As someone who graduated from A&M almost 15 years ago, this has been an interesting read re: the Corps.
I had no idea what went into it. Respect.
I had no idea what went into it. Respect.
Tom Kazansky 2012 said:
Also the bulls and others who are woke d bags likely don't like the non-integrated (all-male) outfits because the all-male ones continuously, every year, dominate the awards for grades, athletics, etc. This is simply unexplainable to the woke losers, but being very close with my own non-integrated outfit and many of my buddies moving into integrated outfits--there are just unresolvable issues with integrated outfits and both female and male cadets being held to the same standards.
FOW is 1 week and has always been 1 week, we did it last year, it is 1 week.BQZip01 said:Please read the Commandant's actual planaggiez03 said:Where are you getting 4 weeks?BQZip01 said:The problem appears to be Corps-wide and Outfit Culture is the root of it. You cannot force bad outfits to become good without shaking things up. I highly doubt that a unit without fish for 4 weeks will "destroy the good outfits"aggie93 said:There have always been bad outfits. Fix the problem and have them model after the good outfits. That's how they have done it for 100 years. This solution destroys the good outfits.BQZip01 said:"A problem that doesn't exist"Fuzzy Dunlop said:
Here's my take:
This is all BS. As many of you have already stated, he's solving a problem that doesn't exist. Retention is one thing but trying to retain everyone is not what is needed. This is a feel good inclusion move. fish life is hard and that is what made my time in the Corps worth it. When my buddies and I get together, most of our stories are about fish year. Yeah, there's a few stories of being pissheads or roaming the steam tunnels when we were Butts and Zips but 97% of the stories are the crap outs, hall parties, 3x5 come-bys, current events at chow, our rivalry with L-1, etc.
He's blaming the sophomores for not being ready to lead but in reality, it's the Trigon's fault for not having then ready. Actually, pissheads aren't ready until the 2nd semester anyway. Some of our worst crap outs were as pissheads.
I think part of the outfit culture problem started when they rotating leadership positions and taking 1st Sgts and COs from one outfit and moving then to another. I understand that was not his initiative but I don't think this change will fix the "problem."
1. Outfit culture IS a problem when cadets actively flaunt the rules saying "our outfit doesn't do that".
2. A system that leads to outfit culture like this needs massive reform: https://www.houstonchronicle.com/news/houston-texas/education/article/texas-am-hazing-lawsuit-cadets-18550232.php
It is 8 weeks with no fish in the outfit, so that is from mid August, all September, 1/2 October. All the fish are together and no outfit training is happening at all cause they are not separated at all.
Then after that (mid Oct - 3rd week Nov) about 4-5 weeks with fish (living separately) and attending outfit training areas in random hallways on certain days. So they have zero outfit contact for 8 full weeks (really 9 when you figure in FOW). Then another 4-5 weeks where they see upperclassmen maybe 2 hours per day, 4 to 5 days per week. Then Thankgiving, come back for finals, and home for Xmas break for a month.
Might as well go to school at a regular ROTC program at UH or the like. That is not a Corps experience.
1. He has it at "5-6 weeks" including FOW which is about 2 weeks now. That means about 4 academic weeks.
2. "All the fish are together" nope. They are with staff selected from the major units
3. "no outfit training is happening" You're right. CORPS training is happening. That's the point. They don't need to be embedded in an outfit to learn how to be a cadet. The idea that they will not be a good cadet unless they are YOUR cadet is an anathema to good order and discipline, which is lacking.
4. I've seen other ROTC units...this is NOTHING like it.
Quote:
I know when and why. It had nothing to do with upperclassmen failing to train. It had to do with some red ass fish that went a little too far.
OK, maybe way too far, but it was fun and the legend lives on.
bobbranco said:Quote:
I know when and why. It had nothing to do with upperclassmen failing to train. It had to do with some red ass fish that went a little too far.
OK, maybe way too far, but it was fun and the legend lives on.
