It's predatory AF. The American Dream is a lie. They suck at taking care of people who you'd think would be a priority. They lie about what you're fighting for: it's ALWAYS American business interests. THEY LIE. THEY LIE. THEY LIE.
I had Brain Cancer. And the won't let me get past the requirement office. I've tried 3 times now. I know I'm only 4'11 with scare tissue on my lungs. But for christ sakes let me serve my country.
Um it would help if the media didn’t base the military and only showed the negatives. I never saw all the good things the military did in Iraq or Afghanistan on the news. Even though I lived them. Its ok though cause that’s not the media’s agenda.
Soooo why don't you tell us about all the good things the US military did while you were there then? Even better since it comes from an eyewitness account.
The majority of that budget is Military contracts. Like the $480million contract Microsoft got last year for a new HUD development for the Military. Yes a Call Of Duty style HUD. Mini map, weapon ammo count.
The army depends on new enlisted soldiers to maintain the force. Usually it’s High School students that fill those ranks. Active duty Soldiers that are newly enlisted are provided with access to mess halls for their meals where available at no cost. They are provided with billeting. They don’t pay utility bills while in barracks. Soldiers while in active duty can work toward a degree. With all available technology it makes getting that degree more attainable. There is always the possibility of having to deploy to a hazardous area, but knowing what the role of an army any army is to provide a kinetic solution to failed diplomatic actions.
I realized when I was 16 that the rich schools didn't have military recruiters. They had college recruiters. I saw that there was a class that died in wars and a class that profited from them. I wanted no part in it
There is no free market when a private central bank is controlling your currency ! The millitary is for protecting US dollar global hegemony and corporate interest. Your basically fighting for slavery including your own in the US millitary !
Then you, by default, are profiting from them. I remember the draft. I remember the Vietnam war I am a veteran. Theres no war so whats their major malfunction? I think you should have to have served in the military to qualify to vote.
My grandfather served before Vietnam in West Germany. I know of only one time he cried, and that was on 9/11. When he found out I was thinking of joining, he begged me not to and got teary eyed. I heeded his advice.
If Trump asked you help safeguard our republic would you say no, Its for the people and all you care about. Where would we be if we didn`t have that WW2 soldier or the Patriots that fought off the Redcoats. Take a good look at commie china and its threat which says we must always have a force they fear.
Who in the service is working 12-14 hours a day? 😂 like half of all military personnel are on their phones all day the other half are on their phones only half the day lolz. And don’t get me started on how many Vets I know ripping the VA off for a “service related injury” 😂 if you cat get rated by the VA then that’s your fault I know some many doors getting $1200-$1500 a month for their “injuries”
@@Person0fColor are you even in the military dude? some work that kind of time every other week, even in sf. and dont get me started in the regular army.
Hardly frivolous. Saddam did still have some old WMDs (chemical artillery shells) he hid out in the desert, and we know from captured documents he was planning to restart his WMD program as soon as the international pressure was off of him. We also know that he was at least starting to make contact with terrorist groups, mostly in the interest of anti-Israel activities, but that doesn't mean his existing or future WMDs couldn't fall into the hands of anti-American terrorists or that he wouldn't eventually point that gun at us. Plus, Israel was and is a major ally. Nevermind that the guy was a bloodthirsty tyrant who killed and tortured more of his people in his reign than we ever caused as collateral damage from OIF. And his sons would have been far worse. Can you imagine if he or his sons were in charge when the Arab Spring inevitably happened, even if it took a few more years?
@@BlargeMan North Korea has nukes and threatens to use them every month… why haven’t we gone to spread “democracy” there? Maybe because there’s no oil there for us to exploit.
@@BlargeMan we need more of you to serve, we definitely need to have your entire family serving oversea, fight for what you believe in! don't worry, our tax dollar got your back!
Father served 3 tours in Vietnam. He had to use the freedom of information act to even prove he was there after his very public draft while he was in the hospital for a crash. After 15 years of fighting he finally got the benefits he was owed after serving. Listened to him and his surviving friends talk about how the US government called agent orange safe enough to eat. While he was having black objects removed from his skin every year due to his exposure. Not sure why I would avoid the military.
I have a friend of mine who was a Marine in Vietnam. He has cancer from Agent Orange and suffers from extreme PTSD--especially from a battle he was in called Dai Do (look it up--brutal...) He had to prove to the VA that his boots were on the ground in Vietnam before they would do anything to help him regarding Agent Orange or PTSD. They made him jump through hoops he should never have had to jump through.
everything is documented electronically now so it's much easier to get your benefits. Agent orange was a chemical to kill things....it doesn't take much thought. To be fair though we do things and put ourself at risk. It's in the values.
As a non US resident, the fact 9% of 18yo people show interest in joining the armed forces sounds like a sky high figure. In my country, when I was 18, some 20 years ago, I don't remember any of my friends or class mates even considering joining the armed forces one of their top 5 career options. And my country doesn't fights wars every other week like the US, here there is no chance you may actually get deployed in a combat zone. I think the only reason the US has anybody willing to enroll is to get a college scholarship, because tuitions are so expensive, so the armed forces are exploiting poor people. Here, public universities give good quality, tuition free education.
@@TheConfettiDress Argentina. Most people here with a college degree (equivalent to a bachelor's degree in the US) are graduated from public universities. It's not entirely free, you still have to pay for books and supplies, and if you come from a small city or town you probably have to move to a large city for the duration of your studies, but it has no tuition. Also, back in my days classrooms did not have heating or AC, outside of the laboratories (but I think some improvements have been made in that direction in the last few years). There are private options, but the tuitions are not something a poor or even middle class family can afford. Also, the military has earned a really bad rep, after several coups (backed by the US I may add) and they cannot shake it off even if the last one ended 40 years ago, so that's another reason nobody enrolls.
Thanks for sharing this comparison with Argentina. I just watched "1985" - powerful to see the human rights atrocities that happened in Argentina (yes, backed by the U.S.) brought to a big, international audience (finally). I remember "The Official Story" which won the Oscar for best Foreign movie back in 1986, but younger folks have probably not heard much about that painful history. Interesting that Argentinian youth today have been influenced by that history to not support the military. Good evidence for the need to push for truth and restorative justice, rather than hiding our heads in the sand about the harms our governments cause.
@@miguelrodriguezcimino1674 America is entire culture was born from fighting for freedom and being a warrior, and personal responsibility in finances/life, so making free college would go directly against american culture. Stick to your own country and stop sticking your nose in ours
My dad was an artillery fire direction specialist. He served in Desert Storm, did peacekeeping in Bosnia, and was in the early days of Enduring Freedom when he got out. He suffers from Gulf War Syndrome with 7 concussions and the side effects of medicine the VA gave him that weakened his bones. Lately, he's been losing his memory, and he's only 52. I hate seeing him like that, and I wonder how many other veterans are like him. I hate everyone that has the power to stop it but lets this thing happen to not only my dad, but other who served.
Go visit the VA if you have one near, a vet will tell you flat out that he would do it all again, no cry babies cause your talking to a man who would give his life in battle so you can enjoy your damn freedom. Thank you dad for your service to America.
The 20-year occupation of Afghanistan that ended in disaster is going to keep military recruitment low, for a long time to come. The military is already reaching out to the "D.A.C.A. beneficiaries", offering "citizenship" to them and their undocumented immediate family members, in exchange for military service. Much of today's Active Duty military is made up of people who were illegally smuggled into the U.S. as children.
People realize there is a big difference between fighting to defend your freedom and homeland and fighting to take someone else's freedom and homeland.
As a younger person I have great respect for our vets, but I wouldn't sign up for the military because of mistreatment by people of higher ranks and politicians. I also am not willing to risk my life in wars I do not believe are moral which have become very common in US foreign policy.
As someone who is Gen Z and recently got out of the Army (my MOS is 19K) after completing my enlistment, I can say that you do provide many good points. However, the reason why the military is having a difficult time recruiting is because they are pushing people away who want to serve, by trying to recruit people who don't want to serve. For example, the "two moms" ad the Army had a couple of years ago pushed away those who wanted to serve, and it didn't really attract those who had no interest in serving in the first place. Another big issue the Army has is retention, people that join do not stay in (like myself). The reason why I got out was because of broken promises and leadership took no accountability for their actions (there are a lot more reasons but that would take a lot of time to explain). My unit promised that I could go to Air Assault, Airborne schools, and take college courses, but when I submitted the paperwork I was rejected every time. My leadership would not take accountability for their failures, they just used their lower enlisted personnel as a scape goat. To some of my leaders, we were nothing but cannon fodder to be used at the first sign of trouble. I don't regret serving because the experience has definitely benefited me in the long run.
Thanks so much for sharing your experience and perspective. It aligns a lot with the ex-Marine we interviewed, Julian Valderrama. We didn’t end up including a lot of the complicated experiences he had - good and bad - but overall his experience was a lot like yours.
Exactly why i left the marines, they promised all these schools, pay your college after 4 years multiple combat deployments myself and my guys never went to any of these schools, just denied.
Toxic leadership seems to be the biggest reason all my Army friends got out after one contract. I had really good leadership at my first command in the Navy, which is probably a big reason I re-enlisted
between the two moms ad and the president we got, that's what pushed me away. Not to mention they denied me on "medical history" which i got everything cleared. Funny thing is a week or so later they called back asking if i wanted to continue and try and get it, 5 years to late dipshits.
Alright, a Tanker! You’re right though. I got out of the Army a few years ago myself, and this is why I tell anyone to go to college first - and if they really want to serve in the military, go through ROTC or OCS. I always stress simply enlisting as a last resort because you’re right - basically anyone that’s below E-7 gets scapegoated and used left and right!
I think my 7 yo son broke it down the best. He said he wanted to be a soldier because it's an all boys club and girls aren't allowed, I told him actually girls can join and he said " nevermind I don't want to be a soldier now."
One massive point you missed is what the military actually does. It hardly engages in defending the Uunited States, but instead focuses most of its efforts abroad. This is almost never for a good reason too. We've used it to overthrow democratically elected leaders all over the world and replace them with fascist dictators who are friendly to U.S. interests, like Pinochet. They also routinely commit war crimes, like drone strikes targeting civilians, even U.S. citizens. And then we use it to stop foreign economies from growing, particularly leftist countries like Cuba with a blockade to enforce an embargo which is considered illegal and immoral worldwide. And on the topic of Cuba, the U.S. military also illegally occupies Guantanamo Bay, which has a torture camp where many inmates haven't even been charged with crimes.
I feel like that point is too broad for most people. I think the truth being let out on social media of how shitty day to day life is in the military is the real core of why recruitment is taking such a hit. Why get screamed at by some dude who can barely write but joined before you did when you can go work somewhere you can quit anytime?
The military needs to focus more on Domestic threats. Our government has been infiltrated by Nazis and Fascists. They must be purged and our society must be made free of racism etc.
Wtf you talking about? Look at all the US troops stationed in NATO countries! Or Japan and South Korea! That’s hundreds of thousands service members helping to defend allies.
Outside of toxic leadership, I'd say is an structural problem of the U.S as a whole. Having to join the military just because you want free school and healthcare is not good. These services should already be easily accessible to everyone in the country, not a plus because of forcing yourself to join the military. Enlisting should be done out of love and genuine interest to increase retention rate and bring more people in.
I like the free education but remember places like Canada and the U.K. have insanely high wait times for appointments and higher taxes because of free healthcare
@@St.Trina445 yes the wait times are horrible. i was living in new zealand and when i strained my back and couldn’t work, all they gave me was over the counter meds and i had to wait 12 hours just to be seen
Even though this video barely scrapes the surface of Gen Z not wanting to enlist, it paints a good picture of the experiences vets go through, and how uncovered information can influence mass decisions.
As a Gen Z in the military I know I'm not re-uping. I've been lied to time and time again and have learned the military doesn't take care of its own even while serving. I have a permanent back injury do to a training accident years ago, which the military has deemed to not be a serious enough injury to receive an LOD do I could get the medical service I need for the remainder of my life. If people don't want to join or stay in I tell them not to. The military can't follow its values of Loyalty, Duty, Respect, Self sacrifice, Honor, Integrity, and Personal Courage. Often enough the higher up have little respect for these values towards the lower enlisted and its sickening to see. I told them last time they told me to re-up that if they want me doing that they need to fix themselves. I haven't been asked again.
