I’m in the military. This cannot put him in jail. It’s called the first amendment. Military regulations don’t apply to civilians. Otherwise Hollywood wouldn’t be to make military movies and shows.
US Penal Code § 772(f) states: "While portraying a member of the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, or Space Force, an actor in a theatrical or motion-picture production may wear the uniform of that armed force if the portrayal does not tend to discredit that armed force." If you want to argue that he's ate the fuck up because his hair is out of regs, laces not tucked, wrong undershirt, wearing his cover indoors, etc., then by all means, you're right. If it bothers you that much, RU-vid comment section ain't the place.
@@Ficus117 civilians are not subject to Title 10 U.S.C. I am 100% sure that guy is not any of those categories. Wearing the uniform in a skit or motion picture so as long as it doesn’t bring discredit upon the Armed Forces applies to service members. How do I know? 1) it’s Title 10, Title 10 is only for service members; and 2) Hollywood makes movies all the time that make the Armed Forces look dumb or incompetent. What allows this? The most basic of rights: The 1st Amendment. So to OP; suck a dick, they don’t have to “earn it.” They’ve earned it by simply being in this country and having the right to express themselves. It becomes illegal when they try receive monetary gain like discounts; that’s called stolen valor.