Spekkio
He bowls overhand.
A new Ens on a sub is 3-6 months away from being able to say "I relieve you" and have operational command over his ER watchteam and 12-14 away from being able to stand OOD -- most get promoted to ltjg somewhere in there. I don't know how long it takes to qualify on surface ships. There is no operational authority afforded to a new Ens like there is to a 2lt, and if the ship were to go into battle he'd probably sit in DC central on phones, stand torpedoroom safety officer to keep him out of the way, or stand in the back of control typing the mission report and everyone O and E alike knows it. Not only is a new Ens inexperienced, but also he knows absolutely nothing about anything remotely useful for fighting the ship or conducting damage control efforts to save the ship in a casualty. That's where the disrespect comes from -- knowing that the guy who just showed up doesn't have any responsibility or useful abilities until he gets qualified to stand a watch. I agree the chief's attitude was wrong and if you put me sitting in that room now I'd have his head, but taking that approach as a nub wouldn't work out for the other ens or me.Marine 2ndLts spend a good portion of their training learning basic small unit level tactical concepts and becoming proficient at training their Marines. They have no actual experience at all. I would argue that taking a platoon into combat in poppy fields with no combat experience and having junior Marines lives in your hands is a but more of a leadership challenge than "getting a PQS sheet signed off..." However you don't see the blatant disrespect from SNCOs. No matter how you dice it - it's wrong.
Busybee hit it on the head. Disrespect gets crushed. End of story. Pin or no pin.
I don't think that you and the pilots in this thread understand that Ensigns are put into a position of supposed authority knowing practically nothing about their jobs as DIVOs or operations on the ship to which they are assigned. It is that very fact that creates the perception OP asked about and is underscored when enlisted Sailors hear the way qualified JOs and above talk about new Ensigns.
This happened off watch and by a forward chief (never seen anything like that on watch unless said officer was being stubborn about wanting to do something dangerous/stupid and wrong). My understanding is that the USMC doesn't have the operational/administrative split in the COC like the Navy does.