Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't allow that. I vehemently don't support the military and would not be comfortable having a military themed room in any home I live in.
If my son wanted a less babyish room that would be fine and I'd be happy to change the decor. But not to military, and not to anything that promotes violence.
Rockets and space? Sure. Airplanes? Sure. Olive green and light blue colors? Sure. But I can't do military. So I'd say no.
Out of curiosity, why do you hate the military?
You know what? If you were a single person who asked me one on one, face to face, I'd answer you. But I don't want to get into it on a public forum and derail OP's thread with people trying to jump in and convince me of how wrong I am or how terrible a person I must be, etc.
I vehemently hate the color pink, and would allow a pink bedroom. That just goes against my aesthetics. I can't allow decorating that goes against my morals. OP is free to do whatever she feels comfortable with.
Anonymous wrote:NP here. I do support the military, but the military-worship in this country is a bit much for me. I see the military as a necessary organization, important... and also a personal career choice each member of the military makes. The over-the-top hero complex many people seem to project on *all* military members is just too much for me. Most of the military is just normal people doing their jobs that they chose. There are some heroes, but not most by any means. The rhetoric around the military is basically really good marketing that says you're unpatriotic if you don't feel that way, so many of us keep it suppressed. You can look at the history of a lot of the sentiments - it is straight up marketing/recruiting.
Anonymous wrote:NP here. I do support the military, but the military-worship in this country is a bit much for me. I see the military as a necessary organization, important... and also a personal career choice each member of the military makes. The over-the-top hero complex many people seem to project on *all* military members is just too much for me. Most of the military is just normal people doing their jobs that they chose. There are some heroes, but not most by any means. The rhetoric around the military is basically really good marketing that says you're unpatriotic if you don't feel that way, so many of us keep it suppressed. You can look at the history of a lot of the sentiments - it is straight up marketing/recruiting.
Anonymous wrote:Not to completely derail the thread, but my 7 year old is into this too. I admit that I don't want to go completely overboard on this in his room, but I like the suggestions here that offer the theme without getting crazy. And BTW, we live in the heart of liberal NWDC and he recently told me he "wants to be a soldier when he grows up" because "there aren't enough people doing that."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't allow that. I vehemently don't support the military and would not be comfortable having a military themed room in any home I live in.
If my son wanted a less babyish room that would be fine and I'd be happy to change the decor. But not to military, and not to anything that promotes violence.
Rockets and space? Sure. Airplanes? Sure. Olive green and light blue colors? Sure. But I can't do military. So I'd say no.
Out of curiosity, why do you hate the military?
You know what? If you were a single person who asked me one on one, face to face, I'd answer you. But I don't want to get into it on a public forum and derail OP's thread with people trying to jump in and convince me of how wrong I am or how terrible a person I must be, etc.
I vehemently hate the color pink, and would allow a pink bedroom. That just goes against my aesthetics. I can't allow decorating that goes against my morals. OP is free to do whatever she feels comfortable with.
I'm a liberal. I also served 20 years in the USMC and my husband served 28 years in the Army. I asked you not to bash you as a tree hugging liberal, but to try and educate you. The politicians in DC are the ones that make foreign policy and send the military in to carry out our foreign policy. Many times it is in a violent manner. Many times it is peaceful - responding to humanitarian disasters. A lot of time it is merely a show of force and a presence to deter both criminal activity such as pirating.
Do not hate the military for carrying out policy. Hate the politicians that send them there in the first place. And the big government contractors that lobby for bigger defense spending and more weapons and advocate for a hawkish foreign policy. Most military members are kids that don't have an opportunity to go to college. They come from a very diverse background - more than you see at a state college campus. They want to serve their country, learn skills, earn money for college. These are wonderful kids. When you read about violence against women in the military - take it into context. The military rape data is almost exactly the same as a college campus. Same age kids, many of the same issues with underage drinking.
Go ahead and hate violence - but direct your hatred at the right group of people.
So anyone who disagrees with you is a tree hugging liberal who doesn't understand that people who serve in the military have no accountability for their actions or decisions because they are under orders? Isn't that what the nazis argued? My leaders made me do it?
Anonymous wrote:I'm not the other poster, but I don't support the military either. I'm a pacifist.