T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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559.1 | Follow your Moral Ideals - possibly to Prison ... | AERIE::THOMPSON | trying real hard to adjust ... | Tue Feb 05 1991 13:38 | 19 |
| The (female) doctor who refused to be called up for active duty
seems to have no moral justification whatsoever (IMHO) because the
activity of doing the best medical work possible for those injured
in combat is a positive activity in humanistic terms.
To be in the service is to accept that duty requires one to go
when called. How does a doctor decide what is immoral in terms of
medical service ? Does one bind the wounds of a drug dealer who
has been stabbed by an angry parent or let the victim bleed to death?
Of course like any other act of moral disobedience the reservist
who has a strong sense of right and wrong surrounding any particular
action is always justified in refusal and suffering the consequences.
One can only appluad a woman who is willing to spend 20 years in a
military prison rather than bind the wounds of soldiers injured in a
war to liberate Kumait against Saddam's demonstrated aggressions.
~--e--~ flying above any battlefield all the wounded 2 look much alike
|
559.2 | I don't like it | WORDY::GFISHER | Work that dream and love your life | Tue Feb 05 1991 14:27 | 28 |
|
The article in the Globe bothered me, too. I found myself leaning
toward calling those people "irresponsible." [My total thoughts and
feelings on the issue are too complicated to put out here and now.
There's more to it than this, but this summarizes it.]
I put this in the category of "Why didn't the car label have 'You
shouldn't drink and drive!' on it? I'm suing!" or "Why didn't the
plastic bag have a 'Your kid shouldn't put this over your head and tie
it around your neck' warning label. I'm suing!"
The lawyers for these people are claiming that the military "tricked"
them into joining. That, at 17 (?) years of age, the "right" to
"change ones world view" is more important than the responsibility of
honoring a signed commitment in which two parties exchange services.
In our society, people are not taking responsibility for their
actions. This is just another example of it. They bought the "Be all
that you can be!" ads, and they gambled that we wouldn't actually go
to war. Now that we are at war, they want to go back on their
commitment. It stinks. (War stinks, but not honoring agreements
stinks, too.)
If the "changing ones world view" argument were true, then the filings
for CO would have been happening in larger numbers before we went to
the Gulf.
--Gerry
|
559.3 | So it goes, so it goes... | CYCLST::DEBRIAE | the social change one... | Tue Feb 05 1991 15:19 | 55 |
|
An alternate view which will probably get people screaming at me
again... but so it goes.
There are several reasons for a request of CO status I can see
Gerry:
- people's politics, religious beliefs, and outlook change over
time. I know my views are radically different than when I was
only 18 and just out of high school.
- I went thru 4 yrs Air Force ROTC. They never mentioned the word
'rifle' or 'combat' once. Everyone told you "Oh, the Army does the
actual fighting. You don't have to worry about that. You're going
to be an Air Force engineer. You think they'd waste a $50K education
bill throwing you out on the battle field?" Well the "you'll be an
engineer" was the first false claim to go. And right now I have
friends who are still in the AF & out doing conveys in Saudi Arabia.
You think they didn't jump when someone handed them a M-16 rifle?
They never as so much touched one in 4 yrs military training. They
were going to be engineers after all. The Army did the dirty work,
right? They were supposed to be behind engineering desks at protected
AF bases, protected by all the MArines, Army, and Navy. Yeah right...
- So others got out into the National Guard. The Guard was a place
that stays home and protects the homefront you are told. They deal
with civil emergencies like hurricanes mostly. But when everyone
else is away at war, you are there protecting your country (literally,
your own land). Many people could deal with that. Protecting your
country from attack is something worthy of dying for. Going over
to protect another man's, Bush's, first American oil company in
Kuwait, going to another country to fight for political interests -
now that to some is not worth lives for. But no worry. The Guard
stays home and the Reserves go overseas. THEN they changed the
Total Force Concepts without telling people the significance of
it. All of a sudden Guardsmen aren't protecting their country
but are being shipped overseas to fight for oil. You bet more
people weren't surprised. That was not part of their agreement
when they joined. You belonged to your state, not the President.
Yeah right. Look how much luck Dukakis had in keeping the MA guard
out of Reagan's political interests.
- And lastly, it is very easy saying "Yeah, I can be a war hero and
bravely march to the battlefield" before that time actually comes.
Until you actually have to pull that trigger, can you do it? Can
you take another human life? What if you freeze because you find
you can't.
Things change, people change. I don't point an accusing finger at
people in that terrible position, especially from my comfy easy chair.
People who do should join the service themselves. But whatever.
Life is not always fair, esp. for the black and poor forced in the
military to make a buck somehow.
-Erik
|
559.4 | so it goes. so it goes... | CYCLST::DEBRIAE | the social change one... | Tue Feb 05 1991 15:34 | 16 |
|
re: calling those people "irresponsible."
That was my first reaction too.
However, it came from the same emotions as 'blame the victim'
(in me).
They shouldn't have believed the recruiters. She shouldn't have
worn that attractive dress. I shouldn't have written feminist
perspective in male space. He shouldn't have been so careless
letting people find out he is homosexual. She shouldn't have
been carrying so much money around anyway. That's what he gets
for buying such an expensive and desirable car. etc etc.
So it goes...
|
559.5 | 'blame the victim'....right | CSS::KEITH | Real men double clutch | Tue Feb 05 1991 16:34 | 10 |
|
RE .4
Boy do you have that wrong! 'blame the victim'
They wanted to take the money/college/etc and give nothing for it. Sort
of like the S&L, something for nothing, greed. I have my rights, but no
responsibilities even though they WILLINGLY signed on the dotted line.
THEY WERE NOT DRAFTED!
Steve
|
559.6 | It works both ways... | MR4DEC::MAHONEY | | Tue Feb 05 1991 16:56 | 23 |
| .5... You hit the target!
Yes, get a college education for free and get nothing for it. It is
all right to get paid to defend the country and when the time comes to
defend it... show a soft back bone and rely on "conscience"... All this
happens because we have a strictly VOLUNTARY forces, where soldiers GET
PAID to defend the country; if we had a COMPULSORY army, where
EVERYBODY, and I mean men, women, and all groups included HAD TO SERVE
we would have no retractors and soft back bones would become "hard
backs" real quickly, just after the few first months of boot camp all
would be tough enough to deal with whatever the need!
I have lots of admiration for those troops who are there, and I hope
with all my heart that their integrity, valor, and preparation will
help them to defend the colors of the U.S. and will bring them home
with pride and victory.
U.S. deserves the best people there are, anywhere! The U.S. became
a great country just due to its PEOPLE... to the hard work and wisdom
of its PEOPLE, to the decency and honesty of its PEOPLE and now that
the country needs them... I am sure that it's PEOPLE WILL RESPOND.
(God bless them all!)
|
559.7 | | USWS::HOLT | ATD Group, Palo Alto | Tue Feb 05 1991 19:20 | 2 |
|
hurray fer us!
|
559.8 | | COMET::DYBEN | | Tue Feb 05 1991 22:10 | 6 |
|
Yah take the Kings coin, yah do the Kings bidding..Simple as that..
David
|
559.9 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Wed Feb 06 1991 02:20 | 20 |
| I think .4 is extending the concept of "innocent victim" rather
far. I know if (in this area) I buy a Volkswagen Golf GTI then there is
a fairly high probability that it will be stolen. However, nothing in
the purchase contract requires me to make it easy to steal - I might
even ask the salesman if anti-theft devices were easy to fit.
To take the analogy back, these people should have asked at their
recruitment interview how easy it was to plead CO or skip the country
when a war came up.
If everyone who signs a contract is an "innocent victim" then that
applies to you if you don't pay for the car after you have it, and to
the car salesman if he decides not to give you the car after you have
paid. And that is quite independant of whether the car in question is
stolen from you or him?
During the 10 years since I took out this house mortgage I have
decided that it is immoral to pay interest to the bank. This decision
was not lightly taken, and in the eventual court case I fully expect to
be awarded the status of IV. ;-)
|
559.10 | Kid fed false claims = victim (to me)... | CYCLST::DEBRIAE | the social change one... | Wed Feb 06 1991 08:37 | 40 |
| .last
There is such a thing as truth in advertising you know. Buying a
K-car because the dealer said it gets 75 mpg and can do 0-60mph in
under 3 seconds so it'd be a good choice for your car racing
rallye career. You bet I'd be back demanding a release of that
contract when it turns out the car is neither what was promised.
I think .8 had the ideal military contract. State it up front that:
> Yah take the Kings coin, yah do the Kings bidding..Simple as that..
Yes, you know that. And I know that, now. But I didn't in high
school, as I suspect most kids that age do not.
If the recruiters said "Yah take the Kings coin, yah do the Kings
bidding..Simple as that" and people signed that contract, not the one
that said "4 yrs to be a Aerospace Design Engineer", I think there
would be a heck of less problems. And much less surprise and shock
when the 18 yr old kid ends up with a rifle in his hand and as an
"frontline infantryman" once locked into the contract he was
smooth-talked into. Especially when dealing with high school
age kids.
That's why Cambridge is pushing to ban military recruiters from
high schools. The kids are too impressionable, too believing. They
believe the Army is about management and typewriters and forms,
believe the lies the recruiters feed them.
If the military is such a rewarding and good deal, why do they have
to lock people in and build a Berlin Wall of a contract around them
never being able to leave their mistaken imprisonment?
