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"insubordination" Definitions
  1. the act of refusing to obey orders or show respect for somebody who has a higher rank

214 Sentences With "insubordination"

How to use insubordination in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "insubordination" and check conjugation/comparative form for "insubordination". Mastering all the usages of "insubordination" from sentence examples published by news publications.

" I remember telling my wife, "This is major insubordination.
It makes clear he should have been fired for insubordination.
Stating the truth was seen as an act of insubordination.
All of this insubordination, oddly enough, probably helped protect Trump.
Internal insubordination has its limits as a defense to impeachment.
The organization fired Mr. Chick later the same day for insubordination.
Fifth grader Zoë will no longer tolerate her classmate Noah's insubordination.
He was fired in 2014 for what executives told him was insubordination.
This episode began with Meredith Grey still on suspension for her insubordination.
In the Hart household, any act of insubordination could be severely punished.
His actions were not simply questionable -- they were the definition of insubordination.
Sam, on the other hand, condemns it as an act of insubordination.
The suspension on February 6 was precipitated by insubordination by Mr. Cummins.
At times, White House officials said, Mr. Tillerson's behavior verged on insubordination.
Insubordination: okay when Jon does it, death sentence when he's giving the order.
"McMaster has been undermining the President to the point of insubordination," Cernovich said.
About a week later, Cigna fired him "for insubordination and misconduct," Peter said.
The insubordination shows up in later paragraphs, where reporters include harder-hitting information.
At the same time, it seems like insubordination if I don't do it.
He was a hard worker, but we also learned insubordination from my father.
Trump and his aides considered Comey's move an act of insubordination, Reuters reported Wednesday.
Collin Green, the Naval Special Warfare commander, of insubordination for defying Trump&aposs actions.
The choice facing the people given the orders is insubordination — dysfunction — or compliance and corruption.
To McMaster and his colleagues, Mattis's apparent attempts to limit Trump's options verged on insubordination.
Mr. Kelley's disciplinary record showed a variety of offenses, including insubordination, profanity, dishonesty and drugs.
For his insubordination, Corker has paid no political price and remains unlikely to do so.
The official said Green knew his move could be viewed as "insubordination" by the President.
Usually this kind of clear insubordination would have teams shooting out some kind of recrimination.
It's bizarre that any president would let a staffer stay on despite insubordination of this magnitude.
MORE. Why Trump continues to tolerate such insubordination from his National Security advisor is anyone's guess.
What, in your opinion, is the best way to deal with student insubordination or rule-breaking?
When I asked him about this act of insubordination, Sestak framed it as a naval metaphor.
SOL WISENBERG, WHITEWATER FORMER INDEPENDANT COUNSEL: It&aposs very serious, insubordination is not a strong enough word.
Parents and those in authoritative positions can all attest to how quickly passive-aggression turns into insubordination.
Accusing Vlaming of "insubordination," the board fired Vlaming when he stated he couldn't in good conscience comply.
As an airman in the colonial Royal Air Force, he was court-martialed for insubordination and imprisoned.
Arnaud Montebourg, a left-wing former industry minister fired for insubordination, rates his chances as a challenger.
Furious at the insubordination, Portugal's dictator recalled Sousa Mendes and put him on trial for violating orders.
Of course, there was a huge outcry from many fans, chastising Vettel for his insolence and insubordination.
Their insubordination threatens to sabotage Mae's ambitions, and to imperil their own bids for security and liberty.
Two Druze officers recently said they would stop serving in response to it, sparking fears of widespread insubordination.
The confluence of insubordination and recklessness on Comey's part were red flags that simply could not be ignored.
In 2010, Ms. Guitron was called into her boss's office and told she was being fired for insubordination.
They decided quickly that her insubordination could not stand, according to an administration official familiar with the deliberations.
But their heroic insubordination allows everyone else to escape to the annex, which then itself falls under siege.
Immediately fire schnoodle lady-in-waiting for insubordination and failure to do anything except give me bitchy side-eye.
Then, a few years in, Jermaine Dupri's mother, a dominant figure within the label, fired Braun for perceived insubordination.
