Yes. He's Shrodinger's Shirtless Warrior.Friendly Bob said:Labyrinth said:Excellent to see you again, good sir. Welcome back to the world.Does this kind looking warrior occasionally phase in and out of reality?The Iron Ninja said:[HEADING=1]Ares Tyr is back![/HEADING]
HEY! We missed you. Your name has come up a few times in miscellaneous posts, so good luck getting caught up on all of that.Ares Tyr said:Also, hello again. I'm back.
WTF is wrong with the Navy? I mean, Liberty Buddies are so ... 1940's. I'm sorry, it's just that this is like bombarding me lately about how retarded the Navy seems to be at times.SmugFrog said:I'm in the Navy, and it is the same for us Bro. I had been in for 8 years when I transferred to Virginia for temporary duty (a security / MA school). They actually required the students to have a LIBERTY BUDDY to go out in town. That's not uncommon overseas (in fact, in the Navy, it's pretty much the standard now), but just to go out in Little Creek? Pants on the head retarded!
Classy? Possibly I might have ended up as some sort of army administrator. Sure, I wouldn't have been down in the mud (much), but I hardly think of that as classy.Friendly Bob said:Oi, that sounds a bit classy.S.H.A.R.P. said:*snip*
lol yeah. Actually, I believe in the 1940's, in the old Navy, you would probably get punched in the face for even saying "liberty buddy". These days it is the kinder gentler Navy - love your shipmate, be nice to everyone, be home before midnight... The people who need to be kicked out or punished AREN'T, because they can kiss-ass so well. It really frustrates me.McClaud said:WTF is wrong with the Navy? I mean, Liberty Buddies are so ... 1940's. For all their tech you'd think they'd actually evolve procedure-wise.
LOL I know what going before the mast means, and I'm kinda leery how that is supposed to be effective. Since most people called before the mast seem to be repeat offenders. Not that Air Force's version of non-judicial punishment is much better, but it isn't as ... ceremonious? ... as that.SmugFrog said:lol yeah. Actually, I believe in the 1940's, in the old Navy, you would probably get punched in the face for even saying "liberty buddy". These days it is the kinder gentler Navy - love your shipmate, be nice to everyone, be home before midnight... The people who need to be kicked out or punished AREN'T, because they can kiss-ass so well. It really frustrates me.McClaud said:WTF is wrong with the Navy? I mean, Liberty Buddies are so ... 1940's. For all their tech you'd think they'd actually evolve procedure-wise.
My last long underway a guy went to captain's mast (basically, like being before a judge and receiving a punishment - look up UCMJ Non Judicial Punishment if you want to know more) for going to a whorehouse. Times have changed.
The shining tip of the spear inevitably gets a bit banged up. And of course our career comes second, how would it not? We don't have the Army's money, the Navy's technology, or the Air Force's professional development. The Marine Corps offers pain, pride, and nothing else. We may be insane, but we don't give a shit, because we're insane.McClaud said:I think the issue is you joined the Marines. Marines are bullet-sponges first and foremost, and then their career tracks second. Which is so weird to me. You guys go onto a beach after it's been shelled, bombed, torched and blasted and take the remaining soldiers' fire so the Army can land behind enemy lines and drive around? That makes no sense to me at all.
McClaud said:Former Air Force here.
Seeing as how I worked in a training squadron for a few months as acting First Shirt -
You think basic training is a stressful mindgame? Wait until you are in real combat - you'll realize that basic training is a cakewalk in comparison.
The deal with basic being so mentally exhausting and somewhat humiliating is that it achieves a few main objectives:
1. You gain pride when you accomplish a task. In your head, you start going, "Yeah, I did it. Fuck you, Sergeant." Trust me, drill instructors know. They can see self-confidence start to form when you start doing things better and faster, just to show them up.
2. It eliminates a sense of independence among your platoon. Once everyone (well, almost everyone) is broken down to the basic element and treated the same, you start working together. I mean, teamwork makes everything EASIER, right? You gain some pride in your team as well, since you all came from the bottom to graduation.
3. It teaches attention to detail. It may seem like a pain in the ass to remake your bed in a certain way perfectly every day and hang all your uniforms in the same way. Or keep your foot locker organized in a particular way. And all the beds aligned, and boots underneath lined up. But think about this - when you do that, how much faster did you pick everything else up? You got in the mindset of paying attention to detail. Of course, no one gives a shit about that stuff out of training except on inspections in barracks.
4. It weeds out the people who don't have the patience or mindset for the military. When the shit hits the fan, you have to snap to your training in a heartbeat. If you can pass the tests in the end, you are probably never going to forget how to clear a barrier or move in formation quickly to another area instead of running around like headless chickens. It's funny - I know fresh recruits out of training at a glance because they don't walk on the grass and walk with their hands closed. It's good to fall into the old habits when it comes time to go to war.
5. It's tradition. If this shit was easy, you'd die in the field tomorrow. This ain't a cakewalk, son. Hold your chin up and be proud you made it through.
EDIT: I agree that some drill instructors are way out of their boundaries when training. You won't believe how many of these people keep getting called to the post to be warned about their insane, cruel methods. Ever wonder why some drill instructors never last or old ones eventually get replaced? Because they tend to push the limit too often and get bounced back to regular duty due to their big mouths and chuckle-headed ideas.
my dad has told me he would rather i was on benifits (welfare to you yanks) than joined the army, but thats what i'm going to dopimppeter2 said:I want to go into the army after I get my degree, but my parents will never let me