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Responses: 4
1SG Dennis Hicks
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Edited >1 y ago
While it would be great have these NCO's actually call in, common sense and past exsperience says that unless they are all on their way out, retiring or don't care about ever being promoted again that they won't take the bait. For a command let along an actual base to descend into that level of toxicity this was no secret to real leadership. A brief look at their retention numbers can confirm the cancer and I will throw Bliss into that mess as well.
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PO1 William "Chip" Nagel
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SSG Robert Mark Odom I Don't Know Much about Ft Hood but from Everything I've Read. Talk about a a ClusterF**k! Sounds Like Long Past time for a Reckoning. A "Come to Jesus Moment". Sounds Like the Lunatics are Running the Asylum.
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MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D.
MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D.
>1 y
SFC William Farrell - Ditto for me. I arrived at Hood in Oct. '71 as a buck sgt. and stopped at the Main NCO Club before reporting in. The first thing I noticed was I was the only white guy in the place. I got a beer, drank it quickly and stopped in the latrine on my way out. Several black NCOs followed me in and blocked the door. Their leader informed me that there was a separate NCaoO Club--the Minidome--for "you people." I nodded my understanding, said I'd just arrived coming back from Vietnam, and they cleared the way for me to leave. In 1972-73 we were averaging murders on post at the rate of about two a month. It got so bad that we chained the doors to the barracks bays at night and on weekends and posted an NCO with a baseball bat at the door with a roster of occupants to check IDs and let them in. . . .
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MAJ Javier Rivera
MAJ Javier Rivera
>1 y
To put it in a maritime term: that place is taking water thru the hull and sinking like a rock! Hopefully it gets fixed and quick, for the sake of the young troops who deserve proper leadership!!!!!

I reported there in summer of ‘14 and as soon as I signed in, before showing up to my unit I stoped by the retirement office. Yes, that’s how inspiring “the great place is”. Perhaps in days before my time, or my biased on past experiences. Who knows.
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COL Armor Officer
COL (Join to see)
>1 y
MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D. - I was at Fort Hood in 1986-1988 as a LT. One of my senior E-6s told me the same story almost verbatim. He also said that guys would opt to spend the final 6 months of their enlistment in Vietnam rather than spend it at Fort Hood during that time.
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MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D.
MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D.
>1 y
COL (Join to see) Interesting. You were an LT at Hood while I was in grad school prepping to teach at West Point. . . .
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SFC Armor Crew Member
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I was with 2-12 CAV from 2008-'11 and 1-9 CAV from 2014-2020, when I was placed on TDRL and medically retired. Higher echelons didn't care or want to listen to what was required to properly maintain tanks. Services which required three weeks were given only one. Parts for the tanks were not a priority. "Controlled substitution" which is just a way to dress up cannibalizing a NMC tank for spare parts, became a shady way of doing business. The biggest issue for me as a senior NCO was the bureaucracy of III Corps, which was just down the road from us, infiltrating its way down to the battalion level. Long before I got to Fort Hood, I heard senior NCOs at the highest levels talk about how the officer corps was trying to wrest power from NCOs. One way this was done was the unofficial dissolution of Sergeants Time, which for me ended when I left Fort Stewart in 2008. 3ID was the best outfit I served with, but according to buddies of mine who went there over the years, that unit has also been hit with some of the same issues.
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