Actually, it's GUY, not GUYS. One of them was a stand up dude that I think got a handful of demerits for oversleeping a class. The other guy wasn't a poster child for the Navy, but had one indiscretion. Guess what? College students make mistakes. If he didn't demonstrate a PATTERN (unlike the current subject), then what's the problem with him being commissioned? He met all the requirements to.
I guess I misunderstood the story. It sounded like they were both stripped of their chance to play in the NFL (and forced instead to become Officers) because of this incident. I'm still not sure what kind of sense that makes, but I'll go with it.
Did you ever hook up with an underclassman in college?
I'll answer that with another question. "Was I ever specifically ordered not to hook up with an underclassman?" - No. Let's compare apples to apples. It doesn't matter who I hooked up with. I hadn't taken the grand oath. As the saying goes, where much is given...
You just applied a "zero tolerance" policy to USNA. Everyone has to be perfect. They can't make mistakes. Or so you suggest... I added my anecdote about a classmate, and how media attention changed the leadership's decision.
There's a lot of people who spent time mustering in smoke hall that turned out to be fine Naval Officers, they just made a college-level mistake. Good job looking down from your perch. Must be lonely up there.
What I was referring to with your anecdote is the irony that the Navy was willing to let these guys go and be civilians until their "indiscretions" came to light. Then they deemed them unworthy of civilian status and
forced them to take commissions. That still makes no sense to me.
For what it's worth - my Dad got a Black N. He retired as a Captain. You're off base.
I have no idea what a Black N is. Again, my gripe with your story was not that those guys were forgiven for their transgressions and commissioned. It was that your story is almost the polar opposite of what is currently happening. The current situation, as I understand it, is about not kicking someone out with multiple offenses and
allowing him to remain a mid. I understood that your story was about
not allowing the guys (I'm not sure why both of them are mentioned if only one screwed up) to voluntarily turn down a commission -
because they screwed up.
Clearly, with this statement your beef is with USNA. Actually, the purpose of the Naval Academy is to develop midshipmen morally, mentally and physically and to imbue them with the highest ideals of duty, honor and loyalty in order to provide graduates who are dedicated to a career of naval service and have potential for future development in mind and character to assume the highest responsibilities of command, citizenship and government.
I agree whole-heartedly with you. That is a long way of saying what I just said - Warfighters and Leaders. My "beef" is that I don't feel, reading the
current stories, that the
current guy has shown any of those qualities or any potential to develop them. So what is the justification for keeping him around with the afore-mentioned mission of the Academy?
Who? The guy in the OP, or my classmate?
Hopefully that is clear now.
Actually, Annapolis High is on Riva Road. I got a High School diploma there, I got a Bachelor's degree and a commission from USNA. And last I checked, it's got greater than 150 years of developing midshipmen. Yes, some fall through the cracks. Some should be booted out and aren't. Guess what, the WORST officer I've EVER encountered in 17 years wearing a uniform went to a state school, so you can throttle it back a notch.
Again I apologize. In my zeal to offend Academy grads and rile one up, I have offended Academy grads and riled one up. My intentions were nothing less than treacherous, I assure you. I never said that the Academy does not produce fine officers. What I'm asking is this: At a normal college, they can let their athletes get away with pretty much anything because the worst that can happen, really, is that they give some undeserving guy a BA in Physical Education or some such nonsense. For the Academy, who's specific mission is to produce Warfighters and Leaders - or all those other words you used to say the same thing - what is the justification of keeping a guy like the
current one around? I mean, it seems to me that giving him a commission in 2 1/2 years - which if I'm not mistaken is the only alternative to kicking him out - is much worse than just giving him a degree.
Hopefully that clarifies my position somewhat.