The report revealed records of the company's insubordination when police requested access to its data for investigative genetic genealogy.
Several Druze military officers recently said they would stop serving in response to it, sparking fears of widespread insubordination.
According to The Hollywood Reporter, ABC threatened to cut The Real O'Neals's episode order as punishment for Galvin's insubordination.
Obviously, that presents a host of problems, not the least of which is insubordination, as one outranks the other.
Gallagher filed a complaint with the inspector general accusing a rear admiral of insubordination for defying Trump&aposs actions.
I was routinely kicked out of class for insubordination, I never studied, and my academic performance scandalized my family.
But throughout Ahmadinejad's presidency, Khamenei was wary of him, and his insubordination and relentless self-aggrandisement rankled the hardline clergy.
The IG sinks Comey's narrative with a finding that he "deviated" from Justice Department rules and acted in open insubordination.
Inspired by the raucous insubordination of punk bands like the Clash, he founded Carte de Séjour in Lyon in 1980.
In another sense, successful social media activism can look a lot like insubordination: The government fired Mr. Rasoolyar for his trouble.
The report itself is a grandiose airing of the FBI's dirty laundry: Internal disagreements, bad decisions, troubling conduct, insubordination and more.
From a practical standpoint, Comey's "punishment" for any claims of insubordination came over a year ago, when Trump summarily fired him.
Besides earning mostly C's, he had amassed at least seven suspensions for insubordination, profanity, dishonesty and drugs, according to school records.
"Curt Schilling was fired for his repeated instances of insubordination, some public and some not," said Josh Krulewitz, an ESPN spokesman.
Parents rarely got to see their children again, and women would be sentenced to a period of manual labor for insubordination.
While the chief executive can fire any member of the executive branch with or without cause, insubordination at the top of the FBI is cause enough — insubordination that clearly was not a one-off, given that Comey repeatedly refused to publicly confirm that the new president was not the subject of the investigation into so-called Russian collusion.
Alexander Vindman's attorney vigorously pushed back Saturday on President Donald Trump publicly tying the impeachment witness' ouster to insubordination and leaking information.
The combination of sex, violence, and the deplorable insubordination of the lower classes was most attractive to the journalists of the day.
"Director James Comey blatantly broke protocol on numerous occasions, to the point of what the report calls 'insubordination,'" North Carolina Republican Rep.
President Harry S. Truman had to fire General MacArthur for his insubordination concerning the conduct of the war on the Korean Peninsula.
Yet firing him on charges of insubordination means believing that the Fake News got the story about Rosenstein's 25th Amendment musings right.
You can also see The Journal's staff pushing back, through both great journalism (including exposes on the Trump administration) and quiet insubordination.
To treat the president's tweet as anything other than an order is, at least for this president, an act of outright insubordination.
And in another act of insubordination, Venezuelans manning the checkpoints reportedly let Guaidó cross into Colombia in a caravan — defying a travel ban.
NOTES: White Sox LHP Chris Sale was suspended five days by the team for a violation of team rules, insubordination and destroying equipment.
The army's removal of settlers from Gaza, and latterly from outposts in the West Bank, has passed off with few instances of insubordination.
In another world -- and in any other administration -- this level of insubordination would be unacceptable, intolerable and these men would likely be gone.
He said that he was worried about "a culture of insubordination" emerging in Texas, adding that the next step would be outright insurrection.
This Jake faced 10 years in prison for repeated fights and insubordination in the Navy — at one point, he apparently broke someone's jaw.
His habit of insubordination despite his military pedigree emerged at the Naval Academy, where he graduated fifth from the bottom of his class.
Still, in our era of image information overload, can clear dialectical images of defiant gestures inspire civil disobedience, insubordination, or beneficial creative negation?
The national commander of the police force and the defense minister denied there was widespread insubordination by police but acknowledged the scattered police actions.
After months of what Ms. Guitron described as retaliatory harassment, she was called into a meeting and told she was being fired for insubordination.
