Wed Jan 14, 2009 2:29PM EST
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Pssst, kid! Wanna play some video games?
That's the latest come-on from the U.S. Army, which continues to refine its approach toward engaging teens and twentysomethings. Having seen amazing success with recruiting thanks to its America's Army home computer game, the military is now taking the pitch to the mall. Specifically, to the Franklin Mills shopping center in Philadelphia, where it has set up 60 gaming PCs, 19 Xbox 360s, plush couches, and "rock music" for potential recruits to enjoy.
There's even a real Humvee that players can shoot from installed as part of a 15-foot-high projected battle simulation and an Apache helicopter simulator that recruits can fly.
Sounds like a killer gaming setup... but of course there's a not-so-ulterior motive at work. It's all part of a plan to get younger kids interested in signing up for service, thinking that shooting terrorists in active combat is all part of a day's work.
Naturally, critics are out in full force, including a former Army staff sargeant, Jesse Hamltion, who accuses the Army of misleading kids with deceptive, unrealistic scenarios. Hamilton notes that recruits are unlikely to see active combat and that "the only way to simulate the heat is holding a blow dryer to your face."
Still, the move of course comes at a good time for the Army, which has struggled to fill its ranks for several years thanks to some overwhelmingly bad press. But with civilian unemployment skyrocketing and the situation in Iraq looking better than it has in ages (particularly with the prospect of troops coming home), the Army's high-tech mall paradise may actually be more than it needs to woo the young and impressionable.
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
dear dear post # are you trying to tell us that many people do not join the military because gays and lesbians cannot. it isn't due to the fact that you could get killed? duh.
darn i cannot believe all those disparaging comments by people who say they were fooled into joining by glitzy things. lol all i was promised was three hots and a cot. did not know hots were c's and the cot was on the ground. oh i did get one heck of an education both in the military and in college with the g.i. bill. so come on people, if you were so dumb as to be suckered in, don't be so stupid as to post it.
LOL...reminds me of the movie, "Last Star Fighter" where star fighter's were recruted via scores on an aracde game at a mall.
Sounds like the majority of people who posted these comments never served and would never serve their country but complain about everything. Maybe we have a solution to this problem and it has been around a long time. Humm cut out the Army's million dollar video game, and sponsorships (which actually goes from companies such as pepsi whom pay the bill). Hey lets revive the draft. You just gave almost a trillion dollars to Big Banks and Corp EX's and your crying about this. Come on we are better than this
The army can be a multitude of things. But at the heart of the matter, soldiering is about killing. As a current combat medic, I can tell you that my primary job is the same as anyone that has decided become a soldier: kill the enemy! I am amazed that people are revulted at the revelation that we exist as a nation because of men and women willing to do what you will not. I'm glad that the army doesn't try to hide that fact.
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86 Posted by briankiejr@verizon.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:13PM EDT Report Abuse
Nothing wrong with free video games. And increased manpower in the military can only be a good thing. I see only positives.