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Researching Pop Culture and Militarism: If we oppose militarism and militarization, what should our relationship with pop culture be?

9/10/2024 / Copilot and NNOMY -  Opposing militarism and militarization while engaging with pop culture can be a nuanced endeavor. Here are some considerations for navigating this relationship: 1. Critical Consumption Analyze Content: Be mindful of how military themes are portrayed in movies, TV shows, video games, and music. Look for underlying messages and question their impact on societal norms and values. Seek Alternatives: Support and promote media that offer alternative narratives to militarism, such as stories of peace, diplomacy, and conflict resolution. 2. Promote Anti-Militarism Create and Share: Engage in creating or sharing content that challenges militaristic narratives. This can include art, music, literature, and social media posts that promote peace and non-violence. Support Artists: Back artists and creators who actively resist militaristic themes and advocate for peace through their work. 3. Educate and Advocate Raise Awareness: Use pop culture as a tool to educate others about the impacts of militarism and the importance of peace. Host discussions, screenings, or workshops that critically examine popular media. Advocate for Change: Encourage media producers to consider the social impact of their work and to create content that fosters a culture of peace. 4. Engage in Dialogue Community Discussions: Participate in or organize community discussions about the influence of militarism in pop culture. These conversations can help build a collective understanding and resistance. Online Platforms: Use online platforms to engage in dialogue with others who share similar views. This can help amplify anti-militaristic voices and create a supportive network. 5. Support Anti-Militarism Movements Join Movements: Get involved with organizations and movements that oppose militarism and advocate for peace. Your participation can help strengthen these efforts. Collaborate: Work with other activists, educators, and artists to create a unified front against the normalization of militarism in pop culture. By critically engaging with pop culture and actively promoting anti-militaristic values, you can help shift societal norms towards a more peaceful and just world. 🌍✌️ If you have any specific examples or areas you’d like to explore further, feel free to let me know!Opposing militarism and militarization while engaging with pop culture can be a nuanced endeavor. Here are some considerations for navigating this relationship: 1. Critical Consumption Analyze Content: Be mindful of how military themes are portrayed in movies, TV shows, video games, and music. Look for underlying messages and question their impact on societal norms and values. Seek Alternatives: Support and promote media that offer alternative narratives to militarism, such as stories of peace, diplomacy, and conflict resolution. 2. Promote Anti-Militarism Create and Share: Engage in creating or sharing content that challenges militaristic narratives. This can include art, music, literature, and social media posts that promote peace and non-violence. Support Artists: Back artists and creators who actively resist militaristic themes and advocate for peace through their work. 3. Educate and Advocate Raise Awareness: Use pop culture as a tool to educate others about the impacts of militarism and the importance of peace. Host discussions, screenings, or workshops that critically examine popular media. Advocate for Change: Encourage media producers to consider the social impact of their work and to create content that fosters a culture of peace. 4. Engage in Dialogue Community Discussions: Participate in or organize community discussions about the influence of militarism in pop culture. These conversations can help build a collective understanding and resistance. Online Platforms: Use online platforms to engage in dialogue with others who share similar views. This can help amplify anti-militaristic voices and create a supportive network. 5. Support Anti-Militarism Movements Join Movements: Get involved with organizations and movements that oppose militarism and advocate for peace. Your participation can help strengthen these efforts. Collaborate: Work with other activists, educators, and artists to create a unified front against the normalization of militarism in pop culture. By critically engaging with pop culture and actively promoting anti-militaristic values, you can help shift societal norms towards a more peaceful and just world. 🌍✌️ If you have any specific examples or areas you’d like to explore further, feel free to let me know!Opposing militarism and militarization while engaging with pop culture can be a nuanced endeavor. Here are some considerations for navigating this relationship: 1. Critical Consumption Analyze Content: Be mindful of how military themes are portrayed in movies, TV shows, video games, and music. Look for underlying messages and question their impact on societal norms and values. Seek Alternatives: Support and promote media that offer alternative narratives to militarism, such as stories of peace, diplomacy, and conflict resolution. 2. Promote Anti-Militarism Create and Share: Engage in creating or sharing content that challenges militaristic narratives. This can include art, music, literature, and social media posts that promote peace and non-violence. Support Artists: Back artists and creators who actively resist militaristic themes and advocate for peace through their work. 3. Educate and Advocate Raise Awareness: Use pop culture as a tool to educate others about the impacts of militarism and the importance of peace. Host discussions, screenings, or workshops that critically examine popular media. Advocate for Change: Encourage media producers to consider the social impact of their work and to create content that fosters a culture of peace. 4. Engage in Dialogue Community Discussions: Participate in or organize community discussions about the influence of militarism in pop culture. These conversations can help build a collective understanding and resistance. Online Platforms: Use online platforms to engage in dialogue with others who share similar views. This can help amplify anti-militaristic voices and create a supportive network. 5. Support Anti-Militarism Movements Join Movements: Get involved with organizations and movements that oppose militarism and advocate for peace. Your participation can help strengthen these efforts. Collaborate: Work with other activists, educators, and artists to create a unified front against the normalization of militarism in pop culture. By critically engaging with pop culture and actively promoting anti-militaristic values, you can help shift societal norms towards a more peaceful and just world. 🌍✌️ If you have any specific examples or areas you’d like to explore further, feel free to let me know!

