US Army Smashes Recruitment Goals By Preying On Hopeless Millennials With Student Debt

by Tyler Durden
Sun, 09/22/2019 - 11:00
The US Army has finally discovered the secret formula, well not a secret anymore, in attracting snowflake millennials into the Army ahead of a possible shooting war with Iran and or down the road, with
China. That is, target millennials who are suffering from the student debt crisis, reported Vice News.
The Army smashed its 2019 recruiting goal, after falling short by 6,500 last year, said the head of Army Recruiting Command Maj. Gen. Frank Muth. He told reporters last week that much of the success was
a new marketing strategy geared towards millennials with student debt.
"One of the national crises right now is student loans, so $31,000 is the average," Muth told reporters. "You can get out [of the Army] after four years, 100 percent paid for state college anywhere in
the United States."
This year's recruitment push wasn't entirely based on patriotism, but instead, targeted millennials who wanted to escape from their insurmountable student
debts.
This is one of the first instances where the Department of Defense (DoD) hasn't used patriotism as a case to urge young adults to join the Army and or any other
service.
During the marketing campaign, the Army targeted young adults on social media, as shown in a tweet from Army recruiters in Chicago:
"#PleaseAWomanIn5Words (or man). I'll pay your student loans! #ArmyTeamChicago”
#PleaseAWomanIn5Words (or man). I'll pay your student loans! #ArmyTeamChicago pic.twitter.com/TyI4cUlekE
— Army Chicago (@ArmyChicago) September 16, 2019
According to Vice News, Georgia Parke, a communications director for Bernie Sanders, criticized the new approach, indicating "if we cancel student debt who will fight the endless
wars?
hmmm yeah maybe this is why its taking so long to address/fix the student loan debt problem in america. the military has no stinking business preying on young, poor kids that simply want an
education. you shouldnt have to stinking join the army to pay for school. https://t.co/fyp0vfr9sf
— 𝖈𝖆𝖗𝖑𝖎𝖊 𝖍𝖔𝖗𝖘𝖊 (@carlieannburton) September 20, 2019
Parke makes a good point considering the next round of wars could be nearing.
America has been locked in endless Middle Eastern wars for the last several decades. There's an increasing chance that a shooting war is brewing between Iran and Saudi Arabia, which would mean the US would protect the House of Saud.
US Secretary of Defense Mark Esper said at a news conference Friday that the US is deploying military assets to the Middle East in response to a significant escalation of violence last weekend when Iran
attacked a Saudi oil facility with drones and cruise missiles.
Debt Collective co-founder Thomas Gokey warns that the Army's recruiting method of paying off student debt in exchange for enlistment is dangerous.
"Debt is a form of social control," Gokey said. "You can force people to do all kinds of things if you put them in debt first, including waging unjust wars, killing and hurting other people, and risking
[their] own life and limbs.”
Millennials who are taking the easy way out in joining the Army to pay off student debt could find themselves on a battlefield if war breaks out.
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Let me know if you like to know the truth about student loan debts and wars and/or if you like to get rid of your student loan debts forever!
If the U.S. Department of Education demands student loan debt payments, but fails to validate the alleged student loan debt, neither the Department of Education, nor any other institution has the documents that
would be needed for proving both the existence of the alleged debt and valid debt ownership.
That is, the U.S. Department of Education may carry any number of assets on its books that it does not actually own, because it cannot validate the debt and its ownership of it. However, legally, the corresponding alleged,
but unvalidated debts as liabilities do not exist.
The debt that does not exist is not owned by anybody. Without anybody actually legally owning the alleged debt, the Department of Education does not have the necessary legally valid base for making monetary demands for
nonexistent debt payments. However, in an individual case, until the U.S. Department of Education’s debt ownership claims and rights to make monetary demands have not been challenged, the U.S. Department of Education can continue to make the relevant claims and demands.
Until you don’t tell the emperor that he has no clothes, the emperor can continue to believe that you see him as fully dressed. The emperor can continue to believe that there’s something wrong with you, and not with him, even after you have pointed out all the relevant laws and rules of logic that are being broken, but that’s another subject matter.
How Do You Know Whether or Not the Demands Are Legitimate?
If a student loan borrower has complete borrowing records and pays off the loans as expected, there is no problem. These are not the instances that are being addressed here. I am addressing here instances, where the
Department of Education makes monetary demands, is being asked to validate the debt, and instead of debt validation offers a variety of general statements and unqualified documents.
If you or somebody you know has been contacted with student loan payment demands that for one reason or another seem strange to you, how do you know whether or not the demands are fully valid, unless you request debt
validation from the Department of Education?
You can request debt validation, and you can submit Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests. However, as my case indicates, the Department of Education may not send you truthful information. So, in order to get some
clarity into the situation, you want to think through and define what kinds of documents will really provide the needed information. In addition, you may want to ask the Department of Education representative to sign a statement under penalty of perjury, declaring that the information that the Department of Education provides is true.
Otherwise, you may end up paying more money than you actually owe.
If the Department of Education representatives refuse to sign a statement under penalty of perjury, and instead of copies of the needed original documents the responses you receive contain generalized statements, you may
be in a situation where you are demanded to make payments on a debt for which the Department of Education does not have complete and valid support documents. The Department of Education may have computer records indicating that there is a debt that you owe, but how accurate these records are is anybody’s guess.
The U.S. Department of Education is known to make claims that it does not validate about holding documents and owning debt. Such claims may, or may not be true. Until proven
otherwise, there is no reason to believe that these claims actually are true and you can legally and lawfully discharge 100% of your student loan debts.
Contact me today for more information.
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