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#1
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Paul Cassel wrote:
Nope, I'm not going to do the worship business here. I'll accept 100% your account of the incident except for the implied analysis. So you diverted 480 nm to get to this sailboat. Now what would you have done using that fuel and time if not for this diversion? Oh, yeah, also you hung around until the weather calmed. So we have a diversion of about 500 nm, then a delay while you waited the weather out. Let me ask you, if the sailboat was in such dire distress, why could it survive the storm? Why do you say that the family would have been in mourning if you didn't pull the guy out when the storm passed? You mean, he and the boat could survive heavy weather but not calm weather? More to the point, is your existence in standard patrol or whatever you were on when you 'diverted' the 500 nm useless? Do you serve no function at all except to aimlessly cruise around in your cutter just waiting for some clown to falsely claim being in distress so you can zoon 500 nm to make some headlines and get good press? So now tell me, what didn't get done while you were out watching this sailboat bounce around in demonstrably safe conditions? I say safe because it DID make it through didn't it? So the safety isn't speculative, but demonstrated. Paul, The USCG is the ONLY military organization with a full time peace time mission. Except for NOAA. So if you are going to bash the USCG for piddling away money and effort then I think you should get your priorities straight. Start with the Army, then USAF, then USN, then the USMC, and then use your still unused energies to vent on the USCG. But to be honest the USCG is not really a military organization, it should also be compared to other big organizations. So, how does it compare to lets say, LAPD?, NYPD? NY Transit? The Washington DC XXX (anything)? Or pick on corporations. Or the bankers who are supposed to make loans effectively. Those overpaid Bozzos have made huge personal fortunes while wrecking my personal 401K. The point is that all big organizations are relatively ineffective and inefficient. Why? Because that is human nature, as a group we are (by definition) just average and that aint all that good. On the scale of things the USCG are pretty darn good, at least they are devoted to saving lives, not taking them. If we could just get them totally away from the military that would be better. And, uh yes, I am ex-USCG. Four years. Vietnam era. I could not stand the inefficiencies so I got out. Boy was I disappointed. |
#2
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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hpeer wrote:
Paul, The USCG is the ONLY military organization with a full time peace time mission. Except for NOAA. So if you are going to bash the USCG Show me one area where I 'bashed' anybody. I only said the rescue wasn't free in the sense of lacking any marginal costs. |
#3
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Paul Cassel wrote:
hpeer wrote: Paul, The USCG is the ONLY military organization with a full time peace time mission. Except for NOAA. So if you are going to bash the USCG Show me one area where I 'bashed' anybody. I only said the rescue wasn't free in the sense of lacking any marginal costs. "More to the point, is your existence in standard patrol or whatever you were on when you 'diverted' the 500 nm useless? Do you serve no function at all except to aimlessly cruise around in your cutter just waiting for some clown to falsely claim being in distress so you can zoon 500 nm to make some headlines and get good press? So now tell me, what didn't get done while you were out watching this sailboat bounce around in demonstrably safe conditions? I say safe because it DID make it through didn't it? So the safety isn't speculative, but demonstrated. " Sorry Paul, it sounds like "bashing to me." If it were not intended so then I guess we agree. The rescue was most certainly NOT free. Howard |
#4
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hpeer wrote:
"More to the point, is your existence in standard patrol or whatever you were on when you 'diverted' the 500 nm useless? Do you serve no function at all except to aimlessly cruise around in your cutter just waiting for some clown to falsely claim being in distress so you can zoon 500 nm to make some headlines and get good press? So now tell me, what didn't get done while you were out watching this sailboat bounce around in demonstrably safe conditions? I say safe because it DID make it through didn't it? So the safety isn't speculative, but demonstrated. " Sorry Paul, it sounds like "bashing to me." If it were not intended so then I guess we agree. The rescue was most certainly NOT free. Howard I did note that you didn't say what didn't get done while you went out to do this rescue which, I infer, took a few days. If I or my wife could spend several days away from our jobs with nothing changed due to our absence (at regular intervals and w/o notice) I think our employers would wonder what are there doing all day. -paul |
#5
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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hpeer wrote:
The USCG is the ONLY military organization with a full time peace time mission. Except for NOAA. NOAA is not a military organization. But to be honest the USCG is not really a military organization, Huh? Funny, they have pretty big guns up front on their boats for not being military. That's kinda like saying the National Guard isn't really military because it also has a peacetime function. The point is that all big organizations are relatively ineffective and inefficient. Within all military organizations as well as all government departments and organizations at all levels (federal, state, and usually local as well) there is usually massive waste and inefficiencies. To be fair there has been tremendous improvement over the last twenty years or so in the military and at the same time the civilian side has become much, much worse. But as was pointed out by someone else, one mandate still stands in all government departments and organizations - they are usually ordered by their department heads to spend everything they get and then some, or the following year's budget will go down. Even the lower ranks feel this pressure at the end of the fiscal year. Oh and one more thing, if the Coast Guard or any military unit does not constantly practice, their skills and leadership will atrophy. The SAR mission in question can easily be considered practice as well as a real mission. Denying them those opportunities threatens their budget, skills, and mission. Then what will you have left after a few self-serving Congressmen decide they want the money for their own districts instead of giving it to fund CG ops? Just trying to clarify a few things. Red Hope everone had, or is having great holidays whatever they may be. |
