Looking back on the "battle food box delivery" case of the parent company...

2024. 5. 13. 07:46U.S. Economic Stock Market Outlook

Looking back on the "battle food box delivery" case of the parent company...

I rolled my brain and looked back at the position of the unit as much as I could,
It's probably hard to deliver "Sanjeong" in person
It may have reached the point of having to mail the package.
I don't know what's going on, but the military is like that anyway.

We need to deliver the military plaque and souvenirs to those who are discharged from the military
Because of the military's lack of supplies, I always searched for warehouses here and there
I'm sure I found some boxes to use
I would have picked the cleanest one among them and taped it carefully(?).
From the point of view of the person in charge, I would have done as much as I could
On the one hand, only 'transmission' itself may have been emphasized.

It might be a mistake of the person in charge, but the person in charge said, "You can do that."
There must be a problem with the system that made you think.

From the standpoint of serving as a low-ranking soldier and being discharged from the military
A protocol was always for those above
Terminal soldiers like us were nothing more than the 'parts' that made it up.
The only time we were getting protocol was when we were "discharged,"
It's not a process where you feel "honor,"
It was more of a kind of 'personnel administration'.

The soldier can't wait to cross the front door of this hellish unit and become a "civilian."
I'm in a hurry to go back, and from the standpoint of the company commander, the ambassador
It was just another 'personnel administration' that has always existed.
The process of interviewing and greeting the battalion commander, repairing the discharge certificate, and leaving
The soldiers will look back on their military service for two years (2005, 6 years)
There was little room for pride and honor.

So, at the discretion of the commander of the unit, each unit is dedicated to those who have been discharged
It seems that the so-called 'protocols' were different.
When I entered the boot camp, there was a discharged person
All the officers, the soldiers, the trainees, come out and line up on both sides
There was a time when I applauded and congratulated him.
Maybe a special unit called the boot camp has a "protocol" situation
It may have provided an environment so that it can be connected well.
If you're a regular infantry unit, you'll be able to give dozens of soldiers a month to service
I won't be able to hold a major discharge ceremony one by one.

In fact, not all soldiers need to receive general-level, permanent-level protocol
At the very least, the nation, this army, will bring my flower-like youth
I think it's necessary to show that you feel sorry and thankful
I feel like I want to.
You have to pat those who go out well to manage the remaining ones.

For example..
My discharge card is the size of a resident registration card or a driver's license
It feels roughly coated, so it doesn't feel honorable at all.
It just feels like a 'passport' that has passed one of the gates of life safely.
There is nothing particularly relevant about the battalion commander's report on the day of discharge.
Just go out to society and get along, it's over after all the hard work.
Sometimes, some units make military medals for those who are discharged from the military
It has not been established as a collective protocol.
So soldiers can't feel 'respect'.
Without respect, you can't feel 'honor'.
High-tech weapons are important, but it's important for the soldiers and the cadres to feel honored
The budget for finding means and purchasing goods must also be increased.

This is not just a problem for our country.
The jungle was covered in blood and flesh of his comrades
Coming back to the Vietnam War veterans who fought back
He was stigmatized as a murderer who participated in an unjustifiable war.
A movie that represents this well is "Rambo," commonly known only as an action movie.
The "honor" that exists on the battlefield is not used in civil society
Rather, the soldiers who are sent to the army are being crushed painfully in the "misdemeanor."
It is a work that illuminates PTSD well.

For decades as a conscripted country, I've been grinding and grinding the blood and sweat of young people
The maintained defense was only propaganda called the "divine duty of defense."
It can't last.
For today's young people, there's a clear idea of the country they want to keep
He wants to find a reason.
Why we need to protect this country, why we need to protect this country, for the community
You need a 'justification' to fight.
Since there is no justification, service becomes simple labor and is not respected
There is no respect, so there is no honor.

For the majority of men who served in the military, the military is only "scarred".
I gave the most beautiful age of my life to the country
It's just "Patriotism" and it's not something that's socially important to the soldiers
I don't even feel grateful, so I don't know what's wrong with the military numbers
I'm just playing with what the unit is like.
And there's no official hierarchical culture that's unique to men
It makes me think about the "Maker Division" scandal.
Even if there's a weak sense of pride in military service
It's a problem, and it's useless in an era where 'Alfano' is rampant like now.

When you join the army, you're the son of the country
If you get hurt, you'll find a consensus with the word "your son."
Is it not just because of the hazy mentality of soldiers.

Like the main character of the movie, Rambo
From the perspective of Korean soldiers
"This war is not what I wanted, but what you wanted."

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