sad state of marine corp boot camp

I’m sure that’s true. Mostly.

I knew a guy (now passed) who was a WWII Navy draftee. He was eligible on special criteria, and when he turned up for induction they accepted him.

He was also, briefly, probably the most junior commissioned officer in the USN, commissioned one day after his group. But that wasn’t related: that was because his supervising officer didn’t like him, and tried to block his commission.

I still don’t understand why you are telling us any of this.

Is it possible that the training has gotten smarter while less physically taxing?

To use an inexact metaphor, I’m reminded of tennis and baseball players who need to be coached NOT to hit the ball so hard. In tennis, better placement can be achieved by taking something off of it. A hitter strikes out less and makes better contact when not swinging for the fences. Are the Marines perhaps making their people better by easing off on certain aspects that don’t yield as much gain while conentrating on more impoertant things?

Assuming this is true, I agree with you. After all it is the USMC, these are jarheads, they’re supposed to be the best physical specimens we have in the military. I’m just not so sure what you say is true. I can tell you for sure a buddy who finished up in 2002 in no way meets your description, and I don’t recall meeting an out of shape marine of any age.

I have no connection to anything military, but my guess that some would argue that isn’t the point–perhaps by trying to make athletes and body builders, they neglect the old method of destroying the recruit’s old personality and reshaping him into a Marine with all the mental as well as physical toughness that should imply. Having recruits hike in athletic shoes rather than boots might be analogous to giving them a shop vac rather than a toothbrush when it’s their turn to clean the head–yeah, the head gets just as clean and much faster that way, but was that the point of the exercise?

So, you’re not willing to consider the possibility that people are showing up for boot camp in good shape? As indicated above, any recruit these days has known for months ahead of time what he’s in for, and has been training for it.

Back in my day, we had to walk uphill both ways to the market to bring home a bucket of sand for dinner, in the snow, without any shoes!

Kids today, rabble rabble rabble

The point of military training isn’t to be “hard”, it’s to produce effective troops and units. Hardness is a tool, not an end to itself, and it’s not the only tool out there, or the best. Unless the OP can show that today’s Marines are inferior fighters than those of his generation, he has no case.

You can’t see me, but I have my “skeptical face” on right now.

http://usmilitary.about.com/od/marinejoin/a/marinebasic.htm

This fits with my experience in 1995. There’s no reason to choke or punch a recruit…unless you’re so stupid that you can’t figure out another way to ‘motivate’ them. And DIs, as a whole, are not stupid.

ETA: Not that you’ll see this until noon, when you wake up from your binge at the VFW.

Also, spelling and punctuation.

You had sand? Slacker! We just had to gnaw the galvanizing off the bucket and make zinc oxide soup.

You had a bucket? We had to use our hands, and we made soup out of skin scrapings.

Skin? Skin is a luxury. Our drill instructors flayed us on the first day for not knowing how to fold hospital corners.

So clearly they are better prepared and in better shape than you were going in. That’s probably why they think it’s easy. Because they are doing the PX90 stuff for giggles, unlike back in your day.

If you seriously don’t see a difference in attitudes toward nutrition and being in top physical shape, between the generations you’re describing, or recognize how drastically those things could affect how ‘hard’ they found boot camp to be, then I’m thinking you’re being willfully ignorant a little bit.

And you earnestly can’t see how the difference between insolent draftees or volunteers would impact the program? Again, I don’t think you’re trying very hard, if that’s the case.

Now you just sound like Grampa who walked ten miles, barefoot, in 3’ of snow, uphill both ways!
“There, there, Gramps, we believe you, really we do!”

This might be an example of the real reason you got banned on the other forum.

Edit: This point has already been made. Sorry.

I didn’t go to Marine boot camp, but I did go to Navy OCS which was run by Marine DIs. I completed OCS approximately 11 years ago, and it was the toughest experience (physically) of my life. I was one of the fat-bodies that were singled out for extra attention. We certainly weren’t allowed to use our cell phones or any other electronics.

This seems to reflect a universal truth about the military.

tim-n-va, you very succinctly made the point I was going to make. Everyone’s boot camp experience was tougher than anyone’s who followed them. *“It wasn’t that way in the old Roman Legion. Sharp pointed sticks? You were lucky! We would dream of having sharp pointed sticks.” *

Pointed stick? Oh, oh, oh. We want to learn how to defend ourselves against pointed sticks, do we? Getting all high and mighty, eh? Fresh fruit not good enough for you eh? Well I’ll tell you something my lad. When you’re walking home tonight and some homicidal maniac comes after you with a bunch of loganberries, don’t come crying to me!