Ending up on the frontlines is a terrible first lesson in trust
for an 18 yr old kid. I feel the Cambridge ban on military
recruiters from their high schools is a good idea. NPR had a
story about it this morning, along with the phrase:
"The military: it's not just a job, it's a political view."
|
559.11 | | NOVA::FISHER | Well, there's still an Earth to come home to. | Wed Feb 06 1991 09:24 | 13 |
| I believe that folks should live up to contracts and in her case, there
are positions for medical CO's. All but one of the medics in my
battallion were CO's, so the govt could find a place for her.
However I think the Army should more realistically view the process
that occurs when one gets a college education and may actually change
their views. Perhaps they should include such provisos in the contract
so that people such as this woman can pay back their assistance or do
time in public service as an alternative. As it was she just got a
"less than honorable discharge" which is a small price to pay for
violating a contract.
ed
|
559.12 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Phase II: Operation Desert Storm | Wed Feb 06 1991 09:40 | 19 |
| Well, guess who was on Nightline last night? You guessed it, our CO.
I was very interested in what she had to say for herself. Unfortunately,
Ted Koppel neglected to ask some of the tougher questions (due in large part
to the format of last night's program).
The bottom line was that she was regurgitating pablum taught to her in college.
We shouldn't do this, we shouldn't have done that, our government is immoral,
that sort of thing. She sounded like a cross between a scairt rabbit and
a liberal arts major. She appeared to be far more concerned with her own
skin than anything else. Her big philosophical change was effected by the
realization that the price she was going to have to pay for her education was
not insignificant, that there was no free ride.
I believe if she has deep philosophical problems with her contract with the
military, then she should have no problems spending a few years in jail and
then paying back everything she owes to the government.
The Doctah
|
559.13 | | WORDY::GFISHER | Work that dream and love your life | Wed Feb 06 1991 11:07 | 15 |
|
I also think that salesmen are well trained. There is a way to sell
something by telling only part of the truth, which isn't illegal. It's
done all the time. That's why people say that you need to read (and
understand) a contract before you sign it. I think that
eighteen-year-olds are old enough to understand that concept.
...and I still wonder why all these people who have gone through so
many life changes since they enlisted didn't apply for CO before
August. That leads me to believe that the issue is _not_ a gradual
change of life's philosophy, but a visceral reaction to being sent off
to war.
--Gerry
|
559.14 | some more different perspective... | CYCLST::DEBRIAE | the social change one... | Wed Feb 06 1991 12:36 | 29 |
|
Your second version of .13 sounds a lot more reasonable than your
first, where it read like saying that there's no such
thing as a faulty contract.
And that is the key to this argument. What is a faulty contract?
What is false advertising? Another question, why are recruiters
allowed in high schools and given the air of legitimacy if the
military service is really such a 'sucker deal'?, where pages and
pages of unwritten small print are designed to fool young people.
How about some more military surprises... "Hey, your '4-year'
commitment really isn't a 4 year commitment you know. Oh, I
know it says that in big letters on the contract you signed. Yeah,
I know all your records have the release and end-of-commitment
date of May 28, 1991. But this is the military, we can break our
contracts legally. All the president has to do is to cut a new
order. And he did. So you're 4 year commitment is now an "INDEFINITE"
commitment to stay in the Marines as long as we want you to. Breach
of contract? Sure. Just try and sue us kiddo!" <and several are>
Surprise, Surprise, We broke our contract. Golly high school kids,
didn't your parents tell you that the military was all about
killing people, and not to believe military people when they scream
otherwise, that it's not all about killing people, that it is about
being a manager, and being a typist, and overseeing defense
contracts. Nope. Should have listened to the sixties generation and
your parents kids, we the military lied to you. But too bad, once
we have our clutches on you kids, you can't get away. Just try.
|
559.15 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Phase II: Operation Desert Storm | Wed Feb 06 1991 14:02 | 7 |
| >...and I still wonder why all these people who have gone through so
>many life changes since they enlisted didn't apply for CO before
>August. That leads me to believe that the issue is _not_ a gradual
>change of life's philosophy, but a visceral reaction to being sent off
>to war.
Exactly. None of them seem to have a decent answer to that charge.
|
559.16 | my 2� | NOVA::FISHER | Well, there's still an Earth to come home to. | Wed Feb 06 1991 14:15 | 9 |
| There are a lot of things behind the "enlistment contract" that are
spelled out in the Laws of the United States that are clearly beyond
the reach of an 18 yr old. However, the same is true of civilianism.
I've often heard young people say "How was I supposed to know that?"
There ought to be a class on "Life in general" in High School but
I don't think it would be enough.
ed
|
559.17 | Some more perspectives people will scream at... | CYCLST::DEBRIAE | the social change one... | Wed Feb 06 1991 15:27 | 50 |
| >>August. That leads me to believe that the issue is _not_ a gradual
>>change of life's philosophy, but a visceral reaction to being sent off
>>to war.
>
> Exactly. None of them seem to have a decent answer to that charge.
Listen to the both of you... judging other people's true feelings for
whether they can really kill another human being. The air of some the
replies here feels like they must 'prove' it to you, you people who sit
outside of the realm of ever having to face that question first hand.
Part of me feels like it shouldn't even have to be qualified. But again,
some more different perspectives for why this may be... reminds me of CCD.
"Gee, all these people decided at the last minute that they aren't really
Catholic anymore, just when time for Confirmation came? Sure seems odd to
me. Why the change all of a sudden? This leads me to believe it wasn't a
gradual change as they went to masses."
Yes, I _do_ think big events are often what forces us to decide what our
feelings are about something, that often events make us sum up our feelings
over the past months or years and put it all together into a decision. How
many other people have put off a big decision until 'something' happened,
whether buying a new car or changing jobs or finally getting married.
Another perspective... it's not like you can just quit the military and
say "I'm not 100% sure I can fire a rifle in the vague context of the
future (not that anyone ever mentions or sees rifles around the office
here), so I want another profession other than killing people". Their
reaction, "Who's killing people? Get back to your job of typing and filing
those defense contracts." You're stuck in there for as long as the
contract, if they're nice to you [since a commander can deny your 'request'
to leave at end of your contract if he feels he needs you (or wants to pay
you back for being pain)].
Yet another perspective... you are an important Air Force engineer
managing several million dollar AF contracts. You are being paid to be a
project manager for the AF. All of a sudden your unit is called to the
Gulf. All of a sudden you are not a project manager, but are assigned to
be a fire team leader. You don't think you'd think about guns more all of
a sudden? You don't think you'd think about whether you can do the job of a
fire team member, 'all of a sudden'? You don't think some won't scream
"where's my HP calculator and what's this M-16 doing in my hands? I'm a
Project Manager, not an infantryman!"
I can see all these situations happening to people. Either way I think it
is wrong for people to judge if someone really is a CO, or a Catholic, or
any other internal belief system. I feel (for me) that people should take
their word for it. Unless you think you know better than them.
|
559.18 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Phase II: Operation Desert Storm | Wed Feb 06 1991 16:43 | 33 |
| >I feel (for me) that people should take their word for it.
And so what should happen to these people? They should simply be allowed to
renege without penalty?
If someone is REALLY a CO, then they won't mind spending a few years in the
slammer and paying back all of the money that the government spent on educating
them. Allowing them to walk away with no penalty invites massive abuse of
the government. Allowing them to simply pay back the money invites abuse of
the military as a secondary student loan device.
In a volunteer army, I find it very difficult to respect someone who suddenly
decides that they are CO the very minute that the country calls upon them to
fulfill their part of the bargain. In a conscripted army it is much easier to
believe that the CO is a true reflection of deeply held belief rather than
expedient excuse to duck responsibility.
I hold nothing against soldiers who are afraid. Lord knows I would be if I
were at the front lines. Heck, I'm fearful for my little brother's friend whose
in the 101st airborne. What I do have a problem with is people who allow fear
to override their sense of duty and honor and ethics, and claim CO for the
purpose of saving their arse.
"Taking their word for it" without reservation is tantamount to saying "all
of you who are afraid or don't really want to do this, line up here and we'll
discharge you." That's BS. That's an insult to those soldiers who are scared
sh!tless but remain at their posts regardless. It's an insult to every soldier
that has ever fought for this country from the revolutionary war on.
As far as I'm concerned, a deal is a deal. Caveat emptor. Nobody forced them
to join the service. Let them serve out their terms.
The Doctah
|
559.19 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVG West, UCS1-4 | Wed Feb 06 1991 16:44 | 19 |
| > Yet another perspective... you are an important Air Force engineer
> managing several million dollar AF contracts. You are being paid to be a
> project manager for the AF. All of a sudden your unit is called to the
> Gulf. All of a sudden you are not a project manager, but are assigned to
> be a fire team leader.
Erik, Are you just being silly? This doesn't happen. The USAF is
a business. Does DEC just throw untrained people at a job and say,
"do it"? Not if they want to be successful. Similar considerations
guide personnel assignments in the USAF. If they've hired and trained
you to do procurements, and put you in a unit that has procurements as
its mission, then that's what you do. Until they send you to another
unit. Your procurement unit is not going to be packed off to the Gulf.
There are plenty of things to complain about in the way the services
conduct their business. Try complaining about real things that you
know to be true, not such silly scenarios as you've made up here.
