Posted on Mar 15, 2018
SGT Joseph Gunderson
71K
1.19K
435
164
164
0
Avatar feed
Responses: 139
SSgt Daniel d'Errico
4
4
0
My most radical opinion of the military is, that 99% of officers feel that they are above many military regulations. Uniform wear especially. Even since my retirement 26 years ago, I see their disregard for the correct wearing of their uniforms is appalling and shameful. Were I on active duty today, I would not salute their violations of uniform wear. But I had to respect the rank, but not the man/woman in that uniform.
(4)
Comment
(0)
MSG John Duchesneau
MSG John Duchesneau
>1 y
I would be very interested if you could list some specific examples.
(0)
Reply
(0)
SSgt Daniel d'Errico
SSgt Daniel d'Errico
>1 y
I have watch officers on flight crew syatus walk outdoors with their uniform jackets unzipped. This I watched from my car, while waiting for ,y wife to come out of the same building. Just before my retirement at Holloman AFB, I saw a captain sitting at the McDonalds on base, with the bars on her cap parallel to the brim of the cap. I as an NCO pointed it out to her, which she replied, "I will check the regulations on it". If you believe it wasn't my place to inform or point out their violations, you're wrong.
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
SGT David A. 'Cowboy' Groth
4
4
0
I really have no radical or negative opinions.
(4)
Comment
(0)
SSG Edward Tilton
SSG Edward Tilton
8 y
Get Some, I'm sure the Army will issue you some
(0)
Reply
(0)
SGT David A. 'Cowboy' Groth
SGT David A. 'Cowboy' Groth
8 y
SSG Edward Tilton - Never saw that option on the TA-50 sheet.
(0)
Reply
(0)
SGT Carl Blas
SGT Carl Blas
6 y
I don't ether, was raised to respect others.
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
Sgt Kelli Mays
4
4
0
SGT Joseph Gunderson getting reprimanded or even kicked out for wearing your religion on your sleeve...having a bible at work, or a religious calendar or even speaking about your religion while on duty or in uniform....just really makes me mad.
(4)
Comment
(0)
LCpl Cody Collins
LCpl Cody Collins
8 y
Amen, while a male can claim he feels like a woman, and go into a woman's bathroom to relieve him/ herself. And people actually defend this behavior.
(1)
Reply
(0)
Sgt Kelli Mays
Sgt Kelli Mays
8 y
LCpl Cody Collins - Exactly!!!!
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
SPC Erich Guenther
4
4
0
Edited 8 y ago
Well ever since the 1980's I thought the retirement benefits should be portable and based on years of service with a 5 year vesting period so that someone that serves 5 years or more gets a portion of the retirement as a lump sum or annuity. Also, say someone in their thirties that wants to enlist can roll in their civliian plan that has accrued so far to the military plan, so they might not have to serve a full 20 years before retirement but what they expected to round out their past civilian work. Thats really the biggest thing making the military retirement system more interchangeable and compatible with the civilian side. Nobody else agrees with me though and folks either say impossible or it would drain people away from the military and will never happen.
(4)
Comment
(0)
CSM Charles Hayden Passed 7/29/2025
CSM Charles Hayden Passed 7/29/2025
8 y
If any service member can actually understand and implement the plan. I fear the plan is an over reach for younger persons. That is why the explanatory classes are emerging!!
(0)
Reply
(0)
CPT Lawrence Cable
CPT Lawrence Cable
8 y
I think that it will have the same issues as contributed retirements in the civilian world. Most people at 21 just don't consider that one day they will be over 60 and want to retire. All I was interested in at that age was women and beer.
(0)
Reply
(0)
SPC Erich Guenther
SPC Erich Guenther
8 y
CPT Lawrence Cable - Thats true but the pension plans offer a buffer for those that do not save much in their 401(k). I can live off my 401(k) without a pension because I saved like I never would get a pension (they are pretty rare these days). However the flip side is had I never saved much in my 401(k) the pension plus SS would have been enough to live off of. So thats why I think it is a good idea to be able to retain a portion of the Army pension if you leave or seperate under 20. I also think they should boost the Medal of Honor reciepients pension. Not many of those guys and the DoD can afford to pay them more than $1k a month (which isn't much of a supplimental kick to SS). Should be closer to $3-4k a month (and indexed for inflation) if you ask me.
(1)
Reply
(0)
MSG John Duchesneau
MSG John Duchesneau
>1 y
Remember - the purpose of military retirement is the incentivize you to stay in the military - not reward you for getting out.
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
Cpl John Cogswell
3
3
0
I found out in the late 1990s that Smedley Butler's quote still held a lot of truth. War is a racket.

