Posted on Jun 2, 2017
MSG David Rogers III
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I am researching the history of Service Stripes for all services, but am curious about the Navy's version. I understand the regulation, but I am more curious about the general feelings toward those who wear the Red Service Stripes after 12 years, knowing something has kept them from going Gold. How do your feel about this person if you were...
a senior?
a peer?
a subordinate?
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Responses: 148
SSG Brian G.
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Really? The Navy does the whole scarlet letter branding thing to those that get out? That is seriously stupid, no offense intended to Navy folk. People make mistakes, the mistake does not define you, how you learn, grow and progress from that mistake however does.
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LCDR Aerospace Engineering Duty, Maintenance (AMDO and AMO)
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Your uniform tells the history of your career.
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SSG Brian G.
SSG Brian G.
>1 y
Yes, but the petty usage of red stripes over gold seems a bit more like scarlet letter to shame rather than an actual purpose to signify an achievement. No other service does it to my knowledge. It's a placard that reads to the knowledgeable, "I am a screw up."
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PO3 Ian Favata
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It’s just another way to acknowledge exemplary service. Nobody is perfect and if you get a chit you lose the gold. It’s that simple. Having red isn’t dishonorable and you should be proud regardless of the color you wear if you finish honorably with your DD214.
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SSG Brian G.
SSG Brian G.
>1 y
Then gold versus red stripes serves no purpose at all. It's redundant and should be done away with.
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MSG Ncoic
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Mistakes happens the point is learning from it
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SFC Platoon Sergeant
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I think a point to note is, if it seen month or years after the incident to everyone, does the Sailor ever really get over it or do they just accept the fact that no matter how good they are today, everyone will know they screwed up?
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LCDR Aerospace Engineering Duty, Maintenance (AMDO and AMO)
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>1 y
Once they make it to twelve years of good conduct, nobody needs to know.
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PO1 Michael Moe
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Who gives a fuck! One owns his or her stripes, no matter the color red or gold stand tall!
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Capt Stephen Loop
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I spent 10 years in the Naval Reserve before being selected for Officer Candidate School by the Air National Guard. I was never awarded a Good Conduct Medal because I spent 3 years in reserve status, 2 years on active duty, 2 additional years in reserve status, discharged upon graduation from college, then reenlisted for an additional 3 years in the reserves.

I always expected that Chiefs would have earned gold stripes, but I never really thought about the color of stripes below the rank of Chief.
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CPL James Mellar
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I think the Army's version of the red stripes would be the presence of a Good Conduct Medal, but it isn't the same. I was in the Infantry, While I never received an article 15, but if I had it wouldn't have counted towards my good conduct medal, because my commander was an O-3. If I were in the Artillery though, then it would have counted because a CO for an artillery company is an O-4, which is a flag officer.
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PO2 Nathan Freytag
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Best Master Chief I had, 30 years of red stripes.
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CPO Mark Robinson
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I kept wearing red under the mistaken belief that 12 consecutive years would be affected by broken service. In reality you continue where you left off before getting out. I wasn't too crazy about spending that money on gold plus you seem to get more street cred when you wear red.
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PO3 John Wagner
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Edited >1 y ago
My “feeling” , or impression I suppose, was never negative against the Red Stripes.
I often found more senior Gold Stripes acted aloof. These were a young man’s impressions and not necessarily accurate nor would they be the same now.
At the time I often got the impression that some Gold strippers didn’t swing their arms very much so that folks might think that the hash marks on the sleeve were actually around the cuff.
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