In basic in '78, somebody mouthed off to another trainee about being Navajo. The Navajo jumped at him and then stopped and looked at the drill. The drill said, "Go ahead, I don't see anything."
I mean isn't that the right thing to do? What happened to personal honor? I'm not talking about having a duel.. I'm saying standing up for yourself is now illegal.
I never had a DS get physical with me, but a couple guys got black eyes...that was in 1971 and these guys were real screw ups. Once when we were getting punished as a group, a trainee yelled out, "Mother f**king drill sergeants!" He thought he was in the background and wouldn't get caught...he got caught. I was glad because I knew we would all catch hell, and I was having enough hell.
This is a true story that happened with me: I enlisted at the age 17 for the Army. I was a junior in high school so I had to do split op. Basic between me junior and senior year, then A.I.T. after I graduated. I went to basic at Ft. Sill. One of my drill Sgt.s was named T. Jackson. Well I felt the Drill Sgt. paid extra attention and focus on me since I was the youngest in my platoon. At the time being young and stupid I thought he was purposely singling me out. So I devised a plan to leave. Again, I want to point out I was young and stupid. I discussed my plan with a few of my friends and it got back to Drill Sgt. Jackson. He told me:" I heard you were leaving? There ain't no fences, but when you get caught your ass is mine" That night I decided to put my horribly inexperienced and executed plan in to motion. They had our personal belongings in a room locked up. I tried kicking the door in but failed. I went to the drill sgts office and tried picking his lock. He had a Charlotte Hornets sweatshirt he loved hanging on the wall. I ended up getting his door open and grabbing the swearshirt. (So i can blend in. ) it was june and hot so i ripped the sleeves off and threw it on with my pt shorts and shoes. I took off outside and to the railroad tracks located next to Charlie battery. Now I did not know Ft.Sill or Lawton well. This was only 16 days in.( I was in receiving for 5 days then we went to actual boot camp. ) I walked the tracks to Lawton and came across a shopping mall. I walked around it knowing I was now in some deep sh*t. I found a water park that was just opening for the day and went up to it. I had my bank card so I was just going to stay there until i figured out how to get home. Well an M.P. from Ft. Sill was taking his family to the water park noticed me. He made a b line to me and asked me if I was in the service. I thought there is no way he could tell because I have on a sleeveless sweatshirt and shorts. I blend in. Apparently not. He asked and I wasn't going to lie. Would have done no good since he recognized the shirt being Drill Sgts prized signed shirt. I never noticed it was signed until i took it off. He asked me what I was doing and I told him. He was nice and said he didn't want to make a scene but i needed to get in his car. He took me back to base and to the senior drill Sgts office and I explained my thoughts. Then came drill Sgt Jackson. He came in snd and with one hand picked me up and slammed me to the wall. He then made me go back with him to the barracks and into his office. I then donned a gas mask and did so many push ups, sit ups, squat thrusts, that I lost count. I would do 10 extra everytime he said rest just in defiance. He told me he was not pressing charges if I stayed in and would make recommendation that i would not be discharged. He broke character and discussed that he wasn't doing it out of harm or anger, but to strengthen me. I had to eat with him and the other drill Sgts with a bib and he put a top bunk on my bunk. Which i had to sleep in. He also, made it where I had a bunk mate who was responsible for knowing what i did at all times. That went on for 5 weeks and I was smoked every day for 5 weeks then it just stopped. Everything went back to normal. I didn't ask questions, but I scored the highest in my P.T. tests and was the fastest runner in the entire base. After graduation, I sent him a check for the sweatshirt and he returned it saying his payment was my improvement and dedication. To this day I consider him one of the most influential people I have ever known, and only knew him 9 weeks.
This here is probably the best comment posted. I won't question whether it's true or not, it exemplifies the purpose and spirit of basic training. I know Fort Sill as well as Lawton Oklahoma, so this comment has resonated with me.
Ghost,you proved to yourself that you were stronger than you ever knew. Thank you and our other Military for your wonderful,brave hearts!! You ROCK,and I am SO proud and EXTREMELY grateful for each of you!
