Admittedly I can't relate to a Corps where all upperclassmen couldn't correct anyone below them. We didn't have to get permission from the Trigon to train
Don't be fooled, we are closer than we appear based on username. I prefer anonymity on here.Boozer92 said:aggiez03 said:Not sure it matters. The training will be done by the contract cadets as the D&C cadets will quit or be treated as 2nd class citizens (as many are now), who need to 'get with the program'.Boozer92 said:
Math says this is doomed
41 Corps outfits. 200 whitebelts handle fish training. 100 pissheads join the leadership training.
The rest of corps has no job. Zero chance they fall in line behind the guys chosen by the Trigon to handle training. That leaves 1200 or more non fish corp members to create their own Corps experience completely outside and opposed to Trigon efforts. You can't tell that many people that they don't matter and expect them to follow those you claim do matter. Anyone who was in the Corps knows how this ends. Complete disaster
It will be a bigger time boof wasting study or potential class time for mandatory training time that cadets will have to schedule around.
My thoughts if this goes through, is that this year, the fish will still get to choose their outfit. In the next 2-3 years, that will be taken away, and fish will be 'randomly' assigned by the Trigon.
They absolutely cannot stand that some outfits excel, while others lag behind. They want everything to be equal.
When the disenfranchised outnumber the chosen 4 or 5 to one. The disenfranchised are the actual Corps
I know we are 11 years apart so things may have been different somewhat. In my time we shunned any guys who went battalion or brigade staff. They got fed the sane bs we fed the bulls. Corps Staff was ignored pretty much universally across the Corps. The respect went to the people chosen among their peers. This plan is that on steroids. Cadre exists outside the outfit. Inside the outfit the majority of the corps will operate on their own with no oversight and clear message those in charge of oversight are to avoided at all costs. It is a terrible idea.
You realize that actually none of his plans have OFFICIALLY been posted anywhere, correct?Dark_Knight said:
Where are all his proposed changes posted, not on TA?
BCOBQ98 said:
I'm not a fan of AI but that is a pretty good summary
aggie93 said:I couldn't agree more. The original response was a BQ talking about how the Corps could do a separate fish thing and then come get a tshirt after they join the outfit. Then of course for the Band that's unthinkable.NICU Dad said:Wrong again. It was and is crucial for the fish to be part of the outfit from day 1. Especially since Hell Week died.aggie93 said:So do you also agree that while you are more loyal to your outfit than the Band that it really isn't a big deal for your fish to be a part of your outfit from the beginning? Of course that also won't work in the Band since you guys are marching at Kyle so quickly unless you want Band fish not to march.pacecar02 said:
2nd here
Streetfighter '02
See where this is going?
My point is that both suffer equally. Technically BQ fish could just not march at Kyle and just be part of the Corps. It would just be a terrible ldea just as this plan to separate fish from their Corps outfit is.
LMCane said:
I went to Officer School in the Air Force so don't understand why simply getting rid of the attachment to individual squadrons would harm the overall force.
It's supposed to be the military of the United States of America, not one company, or one platoon, or one squadron, or one regiment.
I can't understand the logic claiming that upperclassmen don't care about being in the military if they have no relationship to Fish.
What's the point of the Corps at A&M?
to train officers for the US Military?
or to look good at football games and have strong athletic intramural teams?
that seems to be the battle here, between those who relish a unique Aggie Tradition
versus those who look at what the actual mission should be. As a former Captain, I would hope that what's best for the entire US military would be the priority in every ROTC unit. and every decision being made would support that mission of training well qualified military officers.
The point of the Corps of Cadets is to train future leaders for the military, state and private sector.LMCane said:
I went to Officer School in the Air Force so don't understand why simply getting rid of the attachment to individual squadrons would harm the overall force.
It's supposed to be the military of the United States of America, not one company, or one platoon, or one squadron, or one regiment.
I can't understand the logic claiming that upperclassmen don't care about being in the military if they have no relationship to Fish.
What's the point of the Corps at A&M?
to train officers for the US Military?
or to look good at football games and have strong athletic intramural teams?
that seems to be the battle here, between those who relish a unique Aggie Tradition
versus those who look at what the actual mission should be. As a former Captain, I would hope that what's best for the entire US military would be the priority in every ROTC unit. and every decision being made would support that mission of training well qualified military officers.
You are correct in that you don't understand. There are people from many different outfits who have posted in here and still their love is for the Corps of Cadets.LMCane said:
I went to Officer School in the Air Force so don't understand why simply getting rid of the attachment to individual squadrons would harm the overall force.
