D&C cadets were always the most out of shape, lacked discipline and had the good ol boy attitude.
CharlieBrown17 said:aggiez03 said:Canary in a coal mine.CharlieBrown17 said:
Imagine taking the word of a 19-20 year old who is proud to have hissed at a retired general so now he "won't show his face" anymore as gospel.
Comical to act like you should be able to discipline fish at will when you can't even hold your peers to a level where they can listen and work against a change effectively.
There's zero way an organization that's apparently gotten to a point where sophomores feel comfortable to just boo the commandant out of a meeting is preparing cadets for the private sector or public service near as effectively as it should be.
Comical to think that a Trigon that would not only allow some person who decided he is a girl DICTATE the entire Corps play pretend or ELSE, but also they put that person in Charge of an outfit as the sitting CO.
This has not ever even been brought to light even though most of us parents have known about it for 9+ months.
But it is telling that you pulled one tiny sentence out of that whole description of what is going on and decide to focus on that.
Point is, if this Commandant continues his ways, the Corps will cease to exist.
If y'all don't care about that, then I can't help you...
Or maybe YOU ARENT GETTING THE WHOLE STORY, as you so eloquently put it, from the 19 year old too immature to listen to changes and find a way to effectively fight them instead of booing someone off stage.
Warrior 66 said:
Given what I've read on this and other sites about this decision, I seriously doubt that Jame Rudder's groundbreaking and transformational changes - all changes we celebrate today - would have gotten much traction in today's "everybody gets a vote" environment.
Every decision that has ever been made that changed "the way we've always done it" in the Corps has always been the decision that's going to "kill the Corps." Yet, the Corps has survived all those changes, continues to survive today, and will survive this change as well.
How about we give this change a chance, and see how it works out before we start ringing the death knell of the Corps? This may turn out to be the transformational change that the Corps needs at this point and time in our history. These kinds of changes are not malicious in nature nor are they designed to be the death of the Corps. Believe it or not, the Commandant and his staff love the Corps as much as you do, if not more, and want to see it succeed.
There have been monumental changes made in business, in government, in education, in our military, and at Texas A&M over the years - all for good reason. This change for the Corps is difficult and in some perspectives, somewhat radical. But it has merit (the military has been doing this for decades) and we should be willing to give it a chance and see if it will work in the end - just like Rudder's (radical) sweeping changes did. I do not believe it will kill the fish experience, nor do I believe it will kill outfit culture. Both will survive and thrive, just as they have over the many changes made to the Corps over the last 147 years.
You can certainly disagree (and I'm sure many will), but thats my take on all of this.
"Per Unitatem Vis!"
Aggie Therapist said:
My outfit doesn't even exist anymore.
Aggie Therapist said:
Your buddy aggiez03 is copying and pasting our quotes from here and throwing them on F16
Classic.
Aggie Therapist said:
Hey I bonded well with yours.
From miserable FTXs, Epic nights on Northgate and even Korea
Welcome to the culture war. Those who hold onto the old rules of decorum are being swept aside and losing what they cherish. This batch of young men have been told by everyone that they're unwanted and that spaces "aren't for them." And now one of their few bastions is being "fundamentally transformed."Flower Child said:
The idea of cadets hissing the Commandant out of the room is astounding to me. I hope it is an exaggeration of events; otherwise the Corps has a completely different character than the Corps of old. Hissing fellow Ags alone was bad bull, much less the Commandant!
Horse sh*t!Aggie Therapist said:
D&C cadets were always the most out of shape, lacked discipline and had the good ol boy attitude.
aggiejim70 said:
The whole place is going to hell.......The fish this next year will never live in a tent, the fish next year will never wear the grey uniform, the fish next year will be at the Air Base, the fish next year will never experience the Air Base, the fish next year will never be in branch designated units, the fish next year will never wear green pants, the fish next year will wear AMU brass, the BQ fish will never be in the Maroon or White Band, the fish class is going to include women. How will the Corps ever survive?
aggiez03 said:Ha ha, real funny.Aggie Therapist said:
I will never forget what one of my most respected Army ROTC instructors said, CAG now, told me when I was a cadet.
We were talking about peer leadership and struggles with getting people to stay motivated and physically fit.
"Well it's hard because you have non-regs in your formation"
"Oh no sir, they are called D&C"
"Yeah, nonregs"
Without D&C, who make up the majority of the Corps, if the Corps existed at all, it would be a tiny fraction of what it is today.
Aggie Therapist said:
Yall need some hobbies.
This ain't your Corps anymore. Get over it.
Some of y'all just want some type of old army fish buddy fantasy instead of an actual leadership development program setting up cadets for success in the private and government sectors in 2024.