Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Maynard G. Krebbs wrote:
On Sun, 01 Jul 2007 18:36:38 -0700, Bill wrote: I was actually in this program a few years back. I had a medical disqualification. It turns out I am deathly allergic to petroleum based products, who knew, and you can't get a waver for that. I got pretty far along in the course before I had these issues so I do know what I am talking about. I was in the PLC program. Basically what happens is that instead of boot camp you do Officer Candidate school, which many enlisted friends of mine that were at OCS said is much harder that boot.The various programs are in place because you have to be a college graduate to be an officer and they want to get you through in a timely manner. The PLC program did 6 weeks of OCS one summer then 6 weeks the next. During the year while you are in school there is an office you train out of and are expected to keep up your physical and mental performance. There are other programs like ROTC and the OCC. They are just variations on the same thing. After you graduate from OCS and college you go to the basic school. 6 months of training that they say is both the best and worst times you will have in the Corps. Then you go to your specialty school. The Marine Corps is the only military force in the world with anything like TBS. The Navy guys will all talk about how much harder they had it but I hate to tell them they are wrong but hey, any time we need to go fight they give us a ride so please don't pick on them too much. The thing about OCS in the Corp is that they don't help you through. In boot if you want to be there and try hard they will make you into a Marine. They have a very low drop-out rate comparatively. OCS has a 60% attrition rate. When I went it was much higher. We had 60% drop in the first summer session. Not all of those go back and then probably another 60% that did dropped in the seniors session. The whole idea is to see if they can get you to quit and if you will break under the pressure. You learn everything you need at TBS so here they just try to see if you will quit. It's loads of fun. Bill Sorry to hear that Bill. Nothing you can do about that kind of health issue. I know it's hard to lose a dream. The rate of sucess in finishing boot camp as an enlisted person isn't brought about by them helping you through. LOL It's because you have very few choices other than graduate. Graduation, death and illness/injury requiring discharge are the only ways out of boot camp for enlisted personel. We had many guys drink Wisk, try to escape the island or jack-off in front of one of the DI's. This got them a quick transfer to medical hold company. There we guys there 3 to 4 months being "evaluated" for discharge. Graduation morning we had a private get re-cycled back to training day 1. He was dressed in his Charlie's and had to do the sea-bag drag across the grinder to get into his new platoon while the rest of us were doing final review. |
#2
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 02 Jul 2007 22:30:53 -0400, BAR wrote:
We had many guys drink Wisk, try to escape the island or jack-off in front of one of the DI's. This got them a quick transfer to medical hold company. There we guys there 3 to 4 months being "evaluated" for discharge. There was no Wisk when I was in boot. I think one guy in my company went over the fence, and one was discharged for "flat feet." A guy did get caught by the OOD jacking-off while on watch, but he just suffered KP and embarrassment. Being a jack-off never disqualified anybody from being in the Navy. --Vic |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
A.C. Motor Current Draw Question | Electronics | |||
Refinish Deck Question , for sailboat ,, for spring ,, Paint question | Boat Building | |||
Ping Doug! | ASA | |||
Ping: Shortwave | General | |||
The same people | ASA |