This has got to be National Guard...aint no damn way Active Duty soldiers that damn fat....2, when i was active, you DO NOT...REPEAT NOT watch another S/M getting smoked AND if your disciplining your S/M, a true NCO will do it in private..not for the world to see. I would smoke each and every one of these joes....NCO or not. all ya push.
On 2nd thougth this is not a smoke session, this is maybe fake,put on,see his platoon is just standing in mob formation, when at least they would be at parade rest if not kissing the floor with him inj cadence. I know in the Austin/Milley Army,please is the way now.
pfft, most of the people I knew in the Army had far more intelligence than damn near every civilian I've met since my discharge, I'm surprised you fucking meatheads don't get yourselves killed far more often
Bom dia! Pra mim é uma honra viu prestigiar seu trabalho, vamos sempre juntos somar e fortalecer nossos objetivos, Conto com você, eu já estou por aqui.
Three things to get straight here. #1 it is called getting SMOKED, #2 It happens to EVERYBODY most times over nothing, it is part of training. Sometimes you get smoked when another soldier fucks up because you did not stop him or straighten his ass out. #3 this SO MILD! Now running in 10-inch-deep sand for 20 min is really getting smoked. Sometimes NCO's are just bored and your platoon is totally squared away and they still get you
"Why is he getting smoked, sergeant?" "Because after I left active duty, I realized that civilians don't have to automatically respect me just because of the extra stripe on my chest, and that hurts my feelings. So I joined a National Guard unit to terrorize privates once a month and compensate for the fact that I have no marketable job skills in the civilian world." "Wow, that's deep." "You mean 'Wow, that's deep, SERGEANT!' FRONT LEANING REST! GET ON YOUR FUCKING FACE!"
@@zmangkrd5312 Well since you know nothing about me and what my soldiers thought about me, you must be right. There is a time and place for "smoking" a soldier, many times a good reminder of proper military bearing is far better than getting a pen out. Have I smoked a soldier yes, did SHE deserve it YES. Did I get down and do the corrective training with her YES. Don't try to label the type of NCO I was if you have no idea who I am. Now get down and PUSH the ground... ONE TWO THREE FOUR
@@ricksher1320 you can't simply sit here and say "don't assume who I am" when you're commenting something an NCO should never say. Based on the comment, you're portraying that you enjoyed the corrective training you gave to your soldiers, and you'd look for every small opportunity to, in your words, "smoke" them, this is what I'm saying on my response if you took the time to read and think about it, now that your response to me gave me a broader aspect of what type of NCO you were, maybe I can say sure you might've been a decent NCO. You want me to automatically assume you were a good NCO based on your original comment? Sounds like something you'd want your soldiers to think as well, assume things they should know about your thought process when you probably didn't give them the proper guidance, BUT after said "smoke" session you'll correct yourself and try to place yourself in the right, just like you did here in our debate. I still think you're a proper example of a bad NCO, since you resolve to corrective training when you're being challenged, hence the end of your response of the pathetic attempt of correctively training me through the internet. Pay attention to detail, you're not a hot shit.
@@ricksher1320wait, you really did the PT with her? That's weak. Getting smoked is a corrective action that happens in response to some violation of a lawful order or regulation, or good order and discipline. Its entire purpose is to stand in place of taking a soldier's pay and personal time. It isn't just some random bs detail you're dropping your top to help get it done so you have enough time to rotate your guys through to chow before the 1SG is going to come check. You undermine yourself as a leader and you harm the soldier's development when you do the exercise with them. If you can do the exercise with the soldier while doing the proper mentoring where you explain what they did wrong, and whst happens if they make that mistake in combat, it means it isn't an intense enough workout. Once a problem lands in an officers lap that problem is handled on paper. Your job as an nco is to make sure the big problems that are guaranteed to happen, don't happen, bc you've PTd the small problems out of the soldier.