Punk Island was a smash this year, with the headliner, Leftover Crack, supported by bands with names like Sun Rot, Insubordination and Material Support.
He first became fed up with him over the moron remark because Kelly, a retired four-star Marine general, saw the comment as insubordination.
Although I don't agree with Yépez's argument, I admire his irreverence and insubordination (akin to Baraka's) — he is not looking for leftist literary groupthink.
The brilliant tactician who led the amphibious assault at Inchon in 1950, MacArthur later clashed with Harry S. Truman, who fired him for insubordination.
Also, in last week's "Holes," Meadow witnessed another cult member got shot in the head with a round of nails for the crime of insubordination.
Meredith's insubordination may have gotten her booted from her own OR, but now she's back — at the request of Dr. Richard Webber (James Pickens Jr.).
And early in Obama's first term, as he struggled to prevent further collapse, he faced similar insubordination from a key official: Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner.
Barrow had resisted moving Ruth to the outfield, and then resented Ruth's refusal to pitch when needed, which was hardly Ruth's only act of insubordination.
" Parlatore said that he hopes that Green is held accountable for his actions and had previously called on Trump to dismiss Green due to "insubordination.
The reason it&aposs being delayed is also to allow the leaks which you saw today, the partial leak of the description of Comey&aposs insubordination.
Such affirmations of couplehood in the face of death are not denial; but rather insubordination, eyes-wide-open commitments to living fully despite the force majeure.
But the salesman's pushiness and a bluntness that bordered on insubordination were distasteful to the patrician Henry Ford II, chairman and grandson of the firm's founder.
No president intent on exerting control in the executive branch — and all of them must, to implement an agenda — can tolerate an open secret of insubordination.
And I knew I wanted to watch several more episodes of her adventures when she actually suffered the consequences for that insubordination, ending up in prison.
When he reported the insubordination to upper management, he said he was told to deal with it himself, to counsel his workers who'd used the slur.
He was an aggressive, sharp-elbowed bureaucratic operator who always tried to get his way, but would relent in the end rather than engaging in insubordination.
But eventually, the generals figured out a way to put an end to this kind of insubordination: they ordered targeted, small-scale raids against enemy positions.
When Harry Truman decided to sack Douglas MacArthur, the top general in Korea, for insubordination in 1951, he worried about his ability to pull it off.
Dwight immediately offered to kill Daryl with his own crossbow for the insubordination, but Negan told him not to — instead repaying the defiance by killing Glenn instead.
In November 2017 the two women were found guilty of kidnapping, assault, defamation, and insubordination in the university disciplinary hearing, and subsequently banned from Rhodes for life.
Though these protections are in place, how a specific instance of insubordination is framed for the court will make or break the servants ability to employ them.
In her three terms as member of parliament for Bende constituency in Abia, she has experienced discrimination, sexual innuendoes, physical threats and insubordination, mainly from male colleagues.
"Insubordination in the face of international interests is an act of treason and cowardice with the fatherland inherited from our liberator Simon Bolivar," the defense ministry tweeted.
The police deny carrying out illegal killings during the anti-drugs campaign, but openly admit that corruption, abuse of power and insubordination are problems in the force.
The school's principal explained that "it didn't feel safe" for them to speak, adding that their union had informed them that their email could be considered insubordination.
But the point is that the only real check on the president's nuclear launch authority is insubordination — which isn't something you want to bet the farm on.
One clue that Barr's critique of Trump may not be an act of complete insubordination is suggested in the substance of his comments about the Stone case.
Mr. Trump had already fired his acting attorney general for insubordination and his national security adviser for lying to Vice President Mike Pence about contacts with Russians.
The principal counterargument -- and it is an important one -- is that this insubordination subverts democracy and the rule of law because it undermines a duly-elected president.
PERINO: Well, to further that, I think what one of the things Comey did was -- so the I.G. says insubordinate or insubordination, but who did that really benefit?
Now remember it was that very insubordination by Comey that Trump cited when he fired the FBI Director in 2017 and now the DOJ&aposs inspector general agrees.
