Big Men, Big Mission, Big Mistake

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So here comes the Texas Guard, boots on the ground in Illinois, called up by President Trump like a rent-a-sheriff posse, flown in to scare the Chicago out of Chicago. Only problem? Some of the troops rolling off the trucks looked more Buc-ee’s than Baghdad. One viral photo later, the military scrambled like a dropped breakfast taco.

Cue the brass. Texas Guard HQ issued a statement worthy of bureaucratic taxidermy: troops were “not in compliance” with certain “standards,” discovered during a “concurrent validation process.” Translation: they didn’t look the part, and now it’s our mess to clean up.

And wouldn’t you know it—this all comes just days after Defense Secretary Pete “Pull-Up Bar” Hegseth pledged a national crackdown on “fat troops.” Hegseth, who plays a war hero on cable news, has made body composition his latest crusade. If it jiggles, it’s not ready. That’s the gospel from the Secretary’s office, where appearance is nine-tenths of warfighting.

Now let’s pause. These Guard troops got 24 hours’ notice. Less than a day to drop what they were doing—working second jobs, feeding kids, fixing fences—and report for a federal deployment. That’s not a recipe for a precision force. That’s a recipe for chaos with a press release.

And it gets better. This wasn’t some dusty border operation or flood response. This was a political stunt dressed up as “protection.” The White House wanted tough optics: boots, badges, and testosterone on demand. The Pentagon wanted discipline. The governor wanted credit. Nobody wanted to explain the logistics of sending 200 part-time troops across the country without confirming whether they could pass a tape test.

But once the photo hit, the mob did the work. Social media ran wild with gut-check analysis. Clicks were scored. Shame was cast. And instead of owning the rushed mobilization, leadership blamed the soldiers themselves. Pulled them out. Quietly replaced them. Hoped no one would notice that readiness isn’t built in a day—and sure as hell not in a press cycle.

So now we’ve got a lesson in American military theater: call up the Guard, ignore the checklist, take the photo, blame the troops. Never mind that many of these folks have deployed before. Never mind their records. Never mind their real-world skills. They weren’t visibly ready, so they became a liability.

This is what happens when image outweighs substance—when the guys at the top trade readiness for ratings and throw the troops under the next news cycle. You used to tell a unit’s effectiveness by its NCOs and its grit, not its waistline. The real flab is upstairs, in the decision-making layer where egos are lean, but priorities are bloated.

Want a military that meets standards? Start by giving them time. Money. Training. Health care that works. Want fewer embarrassing photos? Stop using troops as props in political showdowns. And if you really care about readiness, maybe look beyond the beltline. There’s more to fighting than fitting in a uniform.

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