I watched the full french documentary. Stan was rejected because during the interview he said he wanted to join the foreign legion to prove himself he could do it. Like a personal challenge. The foreign legion don't like people joining "for fun". They want desperate men willing to risk their lives. Stan was just here for the experience.
Nah the lad was perfect it’s whatever he said or what they found out in the private interview , they would have soon had a word with him if that’s all it was about that would be ridiculous, ask any special forces unit it’s self motivation that they are wanting
They did not "reject" him, they saved his 5 next years. Foreign legion is not a typical army unit, they want people that are here as the last option. If tomorrow France engages in a war against any modern army, the Foreign Legions will basically do suicide/very high risk missions, as they did in history. So never try it if you seek "challenge" or "fun". There is nothing like that in the FL, only honor, missions, tasks and ranks. I did it for 5 years, 80% in my bed, 19% watching tv/phone, 1% action. It's the most boring job 99% of the time but at least it gets you out of trouble once out, and if you have nobody, FL is a real family.
@@arnaudkaho7137 We can see it even from the past 10years, look in Malia, they've seen the most combat out of all countries participating in anti ISIL and Boko Haram over there. And if I recall correctly, have the highest casualty numbers after UN African origin Blue Helmets.
Wonder why they rejected that kid. Highly motivated individual, extremely athletic and willing to lead, and follow....those qualities make outstanding troops. Join the US Army! Ranger material right there
I joined the British Army in 1986 and my two mates tried the same and were rejected because of criminal records. They both went off to France and joined the Legion. One was rejected a month later, the other went onto serve 15 years in 2REP. He would send me letters whilst on Ops. He painted a nice life in the Legion and I swear I regret not trying it myself. Shit happens.
I felt bad for him because I know exactly how that must have been for him. I had everything planned out, I worked hard to get prepared, but then at MEPS I got PDQ'd because of some medical stuff. I had to fly to another state for it, and that flight home was the worst. I'd imagine it's even worse for him given his country of origin. I mean, while it sucked for me, it wasn't like I didn't have any other good paths to follow.
The legion's main HR fear is desertion by highly motivated candidates that become disappointed with the boring legion life. That is why they tend not to select candidates too motivated. They prefer desperate people with no option but to stay there. In general, sometimes it is better not to try too hard in life.
I heard they reject sometimes former american marines but accept high school kids. No one really knows sometimes apparently. I heard from brazilians that they knew portuguese guys who were in and not had but have still problems with the law, the legion knew but let them in. But that is interesting, if you are candid with them they will let you in. What would you call having nowhere else to go?
@@miguelmarques4583 the legion will take you no matter what your criminal record is so long as you haven't committed murder or a sexual offence. Hence the new identity and you can choose to keep that identity after your service. Back in the day they didn't care who you were or what you did as long as ye were fit and willing to kill for the legion.
You know it's really fucking weird when I was in the Navy, I had to try to go special forces and didn't make it and ultimately decided that when they got out they were going to join the French foreign legion, that's kind of what inspired me to look into these guys.
I can imagine he made use of being in Europe and went to Germany. He said "Asyl" (Asylum) at the border which starts the procedures. Even if he is then rejected, he mustn't leave and will live on welfare.
He's functionally retarded. Under 80IQ is a liability on the battlefield. Only way he serves is if a massive war erupts and even then he'll be cleaning latrines in the rear.
Every military has reading and writing requirements. Being from Gabon, he may not have had good literacy. This is important as, for the modern soldier, there is allot to learn. On top of that, in the Legion there are also many chants (songs) to learn which would be difficult without good literacy. Another point is that the US Army does not take anyone with an IQ below 83. This eliminates about 11% of the population. For the British Army, it is 90 IQ points. That eliminates 20% of the population. It is sad to see a young man who seems to have so much to give be sent home, but being fit and motivated wont mean that you can dissemble weapons clean them properly and then reassemble them so that they work.. When I did my basic training back in 1989 I was trained by a Black Sergeant Chef so Stans departure was not due to his colour. The Legion is definitely not racist. In 2 REP I had a Japanese Sgt, Akihiko Saito. Look him up on WIKI. He got shot in Iraq in 2005 after 20 years in the legion.
