ecugringo Posted July 19, 2023 Posted July 19, 2023 I'll add my .02 from my career in Oil and Gas with a lot of former military colleagues. Like all things there are good and bad. I wouldn't say the military experience I have seen is an auto step above anyone else. Some are really good others are not. Im on the sales side of our business and we have maybe 40% sales guys with military experience. The main issue I see is they need to be told what to do and exactly how to do it. I dont see a lot of thinking outside the box with new and innovative ideas to create new business. But if there are procedures to follow, they are great at it. In the O n G industry, an ex enlisted guy with a GED can make great money, however I think that time is mostly coming to an end with energy policies. As far as recommending someone to join: I did and the startup I work for was big on military guys so it worked for me. Where we are now 10 yrs later, we want industry experience, preferably from a competitor we can train. Military experience may or may not be a bonus. I dont want my kids to join. Not after the way GWOT was handled. I feel like it was Vietnam 2.0. Nothing was learned. My best friend from highschool quit college on 9/15 became SF in the ARMY. I dont know how many deployments he did and how many buddies he lost. He was awarded the purple heart and just retired after 20+ yrs. All that time away from his family and the dude is not the same and for what? I did try to get my brother in law to join hte AF as a load or boom for obvious reasons (Travel, college, experience). His family doesn't have much and he was limited on options. Well he didn't and joined the Army after too many years in college figuring out his path. He's an 01, but he could be a civi now had he listened with 0 dept. Lots of guys that were in their 20's 10 yrs ago now have kids. Willing to bet not many will push for a career in the military. It will be a long problem. 1
tac airlifter Posted July 19, 2023 Posted July 19, 2023 (edited) On 7/15/2023 at 11:34 PM, General Chang said: Please. Your ignorance about what goes into being at this level is abhorrent. I'm sure this is a troll account, but that dismissiveness is remarkably similar to replies I've received in person. Your inability to self-reflect is exactly why we lost and will continue to lose. Our generals can't win wars, and so no, my kids won't join and you'll keep grappling with a recruiting crisis. Edited July 19, 2023 by tac airlifter 1
GKinnear Posted July 19, 2023 Posted July 19, 2023 43 minutes ago, tac airlifter said: I'm sure this is a troll account @BashiChuni's sock-puppet is top-tier! With all due respect...even knowing how the magic works, I'll still down-vote Chang every chance I get. 1 1 1
Bigred Posted July 22, 2023 Posted July 22, 2023 This thread is wild and baffling. Military service is good for the person and it's good for the country. I encourage my kids to join. I have three and I think one will. I told them the same thing my dad told me, do four years and if you're having fun keep going. Otherwise get out. The more we isolate the military from all classes of the population the more we will see the political-mil issues we see today. 3 3
hindsight2020 Posted July 22, 2023 Posted July 22, 2023 Hold up, point of order: The upper and upper-middle classes self-isolate from military service all on their own, no compelling needed. So don't go putting that on us W2 serfs/transactional military members, and certainly not our progeny. As I've said before, the temerity of acussing veterans of sabotaging recruitment. Ingrates. The DoD can take their shameless victim blaming, roll it into a fag, and fox2 it up their own six. To wit, New England isn't pulling their fair share of the blood spilling from where I sit, go lecture them about it. And I digress. 1 2
Bigred Posted July 22, 2023 Posted July 22, 2023 1 hour ago, hindsight2020 said: Hold up, point of order: The upper and upper-middle classes self-isolate from military service all on their own, no compelling needed. So don't go putting that on us W2 serfs/transactional military members, and certainly not our progeny. As I've said before, the temerity of acussing veterans of sabotaging recruitment. Ingrates. The DoD can take their shameless victim blaming, roll it into a fag, and fox2 it up their own six. To wit, New England isn't pulling their fair share of the blood spilling from where I sit, go lecture them about it. And I digress. So your argument is; because people in the upper classes, whom most on this board have zero influence and interactions, don’t pull their share with the military than the rest of us shouldn’t as well? I hold no illusions that there are parts of the DoD that suck. There are also parts that are awesome. My concern is when I hear of current and former military actively discouraging people from joining. There’s nothing wrong with telling the truth, bluntly, to those that are interested. But tell both sides, the good and the bad, and let them decide.
