GMAN
Dedicated LVC Member
I don't know what he was thinking, see it for yourself.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WopAHvbg9LU
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WopAHvbg9LU
When the CEO of HP is going to be sending young men and women out to die for the company, then that might be an appropriate question to ask. Until then, you simply cannot compare what might happen at a private company with what they do in the armed services.I think what you need to ask - if it isn't appropriate for boosting morale at Hewlett Packard - why would it be appropriate for the US Navy?
Would it be an issue if an E-1 sailor made the tapes?
When the CEO of HP is going to be sending young men and women out to die for the company, then that might be an appropriate question to ask. Until then, you simply cannot compare what might happen at a private company with what they do in the armed services.
We're going to have to agree to disagree on that. IMNSHO, "this person working for me might go home without a job" is a HELL of a lot different than "this person working for me might not be going home," and you have to make allowances for that in the differences in cultures between corporate America and the military.Yes, you can compare what a private company would do, and what they do in the Armed Forces.
We're going to have to agree to disagree on that. IMNSHO, "this person working for me might go home without a job" is a HELL of a lot different than "this person working for me might not be going home," and you have to make allowances for that in the differences in cultures between corporate America and the military.
FWIW, it would appear that quite a few of those who served under Honors think he's being treated unfairly:
http://timesnews.net/article.php?id=9028755
Is that bad behavior?
What about it is bad behavior?
Because I take issue with the standards.
I think the video lacks a certain amount of dignity but it's not offensive, nor should it have been career ending. Nor was it, until it was leaked to the press.
By who? I wonder. Do we know the channels it was leaked so long after the fact?
If I were to guess, it would have probably been by another back stabbing officer, another politician in a uniform, who got the video into the complicate media's hands.
How many admirals are in the Navy now?
How many ships do they actually have?
I can't remember the numbers off hand, but it's extremely top heavy.
foxpaws said:...the video looked like an attempt to get the sailors to 'like' Honors - so he could be 'one of the boys'. An officer needs to be respected and obeyed, those are the really important things, 'being one of the boys' isn't.
foxpaws said:Would you respect the man who made that video[?]
foxpaws said:Oh- active flag officers - 216 - the number is set by law, and has been for decades.
I don't necessarily disagree with that, but... why is it bad judgment?It is bad judgment Cal -
I also don't necessarily disagree with that, I too said that it lacks dignity. Different branch, but I can't imagine Patton doing silly movies to improve morale.it also showed lack of understanding of what it means to be a commanding officer.
..unless they are competing for his job.Should he be relieved of duty - that was all over the place he said - no officer likes to see another brought down.
Defending America
David H. Hackworth
February 9, 1999
THE THINNEST RED LINE IN HISTORY
The year is 2020 and you are a fly on the wall at a Pentagon briefing for the commander in chief.
"Mr. President, the Army chief of staff just confirmed his rifle squad of 11 generals is good to go," says the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. "The chief of Naval Operations is ready to support, skippering our one ship with a hand-picked all-admiral crew. Our Air Force chief of staff is above the area of operations with his all-general crew in our one Stealth-Platinum bomber, ready to provide air support. The Marine commandant stands ready in reserve with a small amphibious fire team of his best generals. And not only are all 700 of our headquarters online, I'm proud to say their Internet reports are timely and flawless."
Sadly, if our military continues to build new major headquarters, promote more generals and expand the officer corps, and the price of hardware keeps skyrocketing, the above scenario may well become the real deal. In 1945, a fighter aircraft cost about 100,000 bucks, about the price of a WW II M-4 tank. Today, the sticker price on an F-22 fighter is around $70 million a copy while M-1-1A3 tanks run $2.5 million a pop. Today, with an active duty force of 1.4 million, there are more senior headquarters than in 1945, when we had 13 million folks wearing boots.
The U.S. Army presently has 30 Generals for each of its fighting divisions. In WW II, it had only 14 Generals per division and the divisions were 20 percent larger. The Navy has almost more Admirals than ships. During WW II, the Navy had 470 admirals and 61,000 warships - one admiral for every 130 ships. In 1999, the Navy's got 222 admirals for 354 ships. Do the math. The Air Force, the most officer heavy of all the services, actually has more Generals than bombers. In WW II, it had one General for every 244 aircraft. In 1999, it's got one General for every 23 airplanes. Even the once-lean Marine Corps has the inflation disease. With only three active infantry divisions, it has 12 more generals than it had during World War II- when it had six fighting divisions. Since 1945, the teeth that bite into the enemy have gotten smaller while the officer corps and the logistical and command tail have grown faster than kudzu weed. If this trend doesn't stop, our forces will have Generals galore - blubberous battalions of staff weenies and supporters - and few warriors. The Pentagon defends the rank inflation and the bloated tail and the lack of combat troop muscle with the argument that it's in the management business - that its logisticians and managers handle a $300 billion budget and keep together the largest infrastructure in the world.
Spare us this drivel! Since the tail replaced the tooth and managers took over from Patton and Halsey-like leaders, we stopped winning wars. Well-led troops are what put holes in enemy soldiers, fix airplanes, run ships and make things happen.
In WW II, there was one officer to 11 riflemen. Today, the ratio is one officer to six grunts. Take our forces in Germany. Our fighting units there have been cut by two thirds since the Berlin Wall fell, but not so the palaces for the top brass. There are three times more Generals than infantry battalion skippers. All stay busy conducting inspections, micromanaging the troops and writing papers which become more hoops for the troops to jump through. And our four NATO combat brigades have four headquarters with fat staffs above them, breathing down their flak jackets, whipping up irrelevant to-do lists.
It's the same in South Korea, where we have two combat brigades supervised by a four-star general and multi-star studded echelons of higher headquarters above them. But staffers and critical rear echelon supporters, however well supervised by a galaxy of stars and bars, don't take objectives. Matter of fact, I've never seen a general and his staff in an attack. During my last 53 years of fighting in or covering the profession of arms, I've learned this truth: only well-trained, well-led and well-armed warriors win battles.
shagdrum said:I would be more concerned about the DADT repeal breaking down discipline in our military then any of this...
A more lean mean machine than this padded coddled right wing welfare bums version we have now.
And if you noticed I didn't think that these were particularly offensive - just rather stupid.I don't necessarily disagree with that, but... why is it bad judgment?
Because when I hear the news, I'm told that the true outrage was that the videos were homophobic and vile. I don't think cursing or telling dirty jokes is "bad judgment."
Was it bad judgment because it's arguably a poor method of leadership?
Was it bad judgment because we all know how intensely political and PC you must be to be an officer of his rank? And are some of those political and social standards even reasonable?
..unless they are competing for his job.
Again, should this be a career ender?
No. After the first of his introductory moves ventured into the goofy, someone should have taken him aside and told him to cut it out. You can't keep things like that "private" anymore. Every officer knows that everything you do is public.
But if it was such a horrible mistake, why was this "open secret" a non-issue within the military until the media ran with it?
Essentially, the Navy has nearly one ship for each admiral, almost 1:1.
At the end of WW2 the ratio was about 130:1
http://www.navytimes.com/news/2010/08/navy_flag_numbers_081010w/
I would be more concerned about the DADT repeal breaking down discipline in our military then any of this...