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Re: US Army faces 'TikTok mutiny' as Gen Z recruits whine about low pay, 'sh***y' food and FITNESS TESTS while on bases in uniform

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Air Farce Social Justice

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Dec 17, 2023, 11:55:03 PM12/17/23
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Paul Ragna <tpr...@gmail.com> wrote in
news:XnsB0DDC049AB7...@135.181.20.170:

> We are raising a generation of pussies.
>
>
> "US Army faces 'TikTok mutiny' as Gen Z recruits whine about low pay,
> 'sh***y' food and FITNESS TESTS while on bases in uniform"

There's a real easy way to solve problems like that. Send those crybabies
to the most remote outposts in pairs and let enemy patrols kill them.

The CO signs a letter, SGLI sends somebody a check, and the rest of the
squad splits up his gear. What nobody wants gets buried or burned.

Next!

> <https://freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/4204084/posts>
>
> <https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12855869/army-tiktok-mutiny-
> gen-z-recruits.html>
>
> "The US Army is facing a TikTok mutiny as Gen Z recruits are taking to
> social media to whine about low pay, 'sh***y' food and fitness tests.
>
> The brazen posts - by uniformed troops on US bases - represent an
> audacious challenge to top brass amid a recruitment crisis. The Army
> fell short of its target by 25 percent last year.

The military requires basic reading, writing and math skills. Most kids
are "graduated" from high school on a curve these days and can't pass an
AFQT. If they do manage, they are such pussies that they are just frag
bait.

> One of the posts by military influencer Anthony Laster slams Army life
> for having 'No Privacy, The Pay Sucks, Sh***y Food, Disrespectful
> Leadership, NO SLEEP!' and has been viewed more than 600,000 times.
>
> Laster, from Chicago, has more than a million followers on TikTok and
> made the public comments in uniform while on mission in the desert. In
> another post he claimed he spent his whole day watching TikToks while
> supposedly fighting the Taliban.

A typical Obama supporter no doubt. He's deserving of an accident. A
fall from a bridge or helicopter would be appropriate.

> It gives a woeful impression of America's fighting forces to potential
> recruits, which is likely to cause further animosity toward TikTok
> from critics"
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