Seggy
Well-Known Member
BTW, nobody "wins" the Medal of Honor -- it isn't the Olympics. It is awarded.
Thanks for correcting me on that grammatical error.
BTW, nobody "wins" the Medal of Honor -- it isn't the Olympics. It is awarded.
I believe none.
But he made that point from first hand accounts of World War II veterans.
I'll put it this way, Seggy -- my reaction to your argument about "how it is, and how things should be" in a warfighting organization is about the same as your reaction to me if I started spouting off platitudes about how things are and should be in 121 flying operations.
I respect your knowledge and experience in your lane, and I expect you to correct me when I'm speaking outside of my lane of knowledge and experience.
I can and will make my opinion known.
I think the better question you should be asking, as a taxpayer, is if all of the attention (money, effort, etc) that is being paid to this issue is actually reflective of the actual severity of the issue.
Sexual assault is as harmful to combat readiness as everyone says it is -- fact. Absolutely no argument that it has zero place in any organization, much less a warfighting organization where trust, order, and discipline form the backbone. It should be hunted and punished with the full weight of both civil and military law.
What is in question is what actions actually qualify, and if the significance of those actions is as it is being made out to be in the media. The issue that we are facing is that there has now been a link drawn that says "anything offensive" is now equal to sexual assault. The core problem is that "offensive" is an inherently subjective line, and the military has currently drawn that line at the lowest common denominator. There are people in society that can literally be personally offended by just about anything.
Take a look at the results of the latest witch hunt, a "health and welfare inspection" last December which went to go find anything that could be deemed offensive to anyone. Interestingly, the results don't list what the specific items were or why they were found offensive -- and there's a reason for that. Just as an example, two of the items that were deemed "offensive" were the nose art on a B-17 and B-24 at the USAF Museum:
http://www.foia.af.mil/shared/media/document/AFD-130118-015.pdf
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The noseart of Strawberry Bitch and Shoo Shoo Baby were actually COVERED UP WITH SHEETS, and were being considered to be PAINTED OVER so that they would not offend anyone. In my squadron, magazines like Men's Fitness were reported as "offensive", as was a guy's photo of he and his wife/kids on vacation at the beach, because the wife was in a bikini. My squadron also has a skin panel painted up with this vintage squadron noseart (a F-5 that flew with my squadron in the Pacific in WWII), which is actual, real heritage. That noseart panel is now sitting in a garbage bag in a closet so as not to offend anyone, at all, ever (aside from me -- apparently the fact that I'm offended that we are trampling on our own heritage in the name of political correctness isn't valid):
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http://www.airforcetimes.com/article/20130130/NEWS/301300323/Health-welfare-inspections-expect-more
But, don't just take my word for it. I think a good starting point is the WSJ piece written by USMC Capt Lindsay Rodman (a Marine JAG officer), "The Pentagon's Bad Math on Sexual Assault".
I think the better question you should be asking, as a taxpayer, is if all of the attention (money, effort, etc) that is being paid to this issue is actually reflective of the actual severity of the issue.
Sexual assault is as harmful to combat readiness as everyone says it is -- fact. Absolutely no argument that it has zero place in any organization, much less a warfighting organization where trust, order, and discipline form the backbone. It should be hunted and punished with the full weight of both civil and military law.
What is in question is what actions actually qualify, and if the significance of those actions is as it is being made out to be in the media. The issue that we are facing is that there has now been a link drawn that says "anything offensive" is now equal to sexual assault. The core problem is that "offensive" is an inherently subjective line, and the military has currently drawn that line at the lowest common denominator. There are people in society that can literally be personally offended by just about anything.