While I agree that one could argue that kidnapping fish are responsible, the mechanism was not new and upperclassmen definitely shared responsibility and one could argue that all responsibility rested on these upperclassmen 'leaders', the military advisers, and ultimately the university.
The fish were expected to mete out some retribution for the past harassment. Maybe the retribution was in keeping with the hazing. I don't know and don't care. It never would have happened without upperclassmen endorsing and doing the same to their leaders. This reverse hazing never should have been allowed an avenue of bad outcomes.
It was clearly a failure in leadership. Untrained upperclassmen making stupid decisions, 'hold my beer' or good bull stupidity, do not set good examples or mold good leaders. The corps leaders and university should do a better job supervising.
Maybe the changes suggested will go to correct the hazing problems. Hoping it eradicates the ritual of hazing 'good bull' and shift the focus on good leadership and stewardship.
BQZip01 said:Please read the Commandant's actual planaggiez03 said:Where are you getting 4 weeks?BQZip01 said:The problem appears to be Corps-wide and Outfit Culture is the root of it. You cannot force bad outfits to become good without shaking things up. I highly doubt that a unit without fish for 4 weeks will "destroy the good outfits"aggie93 said:There have always been bad outfits. Fix the problem and have them model after the good outfits. That's how they have done it for 100 years. This solution destroys the good outfits.BQZip01 said:"A problem that doesn't exist"Fuzzy Dunlop said:
Here's my take:
This is all BS. As many of you have already stated, he's solving a problem that doesn't exist. Retention is one thing but trying to retain everyone is not what is needed. This is a feel good inclusion move. fish life is hard and that is what made my time in the Corps worth it. When my buddies and I get together, most of our stories are about fish year. Yeah, there's a few stories of being pissheads or roaming the steam tunnels when we were Butts and Zips but 97% of the stories are the crap outs, hall parties, 3x5 come-bys, current events at chow, our rivalry with L-1, etc.
He's blaming the sophomores for not being ready to lead but in reality, it's the Trigon's fault for not having then ready. Actually, pissheads aren't ready until the 2nd semester anyway. Some of our worst crap outs were as pissheads.
I think part of the outfit culture problem started when they rotating leadership positions and taking 1st Sgts and COs from one outfit and moving then to another. I understand that was not his initiative but I don't think this change will fix the "problem."
1. Outfit culture IS a problem when cadets actively flaunt the rules saying "our outfit doesn't do that".
2. A system that leads to outfit culture like this needs massive reform: https://www.houstonchronicle.com/news/houston-texas/education/article/texas-am-hazing-lawsuit-cadets-18550232.php
It is 8 weeks with no fish in the outfit, so that is from mid August, all September, 1/2 October. All the fish are together and no outfit training is happening at all cause they are not separated at all.
Then after that (mid Oct - 3rd week Nov) about 4-5 weeks with fish (living separately) and attending outfit training areas in random hallways on certain days. So they have zero outfit contact for 8 full weeks (really 9 when you figure in FOW). Then another 4-5 weeks where they see upperclassmen maybe 2 hours per day, 4 to 5 days per week. Then Thankgiving, come back for finals, and home for Xmas break for a month.
Might as well go to school at a regular ROTC program at UH or the like. That is not a Corps experience.
1. He has it at "5-6 weeks" including FOW which is about 2 weeks now. That means about 4 academic weeks.
2. "All the fish are together" nope. They are with staff selected from the major units
3. "no outfit training is happening" You're right. CORPS training is happening. That's the point. They don't need to be embedded in an outfit to learn how to be a cadet. The idea that they will not be a good cadet unless they are YOUR cadet is an anathema to good order and discipline, which is lacking.
4. I've seen other ROTC units...this is NOTHING like it.
No there still are a handful of all male outfits.281TexAg said:Tom Kazansky 2012 said:
Also the bulls and others who are woke d bags likely don't like the non-integrated (all-male) outfits because the all-male ones continuously, every year, dominate the awards for grades, athletics, etc. This is simply unexplainable to the woke losers, but being very close with my own non-integrated outfit and many of my buddies moving into integrated outfits--there are just unresolvable issues with integrated outfits and both female and male cadets being held to the same standards.