DougO
|
559.20 | EVERYONE IS A SOLDIER FIRST | BTOVT::JEWELL_S | | Wed Feb 06 1991 17:24 | 25 |
|
I joined a National Guard Unit in 1983. When I enlisted I knew that I
would have to go through Basic Training first. This was to give me the
fundamentals of a combat soldier. Only after I completed basic training
was I allowed to attend the schools for my M.O.S. I was in a
engineering unit. My M.O.S. training qualified me for a position with
my hometown guard unit and benefited me in the civilian world.
When I went through basic training, it was drilled into me and every
other soldier that was in my company that our primary and formost
function was as a soldier. The M.O.S. that each of us had signed up
for was secondary. This was made very clear to everyone.
I was fortunate enough to have a recruiter that was straight forward
from the start, so I knew exactly what my commitment was. My point is
that even if some people are misled by their recruiter, by the time
they are completed with basic training they will know they are a
soldier FIRST. This is the time to say hey this is not what I signed
up for and plead CO to get out of their contract. What I disagree with
are the people that take the training for 3,4,5, years and so forth and
then when the Govt. calls in and says we need you as the soldier we
trained you for....... They then suddenly turn CO
|
559.21 | | CSC32::M_VALENZA | Create peace. | Wed Feb 06 1991 18:09 | 8 |
| Many people in the military have "turned CO" prior to the Gulf Crisis,
so there is nothing new about this phenomenon. I don't believe that it
was ever simply a matter of taking the word of CO applicants--at least
not without some investigation of the application. Well before this
war started or even became a serious threat, the military had accepted
many CO applications over time, and had also rejected some.
-- Mike
|
559.22 | | BIGUN::SIMPSON | Damn your lemon curd tartlet! | Wed Feb 06 1991 18:11 | 11 |
| re .19
> Erik, Are you just being silly? This doesn't happen. The USAF is
> a business. Does DEC just throw untrained people at a job and say,
> "do it"?
First, the military is not a business, although it may conduct
business.
Second, your analogy is very poor, because (and I speak from field
experience) the answer to your question is: far too often, yes.
|
559.23 | Military seldom 'makes sense' to civilians... | CYCLST::DEBRIAE | the social change one... | Wed Feb 06 1991 19:32 | 17 |
| > Erik, Are you just being silly? This doesn't happen. The USAF is
> a business. Does DEC just throw untrained people at a job and say,
> "do it"?
No DougO, unfortunately I'm not just being silly.
Like bigun::simpson, these perspectives are from my field experience as
well.
re: doctah
There are enough benefits and accolades and glories to being an American
war hero that our country and society heaps onto servicepeople that I
think it is not necessary to cut up the COs and other people who were
faked out into combat positions but are not compatible with it.
Personally, I'd see sending a CO into battle as a great liability to a
fire team, not a benefit worth forcing them into.
|
559.24 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVG West, UCS1-4 | Wed Feb 06 1991 19:53 | 14 |
| Ah, ok, Erik, I'd like to hear about your field experiences, then.
I was also in AFROTC. I was commissioned as a reserve officer, and
I happened to go to a procurement unit, the biggest; the AF Contract
Management Division, one of the major divisions of Air Force Systems
Command (the other five are Armaments Division at Eglin, Electronic
Systems Division at Hanscom, Aeronautical Systems Division at W-P,
Space Division at LAX, and ...hm. Can't remember the other 'product'
division in AFSC.) AFCMD doesn't exist anymore, as of this year, but
I learned enough about the procurement mission to know they don't just
pluck entire units out of that role and ship them off to the desert.
So, your experiences?
DougO
|
559.25 | *AMBIGUITY ALERT* | BIGUN::SIMPSON | Damn your lemon curd tartlet! | Wed Feb 06 1991 23:06 | 19 |
| The question was:
> Does DEC just throw untrained people at a job and say, "do it"?
and my answer was:
> ... I speak from field
> experience) the answer to your question is: far too often, yes.
As far as the military side goes, I have little time and no respect for
people who will swear an oath and then drop it like a hot potato when
the crunch comes. If people are old enough and mature to vote and
drive and drink and do all those other adult things then they're damn well
old enough to understand the meaning of an oath which commits them to
'defending' one's country against its 'enemies'. (I apostrophise those
words only because the exact wording will vary from country to
country).
Two totally different things we're talking about here...
|
559.26 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Thu Feb 07 1991 04:36 | 22 |
| If the contracts are so complex and full of hidden implications as
implied then maybe only those who write them should be allowed to sign
them.
Maybe if only someone who has maturity and experience of life is
capable of knowing what they are doing, then only those over 35 should
be allowed to sign such contracts, but since I believe that if you can
sign a contract or vote for something you should be capable of taking
*all* of the consequences this would mean raising the voting age to 35
too.
Or maybe you should require an intelligence test to qualify for
voting and signing military service contracts? I assume that the doctor
referred to earlier would have failed.
To put the above in context, I was convinced in my early teens that
I would spend my late teens in prison. Britain still had conscription.
I knew there were some circumstances where I might kill, so I could not
claim to be a CO. Equally I was not going to allow anyone else to take
the the moral decision about such circumstances. Fortunately for me
Britain abandonned conscription, so I was never obliged to stand up for
this opinion.
|
559.27 | | WORDY::GFISHER | Work that dream and love your life | Thu Feb 07 1991 12:10 | 70 |
|
> And that is the key to this argument. What is a faulty contract?
> What is false advertising? Another question, why are recruiters
> allowed in high schools and given the air of legitimacy if the
> military service is really such a 'sucker deal'?, where pages and
> pages of unwritten small print are designed to fool young people.
Erik, this may come as a shock to you, but telling part of the truth,
verbally, as a sales pitch, is not illegal. If the 18-year-olds are
dumb enough to buy it without reading the contract first, then they
own some responsibility for what they've done. I knew about reading
contracts before signing them since early high school; I don't think that
it's too much of 18-year-olds, people who are generally considered
"adults"--to read a contract carefully before then sign it, especially
when the deal involves thousands of dollars and years of your life.
The responsible thing to do, in my opinion, is for the person to admit
that, due to a maturing world-view, that the person's breaking a
contract signed years ago. And, that the person feels so strong about
his new value system that she or he will take the consequences of the
broken contract.
That's the adult thing to do. Focusing on the tangental points of
slick government salesmenship ("blaming" the government for a contract
that they signed), classism of the military, sexism of the military,
and racism of the military is childish and irresponsible, in my
opinion.
> How about some more military surprises... "Hey, your '4-year'
> commitment really isn't a 4 year commitment you know. Oh, I
> know it says that in big letters on the contract you signed. Yeah,
> I know all your records have the release and end-of-commitment
> date of May 28, 1991. But this is the military, we can break our
> contracts legally. All the president has to do is to cut a new
> order. And he did. So you're 4 year commitment is now an "INDEFINITE"
> commitment to stay in the Marines as long as we want you to. Breach
> of contract? Sure. Just try and sue us kiddo!" <and several are>
This sounds like good grounds for a lawsuit. In this instance, I
don't see it being irresponsible to sue the government.
> Golly high school kids,
> didn't your parents tell you that the military was all about
> killing people, and not to believe military people when they scream
> otherwise, that it's not all about killing people, that it is about
> being a manager, and being a typist, and overseeing defense
> contracts. Nope. Should have listened to the sixties generation and
> your parents kids, we the military lied to you. But too bad, once
> we have our clutches on you kids, you can't get away. Just try.
I agree with the military on this. I'll repeat it, "Didn't your
parents tell you that joining the military can involve wars and
killing people???" How gullible were these young men and women?
And, let's say, for the sake of argument, that you honestly believed
in your heart (regardless of the fact that you didn't read the
contract carefully enough) that you would only be an engineer or a
typist and wouldn't have to pick up a rifle, didn't you realize that
you, through your engineering and typing, would be supporting war?
That you would be keeping a large system in place whose main purpose
is to serve the United States in armed combat?
What kind of people are those who engineer and type for a group that
kills, and then pisses and moans when they are asked to kill instead
of asked to support others who will kill?
Gimme a break! Take some responsibility for what you do (and
_support_).
--Gerry
|
559.28 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Phase II: Operation Desert Storm | Thu Feb 07 1991 12:35 | 8 |
| I find it very hard to believe that the government would leave itself exposed
to lawsuits on such a massive scale as Erik's note implies. Surely the contract
must at least refer to the fact that the "contract" is unilaterally extensible.
And even if it doesn't, none of the COs are complaining because their contract
was extended. They are complaining because they might be forced to take orders
they don't want to follow.
The Doctah
|
559.29 | About our doctor .. | LEVERS::CIARFELLA | Saabless and happy | Thu Feb 07 1991 12:42 | 12 |
| Getting back to our Dr. CO mentioned in the base note:
I was talking to someone last night about this Doctor. The doctor,
it turns out, is a psychiatrist and the reason she gave for joining
was so that she could get more experience treating special cases,
such as combat fatigue and post traumatic cases.
This was heard second hand so I don't know if its actually true, but
I wouldn't be surprised.
Its hard for me to take all this when my cousin is flying a helicoptor
gunship in the gulf.
|
559.30 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVG West, UCS1-4 | Thu Feb 07 1991 12:47 | 26 |
| Mr Simpson (why can't I remember your first name? I intend no slight)
I understood your earlier comments, that the answer to the rhetorical
question posed was "no", and that therefore my analogy wasn't good.
So DEC isn't so smart as the USAF, as far as preparing people to handle
their jobs in procurement.
