• There were many reasons for the change of the site software, the biggest was security. The age of the old software also meant no server updates for certain programs. There are many benefits to the new software, one of the biggest is the mobile functionality. Ill fix up some stuff in the coming days, we'll also try to get some of the old addons back or the data imported back into the site like the garage. To create a thread or to reply with a post is basically the same as it was in the prior software. The default style of the site is light colored, but i temporarily added a darker colored style, to change you can find a link at the bottom of the site.

Army Recruitment Ads - International Comparison

56 years ago today (1966), I raised my hand and pledged to serve for three in the US Army. With enlisting, I could select a MOS (Military Occupational Skill) I qualified for. I did achieve that. NO WAY was I going to roll the dice and get drafted.
 
I joined ROTC in college in part to avoid the draft once I graduated. I entered active duty in the Army with a two year commitment. But as a young officer I found that I got a great deal of personal satisfacttion as a very small cog on a very big wheel but doing something that had real meaning. I ended up serving for 24 years before retiring from active service. I was not a combat soldier but served in a support role, but strongly felt that I was a soldier serving my nation and my fellow citizens. No job before that, or after that ever gave me the same sense of satisfaction. It was the act of serving that made it worthwhile. Seeing the current U.S. Army recruitment video saddened me but did not surprise me. Featuring a young girl seeking adventure, and not service was the theme. And I guess the "woke" leadership of today's military could not resist linking the girl's aspirations with that of a gay couple that raised her. I doubt that such a commerical will motivate the kind of tough warriors we need in today's Army, but might appeal to the self serving "social justice warrior" that the Left has inspired our youth to be.
 
I joined ROTC in college in part to avoid the draft once I graduated. I entered active duty in the Army with a two year commitment. But as a young officer I found that I got a great deal of personal satisfacttion as a very small cog on a very big wheel but doing something that had real meaning. I ended up serving for 24 years before retiring from active service. I was not a combat soldier but served in a support role, but strongly felt that I was a soldier serving my nation and my fellow citizens. No job before that, or after that ever gave me the same sense of satisfaction. It was the act of serving that made it worthwhile. Seeing the current U.S. Army recruitment video saddened me but did not surprise me. Featuring a young girl seeking adventure, and not service was the theme. And I guess the "woke" leadership of today's military could not resist linking the girl's aspirations with that of a gay couple that raised her. I doubt that such a commerical will motivate the kind of tough warriors we need in today's Army, but might appeal to the self serving "social justice warrior" that the Left has inspired our youth to be.

I agree whole heartily. I sometimes wonder where I'd be today if I had applied for a civilian job to any of the bases in the Dam Neck (stationed at) or Norfolk area after hitch number 1 in the U.S. Navy. I guess I shouldn't wonder too much since I am completely retired as military and civilian.
 
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