In the spring of 1990 as a Marine grunt, I had a chance to help develop lesson plans for patrolling operations, infantry tactics, and weapon system training handouts and courses in Spanish for the militaries of Honduras and Guatemala.

These forces then committed atrocities against local indigenous people who could not read, let alone study and espouse Marxism, or wage a guerilla war against their governments.

What they had was land that wealthy individuals in both countries wanted for development, but the local subsistence Indian farmers were in the way.

By labelling them as communists, not only did they have a free hand in pushing them off their land, but in exterminating them as well.

Our military once stood on the principles of spreading democracy. I once believed we could and would do no wrong, that we had moral clarity on our side. Now I am more inclined to ask who is profiting when I see it deployed. Patriotism to me, is more often than not, a lie used to justify the enrichment of the few over the many. I am not saying it is dead, but patriotism should never be blind to consequences.
(3)
Comment
(0)
SPC Steve ChenRobbins
SPC Steve ChenRobbins
>1 y
"These forces then committed atrocities against local indigenous people who could not read, let alone study and espouse Marxism, or wage a guerilla war against their governments." I assume that you did your duty and brought that information (about the atrocities) up the line.
(0)
Reply
(0)
Cpl John Cogswell
Cpl John Cogswell
>1 y
Well, considering the program had ended by the time I discovered that, and the atrocities were not made clear to me until 2006 (14 years later) by a news report, long after I had EAS'd in 1992, would you think it a moot point to do so?
(0)
Reply
(0)
Cpl John Cogswell
Cpl John Cogswell
>1 y
Honestly, I wouldn't even know who to report that to. The officers I worked with at the time have all fallen out of contact.
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
GySgt Kevin Vest
3
3
0
Mine was that I joined the Marine Corps. My parents were against anyone of us kids going in because of some of my uncles' experiences in Vietnam but, I went anyways. It had nothing to do with me going in the Corps, but, that I went in any branch of the service. Later they realized it was for the best and my older brother actually went in the Air Force about a year and a half after I went in.
(3)
Comment
(0)
Avatar small
SSG Craig Newton
3
3
0
That everyone, either upon graduating from high school or turning 18 if not in school, has to serve a minimum of 2 years in the military branch of their choice.
(3)
Comment
(0)
SGT Joseph Gunderson
SGT Joseph Gunderson
>1 y
Conscription
(0)
Reply
(0)
SSG Craig Newton
SSG Craig Newton
>1 y
Yes. It would teach a lot of kids a viable career opportunity as well as getting some out of bad living conditions. And it would be absolute, meaning no deferments like the draft.
(1)
Reply
(0)
SPC Chris Ison
SPC Chris Ison
>1 y
Too expensive.
(0)
Reply
(0)
SSG Craig Newton
SSG Craig Newton
>1 y
With all the wasted money on crony civilian contractors it could be figured out.
(2)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
Cpl D L Parker
3
3
0
We only need one camouflage materiel.
(3)
Comment
(0)
Avatar small
CPT Earl George
3
3
0
Tired of hearing "hero" attached to someone who did a tour in Iraq or Afghanistan.(mainly by the news media)
(3)
Comment
(0)
SGT Joseph Gunderson
SGT Joseph Gunderson
>1 y
I think that most of us are tired of this too.
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
SPC David Willis
3
3
0
That we spend entirely too much money on R&D and equipment when the soldier (sailor, airman or marine... also coastie I guess) is the most important part of the military.
(3)
Comment
(0)
SPC Chris Ison
SPC Chris Ison
>1 y
I TOTALLY agree with this. We spend way too much money on civilian contractor's you can not tell me it is cheaper to have a civilian serving chow, and a private doing KP. Nor should the military pay a former soldier who was just a specialist twice his salary now that Sikorsky has hired him as a "tech rep".

all of the recent defense spending has gone directly to contractor's and none of it has benefited the soldier on the ground.
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small

Join nearly 2 million former and current members of the US military, just like you.

close