• @Son_of_dad@lemmy.world
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    1338 months ago

    I find it utterly deplorable when I see army recruiters at cons. They’re always talking to teenagers who are impressionable and feel bullied. I always walk by and tell the teens to not die for someone else’s stock portfolios

    • Lad
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      408 months ago

      I’m from the UK and when I was at school, we went out on a day trip to an army base. It was cool to see all the vehicles and weapons but I remember some British army guys trying to get us to join up by letting us play call of duty in a tent and telling us that we’d get paid for sitting around all day doing nothing.

      I didn’t realise it at the time but now I know they were just plain lying to try and sell army life to a bunch of teenage boys.

      • Echo Dot
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        78 months ago

        I remember something very similar. If they did that to my kid now I will be very angry about it because it’s ridiculous. At least back in the 90s when this happened to me there wasn’t really any ongoing conflicts, not like now where you’re basically guaranteed to have to go fight somewhere.

    • @MBM
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      198 months ago

      The only military recruitment I’ve interacted with is ads and I’m already weirded out by those. The US really is on a different level.

    • @LemmyKnowsBest@lemmy.world
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      -178 months ago

      okay but when I was a young innocent healthy teenager, I did join the army of my own volition and now they are taking care of me for the rest of my life. Some people want to join the Army. Let people do whatever they want.

      • AbsentBird
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        278 months ago

        Good thing we fund the military instead of public healthcare that would take care of everyone.

          • @Honytawk@lemmy.zip
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            168 months ago

            Or you could move to a country where signing away your soul and conciousness in order to murder people your governement deems “dangerous” just isn’t a thing.

            I got all of your benefits, yet didn’t have to join a murder brigade for it.

            • @Estiar@sh.itjust.works
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              18 months ago

              We can’t all live in Iceland. Somebody has to choose violence, because others will choose violence for you. You can’t simply reason with Russia who invaded their neighbors every eight years. The world is messier than it appears and chances are, you are benefiting from someone else’s sacrifice to keep your country secure.

            • @LemmyKnowsBest@lemmy.world
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              8 months ago

              We can’t control what country we are born into. I joined the Army at age 18 because I felt like it. Knowing what I know now, of course I would not have done that. But I did and that’s how my life was and everything is fine now for me. If I hadn’t joined the military, I would have had no support or safety net whatsoever.

              • Echo Dot
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                8 months ago

                Surely you should be advocating for improving your society rather than telling everybody that the only way to get by is to join the military.

                If you joined back in 2000 there’s a very good chance you might be dead by now. If you did join back in 2000 you’re very lucky that you’re not.

              • CopHater69
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                28 months ago

                You can certainly control the propaganda that you’re typing with remarkable efficiency – shut the fuck up, bootlicker.

          • @T156@lemmy.world
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            8 months ago

            Isn’t one of the common complaints about US military healthcare is that it is notoriously terrible? You’d come in with your torso, three arms, and a leg blown off, and you’d be given a panadol for your trouble, whilst getting it put on your record, where it might impair future promotions?

            Even for post-military, it’s still not great. There are countless anecdotes about people having to wrangle with the Veteran’s Association trying to get military acquired injuries classified as such, or simply not getting apporpriate care at all. Particularly when it comes to psychological injury as a result of military service.

            • @LemmyKnowsBest@lemmy.world
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              -18 months ago

              Are you just repeating things you’ve heard from the Vietnam era? I have been fully in the military health care system in Washington DC, Portland Oregon, Reno Nevada, Los Angeles California, and it has all been excellent state-of-the-art care.

              • @T156@lemmy.world
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                38 months ago

                Not at all. I’ve talked with a few friends and acquaintences in Virginia and Florida who very much complain about the woeful state of military healthcare, in addition to seeing the complaints show up here and there on military reddits.

                It’s not entirely anecdotal, though. There are known staff shortages at the moment, although it seems to have been going for a while.

