btrudy
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Societies attitudes towards work is shifting, the requirements of the CAF are intensifying not decreasing however.
Education and training is how you adapt recruits to the CAFs requirements because otherwise they will not be capable of doing so. Right now we are in a weird place societally where we argue for ‘collective’ rights yet try to treat everything and everyone as a individual. The CAF doesn’t need a bunch of individuals, we need people to act as a collective. To foster a group identity.
This is why you are supposed to get broken down on basic and brought back up to the standards and requirements we need. I would argue that a military culture is more needed now than ever due to how little patriotism, pride, and honour exists in our society at the moment.
Warfare hasn’t changed. At the end of the day Ukraine looks a lot like Korea or WWII just with a bit fancier kit. ‘Outdated’ is a buzzword used by those who in many cases don’t know what they are talking about. Part of the problem is people struggle with why we do things because we have failed to explain them properly.
We aren't going to change society's attitudes towards work. Those are shifting away from something compatible with the traditional military model, and, well, we need to work with the populace we've got because we can't recruit from other countries, or other eras.
It's borderline insulting IMHO to claim that society has little honor or pride compared to what it used to. Was there honor in a society which routinely systematically suppressed the rights and well being of women, BIPOC folks, LGBT folks, etc? Where the military routinely covers up misconduct of members? Hell no. Society has a lot of pride and honor, they're just shifting the focus of said pride and honor. And sure, they're less patriotic. Which, again, pointing to the gross misdeeds of the state and people in positions of power, can you actually blame them?
Trying to pretend that people aren't individuals and shouldn't be treated as such isn't a model that will work anymore. Hell, it hasn't really worked in the past either.
We need people to work as a team, but we need to accept that that requires motivating people, not pretending like we can "break them down" into some mindless robot in basic training. Because even if that worked (spoiler alert, it doesn't), we don't actually want mindless robots. We want people who can think for themselves and react accordingly within the scope of their authority to changing circumstances.
Anyways, as for your assertion that warfare hasn't changed, I frankly think that is probably the most asinine statement I've seen in months.
It takes far less resources (time, money equipment) for a Bn of infantry to execute a Trooping the Colour parade than it does a full level 5 BTS BG attack.
This is a false dichotomy and I'm pretty sure you damned well know it. If you can't run a full Battle Group level attack on a regular basis, you could instead do something smaller in scale that actually practices functional warfighting skills, instead of the useless marching up and down the parade square style stuff. If we're going to pretend like one poster said that everything from saluting to fleet maneuvers count as "drill", we can still differentiate between drills that practice stuff that matters and drill that practices stuff that doesn't.
Practice some damned section attacks, do a fireex or a hazmat spill, etc. Do something useful instead of something whose sole purpose is ceremonial.