Posted on Dec 26, 2022
Why the Marine Corps may nix gender identifiers for drill instructors
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Edited 2 y ago
Posted 2 y ago
Responses: 18
COL Randall C. I'm I against the change. This is a Marine Corps tradition and also a way of showing respect. You haven't earned the title of "Marine" until you walk the parade ground on graduation day. Until then you are just a "Recruit." A lot of us who joined the Marines need to learn this respect. I was a smarta$$ seventeen-year-old kid when I signed to join. I learned really quick how to be responsible and respectful to those senior to me. Some will say, "Well your just old Corps and they need to change with the times." If it ain't broke, don't fix it. My opinion for what it's worth.
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MSgt (Join to see)
COL Randall C. - I know they say this is just about recruit training but it goes deeper then that. You have to look at the whole picture and the culture of the Corps. Yes, it might work fine for the other services. But the Corps has deep roots of culture as to why it’s traditions are so ingrained and necessary to teach its future Marines. It’s hard to change tradition that is as important as any other tradition within the Corps. The Corps is a diffident bred for sure. I guess you just have had to experience the beginning on those yellow footprints and at the end of training to understand how it feels to finally address your DI by rank and name after graduation. The feeling of accomplishment and the self respect and pride that comes with the EGA and becoming a Marine. It really is hard to explain and a hard pill to swallow to the vast majority of Marines past and present.
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Lt Col Charlie Brown
I do think it is a foot in the door...right now it would be limited and then it spreads
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COL Randall C.
Lt Col Charlie Brown - Fair point. As a contrarian thought, if other Services have been doing this, is there an eroding present?
Part of me says "Yes" with noticing the disrespect being shown towards officers and NCOs in the Army.
I can't say it's more common-place that it was when I first came in, but I know that the deference (more in actions than words) that was commonly paid to an senior officer and NCO (let alone junior ones) seemed to be a lot different.
However, another part says "No" because it's still the accepted tradition and courtesy in the Service to answer with "Yes sir/ma'am" or "No sir/ma'am" when responding to a higher ranking officer.
Part of me says "Yes" with noticing the disrespect being shown towards officers and NCOs in the Army.
I can't say it's more common-place that it was when I first came in, but I know that the deference (more in actions than words) that was commonly paid to an senior officer and NCO (let alone junior ones) seemed to be a lot different.
However, another part says "No" because it's still the accepted tradition and courtesy in the Service to answer with "Yes sir/ma'am" or "No sir/ma'am" when responding to a higher ranking officer.
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I don’t agree with it. It’s a sign of respect and sets the standard. Where would we be without standards??
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SGT Gerald “Jerry” Harrell
LOL. Right we’re we are in education right now.
….. uh oh….. I said something that might make a butt hurt.
….. uh oh….. I said something that might make a butt hurt.
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