Col Angus said:I know I'm not going to change anyone's mind on the internet. But I'll at least try.
You're both 2ndLt's fresh out of TBS in presumably great shape. Congratulations! You have no idea what a fleet squadron is like. Training that causes "a few bruises" on one of your counterparts has a higher probability of seriously breaking one of mine. I've seen it.
You speak of injuries and "the risk of people getting concussions and injuring ACLs" like it's nothing. Sure, if a 2ndLt tears an ACL, it's not going to affect anyone except that 2ndLt. If a single pilot in a squadron has a similar injury it will affect the entire squadron to some extent. In my community, if a major player with all the quals is injured (generally a pilot who is older and further removed from the TBS fairytale world of daily PT, MCMAP, and sand table exercises), everyone in the community will be affected. If that squadron is working up or about to deploy, it's now jumping through it's ass to find or make a qualified replacement when the focus should be elsewhere.
This is a good discussion, but you're both a little outside your lane. TBS is good at showing the ideal side of the Marine Corps, where everyone is a rifle platoon commander and less than a 275 PFT is considered bad. That is your world. It is all you know. The reality is there are many more variables in the aviation community than you're considering when you formulate your arguments.
I hope that I'm not overstepping any boundaries in this discussion, that was not my intention, nor did I mean any disrespect. I also concede that I don't have an informed view of what life in the Wing is like nor did I take into account the added "durability" that youth provides.
I only sought to put forth my view that Marine Officers are Marine Officers, and should generally be held to the same standard. I do, however, realize that is not how it works.
And I am currently in the worst shape in the past several years of my life. They don't call it The Body Softener for nothing! In between the mandatory hikes, the 70, 80, and 100+ hr work weeks, and week-long field exercises, its difficult to find the time and energy to maintain your fitness.