- Joined
- Sep 12, 2012
- Messages
- 13,243
Currently participating in the above mentioned activities. Here's a few insider leaks.
- I've noticed that those units who were already upholding the standard and doing what they're supposed to be doing already, have had little concern over this guidance.
- The CG is absolutely right concerning discipline. We can try and place blame on a single point of failure (NCO, SNCO, Officer) but that doesn't matter at this point. You can see it all across the base, in every MOS field. This toxic "I don't care, I'm too good for this shit" mentality. There are a lot of skeptics and critics over the CG's guidance, but there are also a lot of us who actually care, and actually do what we can to uphold/enforce the standard.
- A lot of the people who are openly bashing the CG's guidance on social media either 1. Aren't even part of 2d MarDiv, 2. Haven't actually read the guidance and are just jumping on the social media bandwagon, or 3. Don't like it because they're a turd trying to slime by with no adherence to good order and discipline.
- Most people don't realize that this guidance was developed with the aid of NCO's! That's right, the CG sat down with NCO's from across the Div and these are the grievances they expressed. So when I hear an NCO complaining about being 'micromanaged' it triggers me.
It is beyond me why someone would join an organization, be expected to fall in line with that organizations policies, then complain or try to push back against them. I get it, haircuts and boot blouses don't make Marines any more effective at combat. But if you don't have enough discipline in your nasty body to take the extra 5 minutes and minimal effort required to be within standard then how can you be expected to conduct PCC/PCI's properly before we DFL?
Everyone wants to do the 'cool stuff' and never wants to put in the work required to do it. Sorry for the rant, I'm just extremely passionate about my job and being a Marine and am sick and tired of all these bull shit excuses for not looking and acting like a Marine.
Currently participating in the above mentioned activities. Here's a few insider leaks.
- I've noticed that those units who were already upholding the standard and doing what they're supposed to be doing already, have had little concern over this guidance.
- The CG is absolutely right concerning discipline. We can try and place blame on a single point of failure (NCO, SNCO, Officer) but that doesn't matter at this point. You can see it all across the base, in every MOS field. This toxic "I don't care, I'm too good for this shit" mentality. There are a lot of skeptics and critics over the CG's guidance, but there are also a lot of us who actually care, and actually do what we can to uphold/enforce the standard.
- A lot of the people who are openly bashing the CG's guidance on social media either 1. Aren't even part of 2d MarDiv, 2. Haven't actually read the guidance and are just jumping on the social media bandwagon, or 3. Don't like it because they're a turd trying to slime by with no adherence to good order and discipline.
- Most people don't realize that this guidance was developed with the aid of NCO's! That's right, the CG sat down with NCO's from across the Div and these are the grievances they expressed. So when I hear an NCO complaining about being 'micromanaged' it triggers me.
It is beyond me why someone would join an organization, be expected to fall in line with that organizations policies, then complain or try to push back against them. I get it, haircuts and boot blouses don't make Marines any more effective at combat. But if you don't have enough discipline in your nasty body to take the extra 5 minutes and minimal effort required to be within standard then how can you be expected to conduct PCC/PCI's properly before we DFL?
Everyone wants to do the 'cool stuff' and never wants to put in the work required to do it. Sorry for the rant, I'm just extremely passionate about my job and being a Marine and am sick and tired of all these bull shit excuses for not looking and acting like a Marine.