At West Point Military Academy’s annual pillow fight things got a little out of hand, it seems. The students got the bright idea to take the protective helmets off their heads…and stuff them into their pillows! Thirty concussions, split lips, dislocated shoulders, a broken leg and numerous other souvenirs of their experience as incoming freshmen. Were the upperclassmen appalled at this behavior? Not exactly.
I may be the only person on the SDMB to say this but ------ TERRIFIC! Innovative escalation of violence in even a mock combat situation is just what I want to see from our future officers in training. And acceptance of the results of said escalation isn’t a bad thing for those further along the journey. I say find out who first came up with the idea and give them their gold bar now!
“Large group of adult soldiers let fun get out of hand.”
There, that’s better isn’t it?
I’m a little bit sick of all the hand-holding being offered to college students these days. They are 18 years old. Full adulthood, folks. Crime on campus should be treated just like every other crime. Safety concerns should be addressed just as they would be in any office park or retail district.
Especially at a Military Academy though. They are there to learn how to kill people, and to use, maintain, and strategically deploy weapons of war. For heaven’s sake, let them be grown-ups! And let them suffer the consequences when they break laws or harm others.
OneCentStamp assording to the article this has been going on since 1897.
Run this by me again… these are our future elite career officers? And they are proud that the safety equipment was misused and the game resulted in injuries to their own troops that may potentially put them out of action?
The fighters “changed the conditions of the test”. When Kirk did that he got two citations, one a reprimand and the other a commendation for original thinking.
I agree that these are adults, let them take whatever consequences arise.
There’s pillow fights then there’s Army pillow fights.
Who is they? One person quoted an upper classman (meaning a slightly older college student not yet in the army). Is that the “they” you are talking about?
I for one and truly disappointed and stand firm in my resolve that violence and the future officers of the United State Army do not go well together. Leave that shit to the enlisted men and women.