#6
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Red wrote:
hpeer wrote: The USCG is the ONLY military organization with a full time peace time mission. Except for NOAA. NOAA is not a military organization. Think again: http://www.noaacorps.noaa.gov/index.html |
#7
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Red wrote:
hpeer wrote: The USCG is the ONLY military organization with a full time peace time mission. Except for NOAA. NOAA is not a military organization. And jeff replied: Think again: http://www.noaacorps.noaa.gov/index.html Think again jeff; This is copied from the site above. The NOAA Commissioned Officer uniformed services of the United States. The service, consisting of approximately 299 commissioned officers,is an integral part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), an agency of the U.S. Department of Commerce. (Let's repeat that last statement... "an agency of the U.S. Department of Commerce") The Director of the NOAA Corps is Rear Admiral Jonathan W. Bailey, NOAA. He is also the Director of the Office of Marine and Aviation Operations (OMAO) which operates a wide variety of specialized aircraft and ships to conduct NOAA's environmental and scientific missions. The NOAA Commissioned Corps traces its roots back to the former U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey, which dates back to 1807 and President Thomas Jefferson. The NOAA Corps today provides a cadre of professionals trained in engineering, earth sciences, oceanography, meteorology, fisheries science, and other related disciplines. Officers operate ships, fly aircraft, manage research projects, conduct diving operations, and serve in staff positions throughout NOAA. Red BTW, I worked for NOAA and I was not in any military organization at that time. The officers are uniformed, just as is the top U.S. M.D. and many other civilian/government positions. NOAA officers do not take the military oath. |
#8
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Red wrote:
Red wrote: hpeer wrote: The USCG is the ONLY military organization with a full time peace time mission. Except for NOAA. NOAA is not a military organization. And jeff replied: Think again: http://www.noaacorps.noaa.gov/index.html Think again jeff; This is copied from the site above. The NOAA Commissioned Officer uniformed services of the United States. The service, consisting of approximately 299 commissioned officers,is an integral part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), an agency of the U.S. Department of Commerce. (Let's repeat that last statement... "an agency of the U.S. Department of Commerce") So an agency of the Department of the Treasury (until recently) is clearly military but and agency of Commerce is not? That's a pretty lame argument - try again. The Director of the NOAA Corps is Rear Admiral Jonathan W. Bailey, NOAA. He is also the Director of the Office of Marine and Aviation Operations (OMAO) which operates a wide variety of specialized aircraft and ships to conduct NOAA's environmental and scientific missions. The NOAA Commissioned Corps traces its roots back to the former U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey, which dates back to 1807 and President Thomas Jefferson. The NOAA Corps today provides a cadre of professionals trained in engineering, earth sciences, oceanography, meteorology, fisheries science, and other related disciplines. Officers operate ships, fly aircraft, manage research projects, conduct diving operations, and serve in staff positions throughout NOAA. Red BTW, I worked for NOAA and I was not in any military organization at that time. The officers are uniformed, just as is the top U.S. M.D. and many other civilian/government positions. NOAA officers do not take the military oath. Oh really? I believe that the officers of the NOAA Corps take the same oath as officers in branches under the Department of Defense. In fact, all sorts of federal employees take the same oath as directly by 5 U.S.C. 3331. I took the oath (I think) when I worked at the Smithsonian, and even postal workers take it. Curiously, enlisted men take a different oath, where they agree to obey orders. Officers (and Postmen) don't agree to follow orders, only uphold the Constitution. Here's the law: An individual, except the President, elected or appointed to an office of honor or profit in the civil service or uniformed services, shall take the following oath: “I, AB, do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same; that I take this obligation freely, without any mental reservation or purpose of evasion; and that I will well and faithfully discharge the duties of the office on which I am about to enter. So help me God.” This section does not affect other oaths required by law. BTW, if you're looking for a real significant difference, the NOAA Corps are not bound by the Uniform Code of Military Justice unless they are attached to a military unit. Of course, that can happen pretty easily. |
#9
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In article ,
jeff wrote: Oh really? I believe that the officers of the NOAA Corps take the same oath as officers in branches under the Department of Defense. In fact, all sorts of federal employees take the same oath as directly by 5 U.S.C. 3331. I took the oath (I think) when I worked at the Smithsonian, and even postal workers take it. Curiously, enlisted men take a different oath, where they agree to obey orders. Officers (and Postmen) don't agree to follow orders, only uphold the Constitution. Yep, and I took the SAME Oath of Office, when I was Sworn in as a Resident Field Agent for the Federal Communications Commission. I actually had to fly to Juneau, Alaska, and be Sworn in by a Captain in the USCG, at the time they were part of the Dept. of Commerce..... -- Bruce in alaska add path after fast to reply |
#10
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I will only say that:
1. If the CG wasn't actually doing the rescue operation they would be puttering around in an exercise which is based upon a "rescue operation" or maybe something more exciting like "drug/terrorist interdiction". 2. Total cost to the taxpayers is the same either way. |
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