Now, you took issue with my statement, "The USAF is a business."
Perhaps I am too general. A better statement would be, the USAF is a
corporate entity. By that I mean it has long range plans and
approaches to its problems, and perhaps even moreso than a private
business, as far as goes its regard for putting people with appropriate
training into appropriate jobs, that will help the corporate entity
accomplish its goals/achieve its missions. And it is upon these
grounds that I was disputing Mr DeBrie's claim that a procurement unit
would get shipped off to the desert.
Similarly, I would take issue with his characterization of the four
year committment contract terms as something changeable at the whim of
the president, and thus grounds for a lawsuit. The President can
extend tours of duty, yes, but only in two very specific cases: one,
the Congress has declared a war, or two, the president has declared
some state of National Emergency. In those cases and no others, has
the Congress passed laws that give the president the authority to
extend tours, Erik's sensationalism to the contrary.
DougO
|
559.31 | Sharing our diff perspectives, lets keep it good will guys... | CYCLST::DEBRIAE | the social change one... | Thu Feb 07 1991 12:52 | 165 |
| > Try complaining about real things that you
> know to be true, not such silly scenarios as you've made up here.
>
> Ah, ok, Erik, I'd like to hear about your field experiences, then.
> I was also in AFROTC. I was commissioned as a reserve officer... in AFSC
>
> So, your experiences?
DougO,
'Real' things??? Making it up?? You are clearly not asking because you want
to know, but because you feel I am just 'making silly scenarios' (based on
your own military paradigm). Should I not trust what you voice from your
experience either?
Doug, you were very lucky to remain behind a procurement desk for your entire
four years. Most other people I know got swapped to other jobs at least once
during that period. That includes an ex-girlfriend who was also an Electrical
Engineer in AFSC at W-P who is now commanding convoys on extended exercises
out in the field on another continent. No desk, no VOQ, no calculator, no
engineering, just a tent and lots of mud. Not quite what the picture ROTC
painted of a graduate EE working in the AF. How much is she using her EE
education leading convoys? DEC doesn't throw away trained people and doesn't
throw untrained people into a job and say 'do it', but the military does.
[Isn't that one of their selling points? 'No experience required, get it
here']
How many times did you fire an M-16 in ROTC? (me - none, just shot a tiny
revolver once as a day trip excursion at field camp one time, as sort of a
pencil-whipping for the paperwork, further enhancing our ROTC view that AF
officers don't shoot guns). I didn't even know what a M-16 *was* after ROTC
graduation and four years military training! (A tank?) How many times had you
even heard of chem warfare ensembles in ROTC? (me - none). The very idea of
chem warfare wasn't even a concept in my mind back then. What would they
have said to you if you said "The military 'profession' is about killing
people, right?" What would they have screamed at you as if you said the
biggest lie? "Who knows the military, us or those peaceniks cadet!" But now,
people are saying "Heck, didn't they know the military isn't about desk jobs
and engineering and procurement but about killing and combat? How could they
not know that."
You were in four years and apparently you didn't even get that rift. Did you
buy into that "the Army does that combat stuff cadet" line too? (I did).
Now as for my own background... I just deleted 200 lines of it. I could go
on and on from my military 'career'. But it started reading like memoirs.
And this isn't a very supportive file for sharing, so I won't offer that much
of my private details in this audience. It also has little to do with this
topic, except relaying the fact of how many 'surprises' hit me and people I
know in the military, and that the concept "You take the King's coin, you do
the King's bidding" is an accurate one for the military. [THAT should be the
contract, right up-front and so clearly understood like that].
At the beginning of my military 'career', I was of the frame of mind that if
I bought something and it was broken, too bad, it was my own fault for being
so stupid for buying it - live with it. If a dealer had sold me a lemon of a
car, too bad, live with it, it was my own fault for being so stupid for
buying it. If the military career wasn't as promised all thru four years of
military training, too bad - if you were so stupid to trust the military,
live with it. So I did. Proved I was a tough man I did. [Now however if I
am stiffed with a lemon car, broken merchandise, or a job radically different
from the one I took - you bet I don't just sit and take it and 'live with it'
like a sucker anymore.]
These are to show that surprises do happen, I made my own judgments here for
myself, however I am not judging that these are or are not reasons for other
people to get out...
My own background is similar to yours. An EE in AFROTC. I'll link together
some of the 'surprises':
- From a man with a very impressive title, my ROTC 'Aerospace Studies'
professor, I learned for three years that the AF was the 'best engineering
experience in the world', "Why who do *you* think designs all them airplanes
and electronic systems the AF has, freshman Erik? AF engineers of course." I
was told I'd be doing EE design work like I was going to school for. That's
what I wanted to do. He said 'join the AF, ROTC engineers do that work."
After all 'Aerospace Studies' sounds like engineering, he must know. So I
joined.
- Boy was I duped. By senior year when we were already locked into program,
they told us, "Well you don't really do the design work but you fill out AF
mgt forms monitoring the company's engineers actually doing the actual design
work. Surprise, you're not an engineer but a project manager. That's what
we meant by engineering, because we like to have engineers filling out those
paperwork." The first of many 'surprises'. But I lived with it.
- Like you Doug, I was slated to go to AFSC at Hanscom with ESD or AFSC at
Wright-Pat too, but ended up assigned to a Civil Engineering Project Officer
slot. An EE as a CE? Yup. Surprise! The official reason - "engineering is
engineering. And well, the AF doesn't do engineering but project management,
so it doesn't really matter what the actual type of engineering is since
you'll just be doing project mgt anyway." Let me tell you I had some fears of
overseeing CE projects when I was an EE! But still I lived with it.
- There I was, managing hefty-figure projects (like most afrotc grads, like
you probably), when they said "We need an officer to direct CE projects at
FOBs (forward operating bases) in the position to direct the building of
bare-base airbases and runways on the frontlines from the dirt up and
maintaining it. You're a CE, well, you're in a CE mgt slot, so that's now
your job. Surprise! And btw, you won't be on a secured airbase anymore and
that close to the frontlines you can't count on the Army to protect you in
those situations," so they shoved an M-16 in my hand and handed me a chem
warfare suit and said "better learn how to use these." But I lived with it.
- And then one day they 'liked' the way I handled perimeter security during
one extended 'prime beef' exercise so I became in charge of a fire team as
well as commanding FOB Prime Beef CE operations. A fire team! A fire team =
combat. A hell of a long way off from sitting at a desk with your trusty HP
calculator doing EE design work. What a contract! But I lived with it.
[BTW, if you were in the European theatre, you would have had opportunities
for this to be done to you too, even in a procurement or other 'desk-job'
slot from what I hear from my friends stationed there, including my
ex-girlfriend. AFSC in Con-US is somewhat pampered from the 'real' military,
so they say. Personally I think the entire AF is pampered from the rest of
the 'real' military, based on what I heard from my enlisted people who are
from all different services. My W-P friends say they don't ever even talk to
any enlisted there, that they felt like the lowest rank their as LTs.
Meanwhile I was only one of 4 officers in charge of a whole squadron of
enlisted CE tradesmen and infantrymen. For me I was one of the higher ranks
as an LT. [PS- I got to hear in horrid detail about what the enlisted in all
services think about rotc "90 Day Wonders". They were all set to 'blanket
party' me when I first came in just because the word 'rotc' preceded my
arrival].
So there I ended up standing in the mud leading fire teams with an M-16 in my
hands and wearing a chem warfare ensemble, and saying "This is an AF
Electrical Engineering career?" If DEC hired you as a design engineer but
then once you're in, placed you as a janitor, would you stay there for four
years? Probably not. But in the military, they can surprise you, completely
legally, in more ways than you'd ever thought possible - even as a college
freshman, especially as a naive high school 18 yr old. [How big would the
military be if we only allow 35+ yr olds and quit suckering naive high school
students??]
> I learned enough about the procurement mission to know they don't just
> pluck entire units out of that role and ship them off to the desert.
As for all the other so-far protected desk-job staff in the reserves and
Guards, I don't doubt for one moment that if it is decided by the republicans
that politically it wouldn't do well for Bush to call a draft, that
Guardspeople and Reservespeople won't be called into combat instead, no
matter what cushy job or promises were made to them. CE Project Managers and
EE Procurement Officers in the Guards won't be shipped out with their units,
huh? I think basing the entire military on your 'pampered' experience of just
being in a AFSC slot is hardly a wise thing to do. The Marines, Navy, and
Army are hardly the AF, and AFSC is hardly even representative of the AF.
IMO.
I stayed in. But I can truly understand people who were sold a lemon of a
career wanting to break their faulty contract. If the recruiters gave them
all the wrong facts, I think they have a case. In fact, I think people who
do have far far more courage in standing up and saying "This wasn't our
agreement" than the people who are just docily and passively being led to the
latrine and back by the military, and who just 'live with it'. Maybe that
belongs in the "COURAGE" note.
So there, that was my 'field experience'. But I would hardly call it that,
vs. what the tougher REAL field experiences the Army and Marines have. I'd
rather not talk any more about those wasted four years though. Gave me great
insight into the way the military works but what a waste of time...