no, good body but he had a very wrong attitude. Acted from get go as if he "knew" what had to be done, what it takes etc. + obvious fake supporting the other candidates to get positive remarks from staff and candidates. Resulting in childlike cheers from those candidates when he broke the pull up record...."where do you think you are" ??? " les ancients" will not be fooled/impressed by this. on the contrary. Stan is/seems the type that feels everything revolves around him, what he wants, what he thinks is right and how much he can impress others...that is just what we saw in this short clip, that arrogant know-it-all behaviour, was probably constant. Stan is the type that will start giving problems in the near future and selection weeded him out quickly. "profil ne correspond pas".
As a young man I wanted to join the Legion, like many of my relatives I joined the US Army and served 23 years. I still with regret, not taking this challenge when I was 18 years old, unfortunate for this man to have a dream crushed.
Eh. After a medical issue that kicked me out of the USMC 3 months into bootcamp, I joined the Legion and didn't mention any prior USMC history. I stayed in about a year in 2e REP before deserting. I can't speak for every unit since they all vary, but the disorganization, corruption, and lack of discipline was appalling. I finally got some waivers and am in the USMC again as an 0311. The Legion shaped me personally as a man (I was 20 at the time) but the Marine Corps as an institution, even with its faults, is much much much more cohesive and deadly.
You would not have been accepted since you feel this was a challenge, this was why Stan was rejected. the Legion does not want people who see it as a challenge, once you meet the challenge, what next? They want people who are at their end and feel they have nothing more to lose. This way they can build a soldier in the Legion way. This is why the Legion is one of the most respected forces in the world, they get the job done at any cost. I researched them alot when i was younger, i wouldnt have been suitable and considered it as a way to pay respect to the ones who came before me and succeeded. Its a very tightly knit organization and their only requirement is to not disgrace the legion in any way possible. you think the marines, seals or specops is tough, theyre tough but cannot compare to the Legion. failure is not an option at any cost
I'm an American and severed in the army after college years, yet ever since I was a young kid growing up in the 1950's- 60's I've had the utmost respect for the French Foreign Legion.
Respect for WHAT(?), you ask me?? Answer: I think the Foreign Legion, itself, its history, its 'Esprit de corps'; its ability to take men from all over the world from different cultures, races, nationalities and mold them into a cohesive fraternal military organization is all worthy of respect.
@@chiptenor ...the ability to take men from different cultures, races, nationalities... and send them to "expeditions" to Syria, Indochina, Algeria, Guiana... Used as barrier troops against the French army in World War I. Nothing to be proud of at all. Especially in the 21st century.
My uncle tried joining in the late 70’s, he thought he was good because of his prior military/combat arms background and the fact that he spoke “French” not realizing that Louisiana Creole is far from intelligible to most standard French speakers, so they gave him a bit of a hard time with the language barrier, he said, if you weren’t a French speaker you’d learn quickly, because they’d beat it into you quite quickly if you didn’t understand & ofcourse he was rejected. He was always a strange guy though, he was traveling the world to random & remote places long before mainstream media popularized the idea of it and always had great stories, especially his war stories (ALL lies imo😂), but sadly he & his girlfriend were killed in a car crash in Japan in the mid 90’s a month before they were set to tie the knot. He def was a fun guy to be around & a most unlikely fellow, being from a rural coastal town in Louisiana, you’d never believe small towners could think that big.
Stan is basically suited to fit any military force. He displayed heart, determination, teamwork, etc. He'll be an asset to any team who will allow him the opportunity. Hell, private contracting might be a good future for him, definitely more money. Hopefully, a unit/organization/force somewhere will be better with the addition of Stan.
He tries to please authority at every turn, they don't want this, it is also possible he lied about his past. Also by him doing 24 push ups for example while his mates think is impressive, FL think of it as a show off, he's is hard to trust, if he is too good what will make him stay when he gets a much better offer in life? FL soldiers are usually seen in a high regard, so offers from PMCs come pouring in with much better financial benefit. FL doesn't want a guy that is the best in everything because they are hard to trust and ready to defy authority because he might think "i'm better fit than him". They want a guy that's ready to behave cult like into this cult like military.
