Join or Not Join?
by
Laurence
M. Vance
Recently
by Laurence M. Vance: Lies,
Damn Lies, Statistics – and the Republican Party Platform
I don’t normally
visit websites like Military.com.
The glorification of all things military just doesn’t appeal to
me, as you can well imagine if you have read any of my articles
on the military.
Military.com
is said to be "the online presence of Military Advantage."
It "is committed to the mission of connecting the military
community to all the advantages earned in service to America."
It was founded in 1999 "to revolutionize the way the 30 million
Americans with military affinity stay connected and informed."
It is now the largest military and veteran membership organization,
with more than 10 million members.
I did happen
to visit the site recently after I came across an article by Marco
O’Brien, a contributing editor at Military.com titled "5 Reasons
to Join the Military Now!" Imagine my surprise when I happened
to see another piece of his titled "Reasons To Not Join the
Military."
To join or
not join, that is the question. But of course, O’Brien’s reasons
to not join the military are no reasons at all, as we shall presently
see.
Although I
have given many reasons on many different occasions for joining
or not
joining the military, I thought I would present the reasons
O’Brien gives for joining or not joining and then offer my own.
In "5
Reasons to Join the Military Now!" O’Brien first lists
a general reason, followed by an explanation, and then followed
by a military solution. To keep this from getting too long, I will
list his general reasons and provide the main part of his solutions
(I have corrected a few typos). You can read his entire piece online
if interested.
Reason 1 –
The Job Market
Solution –
Not only is the military hiring, but the military is actually increasing
its numbers over the next several years. No experience is necessary
and all entry-level jobs come with great pay and benefits!
Reason 2 –
Rising Cost of College
Solution –
The Military’s Tuition assistance program pays up to 100% of the
first $4,500 each year of your tuition costs while serving on active
duty. In addition there is the MGIB and the Post 9/11 G.I Bill.
Reason 3 –
Health Care
Solution –
The military has a great health care plan for individuals and families.
How about full coverage with little or no costs to service members
or their families? Top-notch health care for free, it doesn’t get
much better than that.
Reason 4 –
You want to own a home someday!
Solution –
Military service men and women have a unique avenue to obtain home
loans through the Veteran’s Administration.
Reason 5 –
You aren’t getting any younger!
Solution –
Join Now! – If you enter active duty at the age of 18 you can be
retired from the military at age 38. Don’t be one of those people
who look back and regret not joining when they were young.
In "Reasons
To Not Join the Military," O’Brien lists five reasons,
each followed by an explanation. Because this is relatively short,
I will reproduce the entire piece:
1. You want
an education and have at least $40,000 dollars just sitting around
for you to use. Education is very expensive and $40,000 is actually
a very conservative estimate for a 4-year degree. If you don’t
want to take advantage of the military paying 100% of your tuition
while on active duty and giving you upwards of $50,000 dollars
through the GI Bill to use on active duty or up to 10 years after
you get out, then the military is not for you.
2. You absolutely
do not want to have a job that gives you any kind of vacation
time! If you are one of those people who never likes being away
from the work place then the military is not for you. The military
gives you 30 days of paid vacation every year starting with your
first year. It could take 20 years with some civilian companies
to build up that much time off.
3. You get
a scared feeling every time you even think about leaving your
hometown. Some people like where they live and have no desire
to travel the world at someone else’s expense. The military has
installations all over the world and gives its members opportunities
to travel like no other company in the world.
4. You would
feel way too guilty receiving free medical care for you and your
family! Being riddled with guilt can be pretty terrible. If you
can’t imagine ever having free health care for you, let alone
for your wife and kids then the military is not for you. Imagine
how bad you would feel accepting the military’s world-class health
care and not paying a dime for it.
5. You want
to be really old when you finally retire from a company. There’s
good news and bad news here. If you join the military at 18 years
old you can retire and start collecting your retirement at 38
years old, now that is the bad news you won’t be really old when
you retire from the military. The good news is you are only 38
years old and can go and work at another job until you are really
old. The military’s 20-year retirement is an awesome benefit if
you want to retire young.
These could,
of course, be rephrased as five reasons to join the military: education
benefits (see Reason 2 above), employment (see Reason 1 above),
travel, free health care (see Reason 3 above), early retirement
(see Reason 5 above).
In each of
his short articles, O’Brien makes a good case for joining the military
from a financial point of view. But there are other reasons
to join or not join the military that he has not mentioned.