-Erik (who has lived the rough tough macho 'real-man' role in the extremely
non-Valuing_Diversity 1950's _conservative_ _male_ military environment)
|
559.32 | rambling thoughts | LEVERS::CIARFELLA | Saabless and happy | Thu Feb 07 1991 12:56 | 35 |
| <<< Note 559.18 by WAHOO::LEVESQUE "Phase II: Operation Desert Storm" >>>
> In a volunteer army, I find it very difficult to respect someone who suddenly
>decides that they are CO the very minute that the country calls upon them to
>fulfill their part of the bargain. In a conscripted army it is much easier to
>believe that the CO is a true reflection of deeply held belief rather than
>expedient excuse to duck responsibility.
I agree 100%.
It ain't the fear thats getting them, its that these people signed
up with the intention of never fighting for real. I still believe
that there is a signicant population in the reserves
and national guard who just signed up for the 'free' benefits, like
it was just another part-time job. I can remember in high school
when kids were on ego trips because they were going into the marine
reserves. They were going to be the best. They weren't going to
defend they're country, they just identified themselves as the best.
Similarly, I suppose you can also say that about a majority of the
full-time services. These people (men and women, remember) probably
had no place to go except into the service. But they know that they
have a job to do. No exceptions.
One of my best friends is in the marine special
forces in Norfolk, VA. He signed up over a year ago. He signed
up for the marines becuase he wanted to protect and serve his country
as a member of the best force in the world. Its lucky for his wife
and two infant children that he's assigned to guard NATO and not
sneak into Baghdad. He'd do it in a minute, with a smile on his face.
I'm rambling ...
|
559.33 | | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Thu Feb 07 1991 13:20 | 7 |
| Is anyone else having trouble with "CO" as the designation
for Conscientious Objector? I keep reading it as
Commanding Officer... It really flips me out when the
context of the sentence demands "conscientious objector"
and my mind says to me "commanding officer."
Wil
|
559.34 | | CYCLST::DEBRIAE | the social change one... | Thu Feb 07 1991 13:28 | 3 |
|
Time for a paradigm switch. :-)
|
559.35 | | WORDY::GFISHER | Work that dream and love your life | Thu Feb 07 1991 13:39 | 23 |
|
>>>August. That leads me to believe that the issue is _not_ a gradual
>>>change of life's philosophy, but a visceral reaction to being sent off
>>>to war.
>>
>> Exactly. None of them seem to have a decent answer to that charge.
>
> Listen to the both of you... judging other people's true feelings for
> whether they can really kill another human being.
No. You misunderstand what I say.
I think that it is fine for a military person to decide not to go to
war. I am only saying that that person should accept responsiblity
for that decision (and accept the consequences) and not pawn it off as
the government "tricking" them.
I have made no judgements as to whether someone should or should not
want to kill someone or as to what they might be feeling.
Please stop misrepresenting what I'm saying, Erik.
--Gerry
|
559.36 | | CSC32::M_VALENZA | Create peace. | Thu Feb 07 1991 13:42 | 12 |
| >What kind of people are those who engineer and type for a group that
>kills, and then pisses and moans when they are asked to kill instead
>of asked to support others who will kill?
Gerry, they're called 1-A-O conscientious objectors. While I
personally would not choose to opt for 1-A-O for precisely that
reason--I don't see a moral distinction between pulling a trigger and
helping someone else pull the trigger--others apparently disagree, and
these people are recognized by the U.S. military and are assigned a
special selective service class. This is a distinct class from 1-O.
-- Mike
|
559.37 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVG West, UCS1-4 | Thu Feb 07 1991 13:43 | 83 |
| re .31,
Thanks, Erik. I really did want to know. Your account suggests to me
that there were many aspects of your contract you didn't understand
when you signed up. An EE assigned to CE work, yeah, that isn't much
fun. Actually, I wasn't a procurement officer; I was in a procurement
unit as a computer systems support officer. You can imagine how many
CS grads the AF gets vs how many it needs, so there wasn't any chance
they'd assign me to do CE (for which I wasn't trained nor competent).
And once they'd gotten me, there was no way my unit wanted me to go
seek another assignment, so they didn't push too much of that gung-ho
macho kaka my way; they stayed out of my way, and let me run their
systems and networks. Built my first VAXcluster there, and lots else.
I didn't fire an M16 in ROTC, but, like you, spent a day firing a .38
at a range during 'camp'. I trained on the M16 later, while on active
duty, because there were people in my unit who arranged training for
the rest of us, if we wanted to participate. Voluntary, 'just in
case'. Acknowledging that who knew, if we got sent, say, to Belgium on
the F16 CAS program, and something happened while we were there, who
knew what we might need to be able to accomplish? Better to be prepared.
> even heard of chem warfare ensembles in ROTC? (me - none). The very
> idea of chem warfare wasn't even a concept in my mind back then. What
> would they have said to you if you said "The military 'profession' is
> about killing people, right?" What would they have screamed at you as
> if you said the biggest lie? "Who knows the military, us or those
> peaceniks cadet!"
Definately sounds like your ROTC training didn't encourage you to
understand the nature of the profession nor the positions you'd be in.
I can't say my ROTC training was so useless. All those engineering
projects you wanted to build, what was their purpose? Wanted to be
involved in building jets, freshman Erik? But they never told you what
was done with jets? Never told you some of the lessons of Vietnam?
I'm don't mean that in a condescending way, but it really sounds to me
like you didn't get the training ROTC was supposed to provide.
I remember the 4th year instructor I had in the Aerospace Studies
curriculum; a senior captain, had spent time enlisted, had spent time
on assignment at NSA. He turned me on to a book I've used to
explore many, many aspects of social change, and upon which I based
my final paper in his class. Its a book I've even quoted here in
mennotes, when I was trying to explain my views of social change to
Mike Zarlenga. "Revolutionary Change", 2nd Ed, by Chalmers Johnson.
It was that sort of learning, questioning, and investigating the ways
not only our society, but other societies worked; and what part a
military organization could play in the very fabric of it's society,
that I was taught in my AFROTC classrooms. (My paper applied Johnson's
book to several societies in South America, and how their own military
cultures and US military interventions over the past 100 years have
shaped those societies.) Sorry to hear they didn't give you a similar
understanding in your AFROTC classes. They were supposed to.
I'd imagine that the experience you gained from command of enlisted
troops wasn't so worthless as you've painted it; while granted, it
wasn't what you expected you'd learn. You know, I vaguely remember
some of the hype you mention, but I never remember trusting it; I knew
what my contract had said, I knew there was no way to guarantee any
particular assignment unless they promised it in writing, and I knew,
as a CS officer, how lucky I was to be running VAXes. I coulda got
stuck running obsolete SAGE, IBM, Burroughs, or Cyber trash in some
missile hole in Wyoming, or [*shudder*] at SAC in Omaha, or at Minot
North Dakota. Yes, there were awful assignments to be had, and I was
out there at risk of being assigned to them. They didn't keep any
promises to me, and I wasn't looking for them to. So perhaps my slot
was 'pampered'.
> I stayed in. But I can truly understand people who were sold a lemon
> of a career wanting to break their faulty contract. If the recruiters
> gave them all the wrong facts, I think they have a case.
Well, and there it is, the difference in expectations. I knew and
accepted what was in my contract. You didn't know, and you accepted
it, and you find it helps you understand people who want to break their
contracts now. Well...I don't dispute your experience. But I don't
agree with your conclusion, either. I think people who sign up for the
military owe it to themselves to know what they're getting into, and to
take responsibility for their own actions. You accepted that
responsibility, and met your committments. Why would you expect less
of others?
DougO
|
559.38 | | CYCLST::DEBRIAE | the social change one... | Thu Feb 07 1991 14:03 | 70 |
| RE: .27
Gerry, we have different perspectives and I think it is a great
discussion to air them. Let's keep this in good will, OK? And just
exchange our different ways of looking at things. (Just re-affirming).
>Erik, this may come as a shock to you, but telling part of the truth,
>verbally, as a sales pitch, is not illegal.
I am not shocked, you are right. However, there is also the 'intent of
contract' too. My Am. Law classes in high school were a while ago,
but isn't the intent part of the equation too? IE, a door-to-door
vacuum cleaner salesperson can't sell an ederly person a vacuum cleaner
and then on the form have in extremely hard-to-read small print that
the sale of the vacuum cleaner results in them losing their house.
INTENT is a powerful factor in the 'broken contract' equation, if I
remember properly. How do the laws around false advertising and faulty
contracts work?
>it's too much of 18-year-olds, people who are generally considered
>"adults"--to read a contract carefully before then sign it, especially
>when the deal involves thousands of dollars and years of your life.
I agree with you that kids should be told that they have to read all of
the contract. I agree that the military should be portrayed in high
schools and by parents as the 'profession of killing people'.
However, there are pages and pages and pages of very hard to interpret
contracts to read. What is the reading level of the average high
school grad? S/he is going to be able to understand legalese? No, what
happens is the trust thing. IMO. "Gee, my Dad served and he said it
was Ok and my high school counselor pushes that the military as a good
"career choice" and it's in my high school, so it can't be a scam.
These people are the US gov't, I trust them." And the pages and pages
of contracts get signed in one sitting. [How many kids bring a lawyer
with them, like we adults do to our mortgage contract signings
involving 'thousands of dollars and years of our life'?]
A high school would not let a college come into school that
discrimintaes against women or that discrimintaes against gays and
lesbians or a company that suckered students into jobs other than the
ones promised to them. But the military is there. I feel we should
get rid of that 'trust relationship' between school, authority, school
counselors, and the military.