Take a look at the results of the latest witch hunt, a "health and welfare inspection" last December which went to go find anything that could be deemed offensive to anyone. Interestingly, the results don't list what the specific items were or why they were found offensive -- and there's a reason for that. Just as an example, two of the items that were deemed "offensive" were the nose art on a B-17 and B-24 at the USAF Museum:
http://www.foia.af.mil/shared/media/document/AFD-130118-015.pdf
![]()
![]()
The noseart of Strawberry Bitch and Shoo Shoo Baby were actually COVERED UP WITH SHEETS, and were being considered to be PAINTED OVER so that they would not offend anyone. In my squadron, magazines like Men's Fitness were reported as "offensive", as was a guy's photo of he and his wife/kids on vacation at the beach, because the wife was in a bikini. My squadron also has a skin panel painted up with this vintage squadron noseart (a F-5 that flew with my squadron in the Pacific in WWII), which is actual, real heritage. That noseart panel is now sitting in a garbage bag in a closet so as not to offend anyone, at all, ever (aside from me -- apparently the fact that I'm offended that we are trampling on our own heritage in the name of political correctness isn't valid):
![]()
http://www.airforcetimes.com/article/20130130/NEWS/301300323/Health-welfare-inspections-expect-more
But, don't just take my word for it. I think a good starting point is the WSJ piece written by USMC Capt Lindsay Rodman (a Marine JAG officer), "The Pentagon's Bad Math on Sexual Assault".
Sorry Steve, being ex-Navy myself, I should have stated, "Other Drunks". My deepeest apologies"Drunks" is an offensive term. Please stick with "alcoholic" er, make that "libationally challenged"..
Interestingly, not one second. His experience with the military and the only time he ever wore a uniform was in his sophomore year in college, in the ROTC....and how much time in combat did Stephen Ambrose spend?
I've asked the same as a taxpayer seeing the IRS issue unfold. My stance with that is that the severity of the IRS issue does not deserve that attention. But what can I do about it? I would also say that as long as a mountain is being made out of a mole hill with the IRS issue and I'm sure a mountain is being made out of a mole hill with the military, but what is fair is fair.
I guess my Father's plane (Bar Fly) might offend drunks then? Better remove my Avatar lest offend the sensitive.....
It is a pleasure to be told about warrior culture, and how men do/don't react when being shot it, by a man of your experience.
I think the better question you should be asking, as a taxpayer, is if all of the attention (money, effort, etc) that is being paid to this issue is actually reflective of the actual severity of the issue.
Sexual assault is as harmful to combat readiness as everyone says it is -- fact. Absolutely no argument that it has zero place in any organization, much less a warfighting organization where trust, order, and discipline form the backbone. It should be hunted and punished with the full weight of both civil and military law.
What is in question is what actions actually qualify, and if the significance of those actions is as it is being made out to be in the media. The issue that we are facing is that there has now been a link drawn that says "anything offensive" is now equal to sexual assault. The core problem is that "offensive" is an inherently subjective line, and the military has currently drawn that line at the lowest common denominator. There are people in society that can literally be personally offended by just about anything.
Take a look at the results of the latest witch hunt, a "health and welfare inspection" last December which went to go find anything that could be deemed offensive to anyone. Interestingly, the results don't list what the specific items were or why they were found offensive -- and there's a reason for that. Just as an example, two of the items that were deemed "offensive" were the nose art on a B-17 and B-24 at the USAF Museum:
http://www.foia.af.mil/shared/media/document/AFD-130118-015.pdf
![]()
![]()
The noseart of Strawberry Bitch and Shoo Shoo Baby were actually COVERED UP WITH SHEETS, and were being considered to be PAINTED OVER so that they would not offend anyone. In my squadron, magazines like Men's Fitness were reported as "offensive", as was a guy's photo of he and his wife/kids on vacation at the beach, because the wife was in a bikini. My squadron also has a skin panel painted up with this vintage squadron noseart (a F-5 that flew with my squadron in the Pacific in WWII), which is actual, real heritage. That noseart panel is now sitting in a garbage bag in a closet so as not to offend anyone, at all, ever (aside from me -- apparently the fact that I'm offended that we are trampling on our own heritage in the name of political correctness isn't valid):
![]()
http://www.airforcetimes.com/article/20130130/NEWS/301300323/Health-welfare-inspections-expect-more
But, don't just take my word for it. I think a good starting point is the WSJ piece written by USMC Capt Lindsay Rodman (a Marine JAG officer), "The Pentagon's Bad Math on Sexual Assault".

Why paint over the nose art of the B-17 and B-24 at the USAF museum?
Hacker15e said:Really? That's it? You support an over-reaction/witch-hunt atmosphere which results in intentional destruction of military culture as some kind of "retribution" for some completely unrelated issue involving a different branch of the federal government? As in, one bad deed deserves another?
Tip o' the hat to you, sir.