@@youtubestuff683 yep. My friend lost an eye due to shrapnel explosion and they wanted HIM to pay his medical bills. Never fight for a government that treats you that way.
The 20-year occupation of Afghanistan doesn't help. Gen Z grew up during that period of time, and they noticed the abject lack of progress in Afghanistan, year-after-year.
Yeah that's my belief too. In these discussions, people always point to ideological reasons, which I don't think is it. Are they having a recruiting shortfall for officers? No? Ok, then the reason is people look at the raw deal they are offered in enlisting and are rightly turning it down, because the cat's out of the bag.
It's that most people now are either a child of a member or vet or have family and or friends who are. Almost impossible not to know someone at least every other person who has someone they care for a good amount in the service. The problems vet face are more transparent and something more citizens actually are very aware of. The consequences of war and combat vets being more and more vocal about what war is really like and the demons they carry with them due to what they had to see, do, etc. There are many many reasons gen z isn't enlisting
Only 6.4% of the US population are veterans, it's more likely to be the opposite statistically, most people have no connection and no knowledge of how the military works outside of media. Edit to add: In 1980 it was 18% of the population, we are getting to a point where Gen Z is the most disconnected (from veterans and the military) generation we have seen in decades apart from what they consume on TikTok.
To be fair it’s mostly on them, there is the PTSD case and stuff like that, but for the most part it is they just get out with no plan and wonder why they are struggling and aren’t successful, the military gives you every tool you need to be successful
@@tresfordays9644 For a country that stresses having the biggest and strongest military, even if one falls through the cracks, there should be a response to pick that lost soldier back up. Potentially mentally and physically destroying yourself for your nation deserves more than a shrug if you can't immediately transition back to civilian life.
@@CleverCover05 they give you opportunity to set you self up for success after service, you can go to school while your in, get certified with certificates in several areas related to your job that put you ahead in the civilian sector, you can go to school for free when you get out with a housing allowance, they give you taps class when you are getting out which is a class specifically designed to help you transition to being a civilian again, they give you time off in your last couple months to seek job opportunities in the civilian world, if someone decides to get out without a plan or some kind of support system then that’s on them. They are adults, they made that choice, it’s not justifiable to spend the resources on people outside of the military when current service members need it more, they decided to get out and do nothing with their life to be successful outside of the military, despite having the opportunities to do otherwise. Now you can make a separate argument for wounded service members or service member suffering from PTSD or other diagnoses or something like that due to service. And I would 100% percent agree with you on the fact there needs to be more done for those members post service. But the average joe who just decided to get out with out a plan made his choice
Just because your dad says something doesn’t mean it’s right! I’m a military veteran! I have free health care, educational benefits and I receive life time VA benefits!
I’m a Army vet.. what they don’t tell you is that the retention rate is also down by a lot and main reason for this is because the military ( most branches ) take soldiers for granted once you are in. They treat you like you are easily replaceable and do not respect your work/life balance what’s so ever. If you are lucky you might fall in a rare unit where there’s a higher up ( sgt major or a LT ) in your unit that isn’t totally toxic and might let you off in a reasonable time but those are hard to find. I use to wake up at 4:30 am be at first formation by 5:30 am and then work till 6 pm for the exact same amount of money every 2 weeks. It’s a shit way to live, the military is very toxic and do not appreciate their new soldiers and jr leaders, sooo they leave after their first contract. 🤷🏻♂️
Thank you. Nobody is actually addressing the real reasons, instead blaming other businesses with more "competitive benefits". No, not really, it's the deplorable QoL that nobody wants to join for and be forced to go through. That's literally one of the biggest reasons.
Couldn't of said it better myself oh and don't forget the deployments with that same toxic chain of command and the endless patrols in Iraq and still be treated like absolute dog shit.
The way that veterans are treated in this country is reflecting of how we will be treated if we risk our lives for a corrupt government. We learned from the Vietnam vets. If being a veteran was honored and respected in this country then maybe they might get a couple million more troops
There is no free market when a private central bank is controlling your currency ! The millitary is for protecting US dollar global hegemony and corporate interest. Your basically fighting for slavery including your own in the US millitary !
I was 17 when I walked into a recruiting station to join the Air Force. I was still a kid. I wanted a medical job and they said it would be available but when I went to MEPS they said none were available. Instead the officer in charge of jobs showed me a video of people who exploded bombs for a living. Remember, I was seventeen. I felt cornered and said yes too it. My parents were devastated.Several months later and I decided wisely not to go through with the recruitment. The recruiter threatened jail and we set up a meeting. My dad defended me and said I was still a minor under their care. It all seemed very entrapping and I was too young to understand it. I went to University instead and got my B.A.. All without risking my life. That is the thing about the military, your life is always at risk once you sign. But they will always have a mask of toughness to hide behind that fact. Your essential meat for the weapons industries.
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Yeah, they promise you that you will get skills transferable to civilian jobs, but mostly that's BS! They don't care about you because you are expendable!
I’m part of Gen Z, I wanted to be in the Navy. My parents don’t want me going, and I don’t see myself fighting for a very selfish administration. When I find something to fight for then I’ll reconsider. Edit: seems like in my absence I might have caused a microscopic conflict.
Very wise. Go to college and use your brain bc your brain cells will die in the military. It breeds stupidity and there’s no room for critical thinking. It’s for the low of IQ.
You may never be in a battle but its not about dying for your country and its not about backing a corrupt Gov`t. Its in you to show you will do whats necessary to preserve our fragile freedom for your kids and future generations.
Going after people that are in a bad place for no fault of their own and baiting them into risking their health, and even their lives; is pretty scummy. This type of coercion is pretty much just slavery with extra steps.
You should look up the definition of coercion before using. Coercion is defined as using force of the threat of force to compel the party to act in an involuntary manner. So unless the recruiter is beating up high school kids to make them join there was no coercion.
I went to school with a guy going on the gi bill. Government shut down, he got kicked from his classes. Also vets are treated horribly. In ohio, there was land set aside as investment for vets, and the state took it and sold it for cheap to land developers. Really screwed the vets over. No one did anything.
I passed the ASVAB test when i was in high school i decided i wanted to go to college and the enlist but when i graduated college they told me i had to retake the test, i never took it. Best decision of my life.
Im active duty right now and I hate it. We get treated so wrong and its so toxic. They DO NOT care for you at all. My depression has risen significantly since I joined and my body is banged up before this I was healthy but that’s the army for
My cousin and I tried to join the Army after we graduated from high school together. I took the ASVAB at MEPS and got a 95/99 but then they told me I wouldn’t be able to join because the doctor at MEPS found in my medical records that I had eczema after I was 12 even though it’s gone now. My cousin got into the Army though and he’s doing well rn
Yeah, I've read other stories where people were refused to serve due to prior health issues that no longer affects them. It related to the Military's Genesis program where they can find any records on a applicant's doctor visits.
That is defenetly a joke. Those people are NOT doctors, never were. They are civil service employees who go by a chart and records. Even the duck walk and other exercises are compared what the chart and their instructions say. The only medical staff MEPS has are civil service nurses. Their job is to keep people out of the military. You would have made it if there would have been real doctors there. Genesis is done because the greedy government doesn't want to spend the money on real doctors. Therefore, charts and instructions are used. Your cousin was very very lucky. So remember, it wasn't you. Please pass it on. Also, watch the truth channels, they will tell you.
Im a 8 year military veteran and i urge a lot of young people to flee the military service. Military life sucks and you get absolutely NO SUPPORT as a veteran. DON'T ENLIST!!!
Some recruiter tried to get me into the military back in my freshmen year of high school. I was not interested simply because there were better things that caught my interest. I already had friends and family who served and they were treated terribly and never got their benefits. Unlike many in my town I did not fall for the whole "the US military is shinning bright with opportunity and greatness". From my view it was miserable and depressing. I simply had no interest in putting my mental and physical health on the line for something that sees me as simply another sheep in the field. I have no problem with those who choose to enlist. It just isn't for me.
On another note. If you are a legal resident but not a US Citizen. They will bar you from actually doing any of the stuff that would land you in a career post military. While they can help you become a citizen, they will often prey on the fact that you don’t know the legal system or the extent of your contract
idk where you got this, my friend was earning citizenship through the navy and was serving as a corpsman. obviously he wasn't a nurse the moment he was out, but it helped get his foot in the door when being considered for nursing school
@@slashbashful6549anecdotal fallacies. Both of you made sound points, but it's been shown that youre more likely to be screwed than helped. Just because your experiences back one claim does not mean the other claim is invalidated. You need to find the (good) statistics.
@@thekirbycrafter7229Not really. When I joined in 2016, most of whom that earned their citizenship were the 36b , Financial Management, which crazily at the time you didn't need a security clearance for. Most of them were actually Asian/Indian and were green card holders. A good friend shaw actually had a aeronautical engineering degree, and was going NG for citizenship. The limiting factor is The security clearance, as many Good jobs in the military require one, and it's pretty difficult to obtain one of your a immigrant. However there are still good jobs that don't require one.
My grandfather was a WW2 vet and I remember when I was younger, I said that I wanted to join the military and he looked me right in the eyes and told me not to. Considering the shit he’s seen and done I’m gonna follow his advice
In simple terms: IT AINT WORTH IT. We’ve seen how they come back from it. But not only that, how they’re treated. Why tf would I give my life to people who don’t care? And for a government who doesn’t care. I’ve seen them around, veterans walking the streets in pure homelessness. And nobody helps either. Why would I put myself through that?
The military helped me gain discipline and showed me Europe, where I learned different, more social and more peaceful ways of life. Now, at 60 years of age,I would never again set foot in the USA, which spends billions on planes and tanks and rockets to kill people in other countries who are only guilty of having another way of life, not agreeing with America‘s military aggression or possessing resources which America wants. And, in the meantime, Americans are living in tents or not getting the medicines they need in order to survive. They are kept poor, which has always helped military recruiting. But don’t believe me. Just think about it. Travel abroad, learn for yourself and then decide if those in Washington are really acting in your interests and if you want to be a part of that. Especially if it involves going to other countries to kill people who also have spouses, parents and children and haven’t done anything to you. Have a good one.
As a former Army Recruiter, schools aren't targeted based on class or status, they're targeted when recruiters are allowed to go to them. The schools in poorer communities tend to allow recruiters where schools in more wealthy communities tend to limit recruiters to their mandated two visits per year. Our goal was to visit as many schools as possible as often as possible, but it's up to the individual school on how often we can go and what we can do while we are there.
@@jadetea6112 thinking from a rich mindset perspective, the poor are expandable while the rich are immune or deemed "Too Important" to be sent into a warzone. There's more poor then rich so it would make sense from that perspective.
That is the number one reason since the 1960s the upper classes not just white but all - corporate , entertainment, sports, media, academia, etc - have abandoned and look down on the military case in point prez 45 was a 5 time draft dodger! Until they sign up in numbers, no one else should!
i spent 3 years in the JROTC program, enjoyed it, made some good friends, and made me head strong to join the military after i turned 18. Went to the recruitment office on my own and ill make a long story short, was told i needed college credits to join i responded really? recruiter: yup. I then left. thinking well damn. Got a regular job, smoked weed daily and am now 29.
I’m actually 16 and I was going to sign up for West Point my junior year. My entire family were military as far back as around WW1 and maybe even the Civil War. My dad was actually a marine in the Gulf war in 1991 along with my uncle so I had plenty of legacy and motivation to serve. I’m also infatuated with military history and have grades that more than meet west points requirements, along with already passing all of their fitness standards. However, my mother immediately shut down the idea of serving. She had heard about how many veterans struggled with mental issues and lack of support for veterans. She’d also heard horror stories from my dad who had served in one of the artillery batteries that shelled the “Highway of Death” in Iraq. She absolutely refused to even allow me to apply out of all this fear from what could happen; so know I’m studying to go to law school instead, and hopefully become a federal judge or senator. I likely could’ve been an effective officer, but all of the malpractice and lack of support for veterans is what turned me away and I honestly believe the same is true for most talented young people, so this isn’t just a crisis for enlistment it’s a crisis for effective leadership that will lead the military in the future.
