Soldiers Claim Retribution over Christian Concert

According to the Army Times, the US Army is investigating claims that Soldiers were punished when they declined to attend a concert by a Christian music group in May

The Army said Friday it was investigating a claim that dozens of soldiers who refused to attend a Christian band’s concert at a Virginia military base were banished to their barracks and told to clean them up.

Interestingly, the punishment was reportedly telling the Soldiers to go back to their barracks.

As others have noted elsewhere, this “scandal” may be a result of selective semantics.  Within military training environments, it is not unusual for those who opt out of voluntary events to be sent back to their rooms.  This is most frequently done during religious services conducted non-simultaneously (ie, a Christian service and a Jewish service).

In addition, since those participating in the event, whatever it may be, are unable to use their personal items, the same restriction is often (though not always) placed on those who do not attend. 

One former servicemember reported declining to join his unit’s support of a local football bowl game; in return, he stood six hours of guard duty in the cold rain.  To those outside the military, it could be viewed as “punishment,” but it was nothing of the sort.  True, it may not seem “fair” by some standards.  Still, some even volunteer to sit extra duty during such optional events because it earns them either status or credit for future events.  There are probably thousands of such voluntary events in the military every year, though they generally stay well below the radar even when they’re on national TV: like, say, a Stephen Colbert taping, as has happened once and will happen again.  It is unlikely anyone was “forced” to go, though those who did not may have ended up doing menial tasks.

In this particular incident, it is likely the unit was marched to the event — which some reported as “pressuring” — because the unit commander was attempting to demonstrate support for an official military program.  The treatment of the Soldiers who chose not to participate does not appear to have been anything different than the way they would be treated after opting out of any other voluntary event — religious or not.

The fact that it was a Christian concert is irrelevant to the incident, though it does add a conspiratorial undertone (and thus shock value) to the loud accusations.  In fact, this may even be a good example of spiritual neutrality in the military — because the Soldiers were treated exactly the same way regardless of any religious content within the voluntary event. 

In summary, no religious event was mandatory, and the treatment of the Soldiers was not related to the content of the event.  Now, who would see a conspiracy of “religious tyranny” in an event conducted just like any other non-religious event?  As if that had to be asked

Mikey Weinstein claims Christian-themed events are “ubiquitous” throughout the military…

“Whenever we see this egregious, unconstitutional religious tyranny our job is to fight it,” he said.

And further:

[Weinstein] said [those] who were pressured into attending the concert – and then punished if they chose otherwise – were “spiritually raped by their commanding officers.”

6 comments

  • I hope this doesn’t blow up in our faces, but it could. This used to be the norm in boot camp, for example. If one didn’t go to chapel, one stayed and shined his shoes! It’s the way of things in the military, and I’ve never heard of anyone getting upset over it. Hope these soldiers get things squared away, whatever that entails.

  • That’s what happens in boot camp, if you decide not to go to chapel. This wasn’t a Chaplain-led service, it was a Christian-themed concert. I wonder if this was a concert by a quawwali (an Islamic music genre) group, that commanders made their troops attend in the name of “diversity” and “tolerance,” what the outcry would be like.

  • Janet,

    As no one “made their troops attend” anything in this instance, your point of comparison is irrelevant to the discussion at hand.

  • Perception is everything…

    First of all, going to any concert while in basic training is ridiculous! They should be learning how to be soldiers not singers! If they can attend Christian-themed concerts, why not allow them to go see Tanya Tucker or Ozzy Osbourne too?

    I wasn’t there, but the most obvious answer is….wait for it…..wait for it….and now…. my conspiratorial undertone (and thus shock value)—–BECUASE is was a Christian-themed concert and likely an aid in the “spiritual fitness” proselytizing agenda the US Military has so much succumbed to over the past 10 years or so.

    Let’s go to the nearest base, post or camp and round up all the troops and tell them the Commander believes they need spiritual fitness and invited to attend a Christian-themed concert. Those that don’t want to go will be invited on a 5 mile hike with rucksacks…and oh, by the way, no exceptions. Then see what happens. (Sorry guys…didn’t mean to give them any ideas).

    If they had allowed those not attending the concert to go back to their rooms on personal time, or maybe watch a movie instead of (e.g. standing six hours of guard duty in the cold rain), I bet we would not be having this wonderful chat.

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