I thought they got rid of all-male outfits?
I was in an integrated outfit (around the same time you were), and while we performed well in most of those metrics, I can confirm there are problems when you put both genders together in an environment like that. Probably one of the biggest lessons I learned from the Corps.
I hope they keep all-male outfits. I would not even be opposed to bringing back W-1. A one-gender experience should be available for people who want it.
I called the CCA and emailed Bruce Hamilton the CCA CEO as well.tamc93 said:
I have reached out to CCA to see if they can provide something more official than this thread.
I would have hoped they would have been involved to a certain degree since they were helping advertise the mentor positions a few months ago. My guess is they were not in the loop either.
You fix the problem by setting objective standards you expect outfits to reach and holding them accountable. Then if they don't you make changes in leadership, typically taking leaders from strong outfits that were passed over because those outfits produce more of them and have them bring that culture to the outfit that needs help. If the outfit is too far gone you disband it.BQZip01 said:Great. How do you propose to "fix the problem"?aggie93 said:There have always been bad outfits. Fix the problem and have them model after the good outfits. That's how they have done it for 100 years. This solution destroys the good outfits.BQZip01 said:"A problem that doesn't exist"Fuzzy Dunlop said:
Here's my take:
This is all BS. As many of you have already stated, he's solving a problem that doesn't exist. Retention is one thing but trying to retain everyone is not what is needed. This is a feel good inclusion move. fish life is hard and that is what made my time in the Corps worth it. When my buddies and I get together, most of our stories are about fish year. Yeah, there's a few stories of being pissheads or roaming the steam tunnels when we were Butts and Zips but 97% of the stories are the crap outs, hall parties, 3x5 come-bys, current events at chow, our rivalry with L-1, etc.
He's blaming the sophomores for not being ready to lead but in reality, it's the Trigon's fault for not having then ready. Actually, pissheads aren't ready until the 2nd semester anyway. Some of our worst crap outs were as pissheads.
I think part of the outfit culture problem started when they rotating leadership positions and taking 1st Sgts and COs from one outfit and moving then to another. I understand that was not his initiative but I don't think this change will fix the "problem."
1. Outfit culture IS a problem when cadets actively flaunt the rules saying "our outfit doesn't do that".
2. A system that leads to outfit culture like this needs massive reform: https://www.houstonchronicle.com/news/houston-texas/education/article/texas-am-hazing-lawsuit-cadets-18550232.php
Saying it that simplistically ignores the real logistical challenges
Sad that I am running out of organizations to send money to at A&M.aggiez03 said:
I called the CCA and emailed Bruce Hamilton the CCA CEO as well.
The nice lady on the other end said the CCA doesn't take official positions on any policy decisions by the Corps.
fc2112 said:
TIL Corps of Cadet alumni believe their program is superior in preparing US military officers than that used by the United States service academies.
Duly noted.
We kidnapped our CO. It was great bull. He came back and put us on a List and we had a brutal week of PT and stress and so much BS we had to endure. I remember seeing our CO come out in the hallway wearing a fish uniform that we left him and it was impeccable as he crapped us out. Both sides learned a lot that week as he took over all discipline and we gained respect for each other. Our buddies got closer and bonded together as we supported each other through a lot of stuff that would definitely be hazing. Just hours of PT.bobbranco said:You are absolutely incorrect.aggiez03 said:So you actually think the Corps upper classman are teaching the fish and sophomores to remove their clothes put on a condom and rub up and down on their buddies to make them uncomfortable?bobbranco said:
The 'hazing' in that Chronicle article was amongst Sophomores? Right? Leaders, right? How many times has this occurred in the past?
How these idiots made it to year 2 is beyond me. This hazing, that I would classify as a sexual assault, is probably learned behavior. Some of those guys should be jailed and put on a sex offender registry. Totally inexcusable and upperclassmen heads should roll, not necessarily dismissal for the upperclassmen but demotion, in addition to dismissing the participating sophomores.