When I was in USMC bootcamp in the 1990's I was slapped in the face a few times. Regardless of what happened, I never let the DI know that he got me. I learned early on that they were looking for the reaction, the power a recruit/private has is not giving them the reaction they want. The mindset you must have is that they are not doing it to you, but somebody else. If you take it personal you become a marked man. If you show emotion or displeasure, they will make it their mission to take you down.
@@letsgobrandon821 In our platoon and compnay India MCRD San Diego 1991 we were privates during bootcamp. Other companies they were recruits. Our heavy made it clear on drop day that we were privates. It would have been better to go by recruit because the word private had a negative association with it. After graduating as a private it was like nothing had changed.
One recruit was freaking out in the head at like, 1AM. Drill instructor walks in for some reason, and the recruit attacks him. Next morning, the DI was fine, and the recruit was leaving... On an ambulance... This was forming week... Hadn't even met his real DIs yet...
Worse still would be if the offending recruit were made to stand at quarterdeck whilst the platoon was ordered to do punishment PT ( death within 24 hrs !!! Lol )
Exactly! I see US veterans getting beat up in the streets almost everyday, and they love it. If you see a US Veteran, punch him in the face, they actually like it!
@@Chibanah They probably get it from the adults acting the same. Too many people believe that ultimate hell won't come from being strictly obedient to the government in spite of it being spelled out by recorded history of every empire that has a recorded history.
I had a drill that was Japanese. We call him (when he couldnt hear) "Little Godzilla" cause that little guy wrecked shit everywhere he went! We all loved him!!!
This has truly made my day. My brother is in the Air Force and he had an instructor in the academy (I can’t remember his name), now this instructor was Russian and was proud of it. Every Christmas, every class gave him a small bottle of vodka (for the stereotype) and one day, a “student” called him a drunk c*nt and the instructor beat the ever living sh*t outta him WITH A VODKA BOTTLE. Rest of the class just looked the other way and carried on with their work. Best story I’ve ever heard from the military
Was it Sergeant Soto?. My platoon sergeant in Iraq was an ex drill sergeant. Brave man, I saw him (recorded it too) walk through an attack by 12 mortors landing all over the place on the front lawn of the NEC at the IZ (area about half a foot ball field). I have never seen something like that was freaking awesome to see.
There's a fraction of a razor thin line between bravery and stupidity. If someone said that to one of my drill sergeants? Well, we learned to respect our drill sergeants through anxiety ridden fear....except the quiet one. That one......the quiet one: was the scariest. I went to basic training 25 years ago. I recently found out that drill sergeant has since passed away. That hit me in the feels, the hardest ever. Rest well and peacefully SFC M.T.Swift.
Never make someone from africa, s.america or the carribean mad or you'll be shitting out of a tube for the rest of your life and if you make one of their women mad then god help you.
I am a standard issue white guy and felt that all of the drill sergeants treated me the same - regardless of their race or ethnicity. I do remember the black drill sergeants were the toughest on black trainees. I mean, they were harsh. Puerto Rican drill sergeants were definitely the LOUDEST - with the Filipino (especially the short ones) being a close second. As an enlisted soldier who later became an officer, I extend a salute to anyone who was ever a drill sergeant in ANY branch of the armed forces.
My grandfather was a soldier and not the best kind of guy. He called his black drill Sgt a racial slur and he got his four front teeth knocked out because of it
@@derkernspalter I mean, if he's just knocked your teeth out, chances are, you ain't doing shit. You're one of the bad guys that Angry Cops mentioned in his video. Really dude? You're going to call your drill sgt a racial slur and then get upset when he doesn't appreciate it. Okay.
Basic training was the most life changing experience I ever had. You either did what you were told or you were out. No BS period. I think every 18 year old should experience a real wake up call like military basic training one.... I am honored to have made it and had really good DI’s.
I disagree. Most men around the world get drafted. They have just the duty to learn to defend the country and not to get broken and rebuild as killing machines. In most countries you dont even get a passport if you did not your duty. My platoon leader said once: "If I knew that we had a possible war coming up, I would train you hard. We have no war upcoming, so we want to have fun and normal discipline.". I agree, that you US-Soldiers go to war and you enlist yourselfs, and that makes the whole purpose of the training different.
