Fair enough, you got me. It still bothers me that people play the "I didn't know" card, though.
US Education produces mixed results, some would say by design
I'm sorry if the job description goes: a command chain designed for the most efficient use of lethal force - you got yourself a red flag no matter how generously you flush out the supposed meaning of the employed term "effecient". I'll only accept reason number 4 in that it equates to being young and naive.
Yeah nah, an Army Imam/Chaplain, a canteen assistant who did nothing but peel potatoes or a logistics officer that spent their 8 years managing inventories, a fucking doctor who does the exact opposite of efficiently killing someone e.t.c.
Vast majority of US armed forces roles will never see combat. Plus the nature of war itself has changed, a USN sailor or pilot for example is probably not going to fire a single shot at any Chinese or Russian personnel any time soon, but they are going to maintain the capability. The primary objective of all the US armed forces is not to be lethal, it is to project power & not be fucked up by its own imposing bureaucratic size, opposing information control & electronic warfare. In cases like Iraq and Afghanistan the US army focuses on training the local military and police forces, not on killing Taliban or ISIS. So even in these examples the command structures are focused on doing different things, it doesn't help to be reductive
So would you say all legally criminal people are inherently bad people? It keeps making just as much (or little) sense if you switch it around. Consistently since a page.
The fact that it doesn't make sense is more reason for you to agree with me