I hope I do not insult your mother with this post. She is well with in her rights to be worried about her son. Service is thinking about others. Your mother was rightly thinking about you, her son. You as a person must make decisions for yourself. Also do not forget if you give the military 10 years you can spend the rest of your life to provide that effective leadership with first hand knowledge of those who also serve. Since this is the internet let me go completely insane. If you join and the second worse thing happens and your are injured and still in your right mind you can still provide effective leadership. If the worse thing happens I hope you leave a record of some kind to provide inspiration so other will make that sacrifice.
@@damongraham1398 your comment was by no means an insult, and I’d actually thank you for a constructive response. My decision to not join the military was mostly due to her insistence, but also my own personality. I’m extremely extroverted; to the point that I’ll often gather a crowd of people around me when I talk in public. My father, the gulf war vet, was in full support of my prospective military career but also warned me that my personality wouldn’t mix well with the culture of discipline required for an enlisted man let alone an officer. I have no doubt I could adjust if the situation deemed it necessary, but I know from my time in school and in public that I’ll likely succeed in whatever’s field I put my mind to, and that just so happens to be as a lawyer and politician, as I am still, and will always be patriotic for America. I hope that In my future career I’m able to fight against the current corruption and lackadaisical nature that plagues the government.
@@motivationallizard6644 So pretend I am a reporter asking the future politician "would you support whistle blower laws to protect people that have information about corruption wherever it may be found? I'm not understanding the "drawing a crowd" is a bad thing?
@@damongraham1398 it’s not a bad think, but I tend to speak my mind whenever asked, and if something seems inefficient or redundant I’ll call it out regardless of seniority or rank. I’ve been doing this since I was ten, to the point that my teachers would occasionally just let me teach my history classes because I knew the information better than they did. If I were to mouth off to a superior in the military of all places I seriously doubt it would go well for me, especially with how often I call even minor infractions out.
My army recruiter screwed me over and I got permanently disqualified, she and the whole recruiting station blocked my number, only when I went in did they try to play nice. Context is I had depression for three years of HS, and MEPS takes that very seriously since you're considered a liability, not only did my recruiter withhold that info but sat me in a room reciting lies that would get me to pass, well nowI will never be able to join, and when I tried to contact anyone to have this investigated, they shot it down or ignored my calls. This opened my eyes ro the fact the military doesn't give a fuck about any of their members or people trying to join, then they'll complain about recruitment shortages
I'm 24 now. Had Brain Cancer and surgery at 9. And they won't let me get past the requirement office. I've tried 3 times now. I know I'm only 4'11 with scare tissue on my lungs. But for christ sakes let me serve my country.
Your first mistake was telling them you had depression, Jesus do people think it’s smart to tell those recruiters every single thing? I got in telling them I was a fuckin pot head
Though their methods sound a bit sketchy, military recruiters have to go through the entire recruitment routine so they can log data points (# of calls to potential recruits, how many interviews, etc.). They blocked your number, I'd hazard a guess, because you kept calling and begging them to reconsider (inferred by your bothering to call them at all rather than dropping the matter). That's not how the military does things. Be thankful, though, as you'd likely have become an FTA if you joined up, and that'd be depressing af in itself. No one wants to fail Basic--esp as an FTA--but it's hella difficult, pushes you *beyond* beyond, and 15% bottom out regardless. Even if you think you're well past your MH issues, you're likely to crack like a walnut in boot camp. Be thankful you've made it over the major hurdle of your depression and move on. (Sources for my knowledge: 3 brothers, 2 sisters military veterans. One sister a GS employee who worked in a US Army recruiting office as a Communications Specialist.)
Fellow Gen-Z'er here. The main reason why I don't want to join the military is that I don't want to wind up committing war crimes. I was shocked to find out that our military tends to commit war crimes almost on a daily basis. The Iraq war warped my viewpoint on how the US's rules of engagement is just the means of terrorizing the countries populace, that would eventually lead to a rise of an insurgency and subvert our morale, believing that we have come in as liberators. War is nothing but lies, unessesary loss of life, and profiteering.
And if anything, I ever get the draft off to a major conflict, I'll put a bullet in my head before I ever get the chance of getting drafted. Mark my words.
My simple answer is that the pay is not worth the work ethic. I work at a hardware store as a wall coverings salesman and I’m making just as much at a senior airman. And even if we do go to war we’d be fighting for nothing but for the rich to get richer and the poor to get poorer. You’re better off getting a trade or going to a job fair.
I remember the day I graduated Basic and we stop at Golden Corral for lunch on our way to AIT. There were homeless veterans outside asking us for money 😂
@@CenaCuts cause the government don’t care about the people that sacrifice their life for their country. And then they wonder why nobody is trying to join or resign.
There is no free market when a private central bank is controlling your currency ! The millitary is for protecting US dollar global hegemony and corporate interest. Your basically fighting for slavery including your own in the US millitary !
I am a millennial born in the 90s. I was very close to joining the military after high school but my Mother talked me out of it. I currently work in banking and the director of my department is a veteran. There is a lot of trauma you can experience and the benefits are not worth it. Also there are many veterans who end up homeless and jobless after serving!
😂 if you’re mom was able to talk you out of joining the military then you were never going to join in the first place 😂 Also more Vets are ripping the VA off than the other way around I’m a USMC Vet and know tons of doods who took the VA service related injury money afterwards. Vets get first in line at jobs, free housing way more than the average citizen has. You clearly have zero idea what you’re talking about
@@Runandgun13I know so many people who literally sat on there asses all day on their phones and got out and got free college and free housing and these civilians are like “the juice ain’t worth the squeeze”
The billion you mentioned was split between our forces and private contractors that are categorized under military. Because of the latter’s over funding, it leaves the former greatly in want and need for better support.
I just started the process of adding to my VA disability yesterday. Blown ACL in my knee. Tinnitus. Depression. Anxiety. Respiratory ailments from breathing the air in Baghdad. You name it. I'm 50. I'd like to just get to 100% and go into semi-retirement. I do not recommend joining. Mainly because America fights wars that whether we win or lose, do not effect daily life in America at all. I was not securing your freedom when I was in Iraq. Our freedom is largely the consequence of being bordered by two beningn neighbors and two vast oceans. And my being an artilleryman on 9/11 did not prevent 9/11. America's military is designed to fight in other countries. Because there is no plausible mission for a force that size here. To put it another way, Brazil doesn't have a "Wounded Warriors Program". Why? Because Brazil's army stays in Brazil.
Thank you for taking the time to share your experience and perspective. It means a lot. And thank you for your service, and hope you get the care and benefits you deserve.
Never ever join the military, you will die for the rich people and no one and I mean no one will care. Just look at what happened to the Vietnam Veterans. 😢
The vast majority of veterans never see combat and even fewer are wounded or killed in combat. Sure if you joined at the height of the wars in Iraq Afghanistan or Vietnam, you have a higher than average chance of being killed or wounded,but plenty of veterans from the mid 70s until the early 2000s,served in relative peace broken by short sharp wars America usually won and the troops got their parades. The people who do care are veterans and you would be surprised at how many are in the civilian workforce sitting across a table from you during a hiring interview.
Try extending those benefits across a nation as large as ours with as disparate societies as contained within our borders and with such wild and variated economic situations. It's never going to happen. The only way ever would is if we split off into our sovereign states and strove to do so on a local level. I do not believe we would be able to do so as a federal nation.
@@jakeawad2531 I have seen plenty of graphs that attempt to prove this... to date, they lack data showing that enough medical professionals are on hand to provide care to the assumed influx of new patients. Add in that the corruption that would doubtlessly follow from this, price-fixing would only help a little. There are plenty of ways that it could be implemented but I do not see a way to get through the corruption... Not without massive changes that no doubt still need to happen regardless. Do not get me wrong, the current health system of the United States is a joke. In a way it is a microcosm of all of the problems currently being suffered by Americans.
@@DeridusI think it's completely possible but taxes would triple. Free Healthcare and schooling but high taxes and people would still complain there is no way of satisfying everyone.
Imagine risking your life and mental health for a country that will hate you once you are of no use for them... Veterans are treated like shit once they exit service LMAO.
I'm a member of Gen Z and multiple of my friends, white, black, and latino alike joined various branches of the military (Mainly Army and Marines, with one or two going into the Navy). Growing up, I wanted to be one of them, joining the Army was one of my life goals for years, up until I was about 17. By this point, the idea of harm coming to me, PTSD, etc. etc. wasn't something that really phased me. The main reasons I ultimately decided against heading into the military was the lack of care given by higher-ups and a general loss of faith in the government. Personally, I despise our current governmental entities on nearly every level, why would I volunteer to serve them? I still see the military as an honorable thing, and national security as something that is important to me, but I can't willingly serve politicians who view me and my hypothetical fellow soldiers to die for nothing, in wars that do nothing but serve the elite, and fight for something I don't even believe in.
Multiple members of my family have served and done fine-but they all got lucky, and at least two of them didn't have a say in the matter ("thanks" to the draft). Unless it was through a service academy, I could never, for many reasons, including the ones you mention. The 1% and our political powerhouses (both D and R) need to send their children to the frontlines, or go themselves. They complain that our military is shrinking and weakening-time for them to lead by example!
There is no free market when a private central bank is controlling your currency ! The millitary is for protecting US dollar global hegemony and corporate interest. Your basically fighting for slavery including your own in the US millitary !
Personally joining the navy has been the best decision I’ve ever made but seeing how things are going from the inside I can’t blame anyone for not wanting to join. We’re moving in the wrong direction and service members are being taken for granted.
There is no free market when a private central bank is controlling your currency ! The millitary is for protecting US dollar global hegemony and corporate interest. Your basically fighting for slavery including your own in the US millitary !
Ive grown up surrounded by military my entire life. I’ve literally only ever met two people who signed up because they WANTED to. Everyone else did it because they didnt think they had another choice. I work for the govt and i see how much money they waste… youd think theyd put more into the actual bodies that are sacrificing years of their lives.
Great and informative video! I normally don't comment on YT videos but as a veteran (I was on active duty Army for over 7 years), I thought I'd post. Great points were made but I also think that Gen Z saw the massive mistakes and horrendous end result from our last two wars; Afghanistan lasting 20 years only to have the Taliban return was not an outcome anyone wanted. Also, take the legacy families who for generations have served. After those 2 wars and the trauma experienced, those vets are not advocating or encouraging their children to join. Not to generalize but I think the last point is only going to increase over time. Kids today know they deserve adequate pay, respect, and stability. Unfortunately, the military isn't the best option for most people today. Furthermore getting rid of the MAVNI program (allowing non-citizens to serve to help gain their citizenship) was a blow that hurt crucial jobs within the military. I always found it sad that non-citizens are more eager to serve than those born here.
Soon they may have no choice but to bring MAVNI back, as well as other paths like the prison-or-military route. This dearth of willing and able recruits is only going to worsen over time, and another draft is a fantastic way to send the country headfirst into chaos-especially in the era of social media
This 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸 if we get invaded, we'll figure it out. Not the government or our military. We will. Can the government even protect us in the event of that anyways? They lost in Afghanistan after all, and Vietnam, and arguably Iraq too.
I got out of the Marine Corps in 2014 Im worse of a human being then i ever was. Ive had failed marriages, failed relationships and ruined relationships with my family. Im a loner now and live a life of pain and also an alcoholic. I am absolutely worse of a human being i ever was. The thing is I dont care I am who I am now and havnt seen my daughter in years but im emotionally numb
Knew a friend who was a staff sergeant in the airforce with me and lived on base housing and it shocked me when he told me he was on them I couldn't fucking believe it
5 หลายเดือนก่อน
I knew what it was like to be an e-4 specialist/corporal and be broke every month!
Im not joining any kind of army, The kids heard their elders and the ones who came home with trauma, Its been like that since centuries, Theyre not dying for a pointless cause.
The general appeal of the military is that its a miserable experience done for the higher cause of protecting one's country. But how long has it been since we've been engaged in combat that directly kept America safe? If people don't believe in the higher cause its just a pointless miserable experience.