I would say it has probably happened a total of 1 time, like the time this happened.
Don't you think if this was something that was taught by upper classmen, that it would have come out more than 1 time?
This is not something that is taught in the Corps. Are you okay mentally?
Once again, when I called this out a pushing an agenda, I was obviously correct.
When did the tradition of kidnapping CO's stop? How did fish learn about that complete waste of time? It's definitely learned behavior. Same as my children's high school shenanigans.
I have no agenda other than seeing the CoC improve and glad that A&M CoC exists. The CoC needs to do better. Maybe the bulls should be given a larger role of supervision and training of the outfits to avoid continuing embarrassing hazing.
I think you could make arguments that much of the training is superior but it's different. The Corps also allows anyone to join and half the cadets aren't contract. The Academies are hand selected with everyone having a military obligation. It's very hard to compare the two and it really depends on what you are looking to evaluate.fc2112 said:
TIL Corps of Cadet alumni believe their program is superior in preparing US military officers than that used by the United States service academies.
Duly noted.
bobbranco said:
Your hazing experience may be the norm. I agree that a horrible experience does bond a group and can create a solid team until it backfires. Training, the physical and mental stress, does not equal the erratic nature of hazing. Ultimately I don't think hazing rituals are necessarily the answer because they can destroy morale beyond repair, solidify distrust, and result in vendettas up and down the chain of command.
The larger point is that the Academies select their students, the Corps does not. Also that while technically you are not obligated until after a period of time at the Academies, 99% of kids going there start with the intention of joining the service. That's not the case at all in the Corps where you have half that take contracts and probably another 20% that considered it seriously but chose not to or had an issue (typically medical) that prevented it. They have fundamentally different missions.CanyonAg77 said:
Small quibble, the academies do not require a service obligation for the first two years.
A cadet is not obligated until they show up for first day of their junior academic year. Somewhat like how all A&M cadets take ROTC the first two years, but are not required to take a contract
This is why British Commonwealth people are terrible leaders, especially CEOs.Tom Kazansky 2012 said:
News flash: rule followers can and often make terrible leaders in the real world.
No doubt I was fortunate and had great leaders. The key is that the "hazing" has a purpose and guidelines and safety is always first. Most of all it takes strong leadership and you have to weed out the folks that abuse power. You also can't set up a system where the fish know they can complain about virtually anything and get their leaders punished. I know I've heard about fish who all but taunt their upperclassmen now if they get disciplined because they know they can report them and have tremendous power over them. It's pretty far out of whack.bobbranco said:
Your hazing experience may be the norm. I agree that a horrible experience does bond a group and can create a solid team until it backfires. Training, the physical and mental stress, does not equal the erratic nature of hazing. Ultimately I don't think hazing rituals are necessarily the answer because they can destroy morale beyond repair, solidify distrust, and result in vendettas up and down the chain of command.
I know enlisted report disliked officers for 'bad behavior'.aggie93 said:
I know I've heard about fish who all but taunt their upperclassmen now if they get disciplined because they know they can report them and have tremendous power over them. It's pretty far out of whack.
Hazing has been going on as long as there has been a Corps and they have always dealt with it and addressed it. It has also always been used by people who have agendas to change the Corps as a reason to do things that have nothing to do with hazing. It was that way when I was in school and when my Dad was in school.bobbranco said:
I think the CoC is a great organization and as with anything that involves humans you will have problems. I want the best for the CoC because it is the poster child for Texas A&M.
Hazing incidents have caused outside intervention. A&M, the academies, the armed forces will and continue to haze. It's a given that hazing occurs but leaving it up to a bunch of untrained, immature college kids to devise new tactics or continue failed tactics is a recipe for disaster. If there was some level of supervision or maturity the hazing would not have happened as noted in the report in the Houston Chronicle. Hope it all works out for you guys because without proper leadership you will kill the CoC.
And about a third of them still drop out. The difference being, that at A&M, you can stay in the Corps, even if you change your mind on service.Quote:
at the Academies, 99% of kids going there start with the intention of joining the service.