        • @Omgpwnies@lemmy.world
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          18 months ago

          The look on the face of what I am assuming is a cadet in the background is priceless, like “WTF am I getting myself into?”

        • Echo Dot
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          18 months ago

          Batman hadn’t joined up I bet he would have had to have bought his own wheelchair

        • @LemmyKnowsBest@lemmy.world
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          -138 months ago

          All right, you hold onto those rare scenarios and keep assuming that everyone in the military ends up like that. You enjoy working every day for the rest of your life while we get to retire at age 40 or younger.

            • @LemmyKnowsBest@lemmy.world
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              8 months ago

              LOL if I was dead, how do you think I would be talking to you right now?

              All you know about the military is what you’ve heard from the media. If you’ve experienced it you’ll know how boring and uneventful it is and hardly anybody ever gets injured. They pay you money for the rest of your life and you are set.

              Oh and if you like cemeteries so much, military veterans get free burial too. Do you have any idea how much a funeral and a burial costs for civilians? $$$$$$

                • @LemmyKnowsBest@lemmy.world
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                  -58 months ago

                  Like my 89-year-old grandfather who was a World war II veteran, the military paid for his funeral. His death had absolutely nothing to do with military service. He died of old age, decades after World war II.

      • @Honytawk@lemmy.zip
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        168 months ago

        They fuck up your society so they can entice you into joining in order to get benefits other societies get for free.

      • @Maggoty@lemmy.world
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        158 months ago

        Glad it worked out for you. Let’s not force people to risk death, dismemberment, and permanent brain damage just to live an okay life.

        • @LemmyKnowsBest@lemmy.world
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          -108 months ago

          I don’t know anybody I served with in the military who experienced any of those things. We all came out completely alive & whole & thriving, The only person I knew in the military who died, he got in a car accident and died while he was on leave.

          • @Maggoty@lemmy.world
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            198 months ago

            I’m guessing after 2006, with little to no deployment time then?

            My unit still has suicides 20 years later. We had people go home without limbs, with major brain damage, and in body bags.

            And no it wasn’t just us infantry guys. The mechanics had to go out and recover vehicles knowing they’ve been abandoned in the city for hours. That’s probably the only time we weren’t surprised. The logistics guys were driving every day, no matter what the IED report said. And the mortars landing on base didn’t stop to ask what your job was.

            I’m glad you got the other side of the dice. But don’t pretend the shit stick doesn’t exist.

          • Alien Nathan Edward
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            48 months ago

            funny I know 3 people who served and are dead, and one who has just disappeared and I didn’t even serve.

            • @LemmyKnowsBest@lemmy.world
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              -48 months ago

              🙄 I served for 4 years, two of those years I was in school. And none of those years I was in combat, I was in military intelligence, we worked in a bunker, pretty isolated job. Nobody I know died, except for that car accident guy.

              • CopHater69
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                18 months ago

                What MOS has 2 years of school and only 2 years of active duty? You’re full of shit stolen valor.

      • CopHater69
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        78 months ago

        So what you’re saying is the country has no vested interest in supporting its citizens unless they are willing to die for it in which case the scraps thrown to you were sufficient enough to keep you out of abject poverty.

        What a system.

        I’m also a vet and I didn’t get shit.

        • @Estiar@sh.itjust.works
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          08 months ago

          Sorry you didn’t take advantage of the GI bill or any TA or any of the certificates you got or the work experience or potentially security clearance or college credit

      • Alien Nathan Edward
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        58 months ago

        Having schools forward the contact info of low-income, low-performing students to recruiters at the age of 14 so those recruiters can start talking to kids without anyone else’s knowledge and having kindergartners do worksheets with recruiters where they talk about what branch of the service they would join if they could isn’t letting people do whatever they want, it’s grooming children to die for the aristocrats.