The Navy trained me as a Nuclear Electrician, which made it possible to leave NJ, earn a bachelor and a masters and become employed in a Nuclear Utility and earn aprox $110K/yr. If you are a citizen, if you are able bodied, if you meet the physical requirements and if you are strong academically, it could be very beneficial to join. But DO YOUR RESEARCH AND KNOW WHAT YOU’RE SIGNING UP FOR. As someone who was a recruiter for the last 3 years in I can tell you there are a lot of unscrupulous recruiters that will tell you anything to get you to sign up. But ALL the information (down to what each day in boot camp is like) is in the internet. Also, only the Navy and Air Force are the ONLY ones that can guarantee you the job you sign up for (provided you qualify and pass training) other branches (Army, Marines etc) May train you in one thing but your job may be in something else. My training was Nuclear school and my job was as a nuclear electrician on a carrier.
Thank you for watching and sharing your experience and perspective. So important to hear from people who have actually served to understand this issue more deeply.
Exactly, it only works if you come prequalified. And licensed. You get straight sent to the top. Or if you got through rotc, went into officer school or got lucky in a lottery to go to officer school.
I've always told my young soldiers, that the military is what you make of it. Just like any other aspect of life. Life isnt that much easier, expecting the military to build you, while not investing in yourself... Leads to discontentment.
Thanks for posting. Most will agree if you have a veteran in your life, it works wonders in repelling any urge to go to bat for a nation that cares nothing for it's defenders and views them as capital in a business venture.
@@theblackknights4281 talking to possible recruits and vet about pointless wars is preaching to the choir. Even though I am a Vet I agree with people that say the military budget should be cut in half. Yes, that will leave the U.S. vulnerable but IF nothing happens that money could change a lot of lives.
@@damongraham1398 Thank you for sharing your perspective, I am not a veteran as you may have guessed just deeply saddened by this mess the nations of the world are entrenched in, not exclusively military policy.
@@damongraham1398 Cutting the budget would do anything BUT leave us vulnerable, saying it will is just propaganda from defense contractors who preach the same line to Congress every year clamoring for more tax dollars. If anything, halving the budget will eliminate much of the waste, fraud and abuse.
Gen Z don't have time for going to war. They need to work 50 hours a week so they can afford to buy their first house and starting a family when they reach 60.
I recently saw a video of Iraq War veterans who were documented in 2003 by the NYT and again this year to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the invasion. All I’m going to say is that video by it self is enough to make you reconsider joining the military. The reoccurring theme was you might leave the war but the war will never leave you.
I still remember the video of a woman in her 18s, or 20s who joined the militia, and she and other colleagues were r*ped by a superior. Somehow her lawyers managed to lose the case 2 times before getting to court, and never got justice, the girl ended the video saying that nothing has changed in the military, they want more young people to join, while cases like these continue to happen and nobody does anything. Another comment I saw that was repeated a lot is how bad the leadership of the militia is, and how they humiliate the new recruits rather than teach them.
One of my favorite animated Gags is American Dad when son was expelled from school and an Army Recruiters knocks on his door saying 'We'll take him!" The Dad says "Stay Away from My Son you Vultures!" (or something) and slams the door in his face. He then cracks open again to say: "Thank you for your service" I think it reflects a lot of attitudes torwards the military.
I think you answered your own question...most of gen z has mental health issues, overweight, underweight and have been incarcerated. I think a lot of the con of the military has been exposed too. I know plenty of people from all branches that wouldn't recommend it, even if you go in as an officer.
It is a tuff problem. Part of it is the same problem as for leaders. Those who want to lead are often not the best leaders and those who want to be soldiers are often not the best soldiers.
No, it's 100% the leaders my guy. What type of enlisted you are doesn't really matter (yes exceptions), but if you're in a leadership position you should be able to motivate and build upon everyone subordinate to you.
My dad was part of Desert Storm. He served almost two years before having to go back home because my uncle had died in an accident. He would ask me 15 years ago constantly if I was interested in enlisting and serving, but I always answered that I wasn't. He's now 55 and he's been feeling the repercussions of his service hard. He had cancer that he's now in remission for, and he has severe hearing loss in one ear, skin conditions and damage to the joints. His doctors at the Veterans' Hospital have explained that all of those conditions have been seen very frequently in other Gulf War veterans. It's really sad and it's a huge part of why I never wanted to serve unless extremely necessary.
My mother wanted me to enlist in the Air Force with my brother 15 years ago. THIS is what she wanted me to deal with? Death, PTSD, etc.? Yet, because I chose not to get myself killed, I'm viewed as a coward.
As someone that is invested into the military, joining the air force is the equivalent of going to college with 45 min " workouts" 😂 There's a reason why yalls nickname is the chair force😂
“Conventions on the Rights of a Child ... Only Somalia and the US have refused to sign it.” As a Somali, I am saddened by the company we find ourselves in. 😔 We can do better, people.
The US has signed, but has not ratified all portions of the treaty. It’s also important to point out that said treaty rings hollow when you remember that out of all nations that did sign, over 25 still have some form of conscription or mandatory registration for possible conscription in place, enforced or not. I’d take that statement in the video with a sizable grain of salt if I were you
@@thebestcentaur yeh that statement confused me as there's mandatory conscription for people in other countries in the UN but the US allowing 17 year olds to sign up/not formally join until 18 is the "problem"
I'm Canadian and the only time I ever got anything resembling military recruitment propoganda in my school life was a voluntary field trip to the military museum in November for Remembrance day (American Veteran's day), and that class was also an optional film class. And it was just a veteran telling us what it's like. He said he loved his job and all, but yeah it's definitely not for everyone. I think the immense propaganda the US military does is unbelievable, especially towards minors.
I did JROTC and joined the army and I enjoyed JROTC it was fun while I already wanted to join the army before because of my dad but honestly all it did was let me talk to more veterans and a easy grade wearing a uniform every Wednesday I also joined the army at age seventeen and I had a good experience so far and am looking forward to a good career
I’m not dying for a country that constantly shows it’s lack of commitment to its citizens. The rights of my family are being taken away at an astounding rate, I will not support this country in any way.
What do you think about the U.S. military’s recruiting tactics, especially for high school students? Let us know in the comments below!
It's predatory AF.
The American Dream is a lie.
They suck at taking care of people who you'd think would be a priority.
They lie about what you're fighting for: it's ALWAYS American business interests.
THEY LIE.
THEY LIE.
THEY LIE.
Better pay! And pay for all of college!!
They would have more people willing to fight for this country if they dropped weed from schedule 1 to schedule nothing.
They went woke
It is quite simple
getting woke will destroy you
I had Brain Cancer. And the won't let me get past the requirement office. I've tried 3 times now. I know I'm only 4'11 with scare tissue on my lungs. But for christ sakes let me serve my country.
It's almost like Gen Z wants our military to behave better out in the world and treat it's members better when they get home. Shocking ain't it?
Right!
That’s what it is, unfortunately my generation can’t go a day w out being babied , we know wha we want but alot of em are unrealistic
Um it would help if the media didn’t base the military and only showed the negatives. I never saw all the good things the military did in Iraq or Afghanistan on the news. Even though I lived them. Its ok though cause that’s not the media’s agenda.
@nicholas lewis Sorry, but that's not the job of a journalist they aren't state made propaganda agency's to suck the Pentagon off.
Soooo why don't you tell us about all the good things the US military did while you were there then?
Even better since it comes from an eyewitness account.
I think it's rediculous how we have that big of a budget yet many active duty soldiers are having trouble putting food on the table.
Learn to spell "ridiculous".
The majority of that budget is Military contracts. Like the $480million contract Microsoft got last year for a new HUD development for the Military.
Yes a Call Of Duty style HUD. Mini map, weapon ammo count.
War is a racket
The army depends on new enlisted soldiers to maintain the force. Usually it’s High School students that fill those ranks. Active duty Soldiers that are newly enlisted are provided with access to mess halls for their meals where available at no cost. They are provided with billeting. They don’t pay utility bills while in barracks. Soldiers while in active duty can work toward a degree. With all available technology it makes getting that degree more attainable. There is always the possibility of having to deploy to a hazardous area, but knowing what the role of an army any army is to provide a kinetic solution to failed diplomatic actions.
@@unkono And Nationalism/Patriotism is a delusion.
I realized when I was 16 that the rich schools didn't have military recruiters. They had college recruiters. I saw that there was a class that died in wars and a class that profited from them. I wanted no part in it
There is no free market when a private central bank is controlling your currency ! The millitary is for protecting US dollar global hegemony and corporate interest. Your basically fighting for slavery including your own in the US millitary !
Then you, by default, are profiting from them. I remember the draft. I remember the Vietnam war I am a veteran. Theres no war so whats their major malfunction? I think you should have to have served in the military to qualify to vote.
I went to a STEM school in the DFW metroplex with $100.000 electron microscopes, we had recruiters too.
When I was growing up the rich schools gave their kids individual curves and groomed only for college, of course.
Yea that’s complete bs ur lying
My grandfather served before Vietnam in West Germany. I know of only one time he cried, and that was on 9/11. When he found out I was thinking of joining, he begged me not to and got teary eyed. I heeded his advice.
He was a wise man
Coward
Wise man indeed.
He was a wiseman and deserve my respect.
He saved you from commiting horrible war crimes only to come back to live in the streets to be another of the 100k annual ODs in the USA
I love our country, but who wants to fight to defend a corrupt plutocracy?
no one
@@joeswanson733 Way, way, way too many people!
If Trump asked you help safeguard our republic would you say no, Its for the people and all you care about. Where would we be if we didn`t have that WW2 soldier or the Patriots that fought off the Redcoats. Take a good look at commie china and its threat which says we must always have a force they fear.
I would never serve under this president. Absolutely horrible.
@@alanhobbs4498 you'd be serving Obama.
Biden died in '16
No one wants to work 12-14hour days then get told their crippling back and knee injuries aren't service related
Who in the service is working 12-14 hours a day? 😂 like half of all military personnel are on their phones all day the other half are on their phones only half the day lolz.
And don’t get me started on how many Vets I know ripping the VA off for a “service related injury” 😂 if you cat get rated by the VA then that’s your fault I know some many doors getting $1200-$1500 a month for their “injuries”
@@Person0fColor are you even in the military dude? some work that kind of time every other week, even in sf. and dont get me started in the regular army.
@@Person0fColordawg this is a normal schedule for some MOS and Rates within service, believe it or not.
@@Person0fColor
Everyone. Especially if they're deployed.
@@Person0fColoreveryone you clown
You forgot to mention that we as kids saw us invade Iraq for frivolous reasons, and grew up seeing the results.
Hardly frivolous. Saddam did still have some old WMDs (chemical artillery shells) he hid out in the desert, and we know from captured documents he was planning to restart his WMD program as soon as the international pressure was off of him. We also know that he was at least starting to make contact with terrorist groups, mostly in the interest of anti-Israel activities, but that doesn't mean his existing or future WMDs couldn't fall into the hands of anti-American terrorists or that he wouldn't eventually point that gun at us. Plus, Israel was and is a major ally.
Nevermind that the guy was a bloodthirsty tyrant who killed and tortured more of his people in his reign than we ever caused as collateral damage from OIF. And his sons would have been far worse. Can you imagine if he or his sons were in charge when the Arab Spring inevitably happened, even if it took a few more years?
@@BlargeManwould be nice if they had just done this, but you forgot the part where they destabilized an entire area of the world for some oil
@@BlargeManthe people who served says otherwise.
@@BlargeMan North Korea has nukes and threatens to use them every month… why haven’t we gone to spread “democracy” there? Maybe because there’s no oil there for us to exploit.
@@BlargeMan we need more of you to serve, we definitely need to have your entire family serving oversea, fight for what you believe in! don't worry, our tax dollar got your back!
1. No one wants to die in war for political gain (Iraq)
2. There hasnt been a major war for decades so theres no need to enlist.
America is on the verge of war with China and Russia have u not been watching the news?
Father served 3 tours in Vietnam. He had to use the freedom of information act to even prove he was there after his very public draft while he was in the hospital for a crash. After 15 years of fighting he finally got the benefits he was owed after serving. Listened to him and his surviving friends talk about how the US government called agent orange safe enough to eat. While he was having black objects removed from his skin every year due to his exposure. Not sure why I would avoid the military.
