Disaster Montana Army National Guard apologizes following recruitment poster outrage - German WWII soldiers mistakenly added in

A Montana Army National Guard recruitment poster is being taken down statewide after an editing mistake was pointed out on social media.

The poster reads: "It’s more than college money….It’s the spirit of tradition." But in the background, images of German Nazi World War II soldiers are prominent, which sparked outrage online.

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Montana Army National Guard
The recruitment poster


Above is the recruitment poster that’s getting so much attention. Command Sgt. Major Keith DeBoo is pictured, holding a photo of his veteran grandfather Louis DeBoo. But German WWII soldiers were mistakenly added in the background around DeBoo.

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Kelsey Boggs/MTN News
German WWII soldiers


"I’m sure that somewhere, the (Public Affairs) office for the National Guard is squirming, to say the least,” said Randy Stiles, a district commander for the Veterans of Foreign Wars in Billings, on Friday.

Last fall, the poster was distributed across Montana.

"I can see their idea about tradition through the decades. Well, never at any point has the National Guard supported the Nazi party, or Germany for that matter,” Stiles said. "More than likely, it was like, ‘Hey, the National Guard wants us to do this. We’re an ad agency.’ So they went over, they got some Adobe stock. ‘Oh that’s cool looking, I’ll put that down.’ Well, the person probably doing it was probably an assistant of an assistant of an assistant. And, well, really didn’t know our history."

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Kelsey Boggs/MTN News
Randy Stiles


MTN News reached out to the Montana Army National Guard to inquire about the poster and was sent the following written statement:

“Montana National Guard leadership is aware of a Montana Army National Guard recruiting poster that appears to show members of the World War II German Army in the background. This poster does not represent our history or values and has been removed from further distribution. We sincerely apologize for this serious mistake.

"The poster was created by the Montana Army National Guard. The intent of the poster was to show our tradition of multi-generation service. Command Sgt. Maj. Lawrence DeBoo is shown holding a picture of his grandfather, veteran Louis DeBoo. In searching for a historical image for the background of the poster, the creator found an Adobe Stock photo. During the approval process, the Recruiting team did not recognize the German-style uniforms and equipment.

"More than 800 Montanans were killed in action during World War II. The Montana National Guard’s 163rd Infantry Regiment fought in the Pacific Theater from 1942 through 1945 during the Southern Philippines, New Guinean and Papuan Campaigns. The service and sacrifice of Montana’s veterans such as Louis DeBoo and the 163rd is carried forward in everything the Montana National Guard does today.

"Again, we sincerely apologize for this mistake.”


Stiles, a Marine and Army National Guard veteran of 25 years, knows DeBoo (the man featured on the poster) personally.

"Had he known that he was going to do that or be back there, he would have said something. He would never, ever, ever stand for something like that,” Stiles said.

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Kelsey Boggs/MTN News
Stiles looking at the poster


Stiles believes the mistake was made by someone who wasn’t well-versed in history and outside of the Montana Army National Guard.

"They clearly were young and not in the know,” said Stiles. "I don’t think it really reflects the guard at all. If the people that do think it reflects, clearly don’t know. And I’m sure the person that put that stock photo down had no idea either."

Veterans like Stiles hope in the future, the mistake serves as a reminder.

"I think, had this kid known his history, he would’ve realized that, those aren’t American soldiers," Stiles said. "Which is kind of sad."

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hwo is someone so clueless about history that they dont recognize a very obvious german uniform? either this is the result of a brain dead zoomer, or he result of a based zoomer troll.
After seeing it consistently happen everywhere, be it in Russian celebratory signs for victory day or US Airforce posters using MIG 31 silhouettes I genuinely think that every time this happens person responsible simply didn't give a shit, google "WW2 photo", slap in the photoshop, job done, please give me my paycheck.
 
More than likely, it was like, ‘Hey, the National Guard wants us to do this. We’re an ad agency.’ So they went over, they got some Adobe stock. ‘Oh that’s cool looking, I’ll put that down.’ Well, the person probably doing it was probably an assistant of an assistant of an assistant. And, well, really didn’t know our history."
Here's a zany idea: since that ad agency thought so little of this campaign they assigned it to "an assistant of an assistant of an assistant," maybe don't waste tax dollars on outsourcing a recruitment poster? Do they have literally no communications officer desk jockeys who can throw something together in Photoshop? I know it's the Army, but surely there must be some creative types in the Montana National Guard. Hell, even some Zoomer recruit might be good at that if you let them.
 
It could be worse...in fact it is worse. There is a National Guard Retention poster floating around (I can't find it online) that has a Wagner contractor on it...and nobody else. Just a Russian mercenary and his AK walking away from the camera into the sunset.

"Reenlist! It doesn't pay as well as mercenary work but you probably won't get killed in the Ukraine!*"
*See your local Wagner recruiter for details about dying in Ukraine as well. You can do both!
 
When your Army is apologizing, you do not deserve to Conquer or Thrive. Plus, don't you think there's a worryingly low amount of Sub-Saharan Shitums on that poster? Not very Dieverse Montana.
 
"It's more than college money..."

The fact that statement is even mentioned on a recruitment poster kinda means that it isn't, which is how the funny edit slipped through in the first place. If the guy who made that poster in the first place actually cared about his job more than just the college money because of its honorable tradition, he never would've made a version with Nazi soldiers in the first place.

If it was about honor they wouldn't even need the poster.

 
Here's a zany idea: since that ad agency thought so little of this campaign they assigned it to "an assistant of an assistant of an assistant," maybe don't waste tax dollars on outsourcing a recruitment poster? Do they have literally no communications officer desk jockeys who can throw something together in Photoshop? I know it's the Army, but surely there must be some creative types in the Montana National Guard. Hell, even some Zoomer recruit might be good at that if you let them.
Creative people don't really like the army on account of the army's job is to make conformists out of everyone. Now it makes DIE conformists, which is totally lame and gay.
 
The poster reads: "It’s more than college money….It’s the spirit of tradition." But in the background, images of German Nazi World War II soldiers are prominent, which sparked outrage online.
Some countries pre-WWII like China and Ireland used stahlhelm helmets, and the reason was that Vickers & Co. and other companies of Triple Entente countries got the design for the late WWI German helmet as reparations (Germany could not export them), but even if these were Chinese, Irish or Chilean, it's still shoddy and second rate. How hard is it to put 'US troops, WW2' into a search engine?
 
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