    • @thisisnotgoingwell@programming.dev
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      -468 months ago

      It’s not like the army forces you to the job that they want you to do. No one finds themselves in a combat role by surprise. Besides, most military jobs are support based, like logistics or IT. I’d maybe recommend it to someone who doesn’t have money for college but has an interest in something like computer science. But even then, the GI isn’t as big of an incentive as it used to be since a college education doesn’t really guarantee you a comfortable living anymore. I’d probably recommend most people don’t join the military but it can be a good life decision as long as you know what you’re getting yourself into

      • @Viking_Hippie@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        It’s not like the army forces you

        No, it just preys on vulnerable people who are easy to coerce into something they wouldn’t necessarily have chosen for themselves independently. Sound voluntary to you? Or does it sound like cult programming?

        No one finds themselves in a combat role by surprise

        Maybe not, but you’re aware that “do whatever your superiors want you to do up to and including killing people” is kinda the main thing in military culture. And religious cults.

        Besides, most military jobs are support based, like logistics or IT.

        So you’re only coerced into HELPING people kill people? That’s alright then!

        I’d maybe recommend it to someone who doesn’t have money for college

        Yeah, economic coercion is a thing too. If everyone’s telling you that you need college to make a good life for yourself and you can’t afford it, you’re much more likely to be coerced with promises of free college to do something you’d otherwise never do.

        the GI isn’t as big of an incentive as it used to be since a college education doesn’t really guarantee you a comfortable living anymore

        Yeah, it’s a stick instead of a carrot now: used to be that a college education all but guaranteed you a high paying job. Now that you can’t get any except the lowest paying jobs without a degree most places, free college is even MORE of an incentive than back when you could get a middle of the road salary regardless of college.

        I’d probably recommend most people don’t join the military

        I’d recommend no people join. At the very least, their recruiters preying on the vulnerable like they are needs to be illegal.

        as long as you know what you’re getting yourself into

        Which is far from always the case and even when you know, you can still be coerced into it against your will.

          • @Viking_Hippie@lemmy.world
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            48 months ago

            That and the fact that the people and companies profiting from student loans are legally bribing the politicians of both parties, yeah.

        • @SomeAmateur@sh.itjust.works
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          28 months ago

          Military recruiting has to come to you because you can’t just stroll onto a base and check out the place. Just like how you can’t go into an airport so they do airshows to give you a glimpse of what goes on inside the fence. There are scummy recruiters but also those that are very honest about what it can/can’t provide. Many use it to get travel, training and experience the private sector would never pay an unproven rookie to get. Then in a few years they leave and move on to better things on just like any other job.

          And honesty is the best policy. The US military does good and bad, but they sure as hell aren’t the Russians forcing unequipped, untrained kids out to die over a trench.

          If you’re about it be about it, just know what you will be signing up for. Don’t let them choose a career for you.

          • @Viking_Hippie@lemmy.world
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            78 months ago

            Military recruiting has to come to you because you can’t just stroll onto a base and check out the place

            Nope, that’s not it at all. They have actual recruitment offices. They go out to advertise and coerce, not because it’s the only way people can join.

            Just like how you can’t go into an airport so they do airshows to give you a glimpse of what goes on inside the fence

            You most definitely CAN go into an airport. I’ve done it many times myself. I found that it’s usually a requisite for transatlantic travel.

            Kidding aside, airshows are the Top Gun movies in person: it’s all about promotion to make it easier to coerce people into joining and also PR so people will focus less on the killing because they focus on the entertainment.

            You can’t be this gullible, Shirley.

            There are scummy recruiters

            Yeah, that comes with the territory of convincing people to kill people.

            but also those that are very honest about what it can/can’t provide

            Also about the cost? The killing? The high risk of crippling lifelong mental and/or physical harm?

            I bet no recruiters talk about that part.

            Many use it to get travel, training and experience the private sector would never pay an unproven rookie to get

            True, in a way. For all its profiteering, the private sector usually don’t hire people to kill and be killed in faraway countries for no good reason.

