Describing rappelling and other activities that recruits go through in boot camp, the general said: “It’s exciting stuff. Would I love to have those young people tweeting about that.”In 2004, Mother Jones published an article about how the Pentagon has bullied movie producers into showing the U.S. military in the best possible light since at least the 1920s. Example? The first movie to win the best picture Oscar, Wings, cost Paramount a then-astonishing $2 million. But the US military's contribution to the film was $16 million.
Why can’t they? Well, “in the first three weeks of basic training, we take away your smartphone,” General Freakley said.
Wings, 1927 |
Some recent samples of preposterously fake military advertising aimed at young men whose critical thinking comes courtesy of Nintendo, Xbox and PlayStation...
Marine Corps:
Air Force:
Finally, the reality of what the military often does (and will do almost anything to hide.)
(The third version, of course, had to be WikiLeaked to the public because the Pentagon refused to comply with Freedom of Information Act requests to release it, and now the person accused of the leak faces decades in prison. Free Bradley Manning.)
The Pentagon's mantra when it presents its crushing budget requests may be that it defends freedom, but it certainly doesn't practice it.
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