if youre talking about a mistake in paper work then thats what it is, a mistake. please dont try to make it sound like we were given millions of rounds to waste just because.
Tu Stultus Es
didn't have enough rounds for training, bullshit on that oneRidir wrote:
The money spent on the USMC is well spent because it is so small. We don't always get enough rounds for training where as a Bn in Fort Hood fired off several hundred thousand extra rounds of 5.56 simply because someone added a few too many zero's for a Co training operation.
he must have been part of a different corps then I was ineleven bravo wrote:
the way ridir paints, the USMC is living on half rations of hard tack and salt pork
Hoo-rah!eleven bravo wrote:
the way ridir paints, the USMC is living on half rations of hard tack and salt pork
I thought everyone had to sleep on concertina wireJay wrote:
Hoo-rah!eleven bravo wrote:
the way ridir paints, the USMC is living on half rations of hard tack and salt pork
It's all part of the MC myth they beat into their skulls from the first second of boot. That false espirit de corps bravado shit. It's cute, but it makes the lot of them incredibly stupid when it comes to being objectively critical.
And that would be a good model to emulate, if you wanted to bring the various branches of the US military back under one "roof"Shocking wrote:
What? They've got all sorts of heavy equipment which you don't usually expect in an amphibious/fast deployment unit. Tanks, very large arty installations, their own aircraft etc. The USMC can fight a conventional war on its own.
Every marine I ever met spent a month holed up in Fallujah too.SEREMAKER wrote:
I thought everyone had to sleep on concertina wireJay wrote:
Hoo-rah!eleven bravo wrote:
the way ridir paints, the USMC is living on half rations of hard tack and salt pork
It's all part of the MC myth they beat into their skulls from the first second of boot. That false espirit de corps bravado shit. It's cute, but it makes the lot of them incredibly stupid when it comes to being objectively critical.
my experience of marines is drawn from the dude in the passenger seat in gen kill and he is awesome, and marine who is angry. also that film with that old guy, maybe he was in the marines or something? marines are coolJay wrote:
Every marine I ever met spent a month holed up in Fallujah too.SEREMAKER wrote:
I thought everyone had to sleep on concertina wireJay wrote:
Hoo-rah!
It's all part of the MC myth they beat into their skulls from the first second of boot. That false espirit de corps bravado shit. It's cute, but it makes the lot of them incredibly stupid when it comes to being objectively critical.
I really don't get it either. You ask a Navy, Army or AF vet what their time in service was like and you'll generally get an honest answer. Marines, no matter how far removed from their service, for some reason feel it is their duty to be a recruiter for the rest of their life.
Jay wrote:
Every marine I ever met spent a month holed up in Fallujah too.SEREMAKER wrote:
I thought everyone had to sleep on concertina wireJay wrote:
Hoo-rah!
It's all part of the MC myth they beat into their skulls from the first second of boot. That false espirit de corps bravado shit. It's cute, but it makes the lot of them incredibly stupid when it comes to being objectively critical.
I really don't get it either. You ask a Navy, Army or AF vet what their time in service was like and you'll generally get an honest answer. Marines, no matter how far removed from their service, for some reason feel it is their duty to be a recruiter for the rest of their life.
hahahhahahahaRidir wrote:
The money spent on the USMC is well spent because it is so small. We don't always get enough rounds for training where as a Bn in Fort Hood fired off several hundred thousand extra rounds of 5.56 simply because someone added a few too many zero's for a Co training operation.
And sailors spend a lot of their post-service time bashing the Navy.Jay wrote:
Marines, no matter how far removed from their service, for some reason feel it is their duty to be a recruiter for the rest of their life.
ftfyunnamednewbie13 wrote:
And sailors spend a lot of their service time bashing each other.
I thought the Marine females were issued concertina wire g-strings.SEREMAKER wrote:
I thought everyone had to sleep on concertina wire
My college roommate was a Marine that served in the invasion force. Cool guy, and he was honest about his service. He wasn't a rifleman, he was in satcom. He told me a story about his experience in the invasion. His truck broke down on the highway going north so his 1SGT handed him and his driver a box of MRE's and told them to sit tight until they could get help to them. They sat in country, on the side of the road, for a week, next to a minefield, without water, before someone remembered they were missing and sent a wrecker. I'll take my time in the army where I wasn't just a speedbump on the way to mission completion over that, thanksrdx-fx wrote:
hahahhahahahaRidir wrote:
The money spent on the USMC is well spent because it is so small. We don't always get enough rounds for training where as a Bn in Fort Hood fired off several hundred thousand extra rounds of 5.56 simply because someone added a few too many zero's for a Co training operation.
Ah, yeah..
There are a few things I miss about Ft Hood.
End of budget year was always a fun time at the range.
Burn up all the ammo and C4, otherwise we don't get as much next year.
Y'know, it's actually incredibly difficult to cut a 2x4 & plywood target in half with an M60...
Or, blowing a crater in the demo range that was so large, you couldn't see the roof of the 'dozer filling in the hole...
If you want to get there first, join the Marines.
If you want to get there with all the equipment, join the Army.
My dad was a large part of the reason I didn't sign up for the whole airborne/ranger/SF cool-guy experience.Jay wrote:
My college roommate was a Marine that served in the invasion force. Cool guy, and he was honest about his service. He wasn't a rifleman, he was in satcom. He told me a story about his experience in the invasion. His truck broke down on the highway going north so his 1SGT handed him and his driver a box of MRE's and told them to sit tight until they could get help to them. They sat in country, on the side of the road, for a week, next to a minefield, without water, before someone remembered they were missing and sent a wrecker. I'll take my time in the army where I wasn't just a speedbump on the way to mission completion over that, thanks
My dad was a Ranger back in Vietnam. He was super excited when I had airborne inserted into my contract but, by the time I got done with AIT, I was tired of being in training and my reason for wanting to be closer to home (I got Dear Johned in basic) had vanished so I dropped it. I don't regret the MOS I chose. It would've sucked no matter what I had pickedrdx-fx wrote:
My dad was a large part of the reason I didn't sign up for the whole airborne/ranger/SF cool-guy experience.Jay wrote:
My college roommate was a Marine that served in the invasion force. Cool guy, and he was honest about his service. He wasn't a rifleman, he was in satcom. He told me a story about his experience in the invasion. His truck broke down on the highway going north so his 1SGT handed him and his driver a box of MRE's and told them to sit tight until they could get help to them. They sat in country, on the side of the road, for a week, next to a minefield, without water, before someone remembered they were missing and sent a wrecker. I'll take my time in the army where I wasn't just a speedbump on the way to mission completion over that, thanks
I saw what he looked like after he came back from wherever.
Passing out facedown into your mashed potatoes, in the middle of saying something at the family dinner table, is no way to go through life.
That, and the 3 divorces due to the tempo of his military career - no thanks.
I'll do something safe and sane.
Like play with truckloads of C4, or fly around in helicopters as a practice target for SAM sites...