            Unless it’s one of the mercenary companies euphemistically referred to as “military contractors” like for example Blackwater/Xe Services/Academi/Constellis Holdings. That’s one company changing their name twice to run from their well-earned reputation as torturers and mass murderers for hire and then merging with another mercenary company.

            Then in a few years they leave and move on to better things

            Unless of course their time in the military have left them permanently physically and/or mentally disabled. Kinda hard to get a good job when you have severe PTSD to the point where it affects your cognitive function and are missing limbs.

            Even MORE difficult if you’re dead.

            And honesty is the best policy

            Not one the military favors, though.

            The US military does good and bad

            With the bad outweighing the good thousandfold. Apart from all the harm to US soldiers, it kills a shitload of innocent people every year, tortures people, enforces US imperialist hegemony and otherwise is used to directly and politically harm other countries across the world and is the worst emitter of CO2 of all organizations in the world.

            The world, including the US, would be MUCH better off if the US had only domestic forces that never leave the country.

            but they sure as hell aren’t the Russians forcing unequipped, untrained kids out to die over a trench.

            Sure, but still atrocious. Just because worse exists doesn’t make an awful thing good, no matter how much the DNC leadership tries to convince the world that it does.

            If you’re about it be about it, just know what you will be signing up for. Don’t let them choose a career for you

            Easier said than done. As I said before, they’re coercing and tricking people into significant choices that they wouldn’t have made voluntarily without being influenced.

        • @thisisnotgoingwell@programming.dev
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          08 months ago

          Sounds like you expect other people to live by standards you yourself don’t live. Unless you’re somehow a full-time soup kitchen worker you still contribute to the machine just by living in this country and paying taxes. The military can be a good option for a lot of people. But not a great option for most people.

          Sounds like you’ve had the privilege in life to where something like military service is something you’d never consider. Be thankful you have that privilege.

          • @Viking_Hippie@lemmy.world
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            18 months ago

            Holy strawman, Batman!

            Not preying on the vulnerable to coerce them into killing and getting killed ≠ being a full-time charity volunteer.

            you still contribute to the machine just by living in this country and paying taxes

            That’s partly true, though I live in another country that sometimes does bad things, which I subsidize with my taxes. It’s not like I have a choice, though, unlike military recruiters and the politicians that send mostly innocent people to kill and be killed. Nobody’s going to jail them for not doing those things.

            Sounds like you’ve had the privilege in life to where something like military service is something you’d never consider. Be thankful you have that privilege.

            I have and I am. Having privilege that I’m aware of does not mean not having knowledge about and empathy towards those who don’t, though.

            It also doesn’t mean that I don’t want things to be better than they are (for everyone, but especially the most vulnerable in society) and scummy predatory behavior to stop.

      • teft
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        328 months ago

        No one finds themselves in a combat role by surprise.

        This is false. Many people found themselves in combat roles by surprise in Iraq and I would assume other conflicts are the same because war never changes. My unit was an artillery unit that ended up kicking in doors like infantry. I knew supply clerks and admin assistants who ended up assigned to QRF. All soldiers and marines are combat personnel first and foremost. It’s the whole reason every soldier and marine has to pass a rifle qualification in basic training/boot camp.

        • @grue@lemmy.world
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          138 months ago

          It’s the whole reason every soldier and marine has to pass a rifle qualification in basic training/boot camp.

          My father in law once mentioned that as the reason he went Navy instead. (Sailers are apparently all firefighters first and foremost.)

          I suppose it’s also maybe a good argument for picking the [ch]Air Force.

          • Cethin
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            168 months ago

            I would recommend the Coast Guard for anyone who wants to not be involved with the killings of many people and mostly doing good. Sure, there are a handful of roles that do kill, but the vast majority are involved with things like search and rescue or ensuring shipping is done safely, and things like that. They also deal with drug smuggling, which has some ethics issues as well, but as far as military service goes (and getting the benefits from it) it’s easily the best choice.

