I've seen at least 5 regulars here say they are or were part of the American military. What's up with that?
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The military is a social experiment platform. Service members sign away the rights they swear to defend, which makes them perfect guinea pigs for any medical, social, cultural experiment imaginable.
Talk about getting vaccinated, the gauntlet of injections received in basic training is on part with the vaccine schedule for children today. You wouldn't believe it.
They had DEI training as early as 2016, preparing leadership for trannies on fucking war ships. Before that, cultural appreciation in decision making and mission accomplishment. It's all done there because there's no escaping one's compliance. Everyone must pipe up and profess their agreement with multiculturalism.
Anyone who has served in the last 20 years absolutely hates their country's government.
Dont Ask Dont Tell expired in 2011, and everyone had to sit through powerpoint hell over that. Service wide.
I sat through it. I was in 1994-2014.
I got the experimental Anthrax shots in the early 2000s, and lawsuits from that are why the military cannot give experimental vaccines to servicemembers. Which, of course, the DoD and FDA step around for COVID by approving a shot with 3 years left on development, and then calling the EUA shot "functionally and legally equivalent" to the approved shot.