He was fired on March 14, the day after his disappearance, for unprofessional conduct and insubordination, according to his personnel files, which were published by CNN affiliate WZTV.
Cummins was fired on March 14, the day after his disappearance, for unprofessional conduct and insubordination, according to his personnel files, which were published by CNN affiliate WZTV.
Mr. Xi has appeared frustrated by what he saw as foot-dragging and insubordination from local officials, said Mr. Johnson of the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
Death, or a life sentence to till the land in the toxic Colonies, is the punishment for insubordination of anyone who refuses to abide by these specific rules.
He also asserted that RNS and RNF staff are "not encouraged" to contact members of the governing board with grievances, and that doing so could be considered insubordination.
Mr. Ghani repeatedly considered firing the general for insubordination and the possibility of corruption, but was advised against dismissing him by his American allies and his own officials.
How a back-and-forth over an elevator ride and relatively mild insubordination could end with a child being pepper-sprayed and then suspended for 243 days is perplexing.
Trump, so thin-skinned he is incapable of turning the other cheek to criticism even from random people on Twitter, predictably had a toddler-style meltdown over Yates' insubordination.
The company did a cost benefit analysis and determined that the benefit of keeping whatever Curt offered them was not as great as the grief his continued insubordination cost.
She noted that acting Attorney General Sally Yates, a holdover from President Obama's administration, refused to defend Trump's order — an act of insubordination that led Trump to fire her.
" A short time later, Ixcoy was fired for insubordination after an argument with a manager on the plant floor prompted some workers to bang their knives and yell "Strike!
And yet now we see a clear pattern, whether it is Strzok, or Comey, or McCabe, or Yates, of people fired for either insubordination, politicization, or just outright incompetence.
But the reasons behind the teacher seeking therapy, Sinh says, were a troubled marriage, faltering relationship with her children, and a history of insubordination and interpersonal conflicts at work.
The NIS also said on Monday five senior officials of the State Security Ministry, the North Korean "bowibu" or secret police, were executed with anti-aircraft guns for "insubordination".
Mr. Mahaney, who defended the department in the appeal, said Mr. Smith had a history of misconduct in his job, and that act of insubordination was the last straw.
When the Waterfords rape June as punishment for insubordination (and in an effort to force her into a labor), viewers learned the most dark show on television heeds no limits.
Some Druze have said they feel betrayed by the law and several Druze military officers recently said they would stop serving in response to it, sparking fears of widespread insubordination.
That is Michael Horowitz&aposs review into literally what is disgusting misconduct, insubordination taking place at the highest levels of the FBI and Department of Justice and the Obama administration.
"VETO!" he tweeted, promising to crush the insubordination of lawmakers who had tried, where many others had failed, to rein in his quest for power and contempt for constitutional norms.
It is this transcendental insubordination that suggests an exalted state of mind that is divinatory; a means by which to understand and respond to the current many faces of uncertainty.
Nor does it explain why Trump would remain silent about insubordination, if that's what it is, given his demonstrated eagerness to publicly denounce cabinet members — including Sessions — when they cross him.
The stalling at the Defense Department, where officials have used every bureaucratic trick in the book to slow down the release of inmates, is startling, though, and basically amounts to insubordination.
In December of 2017, about four months after she filed her gender discrimination complaint and after nearly 12 years with the company, Pasinosky was fired for alleged insubordination, the complaint says.
In sacking her for insubordination, the court ruled, the employer did not violate the nurse's constitutional rights because it reasonably believed her speech did not fall under the First Amendment umbrella.
Though Kelly was initially on his side when he took over, he eventually grew weary of defending him -- especially after the "moron" remark, which Kelly saw as insubordination on Tillerson's part.
The low point was World War I. Two months after declaring war, Congress passed the Espionage Act, which made it a crime to obstruct the draft or cause insubordination in the military.
" In a statement released after the Times published its story, Slaughter said Lynn has been let go for insubordination—for failing "to adhere to New America's standards of openness and institutional collegiality.