        • @Maggoty@lemmy.world
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          28 months ago

          We had some volunteers roll out with us when we had guys on leave but admin guys on QRF is just peak Army.

        • @thisisnotgoingwell@programming.dev
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          18 months ago

          Okay, most people don’t find themselves in combat roles by surprise? Point is the military doesn’t force you to do an MOS. If you work supply or artillery I’d say that’s not unreasonable considering you know you’re going to be on or near front lines to perform that job. Anyways, I don’t mean to sound unsympathetic but the military is a good option for a lot of people who don’t have many options

      • @Maggoty@lemmy.world
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        128 months ago

        You don’t find yourself in the Infantry by surprise, but just about every time I’ve found myself in a combat role it was by surprise. And the other side doesn’t care what your paperwork says.

      • CopHater69
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        18 months ago

        You have any fucking clue how much lying goes on at MEPs when you pick your MOS?

        • @thisisnotgoingwell@programming.dev
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          18 months ago

          Yup, I’ve had the experience. I also think a lot of people don’t know the lack of options you gotta have to consider the military a good option. Call it privilege. I’d never consider it for my kids, their education is already provided for. But I didn’t have the same options.

      • @mindbleach@sh.itjust.works
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        78 months ago

        What’s gay to civilians is brotherhood in the Army. What’s gay to the Army is brotherhood in the Navy. What’s gay to the Navy is illegal.

      • Gristle
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        168 months ago

        So you can avoid it, right? Because it’s so horrible? Where exactly so you can stay far away.

  • @Duamerthrax@lemmy.world
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    668 months ago

    Yoshikazu Yasuhiko, one of the creative minds behind the original Gundam series felt the need to create the Mobile Suit Gundam: The Origin manga because too many kids thought the War is Hell story to be War is Cool and felt the need to make it more clear.

    Also, stack copyright infringement on top of the other crimes by the US military. Pretty sure Anno and the rest of Gainax wouldn’t be happy about this.

    • @Magnetar@feddit.de
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      158 months ago

      There a a saying that it’s impossible to make an anti-war movie, because they always end up glorifying war.

      • @emergencyfood@sh.itjust.works
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        228 months ago

        It’s actually quite easy. Just focus on the victims rather than the killers. Come and see, Grave of the Fireflies, Catch-22, All quiet on the Western Front, …

        • @wizzor@sopuli.xyz
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          58 months ago

          I’ve only watched Grave of the fireflies once. Can’t bring myself to watch it again.

        • Iceblade
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          48 months ago

          Band of Brothers is also a good one. War movies are so often the “moment of heroism” or tragedy, but in reality, it’s not a moment. It’s months, years on end of always being on full alert, where one false step one time is enough to die.

        • @WhoIsTheDrizzle@lemmy.world
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          38 months ago

          Bump for Come and See. I believe it’s a government sponsored Belarusian anti-war film and it’s pure horror. Watch that if you believe all war films glorify war.

        • TheHarpyEagle
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          28 months ago

          Also Gundam: War in the Pocket. Great miniseries that zooms way into a small conflict to really focus on how war effects everyone.

      • Echo Dot
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        138 months ago

        You just need to embrace the glorifying war aspect like how Starship Troopers does it, and just be so ridiculously over the top that it’s blatantly obvious how over the top it is.

          • @RedAggroBest@lemmy.world
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            48 months ago

            Yea, there’s a reason it’s a cult classic. Everyone thought it was support of fascism and glorifying violence when it was released

            • @mindbleach@sh.itjust.works
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              48 months ago

              It’s a great example of media literacy, and specifically - thesis, antithesis, and synthesis.

              The first reading is, holy shit, is Doogie Horrible wearing an SS uniform? This is fascist propaganda.

              The second reading is, ah, everything goes terribly and nobody learns anything. This is an anti-fascist satire.

              The third reading is… how are you different from these characters? What do you know, that they don’t, that would stop you from wanting to know more? This is a movie about how fascism happens.