It is rare to meet civilians, or even military members in Stans shape. His motivation was through the roof. His leadership came naturally. I really wonder why he was rejected
His enthusiasm was a fad, also, he has a chamaleonic personality, tries to please and adjur to authority, meaning, he has no idea what authority is by his own judgement. He will switch sides as authority moves in his eyes. That may fly in an office job, not in La Legion.
I know how he felt being rejected. I tried in 1994 flying from Australia and spending a night at La Malmousque in Marseille before heading to Aubagne. I lost a kidney playing rugby in the Navy when I was 18 but was knocked back anyway. I had just completed 15 years in the Australian Navy and Army but it didn't matter. At least you received a piece of paper and some pay. I received nothing. Great work for trying as you will always be able to say that at least you had the guts to try.
His paper says he can never apply again, so no "at least" about it for him. Inapte definitiv means that. If he got inapte temporaire he could reapply after a set amount of time, usually 6 months. Obviously something went very wrong with one of his interviews.
@@CFox.7 And besides you get thousands of applicants each year. You can afford to pick exactly what you want. As they said, about 1 in 8 makes selection, and that's before any of the washing out in training...
I joined in 1988 at the same place , Fort de Nogent but it had heavy wooden doors on the entrance back then, like prison gates. We also didn’t have any physical tests there, not until we got to Aubagne for the 15 day selection process. I passed and went on to 4eme RE at Castelnaudary, a frightening place for a 22 year old … I don’t mind admitting. After passing basic training, I joined 6eme REG but later transferred to 2eme REP
You must be made of metal. Great achievement. I wouldn’t have dreamed of joining at 22 and i doubt I would have made it in even if I tried. You must have some great stories.
I know its not the same but, i had too leave the army during training because of a medical issue and i was devastated. A few months later i was watching a marine bootcamp video from the early 2000s and a drill instructor said to an injured recruit that "everything happens for a reason" because if he had of passed through training he may have been the one to be killed or injured. It was a good lesson to take away from the experience.
Stan got rejected and it's heartbreaking because everything we've seen in this documentary about him is extremely positive. But there are other considerations to take into account, physical condition, health, psychiatry, motivations, criminal record, literacy, etc... He's obviously motivated and with exceptional physical condition, but there's a grain of sand. We won't know what it is. That's how it is. Best wishes to him.
Early 2000s I worked with a Pommy brick layer in New Zealand called Shakey because he would get the shakes if he hadnt had a drink.... very nice bloke who joined the foreign legion after serving in Bosnia ect.... you would pick him up in the morning for work and he would be halfway through a 6 pack of beer after bottle of wine 😂Come to work and lay the most bricks with the highest qaulity workmanship He would then run to the sportsbar at lunch for a few schooners and get back to work ... despite his love of a cold 1 you could not fault this mans work load or qaulity ... he would always talk about finding a good asian woman to settle down with and always had a top story/joke or both or stories about his tours in bosnia and such places... About 10yrs later I bumped into him in a shopping mall kid in tow and an asian wife .... I hope he is still out there happily married enjoying life 💯🖤👊
Stan has all the physical attributes to make a great solider. But when he was explaining to his comrade about the interrogation on camera that is a no - no. The only other thing that comes to mind is that since the media couldn't learn what happens during the interrogation, they got him to talk and that can lead to a discharge. His physical prowess is high. And with training he's probably make a great contractor. But it has to start with controlling his mouth. Just an opinion from a twenty-five-year former Infantry Officer.