I joined the Air Force in 2003, and while basic training wasn't *extremely* hard, there's absolutely no way they'd have let somebody get away with that level of disrespect. I highly doubt they'd have actually taken it as far as beating somebody, but they'd have definitely made it look like a very aggressive arrest going down.
My DS was from Samoa that was about 6'8" and 300 lbs of absolute muscle. His arms were the size of my leg. ENORMOUS. There was never a question of who was in charge.
I had a Marine Samoan friend like that in Navy A school. He was an E-3, and told his corporal that he would rip his arms out of their sockets if he ever threw his stuff on the floor again. One E-3 that didn't get a lot of shit from anyone. Nice guy though.
Agreed. I shouldn't be getting shouted at by some douchebag drill sergeant. Because it's MY actions. In what time did they have the ownership of my action.
The military today he can totally handle. It's Combat he will have an issue with. I had said in another comment. My husband was on the trail in 13. Even then you can't cuss them , well not supposed to. Just insanity
My god, I've never seen combat but have still seen the struggles of life through multiple home invasions one resulting in me having to shoot and kill the intruder. A part of being able to handle being yelled at is so when a mortar lands 10m from you and rounds are snapping over your head you're not paralyzed in fear and calling your command insults unable to control your emotions and conduct yourself professionally. It's stress innoculation so that you can make the hardest decision in life - snuffing another soul. If nothing else this is a lesson in humbling oneself and picking ones battles.
He talked about the 2 groups of people pissed off, he forgot the third, the group I'm in, those who are pissed off because the drill instructor didn't draw enough blood
I was in USMC boot camp in 1998. Once, one of the recruits in our platoon shoved a DI. He got swarmed by like 5 other DI’s. They chased him off, and we didn’t see him for the rest of the day. That night, he comes stumbling in the squad bay during free time: he was breathing hard, covered in dirt and twigs and stuff, and he just sat down on his footlocker and stared into space for about half an hour. He wouldn’t talk, and he never told us what went down.
I was there January of 1998. It was cold. 1st battalion was doing the crucible. We were there as pullies. Wished could of join. 3 days at the PI... didn't take long to get lock on!
My grandfather said on his first day in basic training, the first thing his drill sgt said was "the rules say I'm not allowed to hit you, but the rules arent always looking" . Or something like that. Yall get the point
We had a guy at Boot who boasted about his Grandfather being a Grand Wizard in the Klan. Our Drill Sergeants assigned the biggest black dude in the platoon as his Battle Buddy. He got his ass kicked daily for about a month. Nobody knew anything. Nobody saw anything. Nobody said anything. They both became Best Friends.
He ran that sewer. He got an education in short order as he should! You step up and run that head you are up to get it knocked off. Drill instructors and drill sergeants have a tough job they don’t have time for B.S.
Guys tried at my unit and I would dead ass throw them into a locker and beg them to hit me. Always tried to go to our CSM and he laughed and told them they probably should listen next time.
Some of my battles were told this during basic in 2016, I guess it just depends were you go. Didn’t even know we had stress cards mandatory sleep times until we graduated.
I was instructing a young recruit on a test equipment. After I warned him not open a valve during testing to avoid serious injury. He then proceeded to reach for the the valve. I yelled at him not to touch the valve. He said "time out". Time out, what is that I asked. He said "If I say time out you need let me have space and give me time regroup". This, to me was the beginning of the decline of discipline in the military.
Jaynology either that or he never got punished in his entire life. Pretty sure you’d be vacuuming the parking lot for a while if you said that. I’m just saying this from what I’ve heard, I’ve never been military.
I saw a dude tell the Drill Sergeant “you can’t touch me.” DS walked behind him and choked him out, threw him to the ground, looked at me and said “when that bitch wakes up, bring him to the 1SG.”