I have a friend of mine who was a Marine in Vietnam. He has cancer from Agent Orange and suffers from extreme PTSD--especially from a battle he was in called Dai Do (look it up--brutal...) He had to prove to the VA that his boots were on the ground in Vietnam before they would do anything to help him regarding Agent Orange or PTSD. They made him jump through hoops he should never have had to jump through.
everything is documented electronically now so it's much easier to get your benefits. Agent orange was a chemical to kill things....it doesn't take much thought. To be fair though we do things and put ourself at risk. It's in the values.
You are not fighting in Vietnam
@@josiahleviston648🤡
As a non US resident, the fact 9% of 18yo people show interest in joining the armed forces sounds like a sky high figure. In my country, when I was 18, some 20 years ago, I don't remember any of my friends or class mates even considering joining the armed forces one of their top 5 career options. And my country doesn't fights wars every other week like the US, here there is no chance you may actually get deployed in a combat zone.
I think the only reason the US has anybody willing to enroll is to get a college scholarship, because tuitions are so expensive, so the armed forces are exploiting poor people. Here, public universities give good quality, tuition free education.
Which country? Sounds amazing!
@@TheConfettiDress Argentina. Most people here with a college degree (equivalent to a bachelor's degree in the US) are graduated from public universities. It's not entirely free, you still have to pay for books and supplies, and if you come from a small city or town you probably have to move to a large city for the duration of your studies, but it has no tuition. Also, back in my days classrooms did not have heating or AC, outside of the laboratories (but I think some improvements have been made in that direction in the last few years). There are private options, but the tuitions are not something a poor or even middle class family can afford.
Also, the military has earned a really bad rep, after several coups (backed by the US I may add) and they cannot shake it off even if the last one ended 40 years ago, so that's another reason nobody enrolls.
Thanks for sharing this comparison with Argentina. I just watched "1985" - powerful to see the human rights atrocities that happened in Argentina (yes, backed by the U.S.) brought to a big, international audience (finally). I remember "The Official Story" which won the Oscar for best Foreign movie back in 1986, but younger folks have probably not heard much about that painful history. Interesting that Argentinian youth today have been influenced by that history to not support the military. Good evidence for the need to push for truth and restorative justice, rather than hiding our heads in the sand about the harms our governments cause.
@@miguelrodriguezcimino1674 America is entire culture was born from fighting for freedom and being a warrior, and personal responsibility in finances/life, so making free college would go directly against american culture. Stick to your own country and stop sticking your nose in ours
Probably because they relied on security from the US
My dad was an artillery fire direction specialist. He served in Desert Storm, did peacekeeping in Bosnia, and was in the early days of Enduring Freedom when he got out. He suffers from Gulf War Syndrome with 7 concussions and the side effects of medicine the VA gave him that weakened his bones. Lately, he's been losing his memory, and he's only 52. I hate seeing him like that, and I wonder how many other veterans are like him. I hate everyone that has the power to stop it but lets this thing happen to not only my dad, but other who served.
Damn...
Sorry to hear this bro, keep yo head up and keep going strong for the family
i was 13E cannon fire direction specialist. joined army 1987. got out 1991. i am very healthy so i am one of the lucky ones
Go visit the VA if you have one near, a vet will tell you flat out that he would do it all again, no cry babies cause your talking to a man who would give his life in battle so you can enjoy your damn freedom. Thank you dad for your service to America.
@@ak-488 not all vets would do it again. thousands of vets have serious emotional scars
"Imma keep it real with you US Military, I'm not fucking dying for an Oil company"
No, maybe not for an oil company, but you will for Israel when they draft you
@@sdjslkdjlsskldjslkdjsl8262I’ll have my Ali moment when they call my name
@@sdjslkdjlsskldjslkdjsl8262lol wont work nearly as well. Everyone is far too connected with social media.
We aint goin when that happens
Yea that’s why you didn’t join 😂
Considering how many stories I have seen about this country failing it's Vets, I can't say I am surprised.
I’m a veteran and I wish more of these young people would join the military! I’m 35 years old and retired!
It's failing its youth too.
@@kelj4517 stop misleading them😢
@@kelj4517 lol nah I hate this country and want it to crumble
@@kelj4517 I don't wanna go into a random middle eastern country, for war ofcourse, I would go on my own accords
Why?: A rich man's war, but a poor man's fight.
Not unless the poor fight against the rich
I couldn't have said it better myself.
You don't have any clue about being poor
E-1 pay: $1773/mo
My production job: $2720/mo
The 20-year occupation of Afghanistan that ended in disaster is going to keep military recruitment low, for a long time to come. The military is already reaching out to the "D.A.C.A. beneficiaries", offering "citizenship" to them and their undocumented immediate family members, in exchange for military service. Much of today's Active Duty military is made up of people who were illegally smuggled into the U.S. as children.
People realize there is a big difference between fighting to defend your freedom and homeland and fighting to take someone else's freedom and homeland.
As a younger person I have great respect for our vets, but I wouldn't sign up for the military because of mistreatment by people of higher ranks and politicians. I also am not willing to risk my life in wars I do not believe are moral which have become very common in US foreign policy.
and yet the same people vote for the same ol politicians who wont help change or improve the military.
Like which vets?
Lol idc I’m shipping
alr then, imma get benefits while you still gonna have to pay HELLA taxes
@@Overhaul-db6lnoh shit you heading out to basic? Don't loose your annex b or you ain't getting that bonus
As someone who is Gen Z and recently got out of the Army (my MOS is 19K) after completing my enlistment, I can say that you do provide many good points. However, the reason why the military is having a difficult time recruiting is because they are pushing people away who want to serve, by trying to recruit people who don't want to serve. For example, the "two moms" ad the Army had a couple of years ago pushed away those who wanted to serve, and it didn't really attract those who had no interest in serving in the first place. Another big issue the Army has is retention, people that join do not stay in (like myself). The reason why I got out was because of broken promises and leadership took no accountability for their actions (there are a lot more reasons but that would take a lot of time to explain). My unit promised that I could go to Air Assault, Airborne schools, and take college courses, but when I submitted the paperwork I was rejected every time. My leadership would not take accountability for their failures, they just used their lower enlisted personnel as a scape goat. To some of my leaders, we were nothing but cannon fodder to be used at the first sign of trouble. I don't regret serving because the experience has definitely benefited me in the long run.
Thanks so much for sharing your experience and perspective. It aligns a lot with the ex-Marine we interviewed, Julian Valderrama. We didn’t end up including a lot of the complicated experiences he had - good and bad - but overall his experience was a lot like yours.
Exactly why i left the marines, they promised all these schools, pay your college after 4 years multiple combat deployments myself and my guys never went to any of these schools, just denied.
Toxic leadership seems to be the biggest reason all my Army friends got out after one contract. I had really good leadership at my first command in the Navy, which is probably a big reason I re-enlisted
between the two moms ad and the president we got, that's what pushed me away. Not to mention they denied me on "medical history" which i got everything cleared. Funny thing is a week or so later they called back asking if i wanted to continue and try and get it, 5 years to late dipshits.
Alright, a Tanker!
You’re right though. I got out of the Army a few years ago myself, and this is why I tell anyone to go to college first - and if they really want to serve in the military, go through ROTC or OCS. I always stress simply enlisting as a last resort because you’re right - basically anyone that’s below E-7 gets scapegoated and used left and right!
I think my 7 yo son broke it down the best. He said he wanted to be a soldier because it's an all boys club and girls aren't allowed, I told him actually girls can join and he said " nevermind I don't want to be a soldier now."
You can tell which ads were made by men and which were made by women
One massive point you missed is what the military actually does. It hardly engages in defending the Uunited States, but instead focuses most of its efforts abroad. This is almost never for a good reason too. We've used it to overthrow democratically elected leaders all over the world and replace them with fascist dictators who are friendly to U.S. interests, like Pinochet. They also routinely commit war crimes, like drone strikes targeting civilians, even U.S. citizens. And then we use it to stop foreign economies from growing, particularly leftist countries like Cuba with a blockade to enforce an embargo which is considered illegal and immoral worldwide. And on the topic of Cuba, the U.S. military also illegally occupies Guantanamo Bay, which has a torture camp where many inmates haven't even been charged with crimes.
Precisely! This is why I'm an ML.
I feel like that point is too broad for most people. I think the truth being let out on social media of how shitty day to day life is in the military is the real core of why recruitment is taking such a hit. Why get screamed at by some dude who can barely write but joined before you did when you can go work somewhere you can quit anytime?
The military needs to focus more on Domestic threats. Our government has been infiltrated by Nazis and Fascists. They must be purged and our society must be made free of racism etc.
@@FateBringsMe2U not too broad. gen z is very idealistic and people definitely do not support the military or law enforcement on principle.
Wtf you talking about? Look at all the US troops stationed in NATO countries! Or Japan and South Korea! That’s hundreds of thousands service members helping to defend allies.
Outside of toxic leadership, I'd say is an structural problem of the U.S as a whole. Having to join the military just because you want free school and healthcare is not good. These services should already be easily accessible to everyone in the country, not a plus because of forcing yourself to join the military. Enlisting should be done out of love and genuine interest to increase retention rate and bring more people in.
suppose the united states did have affordable healthcare and education, what benefits should the military offer?
@@fakedungeonmaster5740Quality pay? Good work environment with actually competent leadership?
@@themaninabucket8365well the education system needs that too so idk why we expect it from the military. sounds more like a legislative problem.
I like the free education but remember places like Canada and the U.K. have insanely high wait times for appointments and higher taxes because of free healthcare
@@St.Trina445 yes the wait times are horrible. i was living in new zealand and when i strained my back and couldn’t work, all they gave me was over the counter meds and i had to wait 12 hours just to be seen
All soldiers around the world should throw down their weapons and tell the bankers and politicians to go fight their own wars.
Oy vey!
@@Patrickstarrrrr69💀💀
Even though this video barely scrapes the surface of Gen Z not wanting to enlist, it paints a good picture of the experiences vets go through, and how uncovered information can influence mass decisions.
As a Gen Z in the military I know I'm not re-uping. I've been lied to time and time again and have learned the military doesn't take care of its own even while serving. I have a permanent back injury do to a training accident years ago, which the military has deemed to not be a serious enough injury to receive an LOD do I could get the medical service I need for the remainder of my life.
If people don't want to join or stay in I tell them not to. The military can't follow its values of Loyalty, Duty, Respect, Self sacrifice, Honor, Integrity, and Personal Courage. Often enough the higher up have little respect for these values towards the lower enlisted and its sickening to see. I told them last time they told me to re-up that if they want me doing that they need to fix themselves. I haven't been asked again.
I'm brown and don't wanna fight for Ukrainians who hate us and use n@zi symbolism everywhere. Joe can fight this battle himself.
@@youtubestuff683 yep. My friend lost an eye due to shrapnel explosion and they wanted HIM to pay his medical bills. Never fight for a government that treats you that way.
The 20-year occupation of Afghanistan doesn't help. Gen Z grew up during that period of time, and they noticed the abject lack of progress in Afghanistan, year-after-year.
Yeah that's my belief too. In these discussions, people always point to ideological reasons, which I don't think is it. Are they having a recruiting shortfall for officers? No? Ok, then the reason is people look at the raw deal they are offered in enlisting and are rightly turning it down, because the cat's out of the bag.
It's that most people now are either a child of a member or vet or have family and or friends who are. Almost impossible not to know someone at least every other person who has someone they care for a good amount in the service. The problems vet face are more transparent and something more citizens actually are very aware of. The consequences of war and combat vets being more and more vocal about what war is really like and the demons they carry with them due to what they had to see, do, etc.
There are many many reasons gen z isn't enlisting
This is so true - we only touched on three of the major reasons but there are many more - including the experiences vets are sharing.
Only 6.4% of the US population are veterans, it's more likely to be the opposite statistically, most people have no connection and no knowledge of how the military works outside of media.
Edit to add: In 1980 it was 18% of the population, we are getting to a point where Gen Z is the most disconnected (from veterans and the military) generation we have seen in decades apart from what they consume on TikTok.
But Recutment is up in areas with bases and vets... Like your resonale makes no sense in reality...
