Posted on Mar 26, 2016
Where's the sense duty? I refuse to believe I am serving with an entitlement generation.
2.19K
41
14
9
9
0
I typed/retyped a message here several times (anyone else do that?) and decided that my rant would probably offend some chicken shit.......Soldiers flagged for drugs& UCMJ & still using Tuition Assist for college; Sr NCO leaning on walls - I am wrong for fixing them; Sr leaders not at PRT or formation; Leaders not checking on anyone; how about holding a door for an elderly person?
Sound familiar?
Sound familiar?
Posted >1 y ago
Responses: 7
You are being a leader and you are right to be frustrated, especially when the officer Corps is not walking the walk with you. It is not generational, it is the you doing your job and holding a mirror to other people to have them do their job. Caring is correcting subordinates and peers and showing what right looks like.
(7)
(0)
(1)
(0)
LTC John Shaw
MSG (Join to see) - I agree it is a leadership problem with Officers not holding to the standard and leaders not holding them accountable. We as leaders must hold our organizations accountable even if other leaders ignore the problem. The Army culture needs leadership to hold soldiers to a standard.
(1)
(0)
MSG (Join to see)
as for entitlement i work civi and see every day these people think that if they get fired they will collect unemployment makes me sick
(0)
(0)
CSM Michael J. Uhlig I saw much of this prior to my retirement. The trend seems to be somewhat infectious. Instead of mature troops, NCO leaders, and officers stepping up and making the spot and or other corrections as you are, there was the beginnings of the entitled transferring their feelings of entitlement to others. Thank you CSM Michael J. Uhlig for doing the right thing.
Leaders at all levels are responsible for change and climate. If we fail as the newest NCO to make the correction, then we all fail, one entitled step at a time. What holds us together in the military, regardless of branch, is tradition, history, order, dedication to duty, selfless service, and honor.
I further witnessed this as a college professor teaching criminal justice classes. The entitled generation was offended when I established a standard and then held them accountable for meeting said standard.
We must help the entitled generation grasp and accept responsibility; moreover, begin to depict the values we hold dearest. Selfless service, honor, integrity, dedication to duty, and self motivation. PT doesn't do itself. I remember as a young Marine being impressed by a "mature" 1stSgt who was a Vietnam veteran. He ran the Marine Corps Physical Fitness test in combat boots and utilities or "boots and utes." One day one of the younger Marines asked him why. His priceless response, "because when I was fighting in Vietnam we didn't have no silk shorts and running shoes, be ready!"
Generations change. My Dad, who served in WWII, was part of the greatest generation. They were different from the next generation who is different from this generation. The values of the military mostly stay the same. Thanks to your leadership CSM Michael J. Uhlig young Soldiers and SNCOs who need additional motivation are receiving it.
Leaders at all levels are responsible for change and climate. If we fail as the newest NCO to make the correction, then we all fail, one entitled step at a time. What holds us together in the military, regardless of branch, is tradition, history, order, dedication to duty, selfless service, and honor.
I further witnessed this as a college professor teaching criminal justice classes. The entitled generation was offended when I established a standard and then held them accountable for meeting said standard.
We must help the entitled generation grasp and accept responsibility; moreover, begin to depict the values we hold dearest. Selfless service, honor, integrity, dedication to duty, and self motivation. PT doesn't do itself. I remember as a young Marine being impressed by a "mature" 1stSgt who was a Vietnam veteran. He ran the Marine Corps Physical Fitness test in combat boots and utilities or "boots and utes." One day one of the younger Marines asked him why. His priceless response, "because when I was fighting in Vietnam we didn't have no silk shorts and running shoes, be ready!"
Generations change. My Dad, who served in WWII, was part of the greatest generation. They were different from the next generation who is different from this generation. The values of the military mostly stay the same. Thanks to your leadership CSM Michael J. Uhlig young Soldiers and SNCOs who need additional motivation are receiving it.
(5)
(0)
CSM Michael J. Uhlig
You had some outstanding mentors from your father to your 1st SGT SFC Dr. Joseph Finck, BS, MA, DSS!
(1)
(0)
MSG (Join to see)
my familey served ww2, vietnam and i still find it difficult to deal with todays soldiers, we have on line training, and they cant accomplish this because they dont get paid for it, so this is there answer, you do what is needed
(1)
(0)
MSG (Join to see)
had a sm in my unit recieved all his training by the millitary, unit was called up for supporrt of bosnia, this puck refused to go, father 1sf in anouther unit colacated, he did not get charged but silenty left the unit, had arguement with 1fs about this i'm old school, this sm shouldve been charged and delt with appropriately, didnt happaen so much for whats right or wrong
(0)
(0)
Thanks for your honesty CSM Michael J. Uhlig.
I understand it must be disconcerting to be aware of so many violations by soldiers.
When I first came in many draftees from Vietnam were still in service. Most were honorable but some seemed vengeful. In the 1970's and 1980s we had racial strife, drug abuse, some gang activity as well as rape and murder periodically. the internet and email were not available back then so we were not bombarded with stories from around the globe we only had access to what was going on around us.
I understand it must be disconcerting to be aware of so many violations by soldiers.
When I first came in many draftees from Vietnam were still in service. Most were honorable but some seemed vengeful. In the 1970's and 1980s we had racial strife, drug abuse, some gang activity as well as rape and murder periodically. the internet and email were not available back then so we were not bombarded with stories from around the globe we only had access to what was going on around us.
(5)
(0)
Read This Next