In an act of insubordination, Mr. Bolsonaro published an essay in the newsmagazine Veja in 1986 titled "The Salaries Are Low," in which he took his superiors to task over military pay.
Officials are stuck in a difficult position: Even if each individual leak is justifiable, as insubordination becomes more sustained and overt, it inches deeper into the gray zone of counter-democratic activities.
On the one side it needs to project a image, a good image, and on the other side it has needs to deter what it considers to be bad behavior and insubordination.
On the one side it needs to project a image, a good image, and on the other side it has needs to deter what it considers to be bad behavior and insubordination.
Rather, West Point High School French teacher Peter Vlaming was technically fired for insubordination, after he did not comply with his supervisor's multiple requests to call his student by the appropriate gender pronouns.
Jones said that he complained to executives that his boss, Jonathan Larsen, treated other reporters in the "TYT Investigates" group less harshly, and that he faced improper charges of insubordination and poor performance.
So when they suddenly can't act like little kings—that is, when a recruit or player decides he's changed his mind—they grasp for fantastical reasons to explain why this unfathomable insubordination happened.
When Comey refused, Trump and his aides considered that an act of insubordination and it was one of the catalysts to Trump's decision this week to fire the FBI director, the officials said.
That Britain took until 2006 to pardon those World War I soldiers executed for cowardice, desertion and insubordination — and that our own military court martialed Bowe Bergdahl last year — makes that reminder timely.
Racial tensions were particularly high in the Army, where a vast majority of draftees were being sent, and where evasion, desertion and insubordination rates among black G.I.s exploded in the war's later years.
Kelly, a retired four-star Marine general who was once Tillerson's fiercest defender in the West Wing, stopped defending him privately, fed up with the moron remark because he saw it as insubordination.
"The Miami Heat announced today that Dion Waiters has been suspended without pay for his failure to adhere to team policies, violation of team rules and continued insubordination," the Heat announced Thursday night.
If Trump sacks Coats for insubordination, it will be a fresh example of how the President appears more untethered from personal, political and behavioral guardrails than any commander in chief in modern history.
Parlatore said he had filed an inspector general's complaint accusing Green of defying the commander-in-chief in an act of insubordination, for which Parlatore said the admiral himself could be court-martialed.
One of her longtime fans on Oahu is Linda Wong, who hosted fund-raisers during Gabbard's first congressional campaign, and who has grown used to fielding questions about her various acts of political insubordination.
But he is still working out how to manage many of the traits associated with his fellow millennials: a sense of entitlement, a tendency to overshare on social media, and frankness verging on insubordination.
Even if Daenerys takes the throne, putting the Reach in her gift, she's hardly likely to look kindly on the claim of House Tarly given that she burned its two leading members for insubordination.
Even though he'd led the Zollner Pistons to two championships and delivered the star power Zollner wanted for his team, the superstar player-coach was suspended "for insubordination" and put on the trading block.
After Rowan saves Jake from spending 10 years in prison for disorderly conduct and insubordination in the Navy, Jake eventually kills his father, an act that pleases Rowan enough to welcome him into B613.
Collaged into a lower right-hand corner is a copy of the Manifeste des 121 — a pamphlet signed in 1960 by 121 intellectuals and artists claiming the right of insubordination against the Algerian war.
On Wednesday, the prime minister, Igor Plotnitsky, appeared on television to denounce Mr. Kornet's insubordination, accusing him of attempting a coup and holding him responsible for a series of power outages across the republic.
Ever since completing a two-year stint in the Army Reserves in 1965, Gardner had been closely watching the increasing instances of military insubordination, resistance and outright refusal that were accompanying the war's escalation.
Mr. Horowitz found that the former F.B.I. director repeatedly crossed the line from arrogance to insubordination: Mr. Comey was wrong to unilaterally announce in July 2016 that charges would not be brought against Mrs.
Sinclair would no doubt argue that it's reasonable -- and legal -- to fire any anchor who refuses an order to read a company statement, and would call that behavior insubordination not protected by federal law.
If Mr. Comey disregarded her order and sent the letter — a real possibility, her aides thought — it would be an act of insubordination that would force her to consider firing him, aggravating the situation.
