Monday, November 7, 2011

There’s the “New Military All Volunteer Force” and then there is the old military of thirty-five years ago, the old military that was all but destroyed by the Vietnam War. The huge difference was there was a draft that functioned because young men believed it was their duty to serve. That changed after a few years of the Vietnam experience. In fact not only did young men refuse to be inducted but it was almost mutiny on many levels by those serving. It has never recovered from being used as brutal and murderous method of spreading globalism and world hegemony.


The GW-1 vets may recall remnants of the “Old Military” as some of it’s past glory had survived but GW-2 and Afghanistan vets do not. They are the sons of the “Old Military” Vietnam Vets like myself and I watched the change to the “New Military” and it was/is not pretty. My last two years spent (in the Old Military)was as a recruiter at the very beginning of this transition to the “All Volunteer Service” as the draft ended.

The New Military from my experience now consists of mercs and a wide range of social engineering programs like gender norming, gay and lesbian acceptance and an entire plethora of touchy-feely crap that plays well for modern day recruiters and of course the Congressional money managers.



However, sooner or later the “New Military” would be called to do what military organizations are supposed to do, kill people and blow shit up. This is where our new military shines. They have indoctrinated a large segment of our kids into becoming psychopaths and some just down right killers. Assassination and torture are now mainstays of of military (and political) policy. All that touchy feely shit they say they are teaching seems to have a short shelf life once these kids are deployed. You can tell what it’s doing to them by the amount of suicides (the highest ever) among the lower ranking enlisted men. The extreme mental problems tare evident in those that survive and the out of control crime rates around all of our military bases once they return to “the World.”



I remain very proud of my eight years spent in uniform in the “Old Military.” The “New Military” that I served in briefly however, not so much!

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