The 0.6% Who Served: The Truth About Civilian Cowardice, Excuses, and Disrespect Toward Veterans
The 0.6% Who Served: The Truth About Civilian Cowardice, Excuses, and Disrespect Toward Veterans
By TD Goodman Books
Let’s speak plainly.
In America, less than 0.6% of the population currently serves in the U.S. Armed Forces. That means the remaining 99.4% of civilians are living under the blanket of freedom and safety that they did not earn—yet too many act as if they did. Worse, they disrespect the warriors who stood the post, fought the battles, buried brothers and sisters, and came home changed forever.
They post flags on Veterans Day.
They say “thank you for your service.”
But their actions tell the real story:
- They mock the uniform while enjoying the freedom it defends.
- They devalue veterans’ voices, then cry about their own rights.
- They make excuses for not serving, then complain about the benefits veterans fought for.
And when it comes to minority veterans, the disrespect cuts deeper.
Black and Brown Veterans Get Disrespected Twice
Not only have we served this country with distinction, but we’ve also done so while enduring racism, white supremacy, and systemic injustice—from within the ranks and far beyond.
We’ve stood post for people who wouldn’t stand next to us in a line.
We’ve protected rights for people who voted against our humanity.
We’ve died for a flag that still flies over injustice.
And now, when we return home, they question our pain, diminish our sacrifice, and insult our intelligence with excusesfor why they didn’t serve.
Let’s expose those excuses for what they really are.
Top Civilian Excuses for Not Serving in the Military
(Also known as: The Coward’s Creed)
- “I was going to, but I hurt my knee in high school.”
- “I was going to join, but my girlfriend didn’t want me to leave.”
- “I was going to, but I got a good job offer.”
- “I was going to join the Marines, but I didn’t want to kill anyone.”
- “I almost joined, but I don’t like being told what to do.”
- “I tried, but I failed the ASVAB.”
- “I was going to, but they wanted to send me to war.”
- “I almost enlisted, but I didn’t like the idea of being away from home.”
- “I thought about joining, but the military is just a pawn for the government.”
- “I was going to, but I didn’t want to be brainwashed.”
- “I tried, but the recruiter never called me back.”
- “I would’ve joined, but I was focused on college.”
- “I wanted to, but I couldn’t leave my family.”
- “I have too much to live for.”
- “The military doesn’t care about its people, so I didn’t bother.”
- “I was ready, but I didn’t want to fight someone else’s war.”
- “I almost joined, but I don’t support war.”
- “I didn’t want to die.”
- “I support the troops, just not the military.”
- “I was going to join after high school, but life happened.”
These are not reasons. These are cop-outs—often given by people who never intended to serve but now want the world to think they had courage.
The Real Problem: Entitlement Without Sacrifice
Civilians enjoy every privilege that veterans earned. And too many act like they’re owed even more.
They expect:
- VA-level benefits without ever deploying.
- Military discounts without military service.
- A safe America while never protecting it.
They disrespect veterans, especially minorities, while benefiting from the very courage they lacked. Then they cry about things like Stolen Valor, not realizing their silence, indifference, and excuses are just as fraudulent.
What Veterans Want
We don’t need fake praise. We need:
- Real respect.
- Proper healthcare and benefits.
- Acknowledgment of our full identity—including our culture, color, and sacrifice.
- Accountability for those who dishonor our service.
We served.
We showed up.
We did what the majority wouldn’t.
Now we demand what we’ve earned.
At TD Goodman Books, We Tell the Uncomfortable Truth
If this made you uncomfortable, good.
If you feel exposed, maybe it’s time to check your actions.
And if you served, this post is for you.
You are the rare breed. The 0.6%. The defender of the delusional, the ungrateful, and even the ignorant.
Keep standing tall. You don’t need validation from people who’d never wear the boots. You already did what they couldn’t—and wouldn’t.
Veterans, reclaim your voice.
Minority vets, demand your due.
Civilians, either step up—or shut up.
Read more truth at TDGoodmanBooks.com
Recommended Reads:
- Rising from the Ordinary: The Journey to Becoming Legendary