She may eventually invoke Article 350 of Venezuela's constitution, which can be interpreted as justifying insubordination by the armed forces to protect the country's republican values, according to Stratfor, a firm that analyses political trends.
HANNITY: Let me -- let me go to what has come out as it relates to what&aposs supposedly in the insubordination issue which you raised, now, it&aposs we know the facts in this case.
Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz's 500-page report covers plenty, but it can be distilled to two words he uses to describe the Federal Bureau of Investigation during the 2016 election: insubordination and bias.
Sent to the V.A. for evaluation after frequent episodes of insubordination and erratic behavior, he was prescribed mood stabilizers and antipsychotics, neither of which, he sheepishly confided, he was presently taking, thanks to Serenity Park.
Texas public school records also showed Kelley had numerous behavior problems as a student, including nine suspensions for such issues as drugs, insubordination, profanity, skipping classes and dishonesty between sixth grade and high school graduation.
That last part is not happening: from a recalcitrant young despot, North Korea's Kim Jong Un, on its north-eastern border, to those ungrateful Vietnamese Communists to the south, flirting with America, insolent insubordination abounds.
If Mr. Comey still worked for the government, any instruction from Mr. Trump not to testify about their private conversations would have teeth, because the president could fire Mr. Comey for insubordination if he disobeyed.
General McMaster's unblinking, incisive criticism of national security officials reflects a conviction that they are duty bound to do all they can to avoid making or repeating historical mistakes — even at the risk of insubordination.
In Syed's Department of Corrections records, he is described as an "excellent" worker who "requires minimal supervision," is "always very respectful of staff," and has never been charged with any type of insubordination, his attorney writes.
Hickory Ridge High School—who cited the suspension as insubordination, not a dress code violation—made headlines in 2016 for sending 46 female students to the principals office for wearing leggings with shirts that weren't long enough.
The season 2 finale's offering of a late-night trip to the Canadian border came courtesy of Rita (Amanda Brugel), the Waterford house Martha who has been cleaning up the messes of June's insubordination from the beginning.
For Zeman, smoking may well remain an act of cultural insubordination, flying in the face of present day sports science in the same way that his often obtuse formations fly in the face of the tactical norm.
Note that "insubordination" is my word, not Trump's—the largest word in his vocabulary, both literally and figuratively, is "tremendous," which he, much like the word "literally," has overused to the extent it no longer holds meaning.
The last time Ms. Letissier's life had taken such a dramatic turn, after a traumatic breakup and sudden expulsion from her college drama program (for insubordination), she created Christine, a suit of armor for conquering self-doubt.
The admiral's move to revoke Chief Gallagher's Trident was immediately assailed by Chief Gallagher's lawyer and by conservative commentators as a defiant rebuke of Mr. Trump's decision to grant the chief clemency, and a sign of insubordination.
Since the "Umbrella Movement" of 2014, the Communist Party has been making clear that it will tolerate no more insubordination—and yet three days later demonstrators braved rubber bullets, tear gas and legal retribution to make their point.
At his last job, in a Bronx elementary school, records show he was disciplined for incompetence, insubordination and neglect of duties — he had been caught sleeping in a classroom when he was supposed to be helping with dismissal.
Mr. Sessions told a crowd of more than 200 law enforcement officials in a hotel ballroom that he would not stand for the insubordination of California lawmakers and what he called the dangerous obstruction of federal immigration laws.
Parlatore said Green's move to strip Gallagher of his SEAL status marked a direct challenge to Trump's authority as commander-in-chief and an act of insubordination for which Parlatore said the admiral himself could be court-martialed.
Black students are more often disciplined for harmless behaviors flagged as "insubordination" or "disrespect" that can include such things as being noisy, "loitering" in the hallway, texting, arriving late or missing class, chewing gum or writing on a desk.
Instead, it argues that Trump betrayed the laws he swore to uphold because he thought doing so would protect his reputation, and that it was only the insubordination of his staff that restrained him from yet more egregious acts of criminality.