j ai exactement pensé à la meme chose vouloir divulguer aux autres les methodes d interogatoires n a pas joué en sa faveur un peu trop sur de lui fanfaron ima ginez il se fait fair prisonier il se mettrait à parler conclusion pas discret sportif mais pas intelligent
I give you the answer: The guy was only there for the French passport and the money. If they realize that these are your reasons, no matter how athletic you are, you'll be rejected - they're not stupid 😉😉👍🏼👍🏼
That guy he thinks is to clever way more over all ,he has arrogant character and not focus He can’t work in a team And many more To let you understand easily,the legion mostly take mans with a good character (like a sheep) (dog) I don’t know how to make you understand “walk with your head down” humble things lime that Sometimes recruiters are not fit and they don’t pass test sportif but they still get a contract 📑 So sport or muscle it doesn’t matter But brain and character matter bye bye
Someone pointed out that he was told he could never apply again so the reason is either medical or security check. It's probably something to do with his heart
After my discharge as USMC 6092 Airframer. I felt I needed to prove myself worthy of my own respect. I prepared for almost a year to join the FL. But, I was convinced at the last second to stay in the USA by friends who thought I would never return alive. I feel they were right and I don't regret my change of heart. For those that the FL suits. Good luck and I wish you all the best.
The legion today is getting many people apply. However, this makes standards rise. The British army today does not take anyone below an IQ score of 90 . This is below the average of 100, but does eliminate 20% of the population. Stan, from a poor country like Gabon, may not have met either the IQ standard or the literacy standard. When I joined in 1989, he may have got in. Warfare is more high tech today, so education will trump physical strength. Not many people have both. ... There is a sad story from the Vietnam war era where the US defense secretary Robert Mcnamara demanded that the Army lower their IQ requirements so as to make up the numbers for the Vietnam war. It was a disaster with many becoming casualties due to lack of intelligence. They were called Mcnamaras morons. They paid tribute to these men in the character of Private Pile in the movie, Full Metal Jacket. To this day, the US Army will not take recruits below 83IQ. The reality is that 10% of the population are too dumb to be trained to do anything that the Army needs doing. so much for the equality agenda....
@@digdougedy Will and motivation is not enough for a good soldier. Nowadays intelligence is more important than physical fit. At least he was wise enough to admit that they know best what kind of people they need. Sad though. He really wanted that but that is not enough.
That was honestly heartbreaking. I was interested in joining the FFL myself as well however life continued in a different direction. That's why I have so much respect for those who join.
They treat foreigners (even French Canadians) with outmost disrespect. You endure the suck and move on,but foreign legions are essentially mercenaries of France that are better equipped than the French main forces. You are expendable in the legion. No glory or value in that.
When a young man of 17 1/2 years old I did my military training, I remember a comrade who, after a bloody love story, wanted to join the Legion. A little guy, not very tall, not very strong, but very enduring. I only saw him once again, he had entered the Legion and I had been assigned to the cavalry (the MBTs of the time). We kept in touch for a while being in the same promotion, and he went somewhere, one day, a place where only the Legion goes and I never heard from him again. the army not being made for me I stopped, I had given enough time to my country to feel legitimate to vote. I never knew if my boyfriend was alive or fallen in the field of honor. I just hope the girl who broke his heart repented a few times. But he did what I couldn't do psychologically or physically. It was the first time I understood that everyone has limits.
Never give your life to government. They are run by people who are pure evil. The guerilla is the true essence of the free man. May you become redpilled someday.
Stan would be an absolute stud in the US Military! He's in good shape, highly motivated, and hard working. I'm sure he'll be successful in whatever he does in life 🙏
he might do well in reg forces and with some training be promoted to a higher non com but he likely wont make officer. he said he was in this to prove to himself, not many armed forces branch will accept this. the want people they can mold.
While I was in my previous Division 114 back in Boot Camp. I knew a Navy SEAL candidate who could do over 100 plus pushups and he would run over 14 laps without losing his breath. Not to mention he was able to do over 5 minutes of planks. I could only do the bare minimum my rate will be BM (Boatswains Mate) once I’m done with A-School.
As part of a volunteer platoon from West Berlin at the time, we got to attend French Army Commando School 4. We were essentially the 4th platoon in a French training company. During the course we learned two important lessons: As a Commando you despised the Para's, and revered the Legion.
I went there in 2017 and got in so much easy that I expected. After 3 months we had a training part where was the first time for me sleeping on the ground, cold one. Since the first morning my lower back start to hurt until it got so bad I couldn't walk several days later. 2 weeks later they sent me home , reason medical unfit, permanent ban. My answer to one important question from them was, +as long I can mentally and physically + 😅 There are so many more behind you waiting for a spot and they know that.