>I agree with the military on this. I'll repeat it, "Didn't your
>parents tell you that joining the military can involve wars and
>killing people???" How gullible were these young men and women?
That's funny Gerry. Just try asking somebody in the military if the
military is about killing people. I know what was screamed at me by
countless rotc students and staff when they heard that hideous phrase
"killing people."
>What kind of people are those who engineer and type for a group that
>kills, and then pisses and moans when they are asked to kill instead
>of asked to support others who will kill?
I dunno, I think the difference between pulling the trigger to kill
somebody yourself and supporting your fellow Americans is a big
distinction for people. Are all the anti-war Congresspeople and
activists willing to fire a gun at someone when they say "I support the
troops" or they send a care package of cookies to the Gulf? Or sitting
in MD creating all the versions of new AF forms or doing AF payroll?
There are many methods of support. And I think for many people there
is a big distinction between the two. IMHO, many people who say "I
support the troops" don't mean to be saying that they would like to
actually pull the trigger and kill other wo/men themselves.
-Erik
|
559.39 | infected by older minds... :-) | CYCLST::DEBRIAE | the social change one... | Thu Feb 07 1991 15:30 | 73 |
| RE: .37 DougO
> Thanks, Erik. I really did want to know.
Thanks Doug [or is it DougO? :-)]
> Your account suggests to me
> that there were many aspects of your contract you didn't understand
Yeah, I'll admit to that. Some other things I'll admit to not knowing
until just recently - that the National Guard mission went from
'protect the homefront' to a pure combat role deploying with the active
duty forces.. And that the standard 'four-year' commitment isn't
really a four-year commitment, that it can be extended without your
knowledge or permission.
> I'm don't mean that in a condescending way, but it really sounds to me
> like you didn't get the training ROTC was supposed to provide.
>
> explore many, many aspects of social change, and upon which I based
Social change? In *rotc*!! I'm flabbergasted! You sure had a different
unit than I did!
Sure, we read books about the military's roles in society, but it was
all about power and the dangers of communism and military glory and
resistance to progressive change (our AS profs spoke with pride how
they resisted those 'weird radical hippies' Vietnam war protesters on
campus) and about the conservative agenda and how rampant nationalism
is OK when we do it but bad when the Germans do it. They never
mentioned women or women's issues (not in a non-derogatory sense) or
any other progressive ideology. Pretty much the same as I've found
outside ROTC, very conservative and male dominated opinions (of the
1950's).
Oh, and we must have spent almost a whole year on learning all those AF
acronyms. :-)
> I'd imagine that the experience you gained from command of enlisted
> troops wasn't so worthless as you've painted it; while granted, it
So worthless? No. It was a lot of traditional management training, in
the old KITA style of doing it anyway. But to someone who at the time
did not want mgt as a career, it certainly seemed so. I also learned
how to wash mud off boots quickly and how to iron fatigues w/o an iron.
[:-)]
> They didn't keep any promises to me, and I wasn't looking for them to.
Well there's a big difference right there. I think many people expect
the military to keep up on its side of the bargain, or else they'll
drop theirs. I wonder if it is any different for people on the inside
track, ie, how many sons & daughters growing up with a parent in the
military join it afterward, and what their expectations of their career
are... if any different.
> responsibility, and met your committments. Why would you expect less
> of others?
You know, I really wouldn't want them to go thru what I had to. My
older friends have given me some very cynical sides at times. This is
one. Often I feel people push other people into doing something just
because they had to do it too. I took the WPI Comp, I think all the
future students should have to suffer it too. I had to get married
before I could have sex, I think you have to too. I had to walk to
school, I think you should have to too. I had to be in the military, I
think all 18 yr olds have to too. [I esp. hate when they say "Suffer
it, it'll make you a MAN."] No, I wouldn't want them to have to go thru
it too.
AKA "Euu, this is *terrible*. Here, you taste it." :-)
-Erik
|
559.40 | What about the easy sentence? | NOVA::FISHER | Well, there's still an Earth to come home to. | Thu Feb 07 1991 16:09 | 11 |
| I was thinking about this note and came up with:
She got off with a "Less that Honorable" discharge which is a
slap on the wrist really. Was that the result of a political decision
to minimize the publicity? Was it sexist in that some guy who does
the same thing gets 10 years and a DD? [Only time will tell on this
last one.]
I think it was political. She should have gotten a couple of years.
ed
|
559.41 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Thu Feb 07 1991 16:47 | 5 |
| Don't be too quick to assume she got off easy. A "Less than Honorable
Discharge" will haunt her for many years as she looks for work. My brother
found this out...
Steve
|
559.42 | | WORDY::GFISHER | Work that dream and love your life | Thu Feb 07 1991 16:51 | 35 |
|
[Please don't give me condescending orders on how to note, Erik.
I promise not to do that to you. Thank you.]
>>Erik, this may come as a shock to you, but telling part of the truth,
>>verbally, as a sales pitch, is not illegal.
>
> I am not shocked, you are right. However, there is also the 'intent of
> contract' too. My Am. Law classes in high school were a while ago,
> but isn't the intent part of the equation too? IE, a door-to-door
> vacuum cleaner salesperson can't sell an ederly person a vacuum cleaner
> and then on the form have in extremely hard-to-read small print that
> the sale of the vacuum cleaner results in them losing their house.
> INTENT is a powerful factor in the 'broken contract' equation, if I
> remember properly. How do the laws around false advertising and faulty
> contracts work?
1) Good luck proving that they intended something different than what
the contract said. All they have to do is verbally use words like
"most" and "usually," and they are off the hook.
2) You are still not addressing my main theory, made in my first note:
this really isn't about contract law and changing world view
(otherwise, we would have seen large numbers of lawsuits and Con. Ob.
applications in previous years); this is about a knee-jerk reaction to
the possibility of having to go to war. The rest is tangental excuse
making (in my opinion).
----------------------------------------------------------------------
I'm out of this discussion. I've given enough so that people should
be able to understand my current opinions. I'm going to shift to
listening mode to see if I can learn something new.
--Gerry
|
559.43 | Anchors Aweigh.. | ORCAS::MCKINNON_JA | Sorry, NO Vacancy | Thu Feb 07 1991 16:53 | 23 |
|
4 years? Read the contract. It says 6 years. Min enlistment. You
might do 6 months, 1 year, 2, 3, or 4, active but the contract is for 6.
My recruiter was very honest to me. He told me that I would be able to
get ANYTHING I wanted when I was in the Navy. He meant it too.
As far as the service "types" in the Middle whatever. They want to be
there. They are enlisting, re-enlisting and volunteering to go to fight.
The best time to be in the service is when there is a "war" on.
I had one of the most dangerous jobs in the Navy. Pressing pants.
Now that took courage and stamina... You would not believe the size
of some of the buts that are in the service just marking time.
I get my 20, I'm outa here... This attitude is rampant and it is what
lead me to get out of the RESERVES. Not many "co's" there.
Just get rid of the august "co's". Give them lots of EMI.
Discharge under less than Honorable and extract/nomercy on their bankbook.
anchors aweigh...
|
559.44 | maybe not... | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | we need the eggs | Thu Feb 07 1991 17:06 | 14 |
| re .41, Steve, this may be one area where reverse sexism exists. I'm
not sure that having a less than honorable discharge will make it any
harder for a woman to obtain a job. Since most women are never in the
military anyway, most employers don't expect women to list it on their
resumes. If she never mentions she was in the service nobody will ever
know.
I was in the army for awhile and got an honorable discharge due to
"apathy" but I certainly don't list it on my resume, and nobody would
ever dream I was in the military unless I told them.
Lorna
|
559.45 | Let her off EASY because she's a woman and mommy ? | AERIE::THOMPSON | trying real hard to adjust ... | Thu Feb 07 1991 18:12 | 17 |
|
... as Lorna points out ... Chances are her service record will
NOT matter much in civilian life. With that in mind maybe she should
have been sentenced to some number of years of prison time equivalent
to the remainder of her enlistment period in the reserves. Then this
prison record could (perhaps) be worked out over an extended period
as public service without her actually being put "behind bars" and
yet the principle of punishment appropriate to the crime would have
been served and she would then have to list her "prison record" on a
job application ... or lie about it by ommission.
Seeing anybody sleeze by our legal system just because they are
NOT WASP males seems to diminish the concept of "equality" that women
and minority rights activists wish to see as the standard in America!
~--e--~ eagles believe harm is done to causes by "political" solutions
|
559.46 | freedom to set tone however each feels right... | CYCLST::DEBRIAE | the social change one... | Thu Feb 07 1991 19:13 | 7 |
| re: .42
>[Please don't give me condescending orders on how to note.
>I promise not to do that to you. Thank you.]
Ditto.
|
559.47 | Maybe a call to my lawyer... | SALEM::KUPTON | Great Defense=Patriots and Jets | Fri Feb 08 1991 11:04 | 22 |
| I call it desertion, not CO. Failure to perform in a time of declared
war. She got less than a tap on the wrist. She should have done hard
time for 10 years at Levenworth.
You can make all of the excuses in the world for these people. The
important thing that all have to remember is that everyone KNOWS that
armies have throughout history fought and died. End of story.
You join the army, navy, whatever. You have to know that it could
result in service in combat. That's drilled into you at basic and
throughout your career. The first time they stick a weapon in your hand
and you participate in weapons training, a precedent is set that you
will kill on command. At the time they hand you the weapon, you have
the opportunity to reject it and the action. If in the little recesses
of your devious little mind you file a note that says you won't play
for real, you've frauded the government and misrepresented yourself.
