A journey through The Army's criminal justice system seen through the lens of controversial case of Clint Lorance.A journey through The Army's criminal justice system seen through the lens of controversial case of Clint Lorance.A journey through The Army's criminal justice system seen through the lens of controversial case of Clint Lorance.
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I watched the show,listened to everyone's side, made no judgements,it was an engrossing show except... ....they would show Afghani people speaking their language ,and looking like they were saying their piece but no translation. I'd very much like to know what they were saying
Worth watching.highly recommend it. They did a great job at patching together all the different angles of the case. Worth watching.highly recommend it. They did a great job at patching together all the different angles of the case. Worth watching.highly recommend it. They did a great job at patching together all the different angles of the case. Worth watching.highly recommend it. They did a great job at patching together all the different angles of the case. Worth watching.highly recommend it. They did a great job at patching together all the different angles of the case.
Just and balanced at giving both sides of the argument. However, the way the platoon makes this out to be their end all be all is pathetic. They didn't seem to broke up about their favorite lieutenant being blown up 3 days earlier, but they sure as hell have a lot to say about 3 afghans shot that had Taliesin and IED connections. They didn't seem to broke up about taking out a farmer right after that incident. Did they find the"radio" they were using before being shot? That fast pathetic Sgt gave the order but wasn't charged? How come no investigation there? What a joke. Today's Justice system is broken but as long as it's woke your good.
A fascinating documentary about a soldier pardoned by Trump a few days ago. It let's you hear from many sides of the case, but the most compelling are those who matter most. The convicted lieutenant and those in his platoon who would speak out and who turned him in to the Army. It's not a black and white story, until Fox media gets hold of it and jingos it up into a "travesty of justice." I ended up making up my own mind ( he should not have been pardoned, but clemency was appropriate) and that's what I like about this movie. It's a Rorschach projection test on how we will judge the issues.
WHY WOULD YOU NOT TRANSLATE WHAT THE MULTIPLE AFGHAN INTERVIEWEES ARE SAYING INTO VOICEOVER OR AT THE VERY LEAST ADD ENGLISH SUBTITLES? long portions of worthless video interviews where your target audience of English speaking Americans, have ZERO IDEA of what they're saying. Massive mistake on an otherwise solid doc.
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