@@anhviet5412 How long you plan to stay with us? Was part of the first personal interview and was the last question to seal it, I even did some push-up because he didn't think my story match the timeline of some of my answers. I was not the only one, found out later some of my colleagues did too.
Most test at that level are for different purposes. A guy could miss the required PT but still make it another could exceed it and not. It’s attitude and mental maturity that gets you into a group like this.
No it's because he dicsussed the private interrogations with another recruit who hasn't gone in yet, completely discrediting him as someone trustworthy and someone able to keep secrets, which is the whole point of the legion.
6:57 Stan talks to another recruit about the secret interview process. I understand that many will think it's a bullshit reason to reject him based on that and how it's admirable that he is helping out a fellow recruit. Stan fucked up. Period. The End.
Stan talks too fucking much, at the middle of the vid I was like shut up brooooo and there I saw he was going to be rejected even before reading the comments. As a mafia boss would say.. keep ur fucking mouth shut
@@sebby324 My cousin has been a legionnaire for 11 years, he is part of 2 R.E.I based in Nimes, he was born with a heart murmur that shows up on EKG, Legion accepted him. He had four years prior US Army and his murmur showed up at Army physical. Its all up to the Medical technician in the Legion.
In part 2 we learn that Stan is now serving in DGSI: General Directorate for Internal Security - the washout was just to see if he’d leave and hit the gym & church or hookers and beer
I'm current US Navy. The second I got to boot camp, I instantly wished I would've joined the Army. It's nice knowing there's better adventures out there if my Navy career doesn't go the way I want it to go.
Well, chances are slim you'll get your head shot off in the Navy, but you still have the full benefits of being a veteran later. Who desires combat has never seen it. I would go Navy or maybe Airforce. Whatabout SEAL? You can apply.
@@RackwitzG I value adventure, but I also value cool training and pushing myself whether I see combat or not, and more importantly, I want to be in Europe. In order for me to go SO (Seal or Swcc), I had to sign a contract for that. My dad is a former Ranger and talked me out of it. Now I'm on a ship bored out of my mind around a bunch of dumb kids who only joined for free college. I'm seeing the world yeah, but I don't feel like I'm in the military. I had been contemplating joining the Legion for nearly 10 years now. Now that I'll have the VA benefits, I don't see the point in joining the US Army.
@@egg-iu3fe We do, but we also don't do anything. Being a Sailor on a ship is a glorified warehouse job where you are just cleaning, writing, and painting. I also want to be in Europe. Like live there, not deploy there.
I remember that pebble court yard. It felt kind of like a prison yard with all the different nationalities banding together. Sometimes a legionnaire would come out and set up a table and sell cigarettes and chocolates. I look back at it now very fondly. Sadly, after passing selection, I got flagged and pulled before the group got sent to the castle. Said I scored minimum on the hearing test and had an appointment in Marseille for a more professional test. The two and a half weeks t until the test was filled with details to really cool places and it was one of the best times of my life. I have nightmares sometimes about going back and getting rejected again
The Uk should have a foreign legion. A legitimate way for young foreign men to come to the UK and provide a service and invest themselves into our nation. Very proud of our Gurkhas.
I was all set to fly to Paris and try, but I didn’t have the money to get back if I didn’t make the selection process. I should’ve gone anyway and it is one of my single greatest regrets. As a Navy guy, I should’ve tried anyway. I had the courage and the means. I should’ve given it my leap of faith
Would love more insight into the reasons for rejection. We don't seem to be getting the whole story. Others that I've heard from in the Legion say there is a high desertion rate.
@@tomondiek2839 bullshit you are trying to make everything about race there are loads of black soliders in legion and they are not discriminating only race there is solider
Back in 2009 i was doing my mandatory military service in Turkish army. I havent seen a single soul doing 10 pull ups out of 83 soldiers 😅 and this guy is a beast.
It is a consolation to many that even a motivated beast like Stan was unable to join. Looking at his performance, it was probably a minor medical ailment or some other technicality.