Longhorn15 Posted July 22, 2023 Posted July 22, 2023 I always knew the AF/DoD didn’t care about me. I lived with that during the numerous deployments that achieved very little. I at least had fun with the bros. It is somehow worse that we now are deploying people for 6 months to train. It grates on me far worse than any combat deployment ever did. Just when you think it can’t get worse, the military finds a way.Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk 2
skybert Posted July 23, 2023 Posted July 23, 2023 That is why I tell normal young people to seriously think about wearing the uniform I used to wear. 1
M2 Posted July 23, 2023 Posted July 23, 2023 Loved my career, even despite the shitty parts of which there were plenty, and I'm especially thankful for all the great people I met along the way. Not sure if I would make the same decision now as I did 40+ years ago though... 1
brabus Posted July 23, 2023 Posted July 23, 2023 It’s all hindsight - of course it’s easy to sit here and think about all the negative shit as a disgruntled 10+ year vet. You also had a lot of good times and did awesome shit. Tell kids those stories and let them go have the same awesome experiences amidst the bullshit. News flash, there’s bullshit in every avenue of life. I don’t envy the 23 yr old Delta FO a single bit. I couldn’t give two fucks how senior he’ll be at 65, how much $ he’ll make over a career, etc…he will never have the badass experiences I’ve had, he’ll never go to awesome places I’ve been, he won’t know the camaraderie that combat brings. I acknowledge he also won’t ever know the pain, the hardship, and the struggles. No ragrets - do it young guys. 4 4
brabus Posted July 24, 2023 Posted July 24, 2023 (edited) What are you talking about, I can easily name lots of solid, positive things and tell positive stories. I don’t try to convince anyone, I just paint the most honest picture I can for those that ask. I shit on the AF all the time and am ecstatic to be mostly into phase 2 of life. But I’m also honest and not going to just rant negatively while pretending I didn’t have a lot of positive experiences along the way. You’re arguing there is no positive picture to be painted and everything is shit. Must be miserable going through life as such a negative person. Bottom line, I will always speak generally positive about the mil experience because that’s what it was. I will also be happy to talk about all the bullshit and things that piss me off. I’m glad I did it and I’m glad I’m on my way out…two things can be true at the same time, but for some people here I think all they think about is their last 5 years and completely ignore the first 15 (or however long it was fun for them personally before they became jaded and disgruntled). Edited July 24, 2023 by brabus 1
gearhog Posted July 24, 2023 Author Posted July 24, 2023 Overall, I liked my career. 22 years. The vast majority within the context of the GWOT or whatever we're going to call that period. But it's over. This is a different era. Different enemies, different leadership, rules, procedures, technology, and social values. Many of the things I liked most about my career couldn't happen today. I didn't become jaded and disgruntled. I became experienced and wiser. The military changed more than I did. My perspective broadened as time went on. It's fun believing in the Easter Bunny until you find out he's not real and the eggs come from factory farms. What about serving today is better than 10-20 years ago? Why do you think it will remain the same or improve for someone who joins today?
brabus Posted July 24, 2023 Posted July 24, 2023 (edited) I don’t know if it’s better, nor did I say that. But I don’t think it’s a bad career option, idea, desire, etc. I can name all kinds of things I think we’ve become dumber with, but again, that does not make the positive things cease to exist. I’ll continue to be mostly positive to young people when they ask, as I’ve seen just about every major corner of operational and below a fighter guy can see and overall it was a great experience that I’ll always be grateful for having. I guess I just didn’t have a shitty experience like some guys on here. Edited July 24, 2023 by brabus 2
herkbum Posted July 24, 2023 Posted July 24, 2023 Show me where anyone made that argument. I'll wait, cause I know you're making shit up right now. What I'm talking about is that you keep going on and on about your own experiences. "I can name positive experiences...", "I just paint...", "I'm also honest...". In the post before that, you went on and on about how some kid that goes to Delta at 23 "will never have the badass experiences I had" and so on. It's not about you bro, goddamn, try taking yourself out of the conversation for 5 seconds. You even assume others must have been miserable while they were in, because otherwise why would we not agree? That's because recognize that it's not about us. It's not about you. It's not about your past, it's about relating relevant info about the kid's future, that's literally all I'm saying. Great that you can share stories from your past, but if that's all you have to offer, then you're hopelessly out of touch.How can you not talk about your own experiences? Especially since that is what people are asking you about, at least in my experience. Your opinion is formed by how the experience affected you and those you know. If someone wanted to ask about something they hadn’t experienced, go ask a college professor. Most of them don’t have any real experience in what they are “experts” in, they only learned about something by reading. Sent from my iPhone using Baseops Network mobile app 1
brabus Posted July 24, 2023 Posted July 24, 2023 (edited) You’re pissing words into the wind, WTF are you rambling about? It’s weird how annoyed you are that someone would speak positively to kids about the military. kid: “what’s it like to be a pilot in the AF” joe: “I can’t tell you kid because I have no idea what it’ll be like in 10 years.“ kid: “uh ok, well can you tell me about your experience. Are jets XYZ, have you ever XYZ, what’s it like to XYZ” Joe: “I told you, I can’t see the future and only you know you. So go fuck off so I can sit here and drink my cranberry juice in peace.” God I hope you’ve never been the guy standing at an air show static. Edited July 24, 2023 by brabus 1
slc Posted July 24, 2023 Posted July 24, 2023 3 hours ago, joe1234 said: how some kid that goes to Delta at 23 "will never have the badass experiences Uh, that's because he won't flying the magenta line. Of course that's all subjective because it's all he'll ever know anyway right?