Quite the opposite. People with relatives who were in the military have a much higher chance of joining themselves.
@@AboveTheNoisesomalia signed
I'll defend my country with my life, but Im not dying for the Koch brothers or Bill Gates.
I dunno, I see too many "Homeless Vet. Please help" signs to really think they're getting taken care of when they come home, if they come home.
To be fair it’s mostly on them, there is the PTSD case and stuff like that, but for the most part it is they just get out with no plan and wonder why they are struggling and aren’t successful, the military gives you every tool you need to be successful
@@tresfordays9644 For a country that stresses having the biggest and strongest military, even if one falls through the cracks, there should be a response to pick that lost soldier back up. Potentially mentally and physically destroying yourself for your nation deserves more than a shrug if you can't immediately transition back to civilian life.
@@CleverCover05 they give you opportunity to set you self up for success after service, you can go to school while your in, get certified with certificates in several areas related to your job that put you ahead in the civilian sector, you can go to school for free when you get out with a housing allowance, they give you taps class when you are getting out which is a class specifically designed to help you transition to being a civilian again, they give you time off in your last couple months to seek job opportunities in the civilian world, if someone decides to get out without a plan or some kind of support system then that’s on them. They are adults, they made that choice, it’s not justifiable to spend the resources on people outside of the military when current service members need it more, they decided to get out and do nothing with their life to be successful outside of the military, despite having the opportunities to do otherwise. Now you can make a separate argument for wounded service members or service member suffering from PTSD or other diagnoses or something like that due to service. And I would 100% percent agree with you on the fact there needs to be more done for those members post service. But the average joe who just decided to get out with out a plan made his choice
@@tresfordays9644 uh...no. The military literally throws you away once you are no longer useful.
@@mediawarrior5957 >what is the va
My dad (Marine Vet) tells me "Don't join the military" soo I just listen to him.
Just because your dad says something doesn’t mean it’s right!
I’m a military veteran! I have free health care, educational benefits and I receive life time VA benefits!
@@kelj4517 shut up fed
Good for you brother.
@@kelj4517 how much are you getting paid to say this? Lol
@ Boo
No one is paying me!
What I said was 100% accurate I get life time benefits.
I’m a Army vet.. what they don’t tell you is that the retention rate is also down by a lot and main reason for this is because the military ( most branches ) take soldiers for granted once you are in. They treat you like you are easily replaceable and do not respect your work/life balance what’s so ever. If you are lucky you might fall in a rare unit where there’s a higher up ( sgt major or a LT ) in your unit that isn’t totally toxic and might let you off in a reasonable time but those are hard to find. I use to wake up at 4:30 am be at first formation by 5:30 am and then work till 6 pm for the exact same amount of money every 2 weeks. It’s a shit way to live, the military is very toxic and do not appreciate their new soldiers and jr leaders, sooo they leave after their first contract. 🤷🏻♂️
This is accurate y’all.
Thank you. Nobody is actually addressing the real reasons, instead blaming other businesses with more "competitive benefits". No, not really, it's the deplorable QoL that nobody wants to join for and be forced to go through. That's literally one of the biggest reasons.
Couldn't of said it better myself oh and don't forget the deployments with that same toxic chain of command and the endless patrols in Iraq and still be treated like absolute dog shit.
The way that veterans are treated in this country is reflecting of how we will be treated if we risk our lives for a corrupt government. We learned from the Vietnam vets. If being a veteran was honored and respected in this country then maybe they might get a couple million more troops
they lost wars.. they shoudlnt get respect
@@juanshaftpatel7488 Damn go win war for us then
maybe if military got the proper healthcare and shit they need there'd be more people joining..
@@juanshaftpatel7488and you’ve never won at anything in your entire life, therefore we should respect you even less.
But... One day a year you'll be able to get free chicken strips from Chilli's...
They don’t want to join getting paid pennies, when politicians are getting paid 5x more than that and get to sit back/delegate
five pennies
There is no free market when a private central bank is controlling your currency ! The millitary is for protecting US dollar global hegemony and corporate interest. Your basically fighting for slavery including your own in the US millitary !
I was 17 when I walked into a recruiting station to join the Air Force. I was still a kid. I wanted a medical job and they said it would be available but when I went to MEPS they said none were available. Instead the officer in charge of jobs showed me a video of people who exploded bombs for a living. Remember, I was seventeen. I felt cornered and said yes too it. My parents were devastated.Several months later and I decided wisely not to go through with the recruitment. The recruiter threatened jail and we set up a meeting. My dad defended me and said I was still a minor under their care. It all seemed very entrapping and I was too young to understand it. I went to University instead and got my B.A.. All without risking my life. That is the thing about the military, your life is always at risk once you sign. But they will always have a mask of toughness to hide behind that fact. Your essential meat for the weapons industries.
Yeah, they promise you that you will get skills transferable to civilian jobs, but mostly that's BS! They don't care about you because you are expendable!
I’m part of Gen Z, I wanted to be in the Navy. My parents don’t want me going, and I don’t see myself fighting for a very selfish administration. When I find something to fight for then I’ll reconsider.
Edit: seems like in my absence I might have caused a microscopic conflict.
China & Russia trying to takeover? There are many things to fight for, your family, your future kids, who knows?
Very wise. Go to college and use your brain bc your brain cells will die in the military. It breeds stupidity and there’s no room for critical thinking. It’s for the low of IQ.
You may never be in a battle but its not about dying for your country and its not about backing a corrupt Gov`t. Its in you to show you will do whats necessary to preserve our fragile freedom for your kids and future generations.
@@ak-488 I can understand that, with that reference in mind I’m in the process of considering to join.
@@vancarson440 I would do 20, so many Navy vets will tell you its a super experience especially if you can get on a carrier. You are treated well.
Going after people that are in a bad place for no fault of their own and baiting them into risking their health, and even their lives; is pretty scummy. This type of coercion is pretty much just slavery with extra steps.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts.
This comment is clearly based on ignorance, giving someone a chance to pursue a more structured career is way better than a cluster f civilian world.
You should look up the definition of coercion before using. Coercion is defined as using force of the threat of force to compel the party to act in an involuntary manner. So unless the recruiter is beating up high school kids to make them join there was no coercion.
Not every role is a combat role…
someone clearly doesnt know what slavery is truly like
I went to school with a guy going on the gi bill. Government shut down, he got kicked from his classes.
Also vets are treated horribly. In ohio, there was land set aside as investment for vets, and the state took it and sold it for cheap to land developers. Really screwed the vets over. No one did anything.
I was using the GI bill and we were still paid our housing allowance and school tuition. Not sure which shut down you’re talking about
I passed the ASVAB test when i was in high school i decided i wanted to go to college and the enlist but when i graduated college they told me i had to retake the test, i never took it. Best decision of my life.
As someone who enlisted at 18.....The problem is times are changing & The Army is staying the same.
What’s changing? You want to become a woman? The us military will gladly cut if off
Bull shit the drill Sargents can't even shark attack u anymore in my opinion the armyus getting softer to adapt to the snowflakes
Army*
I'm a little disappointed in the army bc of that but it's wtv just makes basic ever so Slightly more easy on me
@@mike-fc1bgtf is a shark attack
Im active duty right now and I hate it. We get treated so wrong and its so toxic. They DO NOT care for you at all. My depression has risen significantly since I joined and my body is banged up before this I was healthy but that’s the army for
My cousin and I tried to join the Army after we graduated from high school together. I took the ASVAB at MEPS and got a 95/99 but then they told me I wouldn’t be able to join because the doctor at MEPS found in my medical records that I had eczema after I was 12 even though it’s gone now. My cousin got into the Army though and he’s doing well rn
Yeah, I've read other stories where people were refused to serve due to prior health issues that no longer affects them. It related to the Military's Genesis program where they can find any records on a applicant's doctor visits.
Yeah one cronic illness and your out.
That is defenetly a joke. Those people are NOT doctors, never were. They are civil service employees who go by a chart and records. Even the duck walk and other exercises are compared what the chart and their instructions say. The only medical staff MEPS has are civil service nurses. Their job is to keep people out of the military. You would have made it if there would have been real doctors there. Genesis is done because the greedy government doesn't want to spend the money on real doctors. Therefore, charts and instructions are used. Your cousin was very very lucky. So remember, it wasn't you. Please pass it on. Also, watch the truth channels, they will tell you.
@isleep396 did they give you the option to waiver?
Ursula Smith thats very counter productive lol oh no recuit shortage... keep them outtt
The best advert for the armed forces is looking after veterans
Agreed, the VA needs to step up their game...
Well said
and, perhaps, stop creating new disabled vetrerans, daily
Im a 8 year military veteran and i urge a lot of young people to flee the military service. Military life sucks and you get absolutely NO SUPPORT as a veteran.
DON'T ENLIST!!!
Some recruiter tried to get me into the military back in my freshmen year of high school. I was not interested simply because there were better things that caught my interest. I already had friends and family who served and they were treated terribly and never got their benefits. Unlike many in my town I did not fall for the whole "the US military is shinning bright with opportunity and greatness". From my view it was miserable and depressing.
I simply had no interest in putting my mental and physical health on the line for something that sees me as simply another sheep in the field. I have no problem with those who choose to enlist. It just isn't for me.
On another note. If you are a legal resident but not a US Citizen. They will bar you from actually doing any of the stuff that would land you in a career post military. While they can help you become a citizen, they will often prey on the fact that you don’t know the legal system or the extent of your contract
idk where you got this, my friend was earning citizenship through the navy and was serving as a corpsman. obviously he wasn't a nurse the moment he was out, but it helped get his foot in the door when being considered for nursing school
@@slashbashful6549anecdotal fallacies. Both of you made sound points, but it's been shown that youre more likely to be screwed than helped. Just because your experiences back one claim does not mean the other claim is invalidated. You need to find the (good) statistics.
@@thekirbycrafter7229Not really. When I joined in 2016, most of whom that earned their citizenship were the 36b , Financial Management, which crazily at the time you didn't need a security clearance for. Most of them were actually Asian/Indian and were green card holders. A good friend shaw actually had a aeronautical engineering degree, and was going NG for citizenship. The limiting factor is The security clearance, as many Good jobs in the military require one, and it's pretty difficult to obtain one of your a immigrant. However there are still good jobs that don't require one.
My grandfather was a WW2 vet and I remember when I was younger, I said that I wanted to join the military and he looked me right in the eyes and told me not to. Considering the shit he’s seen and done I’m gonna follow his advice
Im a millennial not Gen Z, but the bottom line is Americans are tired of war.
*pointless wars our own governcrap caused
@@thekirbycrafter7229It won’t be a pointless war to kill the bourgeoisie
Tired of the smut culture too.
Why die for a country that doesn’t care about us?
HOLD UP. You're telling me those weird LOTC/JROTC classes are NOT in every school in the US? They had us thinking it was normal as algebra.
In simple terms: IT AINT WORTH IT. We’ve seen how they come back from it. But not only that, how they’re treated. Why tf would I give my life to people who don’t care? And for a government who doesn’t care. I’ve seen them around, veterans walking the streets in pure homelessness. And nobody helps either. Why would I put myself through that?
It’s definitely worth it!
@@kelj4517yeah if your mission is to be homeless with PSTD.
@a_9408
I’m a veteran and I’m not homeless!
@@kelj4517maybe 20-30 years ago but not now
The military helped me gain discipline and showed me Europe, where I learned different, more social and more peaceful ways of life. Now, at 60 years of age,I would never again set foot in the USA, which spends billions on planes and tanks and rockets to kill people in other countries who are only guilty of having another way of life, not agreeing with America‘s military aggression or possessing resources which America wants. And, in the meantime, Americans are living in tents or not getting the medicines they need in order to survive. They are kept poor, which has always helped military recruiting. But don’t believe me. Just think about it. Travel abroad, learn for yourself and then decide if those in Washington are really acting in your interests and if you want to be a part of that. Especially if it involves going to other countries to kill people who also have spouses, parents and children and haven’t done anything to you. Have a good one.
Very well said a person with a true grip on the situation and reality of the usa
Thank you for this comment. I wish you well.
Bruh really said “latinx” that’s crazy.
He said "Latin", the image on screen said "Latinx".