        • @dejected_warp_core@lemmy.world
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          158 months ago

          blatantly obvious how over the top it is.

          I don’t know how to break it to you, but Paul Verhoven’s satire pieces (e.g. Starship Troopers, Robocop) are a little too good. Far too many people miss the point, even today, with the entire film spoiled and then some.

        • @Telodzrum@lemmy.world
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          18 months ago

          Sovereign immunity predates Columbus’s voyages. It’s also pretty important for a functioning state.

          • @T156@lemmy.world
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            58 months ago

            But for copyright infringement? That hardly seems relevant to military operations.

            I’m half-surprised that the media associations didn’t carve out an exception for that, or get their lobbyists to.

  • @flying_mechanic@lemmy.world
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    548 months ago

    I went to an airshow a few years ago and the F22 raptor demo team was doing their show, which was amazing and the recruiter was working his pitch into the show the whole time. Between the talking points they would play music and the one that stood out the most was BYOB by System of a Down, which is a complete and total 180 to what they were pitching. It was incredible the cognitive disconnect.

  • azuth
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    458 months ago

    If right wingers can like Rage against the Machine and be surprised they are not right wing or apolitical, NGE is way too subtle for them.

      • azuth
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        98 months ago

        What exactly is a fish story? US military being in comic and anime cons?

        US soldiers trying to recruit young people posing with a character from NGE blissfully unaware of the irony involved?

    • Meowing Thing
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      178 months ago

      Unless they go undercover to research cat girls with military funds.

  • @Dave@lemmy.nz
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    328 months ago

    I’m sorry, is their slogan actually “It’s your time”?

    Like when death appears and tells you it’s your time? It’s like they are recruiting for the losing team…

    • KubeRoot
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      88 months ago

      I don’t think that’s a valid criticism, I don’t see death saying that, it’d be more like “Your time has come” - to contrast it further, wouldn’t somebody say “It’s your time to shine”?

    • @frezik@midwest.social
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      58 months ago

      I’ve seen the LAN parties they have full of fembois. NonCredibleDefense has running jokes about armies of fembois, but it’s more real than I ever imagined.

      • I Cast Fist
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        48 months ago

        I guess the enemy will be too confused to react once they see an army of fembois dressed as maids advancing. It works with the goddamn Maidman, after all

        • @emergencyfood@sh.itjust.works
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          608 months ago

          Just to clarify, Evangelion is basically saying ‘don’t guilt-trip teens into being soldiers, don’t put them under the power of horny adults (however well-meaning), don’t bully them or treat them like lab mice, and definitely don’t cut them off from civilian society and the chance to form normal human friendships’. Seems some people saw all of that and only remembered the cool mechas.

          • @TexasDrunk@lemmy.world
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            128 months ago

            I came to the comments trying to figure out how it was related to the Torment Nexus. You’ve clarified it for me. Thank you for your help.

          • @ZombiFrancis@sh.itjust.works
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            38 months ago

            Maybe you too will let a cigarette burn awkwardly.

            …Or crank it over a coma patient, whatever Shinji, you do you ya little bitch.

          • @dejected_warp_core@lemmy.world
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            28 months ago

            Exactly. Instead we now have:

            Get in the fucking Humvee Shinji.

            Also

            Seems some people saw all of that and only remembered the cool mechas.

            I mean, I kind of get it. That whole genre is/was wall-to-wall spectacle. I suppose it’s possible to dazzle your audience a little too much and lose the plot in all the mayhem.

            But it’s not limited to Mecha Anime. Take The Expanse, for instance. The plight and rebellion of The Belters is pretty much a pastiche a marginalized and developing societies that slave away for the benefit of other wealthy nations, today. And that arc is central to the plot of every season of the show, complete with a bloody rebellion and grave ramifications for those on top. But if you ask, I bet folks mostly recall a show about “protomolecule stuff” and “really cool space battles.”

