense did not survive Nuremberg.
It did not survive My Lai.
It did not survive any tribunal that took the law seriously.
Why?
Because the law is clear: manifestly unlawful orders must be refused.
That truth is uncomfortable. It demands moral courage in moments designed to crush it. But it exists precisely because history provedāagain and againāwhat happens when obedience replaces conscience.
MY LAI: THE NAME THAT STILL BLEEDS
If you donāt know My Lai, learn it nowābefore it becomes a footnote you wish youād read sooner.
In March 1968, U.S. soldiers entered a Vietnamese village. What followed was not combat. It was slaughter.
Civilians rounded up and executed
Women and children murdered
Survivors shot as they fled
Crimes justified at the time as āordersā
The cover-up failed. The truth emerged. And while only one officer was convicted, the event permanently scarred the U.S. militaryās moral record.
My Lai became a case study taught in military academies worldwideānot as an anomaly, but as a warning.
This is why the billboard says: Google it.
Because ignorance has never been an acceptable defense.
āTHIS IS WARā IS NOT A FREE PASS
War is chaotic.
War is brutal.
War is unforgiving.
But war is not lawless.
The laws of armed conflict exist precisely because human beingsāunder pressure, fear, rage, and ideologyāare capable of crossing lines they later pretend they never saw.
Killing survivors in the water is not āfog of war.ā
Attacking civilians is not āoperational necessity.ā
Random destruction is not ādeterrence.ā
These are crimes. Full stop.
THE BILLBOARD IS NOT AN ATTACK ON SOLDIERS
Letās be clearābecause this gets twisted on purpose.
This message is not anti-soldier.
It is pro-soldier.
It protects those in uniform from being turned into disposable tools for illegal orders that will follow them for life. It reminds them that the law is not their enemyāit is their shield.
Because when the shooting stops and the investigations begin, it will not be politicians or commentators standing in the dock.
It will be individuals.
FAFO IS NOT INTERNET SLANG HERE ā ITāS A SENTENCE
FAFO in war does not mean embarrassment or backlash.
It means:
Court-martial
Dishonorable discharge
Prison sentences
International warrants
A name permanently attached to atrocity
No retirement ceremony.
No rewriting the narrative.
No outrunning jurisdiction.
History has a long memoryāand very little patience for excuses.
THIS MESSAGE EXISTS BECAUSE HISTORY REPEATS WHEN IGNORED
Every generation believes itās different.
Every army believes itās justified.
Every conflict claims necessity.
And every time, someone says, āI didnāt know,ā or āI had no choice.ā
That is why reminders like this billboard matter. Not because they accuseābut because they warn.