@@cakecheese2895 4:09
@@artrayus3 oh he did say "Latin x". Ah.
As a former Army Recruiter, schools aren't targeted based on class or status, they're targeted when recruiters are allowed to go to them.
The schools in poorer communities tend to allow recruiters where schools in more wealthy communities tend to limit recruiters to their mandated two visits per year.
Our goal was to visit as many schools as possible as often as possible, but it's up to the individual school on how often we can go and what we can do while we are there.
Can you see the draft returning for low recruitment ?🤦🏽♀️
@@demikavato4275 Unless a large scale war kicks off (which would demand the drafts return regardless) there won't be a draft.
Lol. They come to lower classes more than the rich bc they were targeted. It's those lies that makes us not want to join 😂.
Lmao think you missed the point 😂😂🤣
@@minfamous5841 I wasn't referring to the overall point of the video. This is in reference to a specific point made within the video.
How about the elites send their kids to join up first?
Why do they always send the poor?
@@jadetea6112 thinking from a rich mindset perspective, the poor are expandable while the rich are immune or deemed "Too Important" to be sent into a warzone. There's more poor then rich so it would make sense from that perspective.
That is the number one reason since the 1960s the upper classes not just white but all - corporate , entertainment, sports, media, academia, etc - have abandoned and look down on the military case in point prez 45 was a 5 time draft dodger! Until they sign up in numbers, no one else should!
i spent 3 years in the JROTC program, enjoyed it, made some good friends, and made me head strong to join the military after i turned 18. Went to the recruitment office on my own and ill make a long story short, was told i needed college credits to join i responded really? recruiter: yup. I then left. thinking well damn. Got a regular job, smoked weed daily and am now 29.
I’m actually 16 and I was going to sign up for West Point my junior year. My entire family were military as far back as around WW1 and maybe even the Civil War. My dad was actually a marine in the Gulf war in 1991 along with my uncle so I had plenty of legacy and motivation to serve. I’m also infatuated with military history and have grades that more than meet west points requirements, along with already passing all of their fitness standards.
However, my mother immediately shut down the idea of serving. She had heard about how many veterans struggled with mental issues and lack of support for veterans. She’d also heard horror stories from my dad who had served in one of the artillery batteries that shelled the “Highway of Death” in Iraq. She absolutely refused to even allow me to apply out of all this fear from what could happen; so know I’m studying to go to law school instead, and hopefully become a federal judge or senator.
I likely could’ve been an effective officer, but all of the malpractice and lack of support for veterans is what turned me away and I honestly believe the same is true for most talented young people, so this isn’t just a crisis for enlistment it’s a crisis for effective leadership that will lead the military in the future.
I hope I do not insult your mother with this post. She is well with in her rights to be worried about her son. Service is thinking about others. Your mother was rightly thinking about you, her son. You as a person must make decisions for yourself. Also do not forget if you give the military 10 years you can spend the rest of your life to provide that effective leadership with first hand knowledge of those who also serve. Since this is the internet let me go completely insane. If you join and the second worse thing happens and your are injured and still in your right mind you can still provide effective leadership. If the worse thing happens I hope you leave a record of some kind to provide inspiration so other will make that sacrifice.
@@damongraham1398 your comment was by no means an insult, and I’d actually thank you for a constructive response. My decision to not join the military was mostly due to her insistence, but also my own personality. I’m extremely extroverted; to the point that I’ll often gather a crowd of people around me when I talk in public. My father, the gulf war vet, was in full support of my prospective military career but also warned me that my personality wouldn’t mix well with the culture of discipline required for an enlisted man let alone an officer. I have no doubt I could adjust if the situation deemed it necessary, but I know from my time in school and in public that I’ll likely succeed in whatever’s field I put my mind to, and that just so happens to be as a lawyer and politician, as I am still, and will always be patriotic for America. I hope that In my future career I’m able to fight against the current corruption and lackadaisical nature that plagues the government.
@@motivationallizard6644 So pretend I am a reporter asking the future politician "would you support whistle blower laws to protect people that have information about corruption wherever it may be found? I'm not understanding the "drawing a crowd" is a bad thing?
@@damongraham1398 it’s not a bad think, but I tend to speak my mind whenever asked, and if something seems inefficient or redundant I’ll call it out regardless of seniority or rank. I’ve been doing this since I was ten, to the point that my teachers would occasionally just let me teach my history classes because I knew the information better than they did. If I were to mouth off to a superior in the military of all places I seriously doubt it would go well for me, especially with how often I call even minor infractions out.
@@motivationallizard6644 are you saying that as a smart guy you would not know when to pick your battles?
My army recruiter screwed me over and I got permanently disqualified, she and the whole recruiting station blocked my number, only when I went in did they try to play nice.
Context is I had depression for three years of HS, and MEPS takes that very seriously since you're considered a liability, not only did my recruiter withhold that info but sat me in a room reciting lies that would get me to pass, well nowI will never be able to join, and when I tried to contact anyone to have this investigated, they shot it down or ignored my calls.
This opened my eyes ro the fact the military doesn't give a fuck about any of their members or people trying to join, then they'll complain about recruitment shortages
I'm 24 now. Had Brain Cancer and surgery at 9. And they won't let me get past the requirement office. I've tried 3 times now. I know I'm only 4'11 with scare tissue on my lungs. But for christ sakes let me serve my country.
You cant just go in there and say you have drepression from the get go. Lmao did you really think theyre just gonna let you in with that? 😂😂😂
@@Ziton98 they want able bodied people who are an asset not unhealthy useless deadweight
Your first mistake was telling them you had depression, Jesus do people think it’s smart to tell those recruiters every single thing? I got in telling them I was a fuckin pot head
Though their methods sound a bit sketchy, military recruiters have to go through the entire recruitment routine so they can log data points (# of calls to potential recruits, how many interviews, etc.). They blocked your number, I'd hazard a guess, because you kept calling and begging them to reconsider (inferred by your bothering to call them at all rather than dropping the matter). That's not how the military does things. Be thankful, though, as you'd likely have become an FTA if you joined up, and that'd be depressing af in itself. No one wants to fail Basic--esp as an FTA--but it's hella difficult, pushes you *beyond* beyond, and 15% bottom out regardless. Even if you think you're well past your MH issues, you're likely to crack like a walnut in boot camp. Be thankful you've made it over the major hurdle of your depression and move on.
(Sources for my knowledge:
3 brothers, 2 sisters military veterans. One sister a GS employee who worked in a US Army recruiting office as a Communications Specialist.)
i have grown up watching worthless wars being fought. this is why gen z doesnt want to join. they know they will be dying for an old mans war.
Fellow Gen-Z'er here. The main reason why I don't want to join the military is that I don't want to wind up committing war crimes. I was shocked to find out that our military tends to commit war crimes almost on a daily basis. The Iraq war warped my viewpoint on how the US's rules of engagement is just the means of terrorizing the countries populace, that would eventually lead to a rise of an insurgency and subvert our morale, believing that we have come in as liberators. War is nothing but lies, unessesary loss of life, and profiteering.
And if anything, I ever get the draft off to a major conflict, I'll put a bullet in my head before I ever get the chance of getting drafted. Mark my words.
lol
lol wtf
Don’t die for wall street
Keep your legs
I mean, most likely you wouldn't even end up deployed, or deployed to Le Bore McBoringass.
All the rest though, yeah it sucks.
They don’t want to deal with: Your medical condition is not service related.
My simple answer is that the pay is not worth the work ethic. I work at a hardware store as a wall coverings salesman and I’m making just as much at a senior airman. And even if we do go to war we’d be fighting for nothing but for the rich to get richer and the poor to get poorer. You’re better off getting a trade or going to a job fair.
I remember the day I graduated Basic and we stop at Golden Corral for lunch on our way to AIT. There were homeless veterans outside asking us for money 😂
@@CenaCuts cause the government don’t care about the people that sacrifice their life for their country. And then they wonder why nobody is trying to join or resign.
@@CenaCuts irony
There is no free market when a private central bank is controlling your currency ! The millitary is for protecting US dollar global hegemony and corporate interest. Your basically fighting for slavery including your own in the US millitary !
The Government has plenty of recruits,now,they don’t need ourSons
I am a millennial born in the 90s. I was very close to joining the military after high school but my Mother talked me out of it. I currently work in banking and the director of my department is a veteran. There is a lot of trauma you can experience and the benefits are not worth it. Also there are many veterans who end up homeless and jobless after serving!
if you end up homeless after serving it's your own fault, the VA loan gets you a house easily
This is by choice. I have 2 houses from VA loans. I also got a job halfway through school after I retired because I was military.
😂 if you’re mom was able to talk you out of joining the military then you were never going to join in the first place 😂
Also more Vets are ripping the VA off than the other way around I’m a USMC Vet and know tons of doods who took the VA service related injury money afterwards.
Vets get first in line at jobs, free housing way more than the average citizen has.
You clearly have zero idea what you’re talking about
@@Runandgun13I know so many people who literally sat on there asses all day on their phones and got out and got free college and free housing and these civilians are like “the juice ain’t worth the squeeze”
You had a good mom. Fuck the US military.
Commandment 6 written on some stone tablets by Moses - Thou shalt not murder.
Pretty unequivocally clear and to the point.
The billion you mentioned was split between our forces and private contractors that are categorized under military. Because of the latter’s over funding, it leaves the former greatly in want and need for better support.
I just started the process of adding to my VA disability yesterday. Blown ACL in my knee. Tinnitus. Depression. Anxiety. Respiratory ailments from breathing the air in Baghdad. You name it. I'm 50. I'd like to just get to 100% and go into semi-retirement.
I do not recommend joining. Mainly because America fights wars that whether we win or lose, do not effect daily life in America at all. I was not securing your freedom when I was in Iraq. Our freedom is largely the consequence of being bordered by two beningn neighbors and two vast oceans. And my being an artilleryman on 9/11 did not prevent 9/11.
America's military is designed to fight in other countries. Because there is no plausible mission for a force that size here.
To put it another way, Brazil doesn't have a "Wounded Warriors Program". Why? Because Brazil's army stays in Brazil.
Thank you for taking the time to share your experience and perspective. It means a lot. And thank you for your service, and hope you get the care and benefits you deserve.
Never ever join the military, you will die for the rich people and no one and I mean no one will care. Just look at what happened to the Vietnam Veterans. 😢
The vast majority of veterans never see combat and even fewer are wounded or killed in combat. Sure if you joined at the height of the wars in Iraq
Afghanistan or Vietnam, you have a higher than average chance of being killed or wounded,but plenty of veterans from the mid 70s until the early 2000s,served in relative peace broken by short sharp wars America usually won and the troops got their parades. The people who do care are veterans and you would be surprised at how many are in the civilian workforce sitting across a table from you during a hiring interview.
Perks of the Military: Things you would automatically have access to I other countries.
Yep
Try extending those benefits across a nation as large as ours with as disparate societies as contained within our borders and with such wild and variated economic situations. It's never going to happen. The only way ever would is if we split off into our sovereign states and strove to do so on a local level. I do not believe we would be able to do so as a federal nation.
@@Deridus wrong universal healthcare and education would be easy to achieve in a country with the largest GDP in the world.
@@jakeawad2531 I have seen plenty of graphs that attempt to prove this... to date, they lack data showing that enough medical professionals are on hand to provide care to the assumed influx of new patients. Add in that the corruption that would doubtlessly follow from this, price-fixing would only help a little. There are plenty of ways that it could be implemented but I do not see a way to get through the corruption... Not without massive changes that no doubt still need to happen regardless. Do not get me wrong, the current health system of the United States is a joke. In a way it is a microcosm of all of the problems currently being suffered by Americans.
@@DeridusI think it's completely possible but taxes would triple. Free Healthcare and schooling but high taxes and people would still complain there is no way of satisfying everyone.
Everyone of my family members that have served say the same thing: "Don't"
Imagine risking your life and mental health for a country that will hate you once you are of no use for them...
Veterans are treated like shit once they exit service LMAO.