It's supposed to be the military of the United States of America, not one company, or one platoon, or one squadron, or one regiment.
I can't understand the logic claiming that upperclassmen don't care about being in the military if they have no relationship to Fish.
What's the point of the Corps at A&M?
to train officers for the US Military?
or to look good at football games and have strong athletic intramural teams?
that seems to be the battle here, between those who relish a unique Aggie Tradition
versus those who look at what the actual mission should be. As a former Captain, I would hope that what's best for the entire US military would be the priority in every ROTC unit. and every decision being made would support that mission of training well qualified military officers.
It is not correct. My Dad was Class of '58 and was proud to be in the "Filthy 5th" until the day he died.Definitely Not A Cop said:
The outfit concept was implemented in 1959 I believe. Before that, you just joined the cavalry, artillery, etc.
There was a point where fish were living in tents off campus and the reasoning I had heard was that beatings from pissheads had gotten too bad, but I'm not sure when or how correct that is. I also don't know if that's something indicative of a failure in corps leadership then or just how the world operated back then for male organizations. The junction boys would have shut the football program down if it had happened today, for example.
It's because the Corps isn't just about being an ROTC attachment. You can do ROTC at a hundred other places. You can also go to an Academy. The Corps is a unique institution where you can get the experiences of military training mixed with traditions mixed with attending an incredibly diverse University with 75k students. There really isn't anything like it and the entire point is why would you take something that is special and make it like everything else?LMCane said:
I went to Officer School in the Air Force so don't understand why simply getting rid of the attachment to individual squadrons would harm the overall force.
It's supposed to be the military of the United States of America, not one company, or one platoon, or one squadron, or one regiment.
I can't understand the logic claiming that upperclassmen don't care about being in the military if they have no relationship to Fish.
What's the point of the Corps at A&M?
to train officers for the US Military?
or to look good at football games and have strong athletic intramural teams?
that seems to be the battle here, between those who relish a unique Aggie Tradition
versus those who look at what the actual mission should be. As a former Captain, I would hope that what's best for the entire US military would be the priority in every ROTC unit. and every decision being made would support that mission of training well qualified military officers.
Quote:
It's because the Corps isn't just about being an ROTC attachment. You can do ROTC at a hundred other places. You can also go to an Academy. The Corps is a unique institution where you can get the experiences of military training mixed with traditions mixed with attending an incredibly diverse University with 75k students. There really isn't anything like it and the entire point is why would you take something that is special and make it like everything else?
Quote:
The powers that be seem to think that lessening the fraternity aspect and increasing the ROTC aspect will increase participation.
False.Definitely Not A Cop said:
The outfit concept was implemented in 1959 I believe. Before that, you just joined the cavalry, artillery, etc.
There was a point where fish were living in tents off campus and the reasoning I had heard was that beatings from pissheads had gotten too bad, but I'm not sure when or how correct that is. I also don't know if that's something indicative of a failure in corps leadership then or just how the world operated back then for male organizations. The junction boys would have shut the football program down if it had happened today, for example.
Quote:
The extended Freshmen orientation and outfit integration: The Commandant suggests extending the orientation period for incoming freshmen to focus on outcomes for success, including a common understanding of traditions, values, standards, and the incorporation of resilience factors. This extended orientation will be led by a cadre of seniors and juniors, and freshmen will be consolidated under major unit "pods." Simultaneously, sophomores will complete their certifications under the Sophomore Leadership Academy After the freshmen class is successfully pinned, there will be a transition from cadre to outfit leadership, allowing for outfit integration and the unique aspects and culture of each outfit. This approach aims to provide a more structured and comprehensive leadership development experience for cadets.
In my day, RV was almost automatically the 1st Sargent of an outfit and staff rats. SO the Band would have 4-5 RVs a year, while smaller outfits would have the same.NICU Dad said:
RV's have always been more of a popularity contest than a representation of soldier, statesman, and knightly gentleman.
Looking at his picture earlier in the thread he doesn't have the Yellow and White Cord. He was a Frog so that's not surprising. My guess is he probably has resentment for being a Staff guy that didn't get selected as an RV and didn't like how a lot of RV's aren't guys in significant leadership roles.aggiez03 said:
Just found out new information, guess you could call it a rumor, but it is from someone who would know...
The RVs are too concentrated in certain outfits while very few in other outfits.
The fearless leader is contemplating hand-picking the RVs in order to even it out across outfits.
And no, this is obviously not about EQUITY in any way. It is about a better way to train fish.
Right?
I wish I was making this up...