"As detailed during the course of the public hearing, Mr. Vlaming was recommended for termination due to insubordination through his repeated refusal to comply with directives made to him by multiple West Point Public Schools administrators," Abel said in the statement.
As a lieutenant general during the Suharto era, Mr. Prabowo, 67, commanded the feared Special Forces and was later dismissed from the army for insubordination and the kidnapping of at least nine activists who opposed his father-in-law's rule.
" Horowitz's second congressional hearing in the past 24 hours underscored the partisan divide that's emerged following the release of the inspector general's 500-page report, which faulted former FBI Director James Comey for insubordination, as well as Strzok and Page for "poor judgment.
Still, we live in a world of zero-tolerance policies, where students are kicked out of class for the "insubordination" of refusing to move to a different desk or for drinking juice, and where everyday misbehavior can elicit a call to the authorities.
Bratton's defense of the shield, at a time when his rank-and-file flirted with open insubordination, made it next to impossible for de Blasio to disown the toxic legacy of "broken windows" policing—which, to be fair, he partly embraced by naming Bratton.
Given that this portion of the discourse is supposed to be the Fun Stuff Clubhouse, it's striking how much of it winds up either creepy—there is much unseemly lingering on how you would discipline some young black athlete for insubordination—or earnestly, urgently angry.
Frank Gaffney, a conspiracy theorist and former Pentagon official under President Ronald Reagan who heads the Center for Security Policy, a right-wing think tank, criticized McMaster for extending Rice's security clearance and the dismissal of Cohen-Watnick and accused the general of insubordination.
Or maybe he lied about that and actually was warned, ignored the warning, licked away again, and instead of suspending a borderline Hart Trophy candidate for his insubordination, the NHL pretended the first warning never happened so he wouldn't miss an elimination game Sunday afternoon.
"In an environment where there is a quick trigger by management to charge employees with insubordination, or to go after them if they report safety concerns, there was some hesitancy by employees to do anything other than go along with the program," Petru said.
White House officials told Reuters Trump's decision had been building for months, but a turning point came when Comey refused to preview for top Trump officials his planned testimony to a Senate panel, a decision considered an act of insubordination by Trump and his aides.
Once she completed her training, Lampkins was moved to a KFC in Dover where she was soon demoted to a shift supervisor, and dealt with insubordination from her co-workers who complained that she got too many "breaks" to breast pump, she said in the lawsuit.
The 2012 report found that the two groups used Roman numeral tattoos on their calves to identify membership in the cliques, and that by the time the investigation was conducted, the groups' influence and insubordination had grown to such levels that efforts to stamp them out had failed miserably.
After all the losing this season, after insubordination that led to two embarrassing player suspensions, after reports of a locker room insurrection and after two lopsided defeats in which multiple players appeared to barely try at all, the mood of fans at MetLife Stadium on Sunday was understandably foul.
In effect, this means police are not only on hand to stop violence (only 4 percent of campus police programs were started for violence issues, according to the CRS report) but also to handle daily skirmishes and insubordination issues—problems that might previously have been handled by a teacher or administrator.
But in a 2016 book chapter written with Kori Schake, the deputy director general of the International Institute for Strategic Studies who was then a fellow at the Hoover Institution, he argued that the real problem is not military insubordination, but the disconnection of American society from its all-volunteer force.
As a daughter of colonists from England, I spent my childhood in India, where the British, not satisfied with humiliating Asian Indians by occupying their lands and plundering their riches, historically took to punishing "insubordination" and "rebellion" by suffocating their "lessers," hanging them publicly, and shooting them in cold blood.
His relapse is crushing, as is the knowledge that it is in equal parts due to just how low he's been laid by getting fired from the company (and then being sued by his father for his insubordination), and to his father planting stories about a relapse in the tabloids.
After being blocked from a good posting as court advisor to a prestigious and cultured kingdom, and denied the final rites that would both establish her as an "official" mage and give her the idealized physical form she's craved, Yennefer crosses into outright insubordination and imposes her will on the magical academy of Aretuza.
