February 7, 2012

Top Reasons to Join the Military

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Top Reasons to Join the Military

People decide that they would like to join the military for a wide variety of different reasons. Everyone has his or her own distinct reasons for joining depending on personal preference, life situation and career goals. Here are some of the top reasons for why people join up:

As a Test of Courage: For many people, joining the military is sort of like a daring activity. People go and join up with the military because they want an opportunity to prove that they are brave and courageous and that they have the guts to do it. For many people, it is just a “man thing”. Many men join the military because they feel like it is a way for them to prove that they are strong and tough, because not just anyone can “make it” in the military.

For Good Citizenship: For many people, the reason why they decide that they would like to join the military is because they want to fight for their beloved country, becoming a good citizen. The pride that comes with joining the military and being able to fight for your country is something that cannot be replicated in any other way. Being able to join the military is like pledging your allegiance to the entire country by proving that you would be willing to do anything to pay tribute to your home country. The biggest consideration when this is the course of action that you take is the fact that once you make the decision, it is not one that you can simply take back at will.

These are just a couple of the reasons for why someone might like to join the military. Ultimately it is up to you to decide which reason is going to drive you to join up as well. Just keep in mind that the military is not ideal for everyone, but it may just be ideal for you.

Recruiting for the Air Force

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Recruiting for the Air Force

The Air Force is one of the hardest services for you to join, tied with the Coast Guard. There are approximately 27,800 recruits that are enlisted every single year, which is a big difference in comparison to the Army, which recruits an average of 80,000 brand new recruits every single year. In the 2009 fiscal year, the Air Force decided to increase their goal as a means of making up for downsizing in previous years, and so they raised their goal to 31,980 new recruits. In the 2010 fiscal year the goal for active duty recruiting became 31,750.

In the past several years, more people have volunteered for the Air Force than the service really has room for. They have actually met if not exceeded all of their recruitment goals for the last ten years. What this means is that the Air Force is a service that can be a little pickier about who they do and do not let in since there are so many exceptionally qualified applicants trying to join.

The Air Force has a minimum ASVAB score requirement which is 36 in order to enlist. If you score at a 50 or higher then you are going to have a better chance of getting in, especially considering how competitive it is. The Air Force seems to like to bring in new recruits that score at a 75 or higher, with the maximum score being 100. Testing well on the ASVAB can play a very important role in helping you to get recruited to the air force when this is the service that you definitely want to work for.

The number of prior service applications that the Air Force accepts on an annual basis is generally very low. Typically in order to enlist in the air force, a prior service applicant should already be pre qualified for an Air Force job that is considered to be critically undermanned at current, or they must otherwise qualify for a special operations job and agree to enlist in that job in order to be recruited.

Showing Appreciation for Tough Job

Showing Appreciation for Tough Job

For those families who are left to deal with a soldier who is off fighting for the freedom of the United States it is a full time job to keep the family running in their absence. There are several ways that others can help these military families make it through the absence of their loved ones. One great idea is to offer to help with some basics like shopping or babysitting. These are a big deal for a home that may have one parent away at war and another home trying to balance it all. This little bit of weight lifted from their shoulders can really make a big difference and help them manage everything from their emotions to the basics the family needs.

Another great way to help a family who is waiting for a soldier to come home from a war is taking the time to honor them by offering to cook a meal a week for their family or giving them the ability to take a time out and relax while you take them to a picnic for families who are waiting for a loved one. This is great way to get these families together and be able to support one another while expressing appreciation for all that you do every day to keep it all together for the soldier. You can even put together a mass play date for all of the children of families who have soldiers hard at work for the citizens.

Any bit of help that families of the military can get will go a long way to making their difficult wait a little less stressful. Knowing that they are being supported by the community is vital to helping them make it through the process.

Tactics Used in Military Recruitment

Since America is currently at war, enlistment numbers are down for all branches of the military. It’s very hard to convince people, particularly high school students, that it is worth risking their lives to enlist in the military. Military recruiters use a number of strategies and tactics to try to convince people to join their ranks.

Military recruiters aim to make themselves part of a high school’s community. If they are trusted by the faculty and the students, they are more likely to be able to convince students that they are truly looking out for their best interests in convincing them to join the military. They do this by becoming friends with class leaders, such as athletes, student council members, and class officers. They also become friends with the faculty so that they may participate in more school activities.

Another part of military recruitment is playing up the positive aspects of the military. When recruiting in small towns, recruiters may tell students about all of the countries they can see as an enlisted member. It’s an extremely appealing prospect to someone who has never left their hometown. As the cost of college climbs, the tuition payment aspect of the military is used more and more as a selling point. The military will pay up to $250 per credit hour; students that dread student loans may listen to a recruiter if they talk about tuition reimbursement.