Here are five
reasons to join the military from a slightly different perspective:
1. To kill
people. Young men have been killing people by the thousands for
years in their video games. I guess that is why the military uses
these games as recruiting tools. The aphorism "Join the Army,
travel the world, meet interesting people, and kill them" has
never been truer. Just ask the hundreds of thousand of dead Iraqis
and Afghans.
2. To build
your ego. You can wear your uniform in an airport and be thanked
for your service by throngs of people you have never seen before.
You can wear your uniform to church the Sunday before Memorial Day,
the Fourth of July, or Veterans Day and be asked to stand while
someone asks God to bless the troops. And when you leave the military,
just telling people you are a veteran will bring forth shouts of
glory, laud, and honor.
3. To be part
of the president’s personal attack force. Since World War II, the
U.S. military has been exclusively used by the president for purposes
other than the actual defense of the country. Soldiers that went
to Iraq and Afghanistan, like those that went to Korea, Vietnam,
and all the other countries where the U.S. military had no business
going, go as part of the president’s personal army. And if they
join for financial reasons – as recommended by Marco O’Brien – then
they are simply mercenaries like the British hired to fight Americans
during the Revolutionary War.
4. To commit
random acts of depravity and violence. Want to urinate on dead bodies?
Want to bomb wedding parties? Want to kill civilians for sport?
Want to rape foreign women? Want to take body parts as trophies?
Want to destroy a town and its entire infrastructure? Want to pose
for photos with murdered civilians? Want to torture and humiliate
prisoners? Then the military is the place for you.
5. To pervert
the purpose of the military. Invading countries, occupying other
countries, enforcing UN resolutions, nation building, establishing
democracy, changing regimes, training foreign armies, opening markets,
supplying peacekeepers, assassinating people, maintaining no-fly
zones, providing disaster relief, dispensing humanitarian aid, and
fighting foreign wars – that is, anything but actually "defending
our freedoms" – perverts the purpose of the military.
And here are
five real reasons to not join the military:
1. To be killed.
There are almost 5,000 U.S. military personnel who came home from
Iraq in a flag-draped coffin or a body bag – if there were enough
pieces of them to be picked up in the desert sands. Another 2,000
U.S. troops died in Afghanistan. And for what? Absolutely nothing.
They all died in
vain and for
a lie. Why be added to those casualties?
2. To destroy
your family. Multiple duty tours and increased deployment terms
are the death knell for stable families. Do you think it is good
to deprive a child of his father, and in many cases his mother,
for months at a time? What makes you think that the military will
never send you away from your family for an extended period of time?
What makes you think that you and your family will be able to "handle
it"? U.S. military families are the unseen victims of the wars
in Iraq and Afghanistan.
3. To never
have another independent thought. You will be expected to blindly
follow the orders of your superiors without questioning their purpose
or morality. You will often times not be in a position to know whether
an order is in fact dubious or immoral. You will be expected to,
without reservation, drop that bomb, fire that weapon, launch that
missile, and throw that grenade, as well as kill people and destroy
their property.
4. To suffer
severe injuries. Many thousands of U.S. military personnel have
been wounded in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Hundreds have
had limbs amputated. Untold numbers suffer from post-traumatic stress
disorder (PTSD). Some soldiers will spend the rest of their lives
unable to work or drive a car. Others will live out their days as
physical and/or emotional basket cases. What makes you think that
you will not be sent to Afghanistan, Yemen, or some other God-forsaken
place the U.S. military has no business being and emerge unscathed
in body and mind?
5. To commit
suicide. The suicide rate among active duty and veterans of the
military is at an all-time high. No one joins the military with
the intention of committing suicide, but dealing with broken relationships,
strained families, chronic pain, PTSD, depression, deaths of fellow
soldiers, substance abuse, multiple deployments, and/or adjusting
to life after the military can come with a price that some are not
willing to pay.
To join or
not join, that is the question. Your life and the life of your family
depend on your decision. After you join, you may never be stationed
overseas, never face enemy fire, never be in danger, have a wonderful
family, made a comfortable living, see the world, retire after twenty
years, and then get a good job with a government contractor – and
then again you may not do any of these things. You may die in a
training accident before you are old enough to drink. Whatever you
do, don’t listen to the promises of the lying pimps known as military
recruiters.
September
19, 2012
Laurence
M. Vance [send him mail]
writes from central Florida. He is the author of Christianity
and War and Other Essays Against the Warfare State, The
Revolution that Wasn't, and Rethinking
the Good War. His latest book is The
Quatercentenary of the King James Bible. Visit his
website.
Copyright
© 2012 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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