I'm a member of Gen Z and multiple of my friends, white, black, and latino alike joined various branches of the military (Mainly Army and Marines, with one or two going into the Navy). Growing up, I wanted to be one of them, joining the Army was one of my life goals for years, up until I was about 17. By this point, the idea of harm coming to me, PTSD, etc. etc. wasn't something that really phased me. The main reasons I ultimately decided against heading into the military was the lack of care given by higher-ups and a general loss of faith in the government. Personally, I despise our current governmental entities on nearly every level, why would I volunteer to serve them? I still see the military as an honorable thing, and national security as something that is important to me, but I can't willingly serve politicians who view me and my hypothetical fellow soldiers to die for nothing, in wars that do nothing but serve the elite, and fight for something I don't even believe in.
Great that you didn't join
Multiple members of my family have served and done fine-but they all got lucky, and at least two of them didn't have a say in the matter ("thanks" to the draft). Unless it was through a service academy, I could never, for many reasons, including the ones you mention. The 1% and our political powerhouses (both D and R) need to send their children to the frontlines, or go themselves. They complain that our military is shrinking and weakening-time for them to lead by example!
yeah.. now you kids can just get PTSD from being called the wrogn pronouns.. no need to join the military to get abused
There is no free market when a private central bank is controlling your currency ! The millitary is for protecting US dollar global hegemony and corporate interest. Your basically fighting for slavery including your own in the US millitary !
Personally joining the navy has been the best decision I’ve ever made but seeing how things are going from the inside I can’t blame anyone for not wanting to join. We’re moving in the wrong direction and service members are being taken for granted.
moving in? It's gone off the cliff since I got out. They literally run insane bs about pronouns and fudge packing on AFN.
When u joined?
@@EnabIing 2014
There is no free market when a private central bank is controlling your currency ! The millitary is for protecting US dollar global hegemony and corporate interest. Your basically fighting for slavery including your own in the US millitary !
Ive grown up surrounded by military my entire life. I’ve literally only ever met two people who signed up because they WANTED to. Everyone else did it because they didnt think they had another choice. I work for the govt and i see how much money they waste… youd think theyd put more into the actual bodies that are sacrificing years of their lives.
Great and informative video! I normally don't comment on YT videos but as a veteran (I was on active duty Army for over 7 years), I thought I'd post. Great points were made but I also think that Gen Z saw the massive mistakes and horrendous end result from our last two wars; Afghanistan lasting 20 years only to have the Taliban return was not an outcome anyone wanted. Also, take the legacy families who for generations have served. After those 2 wars and the trauma experienced, those vets are not advocating or encouraging their children to join. Not to generalize but I think the last point is only going to increase over time. Kids today know they deserve adequate pay, respect, and stability. Unfortunately, the military isn't the best option for most people today. Furthermore getting rid of the MAVNI program (allowing non-citizens to serve to help gain their citizenship) was a blow that hurt crucial jobs within the military. I always found it sad that non-citizens are more eager to serve than those born here.
Great points and perspective! Thanks for watching the video and taking the time to share your opinions.
Soon they may have no choice but to bring MAVNI back, as well as other paths like the prison-or-military route. This dearth of willing and able recruits is only going to worsen over time, and another draft is a fantastic way to send the country headfirst into chaos-especially in the era of social media
I would fight for my country, but not my government
Hear, hear. This, coming from an Iraq War vet.
This is why forming militias is in our constitution. In order to fight tyranny.
Let their kids do the fighting.
This 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸 if we get invaded, we'll figure it out. Not the government or our military.
We will.
Can the government even protect us in the event of that anyways? They lost in Afghanistan after all, and Vietnam, and arguably Iraq too.
I'm a GenX, and I've been rejecting the military for decades.
You look like you're 50, and your TH-cam bio says you dropped of college in 1992.
You look like atleast in your late 40s and mid 50s.
I'm finding more and more parents discouraging their kids as if it's a last resort. Just beautiful cause the military deserves it.
Nobody wanna die for 40,000.
I got out of the Marine Corps in 2014 Im worse of a human being then i ever was. Ive had failed marriages, failed relationships and ruined relationships with my family. Im a loner now and live a life of pain and also an alcoholic. I am absolutely worse of a human being i ever was. The thing is I dont care I am who I am now and havnt seen my daughter in years but im emotionally numb
Might be because you can be an E-4 or E-5 and still need a 2nd job or foodstamps.
Knew a friend who was a staff sergeant in the airforce with me and lived on base housing and it shocked me when he told me he was on them I couldn't fucking believe it
I knew what it was like to be an e-4 specialist/corporal and be broke every month!
Im not joining any kind of army, The kids heard their elders and the ones who came home with trauma, Its been like that since centuries, Theyre not dying for a pointless cause.
The general appeal of the military is that its a miserable experience done for the higher cause of protecting one's country. But how long has it been since we've been engaged in combat that directly kept America safe? If people don't believe in the higher cause its just a pointless miserable experience.
The Navy trained me as a Nuclear Electrician, which made it possible to leave NJ, earn a bachelor and a masters and become employed in a Nuclear Utility and earn aprox $110K/yr. If you are a citizen, if you are able bodied, if you meet the physical requirements and if you are strong academically, it could be very beneficial to join. But DO YOUR RESEARCH AND KNOW WHAT YOU’RE SIGNING UP FOR. As someone who was a recruiter for the last 3 years in I can tell you there are a lot of unscrupulous recruiters that will tell you anything to get you to sign up. But ALL the information (down to what each day in boot camp is like) is in the internet. Also, only the Navy and Air Force are the ONLY ones that can guarantee you the job you sign up for (provided you qualify and pass training) other branches (Army, Marines etc) May train you in one thing but your job may be in something else. My training was Nuclear school and my job was as a nuclear electrician on a carrier.
Thank you for watching and sharing your experience and perspective. So important to hear from people who have actually served to understand this issue more deeply.
Exactly, it only works if you come prequalified. And licensed. You get straight sent to the top. Or if you got through rotc, went into officer school or got lucky in a lottery to go to officer school.
I've always told my young soldiers, that the military is what you make of it.
Just like any other aspect of life.
Life isnt that much easier, expecting the military to build you, while not investing in yourself... Leads to discontentment.
thanks for making that point about the Navy and Air Force guaranteeing you the job you signed up for. i never knew that.
@@AboveTheNoisesomalia did sign crc
Thanks for posting. Most will agree if you have a veteran in your life, it works wonders in repelling any urge to go to bat for a nation that cares nothing for it's defenders and views them as capital in a business venture.
so how can you say the nation cares nothing. Like all humanity, the V.A. is not perfect. It is improving.
@@damongraham1398 You're not wrong, but pointless wars endanger good people. Take it easy my friend.
@@theblackknights4281 talking to possible recruits and vet about pointless wars is preaching to the choir. Even though I am a Vet I agree with people that say the military budget should be cut in half. Yes, that will leave the U.S. vulnerable but IF nothing happens that money could change a lot of lives.
@@damongraham1398 Thank you for sharing your perspective, I am not a veteran as you may have guessed just deeply saddened by this mess the nations of the world are entrenched in, not exclusively military policy.
@@damongraham1398 Cutting the budget would do anything BUT leave us vulnerable, saying it will is just propaganda from defense contractors who preach the same line to Congress every year clamoring for more tax dollars. If anything, halving the budget will eliminate much of the waste, fraud and abuse.
Gen Z don't have time for going to war. They need to work 50 hours a week so they can afford to buy their first house and starting a family when they reach 60.
I recently saw a video of Iraq War veterans who were documented in 2003 by the NYT and again this year to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the invasion. All I’m going to say is that video by it self is enough to make you reconsider joining the military. The reoccurring theme was you might leave the war but the war will never leave you.
I still remember the video of a woman in her 18s, or 20s who joined the militia, and she and other colleagues were r*ped by a superior.
Somehow her lawyers managed to lose the case 2 times before getting to court, and never got justice, the girl ended the video saying that nothing has changed in the military, they want more young people to join, while cases like these continue to happen and nobody does anything.
Another comment I saw that was repeated a lot is how bad the leadership of the militia is, and how they humiliate the new recruits rather than teach them.
One of my favorite animated Gags is American Dad when son was expelled from school and an Army Recruiters knocks on his door saying 'We'll take him!" The Dad says "Stay Away from My Son you Vultures!" (or something) and slams the door in his face. He then cracks open again to say: "Thank you for your service" I think it reflects a lot of attitudes torwards the military.
Don't worry about recruiting. Worry about draft notices.
Right. I'm a woman so I'll just get pregnant 😂
Dealing with the VA is the cherry on top of a disgruntling military service.
Imagine teaching an entire generation to hate the country and then wondering why no one wants to enlist to defend it.
You should be skeptical, I served 6 years and speak from experience. They will lie to you and make incentives extremely difficult to use.
Also its incredibly easy to go online and find serious military horror stories while not in some form of combat environment
To say nothing of non combat related horror stories.
Treat your veterans with respect and maybe it wouldn’t be so hard to recruit. But who knows. I’m not a general.
I think you answered your own question...most of gen z has mental health issues, overweight, underweight and have been incarcerated. I think a lot of the con of the military has been exposed too. I know plenty of people from all branches that wouldn't recommend it, even if you go in as an officer.
It is a tuff problem.
Part of it is the same problem as for leaders. Those who want to lead are often not the best leaders and those who want to be soldiers are often not the best soldiers.
That's how it was when I was in the army,I did my contract and bounced !!! LOL. Didn't want to continue being lied to/on,folks playing mind-games.
No, it's 100% the leaders my guy. What type of enlisted you are doesn't really matter (yes exceptions), but if you're in a leadership position you should be able to motivate and build upon everyone subordinate to you.
My dad was part of Desert Storm. He served almost two years before having to go back home because my uncle had died in an accident.
He would ask me 15 years ago constantly if I was interested in enlisting and serving, but I always answered that I wasn't. He's now 55 and he's been feeling the repercussions of his service hard. He had cancer that he's now in remission for, and he has severe hearing loss in one ear, skin conditions and damage to the joints. His doctors at the Veterans' Hospital have explained that all of those conditions have been seen very frequently in other Gulf War veterans. It's really sad and it's a huge part of why I never wanted to serve unless extremely necessary.
My mother wanted me to enlist in the Air Force with my brother 15 years ago. THIS is what she wanted me to deal with? Death, PTSD, etc.? Yet, because I chose not to get myself killed, I'm viewed as a coward.
That sounds rough. Good for you for sticking to your convictions and doing what you feel is right for YOU.
As someone that is invested into the military, joining the air force is the equivalent of going to college with 45 min " workouts" 😂
There's a reason why yalls nickname is the chair force😂
@@BB_The_GamerLol this is what I thought. I support the guys choice for not joining regardless tho
@@openingshift7070 yeah ig you are right, I just wanted to have little fun.
Dude the Air force is literally just corporate jobs with government benefits 🤣
“Conventions on the Rights of a Child ... Only Somalia and the US have refused to sign it.”
As a Somali, I am saddened by the company we find ourselves in. 😔 We can do better, people.
The US has signed, but has not ratified all portions of the treaty. It’s also important to point out that said treaty rings hollow when you remember that out of all nations that did sign, over 25 still have some form of conscription or mandatory registration for possible conscription in place, enforced or not. I’d take that statement in the video with a sizable grain of salt if I were you
@@thebestcentaur yeh that statement confused me as there's mandatory conscription for people in other countries in the UN but the US allowing 17 year olds to sign up/not formally join until 18 is the "problem"
I'm Canadian and the only time I ever got anything resembling military recruitment propoganda in my school life was a voluntary field trip to the military museum in November for Remembrance day (American Veteran's day), and that class was also an optional film class. And it was just a veteran telling us what it's like. He said he loved his job and all, but yeah it's definitely not for everyone. I think the immense propaganda the US military does is unbelievable, especially towards minors.
I did JROTC and joined the army and I enjoyed JROTC it was fun while I already wanted to join the army before because of my dad but honestly all it did was let me talk to more veterans and a easy grade wearing a uniform every Wednesday I also joined the army at age seventeen and I had a good experience so far and am looking forward to a good career
I have probalby forgot so do you join your senior year and graduate early.?
That run-on sentence alone should disqualify you from service honestly.
The thing is they expect us to join the military but I don't see their kids joining the military
I’m not dying for a country that constantly shows it’s lack of commitment to its citizens. The rights of my family are being taken away at an astounding rate, I will not support this country in any way.