        • @mindbleach@sh.itjust.works
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          48 months ago

          The original show is a deconstruction of giant-robot anime, basically examining how every single trope would be horrible in real life. But it’s so goddamn stylish and well-done that a lot of people missed that it’s also an escapist fantasy that says ‘escapist fantasy is bad, actually.’ The ending is infamously abrupt. It’s like if The Two Towers ended in a lecture and there was no third book. It makes thematic sense, but the message is severely undercut by being a story people are invested in, for its own qualities.

          The movies for that show are a long-form middle finger to the audience. It’s honestly impressive.

          The reboot show is all of that in like four feature-length episodes, also incorporating decades of fan culture super not getting the point. The plot textually says, you are an asshole for wanting this remake.

          Hideaki Anno is kind of a dick.

          I’d still recommend it all.

    • Echo Dot
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      68 months ago

      Military intelligence is basically just about knowing where the enemy is. The actual espionage and counter espionage stuff done by non military experts. It has to be this way because the military doesn’t exactly recruit for brains.

  • @dangblingus@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    8 months ago

    I know Eva has moments of commentary where the idea of child soldiers is criticized, but at least in the OG series, it seemed to work out for humanity in the end. Eva always came across to me as “children are easily manipulable and their feelings don’t matter so long as the ends justify the means”.

    • @marcos@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      it seemed to work out for humanity in the end

      Isn’t it the one where the kid gathers all the power he needs to stop the invaders from destroying the world, and uses it to destroy the world by himself?

      • @dangblingus@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        58 months ago

        Not sure if you’re referencing some other media, or any of the Eva movies that aren’t canonically linked to the show, but in the show

        spoiler

        NERV triggers Instrumentality, which, without much explanation, merges all human consciousnesses into 1 hive mind consciousness which may or may not have something to do with Rei being Shinji’s mom, and may or may not have to do with Evas being living creatures borne of Lilith, and somehow eliminates the Angel threat. Shinji’s abandonment complex is neatly resolved by him realizing that the military people forcing him to fight were right all along and that being in the military is awesome if you aren’t afraid to be outgoing.

        • TheHarpyEagle
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          8 months ago

          I read the ending quite differently.

          !Gendo’s only goal in instrumentality was to reunite with his wife, and NERV/SEELE were just after power. Shinji actively rejected both of these goals by restoring the bodies of those who did not wish to be part of the hivemind. The ending was him realizing that the challenges of being human were mutually inclusive with the emotions of love and trust; the human body is effectively an AT field borne of the fear of being truly known by others, and love is the result of trusting others to view part of that “true self.” Instrumentality would’ve made Shinji’s life a lot easier, but he would’ve also lost the relationships he’d built with the people he’d actually come to care for. Also, instrumentality didn’t end the angel threat, rather the angels all had to be killed before instrumentality was initiated to ensure they didn’t just wipe out the human race.!<

    • @emergencyfood@sh.itjust.works
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      38 months ago

      Which ending? The OG show, the movie, or the rebuilds?

      OG show had humanity almost lose multiple times because someone at NERV was being a dick. The ending was about Shinji figuring out how to connect to people, not about the war.

      Movie had SEELE backstab humanity, and humans only survive because Shinji’s mother (the only sane character in the show, also coincidentally a civilian) saw the writing on the wall and came up with an absolutely insane plan that worked, at the cost of her life and Shinji’s sanity.

      Rebuild is weird even by Evangelion standards, and I think at this point Anno is trolling the ‘fans’ who want a conventional happy ending with Shinji and Asuka getting married or what not.

      • @mctoasterson@reddthat.com
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        08 months ago

        Dude was literally going through some shit in his life during the original show, and “retold” the same story with a different outcome for the rebuilds. Mari is an analogue for his wife.

        Let’s be honest - who hasn’t had an unhealthy obsession with a slightly crazy firecrotch at one point? Hotter than the midday sun does not necessarily equal wife material.