US Army faces 'TikTok mutiny' as Gen Z recruits whine about low pay, 'sh***y' food and FITNESS TESTS while on bases in uniform
Similarly, the Navy expects to fall short by 10,000 personnel and the Air Force is projected to miss its goal by 10 percent.
By Alice Wright For Dailymail.Com
The Army expects to end up about 15,000 short of its target of 65,000 recruits for 2023.
Similarly, the Navy expects to fall short by 10,000 personnel and the Air Force is projected to miss its goal by 10 percent.
The traditional allure of military recruitment is failing to register with Gen Z.
Last year only 9 percent of young people ages 16-21 said they would consider military service, according to Pentagon data, sliding 13 percent from before the pandemic.
The military has faced criticism for using 'woke' advertising campaigns focused on diversity, equity and inclusion as well as drag shows for troops, to appeal to Gen Z.
The Army is in the middle of a five-year plan to become a 'model example of diversity, equality and inclusion', with the blessing of the White House.
However, with focus elsewhere it is in the grips of a fitness crisis.
Around 23 percent of soldiers registered as obese in 2021, according to a recent study of data from the Military Health System Data Repository.
Not only are recruits not fit enough to join, their fitness is also declining once they're in the ranks leaving officials scrambling to install weight loss and exercise regimens.
Now disgruntled rank and file officers have found an outlet on TikTok to advise those considering signing up to think again, according to videos viewed by DailyMail.com.
Among the major criticisms, the young soldiers complain about having to remain below a certain weight, harsh treatment from their superiors and having to perform menial tasks instead of engaging enemies on the battlefield.
One young recruit, Shemar Williams, in uniform and appearing to be on base, looks into the camera and tells his 34,000 followers his 'top five reasons not to join the military'.
Echoing Laster's grievances, Williams bemoans that 'we do not get paid enough to perform the mission that is tasked to us,' lack of autonomy and sacrifices in family life.
According to federal data, more than 20,000 active-duty troops are on food stamps to make ends meet.
More worryingly for recruitment, Williams also adds to his list complaints about things the military attempts to sell to potential recruits as perks, notably 'schooling'.
'Now I know you think 'woah that is a benefit', Williams explains, 'but there are requirements you have to meet first to get to that schooling. So if you're thinking of joining because of schooling, just go to school.'
Sergeant Barber, 25, filming himself in his uniform admits that he has already been 'counseled because of a TikTok video' nonetheless tells his 68,000 followers 'before you head to the recruiting office, watch this video… If you don't like your freedom being suppressed a little, not really, then I wouldn't join the military.'
As well as cautioning against fantasies of getting rich in the army, Barber also says life in the military is 'mopping those floors 99 percent of the time' rather than war combat.
'Even if you deploy you probably won't see combat today in this world so if that's your mindset. Don't join!'
Female recruits have also contributed to the anti-military advice offered on TikTok.
One young recruit who could only be identified as Gammage from the name on her uniform, tells those considering a life in the military: 'Don't join the Army until you're mentally prepared to be told you're going over/under weight, treated like you're not a good soldier if you can't run 2 miles in 18 mins or less - oh and you can't get injured either cause then it's your fault'.
Health is a barrier to recruitment as well as an issue once recruits are enrolled.
More than half (56 percent) of American 18 to 25-year-olds are overweight or obese, according to Johns Hopkins researchers, meaning they can't enlist.
Fitness within the army is also at crisis point, with generals terming it a threat to national security.
Injury and healthcare are also a concern for a young recruit who identified himself as Treull.
He advises against joining the Army because 'this is very physically demanding, the army don't give a f**k if you f***ed up you better see the PT [personal trainer].'
Treull also complains that commanding officers are 'on a power trip and you can't do nothing'.
Concluding: 'In the military you're their b***h, if they want to do something to you you're going to do it.'
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