Lafferty's adaptation adds some scenes that didn't end up in the film's final cut: notably a couple of extra scenes during Qi'ra and Han's escape from Corellia, and Han's time as an Imperial pilot, during which his insubordination led him to a posting on Mimban, the muddy planet where he met Tobias Beckett and Chewbacca.
White House officials said Trump's anger at Comey had been building for months but a turning point came when the FBI chief refused to preview for top Trump aides his planned testimony to a May 3 Senate hearing on the Clinton email issue, an act Trump and his aides took it as an act of insubordination.
In Discovery's first season, Michael gets bounced from her original post due to criminal insubordination, and she is reassigned to a new ship to help fight a war against the Klingons alongside a crew that's not sure they can trust her… just as she (correctly) surmises that not all of them are on the up-and-up.
White House officials said on Wednesday Trump's anger at Comey had been building for months but a turning point came when the FBI chief refused to preview for top Trump aides his planned testimony to a May 3 Senate hearing on the Clinton email issue, an act Trump and his aides took it as an act of insubordination.
The guidance provided by the Obama administration, and supported by researchers, is for schools to reduce the use of out-of-school suspension for minor, nonviolent infractions, such as insubordination or talking back in class, and to adopt whole school approaches to improve school climate that would limit the need for these consequences in the first place.
Jeff SessionsJefferson (Jeff) Beauregard SessionsDOJ should take action against China's Twitter propaganda Lewandowski says he's 'happy' to testify before House panel The Hill's Morning Report — Trump and the new Israel-'squad' controversy MORE's nomination to be attorney general, one day after the growing controversy surrounding President Trump's travel ban on seven Muslim nations led to the firing of an acting attorney general for insubordination.
Jeff SessionsJefferson (Jeff) Beauregard SessionsDOJ should take action against China's Twitter propaganda Lewandowski says he's 'happy' to testify before House panel The Hill's Morning Report — Trump and the new Israel-'squad' controversy MORE (R-Ala.) to be attorney general on Wednesday, two days after the growing controversy surrounding President Trump's travel ban on seven Muslim nations led to the firing of an acting attorney general for insubordination.
CAVUTO: Chairman, one of things I was reading in the report myself is that the inspector general accused the former FBI Director James Comey of a lot of things, including insubordination, big-footing his bosses at the Justice Department, who should normally make any public pronouncements, stumbling through how he handled the whole e-mail thing with Hillary Clinton, but that, for all of that, he exhibited no bias.
Sally YatesSally Caroline YatesSally Yates: Moral fiber of US being 'shredded by unapologetic racism' Trump: 'Impossible for me to know' extent of Flynn investigation Mueller didn't want Comey memos released out of fear Trump, others would change stories MORE, the former acting attorney general best known for the anti-Trump insubordination that led to her firing, used the prospect of a Logan Act violation to entrap General Michael Flynn.
He'd never cop to being a shitty teammate but that's been a matter of fact at various points in his career, from savaging Mitch Kupchak and Andrew Bynum to an audience of random pedestrians to denying Smush Parkers' right to converse with him to Chucky Atkins calling him out for being the absolute worst, the sort of insubordination that even lightning rods like Barry Bonds, Alex Rodriguez and Yasiel Puig haven't encountered.
Then the MWAA — an agency with over 1,85033 employees, a 17-member Board of Directors appointed by the president of the United States, the governors of Virginia and Maryland, and the D.C. mayor, and control over Ronald Reagan Washington National and Washington Dulles International airports — placed me on AWOL for the last two days of Passover for violating leave policy and suspended me in May for an additional five days without pay with an added-on insubordination charge for using my own vacation time to worship God.
Number one, for FBI Director James Comey, the inspector general found that when he gave a statement in July 2016 about the Clinton email case and when he recommended against criminal charges, the inspector general found that when he gave a statement in July 2016 about the Clinton email case, and when he recommended against criminal charges, the inspector general found that that was insubordination, that he had gone outside the chain of command, he had not notified his leadership, Attorney General Loretta Lynch, her deputy Sally Yates.

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