Not an once of respect is gained from me by someone being in the military.
In fact, they lose respect for voluntarily joining the military.
Generally speaking, I regard people in the military as people who probably have nothing particularly useful to offer.
Now, you can interpret that however you want, but that is GENERALLY speaking.
This is coming from someone who gets calls from the FBI at 6am on Sunday mornings with almost comedic frequency, regarding me being a reference for sooo many people who have listed me as a reference when they enlisted.
My dad was an MP in the Army.
My best friend is in Army Intelligence.
My girl was literally as close to being a Marine as you can be without being a Marine (got kicked out for bullshit reasons when she was most of the way through boot camp).
Then there are 3 former friends of mine that are all Marines. All of them assholes.
There are about a dozen Army Intelligence officers I met through my best friend... A couple assholes, a few cool folks, a few mehwhatever people, though none of them leave me slightly impressed.
I was in a cab with 8 Army Intelligence officers back in June, and the smartest people in the cab with me, BY FAR, were the cabby and my friend.
A girl I work with is married to a former Marine. The guy has apparently suddenly started having night-terrors this past week because of Afghanistan - where I'm told he got shot, stabbed, and blown up (I have no reason to doubt it's true, though he seems very much in one piece as far as I can tell). Guy is friendly enough. Don't know him well enough to judge him.
Do I respect him? No. I see him every day when his wife is working, and usually we chat a bit.
This isn't a thing where I feel I can just not respect military personnel because I don't know them and therefore they are irrelevant to me (which they are).
It applies to the ones I've met too.
I've seen this guy probably four times this week, and each time for probably an hour where he was just hanging around our store chillin' with us.
I feel sorry for the guy and hope he's not too mentally messed up, because his wife is pretty cool and one of the better people I've met all year, and I'd hate to see her deal with him falling apart.
Every time I go through the mall I get assailed by recruiters, and I just talk little circles around their bullshit and leave them all muddled.
I don't get why anyone would join the military, unless they themselves acknowledged that they literally had nothing else to offer.
Are these recruiters actually capable of talking people into thinking it's a good idea???
A tiny handful of people in the military are pretty damn smart and pretty cool, like my dad, my girl, and my friend.
A few of them are decent ordinary people who seem like fish out of water.
A TON of military personnel are self-important douchebags.
A TON of military personnel aren't particularly bright.
Every time someone I know mentions considering joining the military, it's just an epic facepalm moment.
I can't understand people who need people to tell them what to do every waking moment, I can't understand how you can tolerate it, and I can't understand anyone who thinks that sounds appealing.
And this isn't just me in my happily sane military-free existence.
My girl agrees completely. She's completely relieved they threw her out and agrees on all of the above. And my friend in Army Intelligence agrees too, and he would've been out of the military ASAP, if hadn't put together such a ridiculously lucrative deal going in (Turns out when you score astronomically high on your aptitude tests the military will give you whatever you want to get you to join...).
My dad's experience was apparently, understandably, quite different from what they do today, what with the Cold War and all that. He was one of the guys who they called on to guard Air Force One, the Space Shuttle, and various other stuff, and he had a security clearance even higher than what my Army Intel buddy has now.
He likes modern military hardware, as do I (who doesn't?), but he's pretty apathetic towards the modern US military itself.
So....yea. People only get respect from me if they've earned it. Being in the military does NOTHING to help earn it.
Whatever.
I try not to ponder it.
I lumped it into the "shit humans do that makes no sense" pile, and stopped trying to contemplate it.
*shrug*
In fact, they lose respect for voluntarily joining the military.
Generally speaking, I regard people in the military as people who probably have nothing particularly useful to offer.
Now, you can interpret that however you want, but that is GENERALLY speaking.
This is coming from someone who gets calls from the FBI at 6am on Sunday mornings with almost comedic frequency, regarding me being a reference for sooo many people who have listed me as a reference when they enlisted.
My dad was an MP in the Army.
My best friend is in Army Intelligence.
My girl was literally as close to being a Marine as you can be without being a Marine (got kicked out for bullshit reasons when she was most of the way through boot camp).
Then there are 3 former friends of mine that are all Marines. All of them assholes.
There are about a dozen Army Intelligence officers I met through my best friend... A couple assholes, a few cool folks, a few mehwhatever people, though none of them leave me slightly impressed.
I was in a cab with 8 Army Intelligence officers back in June, and the smartest people in the cab with me, BY FAR, were the cabby and my friend.
A girl I work with is married to a former Marine. The guy has apparently suddenly started having night-terrors this past week because of Afghanistan - where I'm told he got shot, stabbed, and blown up (I have no reason to doubt it's true, though he seems very much in one piece as far as I can tell). Guy is friendly enough. Don't know him well enough to judge him.
Do I respect him? No. I see him every day when his wife is working, and usually we chat a bit.
This isn't a thing where I feel I can just not respect military personnel because I don't know them and therefore they are irrelevant to me (which they are).
It applies to the ones I've met too.
I've seen this guy probably four times this week, and each time for probably an hour where he was just hanging around our store chillin' with us.
I feel sorry for the guy and hope he's not too mentally messed up, because his wife is pretty cool and one of the better people I've met all year, and I'd hate to see her deal with him falling apart.
Every time I go through the mall I get assailed by recruiters, and I just talk little circles around their bullshit and leave them all muddled.
I don't get why anyone would join the military, unless they themselves acknowledged that they literally had nothing else to offer.
Are these recruiters actually capable of talking people into thinking it's a good idea???
A tiny handful of people in the military are pretty damn smart and pretty cool, like my dad, my girl, and my friend.
A few of them are decent ordinary people who seem like fish out of water.
A TON of military personnel are self-important douchebags.
A TON of military personnel aren't particularly bright.
Every time someone I know mentions considering joining the military, it's just an epic facepalm moment.
I can't understand people who need people to tell them what to do every waking moment, I can't understand how you can tolerate it, and I can't understand anyone who thinks that sounds appealing.
And this isn't just me in my happily sane military-free existence.
My girl agrees completely. She's completely relieved they threw her out and agrees on all of the above. And my friend in Army Intelligence agrees too, and he would've been out of the military ASAP, if hadn't put together such a ridiculously lucrative deal going in (Turns out when you score astronomically high on your aptitude tests the military will give you whatever you want to get you to join...).
My dad's experience was apparently, understandably, quite different from what they do today, what with the Cold War and all that. He was one of the guys who they called on to guard Air Force One, the Space Shuttle, and various other stuff, and he had a security clearance even higher than what my Army Intel buddy has now.
He likes modern military hardware, as do I (who doesn't?), but he's pretty apathetic towards the modern US military itself.
So....yea. People only get respect from me if they've earned it. Being in the military does NOTHING to help earn it.
Whatever.
I try not to ponder it.
I lumped it into the "shit humans do that makes no sense" pile, and stopped trying to contemplate it.
*shrug*