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#1
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Thousands of Facebook users have joined a group called “I Hate Reflective Belts” to protest and mock an Air Force requirement that airmen wear reflective belts during hours of darkness.
What do you think about the service’s use of reflective belts? Is this a silly regulation that goes too far, or do the belts serve a purpose? |
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#2
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Of course they serve a purpose....they reiterate the fact that apparently my six year old knows more about crossing the street than those in high places think we do... Speaking of which, I have yet to see anyone with eagles or above wearing one of the damn things...
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God is great, beer is good, and people are crazy. -Billy Currington You really need to take a class in logic, reasoning, and deduction because with your logic, you say that if you start with C and add 3 you get elephants and that just isn't so. "He uses statistics as a drunken man uses lamp-posts...for support rather than illumination." -- Andrew Lang (1844-1912) Lord of the Pings |
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#3
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1) they get done with work while its still light out 2) were they to stay at work passed nighttime, they'd only have 3 steps to walk to their "DV" parking spot or reserved spot they usually park in 3) whos going to brief a Colonel or General? Theyre merely doing this as a "cover your @$$" measure....just like issuing us a bunch of stuff thats not practical to use given the situation and then saying they "took measures" to protect us" Just like technically none of us should have cuts on our hands because of gloves and none of us should have hearing loss because of hearing protection thats issued but they know good and well its not always practical to wear that stuff. I cant wear hearing protection for the rest of my enlistment period 24/7/365....but they covered their @$$ by issuing it "its not our liability you got hit by a truck because of blackout conditions in the AOR....we gave you guys reflective belts to wear 24/7/365" |
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#4
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It's not even a matter of safety for me though - reflective belts have their place, and I don't have a real problem with that - but the amount of "emphasis" put on them at some locations 'downrange', just leads me to think that perhaps some people have lost sight of the mission - of why we're really there and how each of us fits into that mission on a daily basis.
If you're a senior NCO or an Officer, and you spend any amount of time monitoring minor uniform violations at the gym or chow hall - or worse yet, you're ordered to - you should really ask yourself if your time could be put to better use doing something else. Discipline, whether it be in uniform wear, or in your job performance doesn't come from a Chief watching over our shoulders, it comes from pride, professionalism, and REAL leadership. Back during Desert Storm, on the very first morning of the war - in Qatar - we had engines running during our squadron's first launch, when the sirens went off as our base went to "Alarm Red - MOPP 4". No one involved with the launches even flinched, no one ran for chem gear or helmets - even though at the time, based on previous Intel, we expected that we were likely to come under attack. Why? Did we have somebody standing over our shoulders telling us what we should or shouldn't do? No, we were treated like adults and we made our own decisions, and we stood there because we believed in what we were doing. We stood there because it was our mission. Each individual deployed overseas might not be able to go out and win either of these wars for us, but collectively, if we lose sight of the REAL mission, we can lose them. It's the MISSION that matters. Mike Kopack Last edited by MKopack : 11-06-2009 at 10:17 PM. |
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#5
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I really think you have no vision as far as the AF is concerned or the military as a whole for that mater.
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Someone who knows what they are talking about and is RESPECTFUL about it. I had a A1C coined by a wing CC for pointing out a uniform violation. The CC had been wearing it wrong for 2 weeks to see who was the first to point it out. Quote:
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#6
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Yeah they would be "required" to wear the damn thing but they don't.. Respect has nothing to do with it. Unless you lay in wait, your chance of catching them between the door and their parking space...not good. A Wing CC and some Col that is pissed off that he/she isn't a BG or a BG pissed that he/she isn't a MG or a four star that thinks he/she owns everything in the AF and that the AF couldn't possibly function when he/she is gone...is quite another. Ummm last time I checked they DO owe you something when you retire...Pesky federal laws requiring them to give you a retirement check. You are correct though that some damage is expected in certian cases and that is what the VA is for...continued care after your final separation for any service connected disability...
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God is great, beer is good, and people are crazy. -Billy Currington You really need to take a class in logic, reasoning, and deduction because with your logic, you say that if you start with C and add 3 you get elephants and that just isn't so. "He uses statistics as a drunken man uses lamp-posts...for support rather than illumination." -- Andrew Lang (1844-1912) Lord of the Pings |
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#7
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And you're flat wrong. 1) If you do 200, they owe you quite a bit of crap at retirement. 2) Any documented hearing loss is evaluated by the VA and often times they will owe you something. As was explained to me by the guy that did my VA physical, "You made a commitment to the government to serve six years, and in return they made a commitment to take care of you during those six years and take care of you for any injuries incurred during those six years for the rest of your life." Were that not the case, there would be no VA. So calm down.
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"To erect a standing authority of military men might even overthrow the civil power." - John Winthrop "A standing army may be likened to a standing member, an excellent assurance of domestic tranquility, but a dangerous temptation to foreign adventure." -Elbridge Gerry, Constitutional Convention "A standing army can never be turned into a moral institution" - William Gladstone "I don't believe in stalemates. I don't think there is such a thing." - General Curtis LeMay |
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#8
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In every democracy, the people get the government they deserve - Alexis de Tocqueville |
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#9
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This is simply another example of the Air Force bending to the will of the Army. Our pilot leadership sacrifices every non-rated officer and every enlisted person to the Army without question, from deployment bodies and length of deployments to reflective belts now. What's new?
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#10
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