Recruiters also play on the heartstrings of students and potential service members. By talking about America and what an honor it is to serve their country, they inspire patriotic feelings in students and subtly encourage them to make the same dedication to their country.

As recruiters continue to miss their recruiting goals, high school students across the country can expect to see more aggressive recruitment tactics in use.

The Social Media Home Front

It’s well known that soldiers can fire a gun and follow orders. But now soldiers are posting blogs and following tweets. With the advent of social media and internet marketing, the US military is hopping on board the social networking bandwagon.

Military blogs are one of the best ways to stay in the know with soldiers around the world. An insider’s perspective, and on-the-ground look at life in the military is now within reach of anyone at a computer. There is a network of military blogs that are endorsed by the US military, but written by deployed personnel in all branches of the military, as well as veterans, reserves, and spouses and family members of the deployed. Readers can follow their favorite blogs to receive updates on the life of a soldier in the front lines in Afghanistan, in the guerrilla lines in Iraq, or deployed on any other mission. There is a blog for almost any current deployment.

It’s possible to “friend” on Facebook any of the US military branches, such as the US Navy, which maintains a Facebook group with interesting videos, photos, and news clips. Many Navy servicemembers and family members will post on the wall to say hello to each other.

The US Army is now undergoing a social media campaign that will allow the Army to interact with civilians and wider society with more ease. One of the major benefits of social media is community-building. Although virtual, social media networks allow family members and servicemembers to join together and share their thoughts, hopes, and fears with each other.

Many units of the US military already have e-newsletters that have been in print and/or published online. But social media allows for a dialogue, so that the military’s readership can now give feedback and express their opinions with more ease than ever before.

Taking Over Someone Else’s War in Fear

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Between 1955 and 1961, the U.S. Government deposited 78 percent of the total American foreign aid program into a single point on the globe. Fear of communism spawned the idea. Fear of leaving our recent WWII ally, France, holding the bag in Vietnam fed the infection. Even though Ho Chi Minh begged for help in creating a democracy to replace the vulgar dictatorial rule of France, the U.S. government turned a blind eye, opening the door to one of the greatest ‘non-war’ disasters in American history.

It is pretty easy to point fingers 45 years later. What turned into a worldwide disaster was created due to fear and pride running the show. If a person makes decisions based on fear and pride, the ability to use logic and wisdom gets thrown out the door. It doesn’t matter if the decision maker is a single woman raising two kids, or a general minding an army of a million. Using fear as the primary starting point in decision making will ruin your day. In the event you are the general, it could ruin many people’s days to tune of a war that lasts 25 years. That cost includes the lives of military personnel and civilians on both sides of the conflict not only is countless deaths, but in emotional damage that lasts generations afterwards.

Were power, greed and corruption involved in the Vietnam conflict? Ask yourself this question: What war has not included greed and corruption?

The men and women who serve in the armed forces most often enter wanting to help. You may know dozens of vets, young and old, and you will get very much the same answer from each: they want to help the democratic cause.

A huge number of Americans do not study history even when they are taking the classes. This leaves a nation blind to realities of war. One of the realities of war is that most people involved are innocent people who desire to give what they can to make humanity right. So what needs fixing? Fear. Something our soldiers are taught not to do.

Credibility

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The North Vietnamese launched a massive attack on South Vietnam in March of  ’72. It was just before the presidential election. They knew the President could not politically afford to re-enter American troops into the very old and costly fray after beginning the withdrawal. It was a political move to put egg of Nixon’s face just before the peace talks. The attack was also backed up by Soviet tanks, muddying the water for peace there as well. It was a war between the Soviets and Americans on Vietnamese soil. In the end, everyone lost.

This was the time that Hanoi bombing began. Nixon brought his thoughts of the mater to verbal discourse stating that the American president would lose credibility if he had force and didn’t use it. By that time, the American people were more than fed up with the abuse of their soldiers on both land and sea, so had half the world. To save face, Richard Nixon pulled out all the stops. It was a case of American might throwing a last punch at Soviet might.

This was a war that should have ended before it started. Even in the late fifties the writing was on the wall. Decisions were made greatly to save face, make money, and gain huge advantages in global positioning against China and the Soviet Union. But in the end, as Nixon stated, it was a matter of credibility. Put more bluntly, it escalated from Kennedy, to LBJ, to Nixon in an effort to keep from being embarrassed.

No one behaves themselves during war, especially wars being fought with so many contradictory reasons for being there.