jonlbs Posted July 24, 2023 Posted July 24, 2023 Gonna try and help this back and forth and maybe I’m wrong, but I think what @joe1234 is trying to say is that you can talk about your awesome experiences all you want (and everyone on this forum agrees) but this new generation doesn’t care about what you thought were awesome experiences. An exaggerated example would be…you thought doing strafing runs and saving dudes fighting on the ground was the most rewarding thing ever (and again we would all agree), but this new generation seemingly does not give a shit about that and would rather be learning something new about programming or developing software or something like that. During my time working with ROTC I was shocked at how little people actually wanted to fly, I figured there would be 100 kids fighting for pilot slots but that just isn’t the case. I’m actually shocked at how many people I fly with at the airlines that have absolutely no interest in military flying or ever had any interest in anything military in general. So targeting the kids with your experiences might not work anyways I hope that was the point Joe was trying to make before it got lost in translation. I do think we have to be honest in understanding what kids are wanting out of service but also we can’t reshape our service too much. 1
pawnman Posted July 24, 2023 Posted July 24, 2023 47 minutes ago, jonlbs said: During my time working with ROTC I was shocked at how little people actually wanted to fly, I figured there would be 100 kids fighting for pilot slots but that just isn’t the case. I’m actually shocked at how many people I fly with at the airlines that have absolutely no interest in military flying or ever had any interest in anything military in general. So targeting the kids with your experiences might not work. I had a similar experience my first year in ROTC, but it was also amazing to see how many cadets became interested in flying once they had two rated officers in the detachment telling flying stories. We went from like 3 freshmen in a class of 30 being interested to commissioning over half the graduating class into rated spots. The cadets in ROTC already want to join the Air Force...I don't think you need to push too hard to get them interested in aviation. A lot of them had pre-screened themselves out "because I don't have perfect vision" or "I had a concussion once in junior high". All it took was a little education to convince them to at least apply and make the Air Force turn them down instead of keeping themselves from even competing. 1
mp5g Posted July 24, 2023 Posted July 24, 2023 I think that the real issue is that kids today just don’t have any idea who Doug Masters was or what he did for his family and country. Obviously we need a refreshed Iron Eagle movie to appeal to these youngins. Make Samuel L Jackson the new Chappie. 3 8
FourFans Posted July 24, 2023 Posted July 24, 2023 Samuel L Jackson would be droppin the MFing Hades Bombs all over that bitch! How do we make this happen?!
Bigred Posted July 24, 2023 Posted July 24, 2023 18 hours ago, gearhog said: What about serving today is better than 10-20 years ago? Why do you think it will remain the same or improve for someone who joins today? Better quality of life (paternity leave is one example). Better pay. Housing and dorms vastly improved from when I lived in the barracks. No sequestration of flight hours. Parts that are actually available. JFIRE and JCAS being incorporated across all branches vs individual branches having their own CAS methods. That’s an example from admin, ops, and tactics. I can keep going. I laugh when people say ‘what’s better than 10-20 years ago’. My dad enlisted in the late 70s, he said he got slapped around. I enlisted in the late 90s, didn’t get hit but we lived in moldy ass barracks and had no hot water. Kids these days think it sucks they have to field day the barracks. Life was always ‘better 10-20 years ago’. When people say that I ask them to actually, seriously, look at what was going on then versus now. 1 1 2
gearhog Posted July 24, 2023 Author Posted July 24, 2023 9 minutes ago, Bigred said: I laugh when people say ‘what’s better than 10-20 years ago’. My dad enlisted in the late 70s, he said he got slapped around. I enlisted in the late 90s, didn’t get hit but we lived in moldy ass barracks and had no hot water. Kids these days think it sucks they have to field day the barracks. Life was always ‘better 10-20 years ago’. When people say that I ask them to actually, seriously, look at what was going on then versus now. You could actually slap people around in the 1970s? How can you say that's not better? Now words are violence. 😄 You bring up an interesting point. Some perks, benefits, and conditions may be better, but "kids these days" think it sucks. All of the things you're touting can be gotten outside the military as well. The "Job" is the difference. Why is it no longer attractive to recruits? https://media.defense.gov/2022/Jul/14/2003035423/-1/-1/1/STRENGTHENING-FOOD-SECURITY-IN-THE-FORCE-STRATEGY-AND-ROADMAP.PDF "Analysis of the 2020 SOFS-A indicates that 76% of total active duty Service members were food secure and 24% of active duty Service members experienced food insecurity at some point in the preceding year of the survey." 1
pbar Posted July 24, 2023 Posted July 24, 2023 8 hours ago, jonlbs said: During my time working with ROTC I was shocked at how little people actually wanted to fly, I figured there would be 100 kids fighting for pilot slots but that just isn’t the case. I’m actually shocked at how many people I fly with at the airlines that have absolutely no interest in military flying or ever had any interest in anything military in general. So targeting the kids with your experiences might not work. Air Force JROTC has a full ride PPL scholarship with no obligation incurred and yet in the three years I've been teaching it, I've only had 5 out of 250+ cadets apply. I would have killed for an opportunity like that when I was in high school... 1 1 1
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