Rp logo flat shadow
Command Post What is this?
Posted on Dec 8, 2017
SGT Joseph Gunderson
69.4K
688
200
161
161
0
Avatar feed
Responses: 89
PO3 David Greeley
8
8
0
We have the mainstream media to thank for the skewed perception that our fellow citizens have of the military, even when it comes to our own families. As a former hospital corpsman, I served with Navy and Marine commands which has led to the question when someone who knows me who has seen me wearing cammies and says, "I thought you were in the Navy and worked in hospitals."

I agree with SSGT Dickey who said, "I do not know if there really is a way to educate all of the public about what the military entails." With the increased use of irregular warfare in today's missions its even harder for the public to comprehend the logistical support structure that supports it all.

I get particularly get annoyed of inaccurate portrayals of the military and its personnel in the news and in the movies. I doubt they will ever get it.
(8)
Comment
(0)
Avatar small
COL President
7
7
0
Good post, thanks SGT Gunderson. I use tp have a similar conversation with parents, faculty and, students, when serving as a Professor of Military Science on a college campus. It's amazing what our citizens don't know about our Army / the military! Best thing we can do, as you did, is set them straight!!
(7)
Comment
(0)
SFC Greg Bruorton
SFC Greg Bruorton
8 y
I was once asked by an innocent if I'd ever jumped behind enemy lines. I replied, "That was in World War II! The enemy lines are no longer distinguishable in today's conflicts."
(2)
Reply
(0)
CPO David Ransom
CPO David Ransom
>1 y
SFC Greg Bruorton - if you were a Recruiter, they were asking if you'd ever been on a college or high school campus.
(0)
Reply
(0)
SFC Greg Bruorton
SFC Greg Bruorton
>1 y
CPO David Ransom - A question had not been posed by Sergeant Gunderson in his narrative. I simply added a comment I had with a civilian on a college campus.
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
Capt Sabrena Goldman
7
7
0
So true! Thanks for sharing.

One of the nurses I work with had the strangest ideas of a nurse in the USAF and she works with me at a maximum security prison with me. I said your personality and resiliance lends itself to at least one look. She was excited and has been persistently asking me more questions.
(7)
Comment
(0)
Avatar small
MAJ William Roberts
6
6
0
Lauren Katzenburg can attest to this true combat war story that you can make into a movie that will finally set it straight for many...The calls to prayer had ended but strangely they still seemed to echo through the stifling hot air. Even this early the sun seemed merciless but I had to go on, the mission, my men, I just couldn't fail. I struggled to move again, digging deep down to find the strength to move just a little more. I knew it wouldn't be easy to get by unseen; But I had to make it. I ducked into an alley trying not to breathe in too much of the foul smells. Good god what did those people eat last night...at the end was a danger area, I just knew it was the end. Would it be a sniper, an IED, or worse, the CSM....I MUST GO ON. I sprinted across ran to the door and NOOOOOOOO the horrors. Yes PTSD even to this day...GREEN BEANS WAS CLOSED. THE LIFE OF A FOBBIT ISN'T ALWAYS EASY.
(6)
Comment
(0)
MSG David Johnson
MSG David Johnson
>1 y
MAJ William Roberts
Great story, I was spellbound til you hit the danger zone...
Great start to a short story.
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
SSG Cnd Analyst
6
6
0
Funny, I was just having this discussion with one of my battles that the majority of the Army is to support Infantry and combat MOS's but, by and large the military is a machine to get personnel and equipment trained and from point A to the battlefield. Its very rare a non-combat MOS will be in a war zone and be engaged in an actual firefight. My hats off to the brave Soldiers who encounter that on a semi-regular basis but, I knew what I signed up for and what I was expecting, my recruiter was pretty honest.

I hope we do see more support for doing regular jobs that civilians might do but, in a tactical or strategic manner to support a combat situation.
(6)
Comment
(0)
MSG David Johnson
MSG David Johnson
>1 y
During my second deployment I went over with a Transportation unit, we were running unarmored KBR trucks with 3000 gal fuel tankers.
The unit was mostly made up of 88M (Truck Drivers), but there were several of us who were 12B (Combat Engineers).
For a non combat MOS the unit went through several ambushes. No sustained firefights because speed was our friend, but there were injuries from IED's.
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
CW4 Brian Haas
5
5
0
Wait wait wait, you mean everyone is NOT a SEAL or SpecOps!? Noooo!! It can’t be true!!
(5)
Comment
(0)
SSG Edward Tilton
SSG Edward Tilton
8 y
Of course they are, that's what Basic is for
(1)
Reply
(0)
MAJ William Roberts
MAJ William Roberts
8 y
I was in the Green (Been) Beret we established it in Iraq and had a second BN in Kabul AFG. I figure only people who were there will get it anyway. :)
(2)
Reply
(0)
SFC Quinn Chastant
SFC Quinn Chastant
>1 y
You mean Civil Affairs wasn't Special Ops? Awe I'm heart broken now. ;) hahahaha...
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
SGT Stephen Jaffe
5
5
0
I suppose no one would go see a movie without any action in it. People like to imagine themselves as a fighter pilot, special forces operator, or marine. It would be kind of hard to make a movie featuring personnel clerks and comm center operators. But one thing is for sure. It doesn't make any difference what your mos is, you could wind up in a combat zone.
(5)
Comment
(0)
SFC Greg Bruorton
SFC Greg Bruorton
8 y
Shucks, a prolific writer might pen a story about an *RTT operator in the jungles of Vietnam, having exposed themselves to the VC and surviving through sheer willpower and determination. When the generator runs out of gas and the **J-38 becomes inoperable, the brave Specialist relies on his trusty M-16, a bayonet, and C-rations to get him back to base. And he sleeps under his camouflaged poncho just as the Special Forces troops did. Damned Sterno cans don't last long enough though.
*Radio-Teletype
**Morse code transmitter
(1)
Reply
(0)
SPC Wanda Vergara-Yates
SPC Wanda Vergara-Yates
>1 y
But, there is a lot of action in Personnel. Ok, the action takes place in your brain and on paper you are processing, but it is action.....until it camps out in your supervisor's inbox while he / she has to tend to some other action that is higher priority than your action. But then you get action by sitting in a hot seat that does not belong to you, but you still have to go to represent the person it belongs to because everyone between you and them is at a meeting. See? Personnel clerks see action too. It just has a different flavor.
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
SSG Edward Tilton
5
5
0
But who is going to pay to watch you burn shit
(5)
Comment
(0)
MSG David Johnson
MSG David Johnson
8 y
I used to read about the shyte burning details in Vietnam, then having to deal with it in Desert Storm, Nasty!
(1)
Reply
(0)
1LT William Clardy
1LT William Clardy
8 y
Agreed, MSG David Johnson. There is no side of the barrel upwind enough!
(3)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
LCDR Robert S.
5
5
0
I spent 5 years enlisted before I went to college on an NROTC scholarship in 1990. Because the Gulf War was just kicking off, and everybody in my dorm knew I was military, I got some of the most off-the-wall questions. Most of them weren't the sort of thing that a Navy Electronics Technician would know, except that I did a lot of reading and did know some of them.
(5)
Comment
(0)
Avatar small
TSgt Jennifer Disch
5
5
0
Same here. When I say I retired from the Air Force I get asked if I flew a plane or I’m treated like I was in some elite secret society.
(5)
Comment
(0)
Avatar small

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

close