It can be anything: at your job or any forced activity that you just don’t feel like doing surrounded by other people. Visiting certain place, local, party, etc. It can be anything: at your job or any forced activity that you just don’t feel like doing surrounded by other people. Visiting certain place, local, party, etc.

I had to accompany my young brother to a small comic con thing a month ago and I was cringing HARD in that place I couldn’t bear being there, I just kept my head down most of the time otherwise I would’ve just start laughing or rolling my eyes looking all that adult people dressed like it’s a shitty Halloween party.

  • @[email protected]
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    464 months ago

    In the US, the singing of the national anthem and the military involvement always makes me uncomfortable, coming from a culture where that doesn’t happen unless it’s a really big event.

    • @[email protected]
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      194 months ago

      I am a veteran (you’re welcome for my service) and I also find this annoying/over the top.

      • @[email protected]
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        4 months ago

        I am shocked an appalled that you don’t have any replies thanking you for your service.
        However, I’m suspecting that you don’t feel extremely offended by Kaepernick kneeling either?

        There, with the sarcasm out of the way, how did the “thank you for your service”-thing start? I assume it was during the Bush Jr era, but was there a public statement of some sort suggesting everyone should do this? I’m also a “veteran”* (not US, though), and I would just be weirded out if it became a trend here.

        *: Never deployed abroad. I was offered a contract, but turned it down due to a competing offer from the IT sector.

        • I'm back on my BS 🤪
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          44 months ago

          Veteran here sharing my personal experience. It seemed like people generally didn’t give a shit about veterans except for maybe a few people that had some sort of relevant personal experience or values related to patriotism or sacrifice. Around 2009, it got politicized. After that, it was a competition to see who cared more about veterans and felt a bit odd and fake, kind of like how people are publicly obsessed with the US Constitution, yet have never read the whole thing. It’s a theater in the never-ending war for political or moral validity. Around 2018, it started slowly waning off again, but not to the level it was before.

          • @[email protected]
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            54 months ago

            I don’t see many of those “support our troops” ribbon stickers on the back of rusted out Suburbans and F150s like I used to.

            I always thought what they really meant was “don’t criticize the GOP’s disastrous response to 9/11” so I guess that makes sense.

          • @[email protected]
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            4 months ago

            Do you remember how it got politicized? Did some politician start it, intentionally or not?

            Also, obligatory: Thank you for your service.

            • I'm back on my BS 🤪
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              4 months ago

              It slowly started gaining some traction because of:

              • Veterans returning from Afghanistan and Iraq were seen as those that placed themselves in harms way to protect the US from terrorism following 9/11. Until then, veterans were mostly seen as people that weren’t smart or disciplined enough to go to college and needed to figure out something to do with their lives. Kind of like how Trump sees veterans.
              • Those returning from Afghanistan and Iraq began going to college, organizing, and being more public about their service. Imagine fighting the Taliban, then coming home to go to college and they delay your payments by 3 months. These combat vets were too head strong to tolerate that and would make a big deal about it.
              • The overtly injured would be hard to ignore. Imagine a 25 year old missing their legs on a wheelchair at Golden Corral, yet they’re the most polite one there.
              • The GI Bill was reliable, so schools that were able to attract veterans saw significant increase in their revenue. Schools competed for this by creating policies and programs that were supportive of veterans.
              • Family members of the severely injured became strong advocates.
              • McCain ran for President in 2008, and his time as a POW was used as evidence of his patriotic values and endurance.
              • Veterans publicly socialized in tight-knit groups. Think of the ~5 really loud dudes at the bar that seemed to have an extraordinary bond, peculiar sense of humor, and confidence. People wanted to emulate this.
              • Veterans would wear military clothes/items to identify themselves to other vets for camaraderie and a warning to potential threats. American bros started imitating returning combat vets as a prototype of masculinity, specifically attire and ironically beards1.
              • Veterans with considerable training and experience would go to major protests and either do a better job than police or intimidate them. Veterans at protests would be injured by police, making them a good example of hypocrisy that the news would report on. You’d see something like, “Veteran that protected Iraqis right to protest sent to hospital by Oakland police.”
              • Veterans became the group with the highest suicide rates in the country…by a lot.
              • The Arizona VA Medical Center scandal outed that veterans were dying from lack of access to healthcare that was purposefully hidden by administration. Veterans had long been complaining about terrible healthcare services, but were brushed off or made to seem too privileged and ungrateful2. When this scandal broke out, it was major validation for the vets and shame for the public and government. Politicians and citizens that wanted to avoid the shame would pretend to be veteran advocates and accuse others of the problem.
              • When the government and public tried correcting this for the recent vets, all the Vietnam vets that had been ignored and marginalized started coming out too.
              • The baby boomers that spit on Vietnam vets and called them baby killers had to rid themselves of their shame, so many of them became super veteran supporters. As my one military buddy put it, “They were competing for American of the Year.”
              • The country had a reckoning with how they had treated all veterans until this period. Basically, the country felt it had to make up for it.
              • People that want to ride veterans’ coat tails without the risk and effort advocate for veterans to get some of the esteem.

              \

              1: Fun fact! The beard thing was a rebellion to having to be clean shaven every single day for ~4 years straight. It was also a way of hiding that someone was in the military.

              2: I’ve worked in the VA. It is pretty common to hear medical providers say something like, “I wish I didn’t have to work for the rest of my life,” when referring to veterans asking for help applying for disability.

              Edit:

              Also, obligatory: Thank you for your service.

              Obligatory: discomfort

              • @[email protected]
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                24 months ago

                Thanks for the write up! I’m Canadian with family members in the military and the vibes different and I never really knew why. Your post helps put it into perspective.

              • @[email protected]
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                24 months ago

                Thank you for your service well written response, it was really informative. I was really young when most of this shift began so most of my conscious life I’ve seen people throw themselves at veteran’s feet (unless they’re homeless of course… then ew) and didn’t know it was a relatively recent thing.