TUCSON, Ariz.  (AP) — A veteran firefighter refused to respond to last month's deadly  shooting spree that left Rep. Gabrielle Giffords wounded because he had  different political views than his colleagues and "did not want to be  part of it," according to internal city memos.
Mark  Ekstrum's insubordination may have delayed his unit's response because  firefighters had to stop at another station to pick up a replacement for  him, the Arizona Daily Star reported.
Capt.  Ben Williams wrote in a report that when Ekstrum first said he would  not go on the call, "he mentioned something about 'political bantering'  and he did not want to be part of it."
Williams  said in the report that he told the 56-year-old firefighter that he  could not refuse a call for that reason and then talked to the  firefighter privately in his office. He said Ekstrum "started to say  something about how he had a much different political viewpoint than the  rest of the crew and he was concerned."
Despite  being told that was not acceptable, Williams said Ekstrum informed him  he was going home "sick," so they answered the call without him.
2 comments:
So a first-responder unit has now been torn apart by politics, at the worst possible time. Great. It makes me wonder what will happen when some teabagger/Dominionist governor orders the National Guard to fire on protesters in the capital. Will the troops obey, refuse the orders -- or just start shooting each other?
Why does Ekstrum still have a job?
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