Part 1: If we oppose militarism and militarization, what should our relationship with pop culture be?

Opposing militarism and militarization while engaging with pop culture can be a nuanced endeavor. Here are some considerations for navigating this relationship:

1. Critical Consumption
 Analyze Content: Be mindful of how military themes are portrayed in movies, TV shows, video games, and music. Look for underlying messages and question their impact on societal norms and values.
 Seek Alternatives: Support and promote media that offer alternative narratives to militarism, such as stories of peace, diplomacy, and conflict resolution.

 


 2. Promote Anti-Militarism
 Create and Share: Engage in creating or sharing content that challenges militaristic narratives. This can include art, music, literature, and social media posts that promote peace and non-violence.
 Support Artists: Back artists and creators who actively resist militaristic themes and advocate for peace through their work.

Featured

Which schools are being datamined for military recruitment?

9/06/2024 /Copilot & NNOMY - Many schools across the United States are involved in data collection for military recruitment purposes. For example, over 13,000 schools encourage students to take the Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery (ASVAB) test, with results sent directly to military personnel1. This data helps identify potential recruits.

Additionally, some state education leaders are proposing data-sharing agreements with the Department of Defense to include enlistment and service data in state-specific longitudinal data systems2. This means that more schools could potentially be involved in data collection for military recruitment.

If you’re concerned about this practice, there are resources and organizations, like the National Network Opposing the Militarization of Youth (NNOMY), that provide information and support for counter-recruitment efforts3.

Featured

Antimilitarism in American public life

Review of Breaking the War Habit: The Debate over Militarism in American Education, by Seth Kershner, Scott Harding and Charles Howlett (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 2022)


Antimilitarism in American public lifeRachel Waltner Goossen / Issue 2023, vol. 77 / Mennonite Life - Depending on one’s zip code, an American teen may have a high likelihood of attending a public school with Junior Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (JROTC), a federally funded program aimed to introduce students to U.S. military culture. At present, some 3,500 public high schools across the United States offer JROTC classes, with clusters especially in Southern states and in large urban districts. According to a 2022 New York Times study, troubling evidence is emerging that more and more high schools are mandating JROTC for large swaths of freshman students, even though by law these military classes are elective, not compulsory. Not surprisingly, some students and parents are pushing back against school officials, asserting – and winning – arguments that they have a right to public education without military-focused requirements.


The new volume Breaking the War Habit, a collaborative effort by a trio of U.S. peace historians, provides fascinating historical context for these present-day conflicts in districts around the country. Dating back to the new nation’s formation, rejecting school militarism has been “part of a long American tradition of opposition to military meddling in civil affairs,” which included James Madison’s and other founders’ concerns for the separation of powers, as well as limits on military authority (16). By the 1830s, as the Massachusetts educator and theorist Horace Mann began working out key principles for American public education, antimilitarist sentiments were widespread. Mann, the most influential of 19th-century U.S. educational reformers, proclaimed that young people must be “educated to that strength of intellect which shall dispel the insane illusions of martial glory” (5).

The National Network Opposing the Militarization of Youth (NNOMY) is supported by individual contributions and a grant by the Craigslist Charitable Fund - 2023 Except where otherwise noted, content on this site is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License. NNOMY websites are hosted by The Electric Embers Coop.

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NNOMY

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the Militarization of youth
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