I think that the reason was because at the interview he said that he wanted to join the Legion just to prove himself that he could do it and they don’t like that, they want desperate people that are not afraid of loosing their lives
joining a special unit with only physical fitness is pretty stupid. they want smart people. people who know what they want in life what they do. if your reasons to join is too selfish can be a reason to get kicked. and i say "CAN"
@@melbourneauditing3404 thats exactly why, the us army doesnt want thinkers but will tolerate them, the legion will not tolerate thinkers and you are gone.
In my senior year of high school I tried to enlist in the air force, i tested very high in the ASVAB test but was rejected because I had had a history of sleep walking as a child, when asked on the paper work I didn't think it was a big deal but seems it was then, a few years later I talked to a recruiter and enlisted again, this time I was accepted but i had to retest and didn't score as high on the ASVAB so my career choice weren't as many.
Best Documentary..."Stan",the Gabonese, definitely was an excellent candidate for the French Foreign Legion. The fact that they turned him down speaks volumes about the "Legion". There are definitely other 'Mercs' who would love this potential recruit's conscription.
In the full documentary he was too kind and too revealing...he recounted to other candidates how the questioning was etc. I think such an attitude is ok for the civil world but not for the military. He's physically exceptional though...
@@isaymymind1727...not a bad answer, but he could have learned to be furtive. That's not a complicated prerequisite to achieve...unless,it involves a moral call.
@@claudesledge5545 That's not how the military works, especially not the infamous Legion Entrangere. You must be stone cold, no kindness, no mercy, no weakness.
@@kingswood9064...yes,you're correct,but the military also has a saying"leave no cohort behind ",which means they do have heart...just under certain circumstances.
Hey Stan. The Corps is always looking for a few good men. Reach out to a Marine. They may talk to a recruiter for you. I did for my brother, and he joined. You looked squared away on the pull up bar. Good luck
I know of two.. ..and both said, "I've nothing left (&/or) to wake for, need a place to belong".. There's training that's never gonna see media light..
This is sad. However, it seems his background may have been a factor. We never know which decisions in our past may pave our future. We hope all the best to this motivated leader.
@@undead9999 I wonder what he lied about. Maybe it is just the fact he lied. I don' t know if it exagerated but I heard a guy say they will even know where you lost uour virginity.
@Miguel Marques the Gestapo has ways to check your story. But the point I always bring up to young aspirants who think they will be fine with "a little white lie" is this: would you entrust your life to a liar? That's why liars are dropped, fast. You could be the fittest, smartest candidate, but lieing to the Gestapo is an automatic out. When I went through it a former Marine was dropped because he tried to conceal a DUI incident to the Gestapo. He was excellent soldier material, but the Legion can afford to be picky, there will always be far more applicants than places to fill.
What a bloody shame. Highly motivated, extremely fit, as another poster says showing leadership qualities. Got all the right material to do very well in the military as a top recruit. I thought his most telling attribute was the mature way he accepted his rejection. He is a credit, I think he will ultimately succeed in his chosen profession. As a British Veteran I hope to God this is the calibre of troops we are recruiting into our forces.
Stan was clearly giving all he had to achieve his goal. Showed great effort and camaraderie. Took rejection like a champ. The Legion made a bad decision. People's perception of things generally speaks more about their character than the person they're opinionated about.
It's easy to be on the outside looking in and say that! I was an Army Recruiter for 4 years and had MANY what I felt to be qualified enlistees. They were fit and smart. Many with College educations. Once they actually went through the Medical & Psychological portion of the process, that was when underlying problems were exposed that many times even the enlistee wasn't aware of. They didn't disclose in the video of why those turned away were...not even to the individuals so we will never know the actual reasons.
you can be sure they need good men, and will draft him if he was apt. His character and background check was negative or he lied in something or had problem with police very simple. They don't tolerate childish behaviour there
@@arncj18 true but tbh I don’t get this new military concept of wanting “choir boys”….people fuck up, people learn, people change & people are at times even caught up in something they didn’t do….I was just now able to get into the military after fighting for over 3 years 🤷♂️🤷♂️
Reserve soldier here: He tried too hard to be someone he isn't. He was selected by the film crew to "beat" the selection process through brute strength. But it's also a selection of character and of course they found out. Edit: Ah, and the top comment confirms it.