Credibility gap: a perceived discrepancy between statements and actual performance or behavior. There were many statements in a twenty-five year period of time that were never backed up by successful action. One must remember that in wars, no one wins. Not really. Credibility never existed in the first place, except in the hands of the ones doing the fighting.

The vets are credible for the most part. Government leaders tend to miss that mark.

Shake it Off

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Susan was born in Austin and now operates her own business in the Pacific North West. She is an acupuncturist who runs a mobile business, working with unemployed, homeless, and derelicts of all sorts. Of course many of her patients are well rounded folks who just have injuries they can’t seem to cope with. Susan’s skills are quite good. She does her share of curing what normal M.D.s can’t.

Susan puts up with a lot. Most of her clientele are accident victims sent to her by insurance companies. Large numbers of her patients have no money, are alcoholic, and display a number of behaviors that would make the average person sick. Susan works on them. She is a tough nut and after two years of this kind of punishment, she perseveres, newborn infant and all.

About a decade ago, Susan did a stint in the Navy. Going in, she was one of those kids who always had a smile on her face and would bend over backwards to help another in need. But she was green, gullible and had no outer shell.
If you ask Susan what she thought of the Navy she is quick to respond. It was pure hell. She hated it from beginning to end and her stories are graphic. Interestingly she still has that incredible smile and a gift to cure people with it. Her resilience to do what is right was never lost in her hell on the oceans over her four years of torture. She tends to use the words, “Shake it off” when trouble wants to stop her from success. And she does shake it off well—usually within minutes. She is a rare woman.

Susan spent a good deal of time scraping rust off a barge. Weeks of hell. She worked and slept on the rusted hulk, covered in lice. She woke up every morning and shook it off. Often some of the toughest events in your life are the creation of the better part of you. Bad patient? She shakes it off and goes to work removing the rust on the next patient.

A Pre-set Fate

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Earl used to race a souped-up Model A down the streets of L.A. This was in the 1930s. He had a buddy with a shop who milled the heads and did various other things to the buggy to make it romp. Earl went through a number of different hotrods, racing title for title. He was a cut-up all the way around, going pretty much nowhere with his life.

When the United States become active in WWII, Earl’s younger brother, Don, joined the merchant marines at age 17. Earl was never one to be one-upped. He joined the Navy. He became a medic and floated from port to port across the entire globe. He also literally had a wife in Liverpool and one in L.A. He used to buy cheap watches in one port and sell them for triple the price in the next. M.P.s caught onto the doings and attempted to arrest Earl. Earl was sharp. He knew he couldn’t be arrested at his duty station so he slept there, having buddies deliver meals. He once slept at his duty station for two weeks before the M.P.s gave up.

Earl got his hands on a .25 caliber pistol. The troop transport was a converted ocean liner, heavy guns mounted. During gunnery practice, Earl pointed the 25 caliber out the port hole of his stateroom and fired three shots. (Yeah, he had a rough life in the Navy . . . a stateroom.) Gunnery practices ceased immediately. He discovered that the piercing noise of small firearms can be heard through the din of heavy artillery. As he heard the approach of feet, with doors opening and closing, the pistol made it to the bottom of the Atlantic.

The little boy in Earl never quite grew up. At age 80, and as a minister, he still drove like a kid. It eventually cost him his life. Some kids are born to be hell-raisers, and it doesn’t seem to matter how much structure you give them, you can’t save them from themselves. The Navy tried. Earl did what Earl was going to do.

Fragmentation of Humanity (In the Name of Truth)

Rarely is harmony acquired and maintained in humans. People are animals, literally and figuratively. Not all, but the greater portion of the race presumes one thought is the only truth and they will fight to the death to defend their twisted views. Hard pressed to buy that? Look at the splits in practice and thought in Vietnam during the fall of Diem.

Attacks from Hanoi were led by people pleading for freedom from French domination and torture. The world turned a blind eye. Not China. Not USSR. They jumped at the chance . . . to become Vietnam’s captor in sheep’s clothing to push their world view. Diem was corrupt, leadership was frayed and Kennedy handed the reins, not of free will, to Johnson. One assassination followed another, as leaders fell to the guns of hatred and desire to inflict as much damage as possible to control the “truth”.

Bitter wars were fought inside of bitter wars in Vietnam alone, until Johnson felt forced to give full commitment to the South East Asia at the cost of his innovative domestic programs. Some call Johnson an arrogant war hawk. The reality was that Johnson inherited a horrible enterprise and was blinded by his own need to run for president the next term. Politics took over the lead in decision making. Johnson left office totally broken.

A sad side note: two of the larger factions in Vietnam were Buddhists and Catholics, both hating each other, in the name of truth?

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