Once they had her, they should have shipped her butt to the front!
I wonder if I, US taxpayer could sue her for theft of my tax dollars???
Ken
|
559.48 | Most Guard medics have never fired a weapon, not their job too... | CYCLST::DEBRIAE | the social change one... | Fri Feb 08 1991 12:09 | 24 |
| re: .last
Agree with your sentiment that everyone should know the true
terrible nature of the military, but wanted to point out:
- 'basic' for an officer is not the same as Basic Training for an
enlisted, especially in the AF anyway, where she is serving.
- I doubt very much that medics are ever given a weapon or weapons
training. Wouldn't be surprised if for most officers in the AF, the
very first time they are given a M-16 in their hands, is when they
are being used to fill the draft.
>important thing that all have to remember is that everyone KNOWS that
>armies have throughout history fought and died. End of story.
May sound like a stupid question, but the image is (and young
people will ask it):
"Yeah, the Army does that and always has. But what about the
high-tech Air Force? They just fly planes, right? Only the Army
shoots the guns." <WRONG>
|
559.49 | To Hell with 'em .... | MORO::BEELER_JE | This space for rent | Fri Feb 08 1991 12:26 | 25 |
| .47> I call it desertion, not CO.
Precisely. Had this person been in my unit I *guarantee* you that
court-martial proceedings would have been initiated. If you really
want to screw up the rest of your life there's nothing like a
dishonorable discharge to get you started ....
I remember well the turkey who, when he found out that he was going to
Vietnam, decided that he was gay .... I escorted (read that "drug") him
to what was called STB (Special Training Battalion -- a hell hole to be
sure) ... he cried (big ol' crocodile tears) the whole time ....
Turned out that he was gay (probably) and I made damned sure that he
got a dishonorable discharge ...
I, along with Mr. Kupton, think that he should have done a minimum of
10 years hard labor but a dishonorable discharge was the best that we
could do at the time ... personally, I hope that he was never able to
hold a job or the remainder of his life ....
Sorry, I have no tolerance for that type of person ... am I that
"evil"?
Jerry
1st Division, USMC
|
559.50 | Without answering the question... | CYCLST::DEBRIAE | the social change one... | Fri Feb 08 1991 12:45 | 15 |
|
> To Hell with 'em ....
&
> Sorry, I have no tolerance for that type of person ... am I that
> "evil"?
You aren't a General. Jerry.
Just better hope that your male & female commanding officers
approve of your 'rough treatment' decisions and have your reasons
for that decision and the case well documented. The reasons above
hardly cut it.
-Erik
3rd Squadron, USAF
|
559.51 | Zero tolerance .... | MORO::BEELER_JE | This space for rent | Fri Feb 08 1991 13:21 | 19 |
| .50> You aren't a General. Jerry.
Immaterial ... Private First Class or 4-Star General ... makes no
difference.
.50> Just better hope that your male & female commanding officers
.50> approve of your 'rough treatment' decisions and have your reasons
.50> for that decision and the case well documented.
"..rough treatment...?" ... war is rough ... I don't want turkeys like
that anywhere NEAR me when the lead starts flying .... I don't want 'em
in the service ...
.50> The reasons above hardly cut it.
Wrong. Not one dissenting vote when we mustered the turkey out. I'd
do it again, today, in a heartbeat.
Jerry
|
559.52 | | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Fri Feb 08 1991 13:24 | 10 |
| "..rough treatment...?" ... war is rough ... I don't want turkeys like
that anywhere NEAR me when the lead starts flying .... I don't want 'em
in the service ...
Turkeys like what Jerry? Homosexuals or people who are trying to get out of
the service? If the latter, and you "don't want 'em in the service" I would
think you could cut a deal. If the former - I don't think I have anything
more to say to you.
-- Charles
|
559.53 | | BIGUN::SIMPSON | Damn your lemon curd tartlet! | Fri Feb 08 1991 13:28 | 12 |
| re .50
You know, Erik, it's increasingly clear that you don't have the
faintest understanding of the requirements of a combat unit. They
don't have the luxury you enjoyed of worrying about sensitivities.
They absolutely require the confidence that when they're fighting
against a bunch of bastards on the other side equally intent on killing
them that everybody around them will stand and fight with them. There
is simply no room for people who betray that trust. I'm willing to bet
that Jerry's fellow officers gave next to no thought for the way he
handled the miscreant - because they knew too that people who run away
when the going gets tough can get them killed as well.
|
559.55 | AF is not the Marines, Medics are not combatants (they feel) | CYCLST::DEBRIAE | the social change one... | Fri Feb 08 1991 13:47 | 22 |
| RE: .53
>You know, Erik, it's increasingly clear that you don't have the
>faintest understanding of the requirements of a combat unit. They
>don't have the luxury you enjoyed of worrying about sensitivities.
And that was just the point. I am not a Marine. The AF is not run
like the Marines. Yet from what I'm hearing from civilians
unfamiliar with the military, is that they expect AF people to be
Marines, under the image that all the military is like that 'rough
and tough' Marine image.
AF engineers don't have guns. AF base hospital medics don't either.
The services operate differently. Try playing out Jerry's management
decisions in an AF Enginnering office office-space. If an AF
officer had displayed the same 'brutality', it would have resulted
much much differently in an AF office environment. I would have
handled it quite a bit differently, to say the least.
[And fwiw, on my own behalf, I've spent enough time as a fire team
leader that I think I have more than a 'faint understanding' of a
combat unit. Albeit, not a Marine one].
|
559.56 | Read my lips ... OK? | MORO::BEELER_JE | This space for rent | Fri Feb 08 1991 13:48 | 32 |
| > "..rough treatment...?" ... war is rough ... I don't want turkeys like
> that anywhere NEAR me when the lead starts flying .... I don't want 'em
> in the service ...
.52> Turkeys like what Jerry? Homosexuals or people who are trying to get out of
.52> the service?
The "people who are trying to get out of the service" class of
individuals. I really don't give a flying damn if a person is black,
white, yellow, brown, straight, gay, undetermined, transsexual,
bisexual, butcher, baker, candlestick maker ... or whatever. I could
care less .... BUT ... when you raise your right hand and swear a oath,
I anticipate that you will live up to it ... you're going to follow
orders ... if you are subordinate to me, you'll follow my orders - if
you don't - you're history. That's the way that it is in the military
- if you don't like it then change it - but - until then, that's the
way that is is.
Clear? Good.
Jerry
PS - Just for the record ... had it not been for a Marine that was as
queer as the day is long I wouldn't be here right now ... he pulled my
butt out of a fire fight and saved my life when we got shot up by the
VC ... he's dead now ... direct hit from a VC rocket attack, but believe
me, he'd puke if he could see most of the stuff written there. Please,
don't give me any condensing crap about homosexuals in the military ...
when you put that uniform on you're FIRST a Marine and somewhere down
the line you're ... homosexual.
Clear? Good.
|
559.57 | We work together .. for the same reason ? | MORO::BEELER_JE | This space for rent | Fri Feb 08 1991 14:03 | 18 |
| .55> I am not a Marine. The AF is not run like the Marines.
No, it's not ... and .. I really don't care .... what I DO care about
it that when I call for an air strike at some coordinates .. I want the
strike WHERE I called for and the TIME I called for and with the
ordinance that I call for.
We work as a T E A M - nothing more and nothing less. It was drilled
through my head from the first day of boot camp that EVERY piece of
ordinance exist for ONE AND ONLY ONE REASON and that is to get the foot
soldier to his objective .. all the way from the guy who's got his
fingers on the missiles to the guy who's washing dishes in some rear
area ... as Patton said, "this individuality stuff is a bunch of crap".
This dissension between the Air Force, Army, Marines, Navy, Coast Guard
... makes me sick to my stomach ....
Jerry
|
559.58 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Phase II: Operation Desert Storm | Fri Feb 08 1991 14:11 | 4 |
| > Turned out that he was gay (probably) and I made damned sure that he
> got a dishonorable discharge ...
Because he was gay?
|
559.60 | | CLIPR::STHILAIRE | we need the eggs | Fri Feb 08 1991 14:15 | 25 |
| re Jerry Beeler, you seem to have no understanding for the fact that
some people enlist in the military and later discover that they are not
suited for that life. Everyone is not suited for the military way of
life. I would think it would be best for everyone concerned to
discharge these people as soon as possible and get them out of the way.
Why should someone be treated so badly just because they don't have the
temperament to adapt to military life? The same person might have a
great deal to contribute to society in another area.
Sometimes people, especially very young people in their late teens or
early 20's, make mistakes. They think they might want something and
then after trying it out for awhile find out they were mistaken. It
could be a particular major in college, a certain job, a marriage or
the military. The majority of people who enlist in the military stay
in, so I think there could be a little compassion for those who made a
mistake by enlisting. All people are not suited for all jobs, and that
includes the military as well as anything else.
I don't know you well enough to say that I think you are "evil" but I
do think, from your notes, that you do show a lack of compassion and
understanding for those who think differently about things than you do.
Lorna
|
559.61 | Hey .. they do a hell of a job ... | MORO::BEELER_JE | This space for rent | Fri Feb 08 1991 14:36 | 9 |
| .59> I read someplace that the Air Force's *least* favorite mission
.59> is ground support.
