New Army Motto ‘What’s Your Warrior?’ Has Some People Up in Arms | Eastern North Carolina Now

There's a lack of candor and an obscuring of the service's basic mission, declares one veteran — all in an effort to attract today's fresh young recruits

ENCNow
Publisher's note: This post appears here courtesy of the LifeZette, and written by David Kamioner.

    Given the history of the popular tagline "Be All You Can Be" - plus the highly motivational "Army Strong" slogan of 2006 and then the early 2000s counterintuitive "Army of One" - you'd think U.S. Army Public Relations and the Recruiting Command would have learned from the past.

    But as an Army veteran, I can say the Big Green Machine can take even the simplest of concepts and contort it in such a way that it doesn't quite resemble sentient thought.

    Just speaking bluntly.

    An example of this is a major general and the head of the Recruiting Command's use of the word "awesome" with two exclamation points in a tweet as if channeling a junior high school cheerleader.

    No doubt this individual is a brave and noble soldier.

    But still.

    Now, welcome to the Army's new motto, which was rolled out last week: "What's Your Warrior?"

    No, that's not a lame game-show title. It's the Army's attempt to appeal to today's Gen Z types by stressing cyber and other rear-echelon occupations - all in an effort to distract these young people from the fact that lots of soldiers these days have been crawling around dangerous foreign valleys or driving along Middle Eastern dirt roads trying desperately not to get killed while simultaneously executing their missions.

    But the Army thinks that's less important to talk about than - gaming!

    To be sure, military personnel from time immemorial tell tales of getting raw deals from their recruiters. (When he signed on the dotted line, Agamemnon probably promised Achilles a posting in Hawaii and sergeant stripes in two years.)

    However, at the bottom of every Army contract for enlistment is the teeny-tiny codicil that states the whole thing can be torn asunder by the secretary of Defense for "the needs of the Army" - including but not limited to if a war comes along.

    A decorated U.S. Army colonel who served combat tours in both Iraq and Afghanistan and is now retired told LifeZette about the new motto, "It's weak. It's vague. It's not a call to action. When we join the Army, our identity changes. It becomes team over self. This motto does not reflect that."

    It is understandable the Army wants to attract a new generation of recruits in a language the potential soldiers comprehend.

    And as Brig. Gen. Alex Fink, chief of Army Enterprise Marketing, told Army Times, the new campaign just unveiled differs from past efforts in the way it focuses on the Army's many military occupational specialties that don't involve direct combat.

    But to me, obscuring the basic mission in the name of recruitment marketing does not help the Army or the recruit.

    As in combat, direct candor should be the order of the day.
Go Back


Leave a Guest Comment

Your Name or Alias
Your Email Address ( your email address will not be published)
Enter Your Comment ( no code or urls allowed, text only please )




NCGOP Statement Regarding Opening Impeachment Hearings Guest Editorial, Editorials, Op-Ed & Politics Hidden Act of Kindness Took Everyone by Surprise


HbAD0

Latest Op-Ed & Politics

Vice President Kamala Harris’ husband, Doug Emhoff, admitted that he cheated on his first wife with the couple’s babysitter after a report was published on Saturday that said the marriage ended after he got the babysitter pregnant.
A black Georgia activist became the center of attention at a rally for former president Donald Trump on Saturday when she riled the crowd in support of Trump and how his policies benefit black Americans.
Former President has been indicted by a federal judge in Pennsylvania for inciting an assassination attempt that nearly killed him.
A federal judge ruled on Monday that Google has a monopoly over general search engine services, siding with the Justice Department and more than two dozen states that sued the tech company, alleging antitrust violations.
3 debates and Twitter interview
If we vote the way we have always voted we will get the kind of government we have always gotten
Check it out and see if you think this is an exhibit of Open Government

HbAD1

Acting U.S. Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe told reporters on Friday that his agency was fully responsible for the assassination attempt on former President Donald Trump last month and that the agency “should have had eyes” on the roof where 20-year-old Thomas Matthew Crooks.
Smartmatic was at center of voting machine controversy in US 2020 election
If we vote the way we have always voted we will get the kind of government we have always gotten
Shooter was identified on the roof with a weapon with enough time to stop him...but, officers were not prepared to access the roof

HbAD2

 
Back to Top