5:42 no boasting 6:57 don't talk to anyone about the interviews. In addition to physical preparation, prepare yourself physically and mentally. Don't be active on social media and don't stand out. If you do this to become a French national the past matter. If the past is bad, specify that you do not want a residence permit after the 5 years and maybe they can accept you regardless of the past.
He is physically very fit and strong, excellent french, seems intelegent and literate. I'm going to guess he has a criminal record he thought he was leaving behind. The other thing m8ght be a failed drugs test. That or they just didn't like him, they thought he wasnt going to be a good fit. His exit letter marks him permanently unsustainable.
@@twoonthewall Atl east he was accepted to the army and even got a medal. If you speak strong southern accent doesn't mean you lack intelligence or if you have speaking disorder. (ofcourse lack of communication is a no go but you get my point) Like i said, you can't verify someones intelligence with a few interviews. He is fit and looks like a military person but there is something off with his mentality or basic brain function. Foreign legion is not a special unit. If you get denied there is just something wrong in you. Or maybe it was just because he got filmed and his new identity got revealed. They have more than enough applicants to choose from. That is also lack of intelligence to allow yourself filmed while trying to get in and talking about secret interview with others is also mark of stupidity.
@@oxxal7357 😄😄 You do realise forest Gump is a fictional movie? Part of the conceit was Forest was some sort of sub 85 IQ yet all these fantastic things happen to him. Look up Mc Namara's morans. As for it being held against him for speaking to the camera, who do you think gave them permission to be present and for any filiming to take place. Going back to my first point I firmly belive I can identify with a good level of accuracy a sub 85IQ type person just by listening to them speak. I would agree with your point there is something off about him, maybe he was a bit of a dick and they just knew from experience he would not be a good fit or he was a bullshitter. My guess he had some sort of crime that turned up when they went looking for his records
@@twoonthewall I still don't believe this clip was enough to judge intelligence. It might have been scripted. Who knows? You are right that stupidity can be identified by only speaking with a person but it must be face to face situation. And i sure know Forrest Gump is a fictional movie. :)
I think he was rejected because they watched the part where he sits on the bench and comments about the interview process, where he says they'll try to fool you and so on. I suspect the officers at the legion asked the filming crew about what they've recorded so far and they've seen the part Stan talks.
In Special Forces they need Super Fit people because your mistakes can get others killed and that is a common thin in war scenarios. Just join a different branch if you’re bloodthirsty..
You shouldn't expect to join any decent military outfit without being fit, strong and prepared. And joining the legion brings additional challenges in culture and language.
Pretty basic reason for rejection: too fit for fun, is means you excel in fitting the role but are there just for the fun to try yourself (and perhaps desertion is behind the corner when find out that is not living COD but is a lot of boring, routine duties). When selecting people: 1) to be desperate and needy enough to not have another chance in life 2) ready to suffer and to go for long run 3) basic fit (they will get fit later, no worry)
Some of the selection criteria might be: Do they have a personal history profile that can be validated? Are there any pre-existing medical conditions? Are they fit to enter training? Are they trainable? Are they able to work with others?
I was very disappointed in this documentary I thought the gentleman Stan would have been a great candidate for the Legion. I thought the Legion take everyone considering I watch Warriors of the French foreign Legion they should do a follow up and get the guy second chance. If not the US Army special forces Delta force rangers definitely what I need. You come to the US baby. 🥋🐉
The base criteria is : "What do they have to lose ?" Stan has too much is his life. Some people come from Mongolia and cross mountains, seas and borders hidden under a truck to go to the Fort without knowing a single word of french and don't even know how to read ! They just know there is that army that recruits the desperates and give them a new life. The legion takes people like that right away. People like Stan who have a family, money, knowledges etc. they don't take them.
@@thibaultmerlin They are more or less looking for disposable people. People without families don't have anyone who can be shown weeping on TV when their Legionnaire son is killed in Afghanistan or Africa.
I enlisted in the Canadian Army in late, 1979. What a $ experience that was. I was seventeen, green as hell, with a lot to prove in life. After my enlistment, turning twenty, I had nothing to prove to anyone. The Army in those days??? Man the crazy ass things I seen, it would curl your toes mate