The least "favorite" of any air support unit ... you've got to go in at
very low altitudes ... for the most part ...and slow ... you're a sitting
target for SAMs and AA ... a great deal of the time multiple passes are
required. It's not a "fun" place to be ....
Jerry
|
559.62 | | CRONIC::SCHULER | Your groove I do deeply dig | Fri Feb 08 1991 14:40 | 4 |
| I deleted .59 because this isn't the right topic for it.
Thanks for the answer though...
|
559.63 | | BIGUN::SIMPSON | Damn your lemon curd tartlet! | Fri Feb 08 1991 14:54 | 17 |
| re .60
> suited for that life. Everyone is not suited for the military way of
> life. I would think it would be best for everyone concerned to
> discharge these people as soon as possible and get them out of the way.
The beef really isn't with those people. I don't know about in the US
but the Australian Army has alway taken a somewhat lenient view of
people who go AWOL and desert - in peacetime. Sure, the MPs will make
an effort, but if the guy is dead-set keen on getting out that way then
rather than waste too much taxpayer's money they'll just sign a nasty
form kicking him out and forget about it.
The beef is with people who stick it out right up until the point when
they're called to make it all worthwhile. They don't decide they're 'not
suited' as long as they are getting what they want out of the system -
but when push comes to shove they bail out.
|
559.64 | | NOVA::FISHER | It's your Earth too, love it or leave it. | Fri Feb 08 1991 15:06 | 6 |
| I hope they sent you the ordnance you wanted and left the ordinances
for the company clerks.
:-) Just trying to lighten this up.
ed
|
559.65 | How long oh Lord? | MORO::BEELER_JE | This space for rent | Fri Feb 08 1991 15:48 | 36 |
| .60> re Jerry Beeler, you seem to have no understanding for the fact that
.60> some people enlist in the military and later discover that they are not
.60> suited for that life.
Please do not judge my compassion or understanding by this very
imperfect medium ... I have a great deal of "understanding" for those
who are not suited for a military life. As Mr. Simpson stated, I'd
rather get 'em out as soon as possible .. but... how long do you wait?
After completion of boot camp? After the completion of advanced combat
training ... After a year of service ... after two years of service?
Where do you suggest that my unbounded compassion and understanding end
and my desire to knock 'em side the head begin?
.60> I don't know you well enough to say that I think you are "evil" but I
.60> do think, from your notes, that you do show a lack of compassion and
.60> understanding for those who think differently about things than you do.
To know me is to love me :-) ... the operative phrase here is "...from
your notes..." Please do not judge *anyone* from their notes ... I've
been a student of notes ever since the prototype days and believe me,
those with whom you most violently dislike in notes ... you'd probably
find them to be your best friend outside of notes ... I even fell in
love (seriously) with one of my worst notes_enemies after we managed to
meet face to face!
To judge a person by their notes is a serious mistake and you are
depriving yourself of what could possibly be a new and close
friendship...
Jerry
PS - I'll be in New England around the first of March and if you're
located there ... you can buy me dinner and we can get acquainted :-)
|
559.66 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Sat Feb 09 1991 08:51 | 31 |
| > Sometimes people, especially very young people in their late teens or
> early 20's, make mistakes. They think they might want something and
> then after trying it out for awhile find out they were mistaken. It
> could be a particular major in college, a certain job, a marriage or
> the military.
I think this is saying that a marriage contract, a military
contract, another employment contract, a mortgage contract,
possibly any other contract, should be cancellable by "very young people"
without any problem or penalty.
While I agree that the law should protect minors and idiots I would
hope to see a consistent definition of what constitutes a minor or
idiot. It is not clear which of the two the doctor referred to earlier
is claiming to be, and either she or someone responsible for her should
make a clear statement.
If repudiation of a contract can be based on just "I made a
mistake" then you can expect that insurance companies will *never* pay
out (they just calculated the odds wrongly) and in any sale possesion
becomes ten tenths of the law instead only nine.
Actually it would make the U.S. a lot more productive. Since
contract law would be unenforceable there would be hundreds of contract
lawyers unemployed and looking to design the next range of computers
and operating systems.
I agree that it is not worth an organisation keeping someone on the
books who *will* not fulfill requirements, but I would argue that the 3
'M's (military, mafia, morgage company) should execute a contract in
the same way.
|
559.67 | Bad word ..... | MORO::BEELER_JE | Duty .. honor .. country | Sun Feb 10 1991 12:00 | 16 |
| > Turned out that he was gay (probably) and I made damned sure that he
> got a dishonorable discharge ...
.58> Because he was gay?
Excuse me Herr Doctah ... bad choice of words ... that should have read:
"...but I damned sure ...."
^^^
The implication being that I really don't care what his/her/it sexual
orientation is ... I did my best to see to it that a dishonorable
discharge was issued. [When I was in the Corps, homosexuals got
dishonorable discharges ... I believe that has since changed to
"General Discharge"].
Jerry
|
559.68 | | BRABAM::PHILPOTT | Col I F 'Tsingtao Dhum' Philpott | Mon Feb 11 1991 09:39 | 18 |
|
I have no problem with people who enlist and then discover they are not cut out
for the military life.
I have a soft spot for people who discover this fact shortly after getting
orders to go to a fire fight - its a bog in Killarney!
Once in, and past basic training, you have an obligation to get down and get
dirty, when the chips are down.
Try and leave and you'll be arrested. And if you are shot trying to escape I'll
shed no tears.
There is only one place for individuals in the military: the 'ghosts' of
military intelligence. Even special forces (US Delta force, British SAS/SBS)
fight in pairs.
/. Ian .\
|
559.69 | Not necessary ..... | MORO::BEELER_JE | Moderation in war is imbecility | Mon Feb 11 1991 12:32 | 6 |
| .68> ...if you are shot trying to escape I'll shed no tears.
At Parris Island the swamp surrounding the island took care of most of
those "problems".
Jerry
|
559.70 | What is a CO's purpose with the military? | CSC32::K_JACKSON | First Things First! | Mon Feb 11 1991 12:41 | 61 |
|
I've been watching this one and wanting to reply but I have bit my tongue
because of the controversy around this touchy subject!
First of all, I should mention that I have mixed feelings about the war
but I do SUPPORT THE TROOPS!!! I have pro's and con's which I won't
get into because the subject at hand is "CO's".
My main question is, and probably was asked in here earlier but, "If
you are a CO, why in the hell are you enlisting in the first place?"
If I recall correctly, all the motto's of all our services are just
like the police force, "To Protect and to Serve". If you can't understand
those words, then you better go back to junior high.
It has been mentioned by someone previously that not everyone goes through
the same training and that medics aren't "probably" issued a weapon!
BS!!!!
All personnel in the service MUST qualify with a weapon! In combat zones
medics have the option of carrying a weapon. Most of them carried .45's
since they have to have their hands free to render aid and rifles are
a little bulky.
Everyone, enlisted and officer material, go through basic training.
Why do you think they call it "Basic Training"? While in the service
most people who were kwown "CO's" became medics, solely because they
weren't required to carry weapons. However, when I have talked with
Vietnam Vets down at the DAV, those same medics were the targets of
the VC's, because they knew the medic's usually wouldn't shoot back,
and if they wounded or killed a medic, that meant one less medic to
fix up the soldiers that were doing the shooting.
It was also mentioned that the young don't know what they are getting
into. Well, that could be true and unfortunately, enlisted people have
no real recourse except AWOL or desertion. They may be able to get someone
in politics to help but it's tough. If you are an officer, then they
can "resign" from the military service. (I alway's thought that was
unfair but RHIP).
In peacetime, I have no problem working with CO's, because this is
America, the Land of the Free. However, I could never understand why
they enlisted. Did they want free room and board? Obviously. Did
they think the service OWED them something? Apparently so.
I would have NO PROBLEM AT ALL against extending the contract of
a CO who refused to go to battle after having taken the bennies for a
couple of years. Just extend their contract to the length that they
have already been in, take 3/4 of their pay, and after their time
is up, give them a BCD (Bad Conduct Discharge).
Maybe another topic should be started (if I haven't overlooked it)
"Why do CO's enlist in the 'Armed' Services"?
Thanks,
Kenn
|
559.71 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVG West, UCS1-4 | Mon Feb 11 1991 13:34 | 14 |
| > If you are an officer, then they can "resign" from the military service.
> (I alway's thought that was unfair but RHIP).
Eh. Not quite. An officer can resign their commission. If they still
have a contract with a time committment, resigning their commisssion
means serving the rest of the time as an enlisted troop. Doesn't
happen all that much; no matter how bad one hates being an officer,
one doesn't try to improve on it by joining the enlisted ranks!
After one's initial time committment has been met, you periodically
renew for another 2 or 3 or 4 years (Congress changes the rules every
couple of years.) Or get out then.
DougO
|
559.72 | How would you know? | EXPRES::GILMAN | | Mon Feb 11 1991 14:51 | 13 |
| re .60 I think you sum up my position on the Beeler notes Lorna.
They sure comes across as non compassionate and not very understanding
of other points of view.
Its great to take the send me a Rambo style mans man to go into combat
with ME.... nothing less will do, but... I don't know how one knows how
another is going to act during combat until they get into combat. I
agree that there are certain preliminary signs such as being a C/O
which would indicate that a person has the 'wrong' attitude to enter
combat but other than that I don't know how you would know beforehand.
(I am assuming that all get appropriate training before hand).
|