Saw a similar situation at MCRD PI in 1982. Recruit called the SDI homey, thought the SDI was going to kill him, had him by the throat and turned 2sets of racks over with him, scared the hell out of all of us
Gregory Maupin I agree. Even in 2008 in British Army they could only give a max of 25 press-ups for group punishment in training. At the time I could do 100 press-ups in under 2 mins back then
I was 18 and on the Island for 4 weeks. I threw a laundry bag to get it to the pile in time and accidentally hit one of my D.I in the face with it and knocked his cover on the deck! It was a long 2 months after that. He tried to kill me!
My Army DIs were all Vietnam combat veteran's and in '72 the Army was still drafting in a lot of gangsters and thugs but NONE of those guys messed with those drill sergeants... They talked smack in the barracks a lot but none of 'em did squat...
You Reap what you Sow!!! Quit blaming others for your Inanity!!! I am retired disabled after almost 3 decades of service!!! Mr T??? What does that stand for??? Mr Traitor???
@@christianbateman2 ??? Read something that wasn't written??? Did I also hear something that wasn't said??? I am to old for your Games Sonny so on that note, Go back to your COD and GS GO!!! My son could get you in a H2H and I could probably do just as well on a real Battle Field!!!
We had a $hitbird from New York talking Rangers, SF, only to fall out of our 1st PT test and "pull a muscle" during our first road march... He begged to be chaptered out immediately, and even though he expected to be sent right home right away, they held his ass and made him CQ runner (the 1st Sgt's runner/btch) and sweep and buff floors in the company area all day until we graduated basic. Yet he still talked about how he could have handled the crap we were going through and how he was a tough guy back on the block... They eventually had to set up a cot for him in the CQ office so he wouldn't be the guest of honor for a blanket party. The thing is, he might.. MIGHT have been considered a decent guy if he had just kept his mouth shut.
I seen it happen a few times. Seen a DI get attacked after he was warned by said DI it wouldn’t be in his best interest. The recruit broke a window and tried stabbing the DI with broken glass. Recruit got his ass kicked, then the MP’s said he fell down the stairs, and was tasered.
wow. I remember one recruit did something way down the squad bay. not sure what but next thing I know DIs were tossing racks, foot lockers, him. grunts and screams later - he never came back.
Heading into the barracks from a ruck march I was cut off at the doorway by a soldier. Their camelback had their last name on it and as I read it out of reaction I said "Sorry about that Barrera." He stopped and turned around and as soon I realized it was one of the DS he says "What in the f*ck" he then smoked me for an hour had me run the fenceline and do updowns while saying things like "I guess we're buddies now what's your name Tom? John? Timmy? You look like a Timmy let's get a beer after this Timmy." Other DS came up wondering why I was getting smoked so bad. They just laughed and watched until they got bored. I was private dumbdick for a week after that.
There was a guy in my basic unit who did a similar thing after chow. Smoking his butt was a team effort by the Drill Sgts. Three ganged up on him and smoked him soo bad he was throwing up all over the grass in front of the barracks. They then made him do pushups in his own vomit. That was over 30 yrs ago.
I made the mistake of correcting my DS when he butchered my last name, during our first mail call. He never even attempted to come close to getting it right, after that
1977 Fort Dix told my Drill Sargent F-off he said quietly private we need to have a talk in this room I went in the room he closed the door I turned around to face him and his size 11 boot came up and kicked me in the middle of the chest I went backwards threw the side of a gun metal gray locker then he came over pulled me out of locker and calmly asked if I need any further instruction, I did not, I did graduate with my class and never forgot that lesson. Drill Sargent Hines was a very good teacher.
I'm not military, but a Marines friend of mine said a recruit in basic had a very similar story. Only it was cleaning supplies all over the recruit when they came out.
Sounds like my Grandparents, Parents, and yours truly. I don't feel bad for my Grandsons...their parents came from a long line of shut the hell up and do as I say.
I grew up with my Daddy who was a Drill Sergeant in the Army. He could go from zero to a thousand in a split second! He rarely spanked us kids, but we sure did a lot of PT for punishment. I could do a few hundred sit ups and push ups at a time when I was a wee little girl. He had some very creative ways to punish us. He died 2 months ago from brain bleeds. God rest his soul. I miss him so much. ❤️❤️❤️
My Son is in the Air Force. When the SEER interrogation team discovered He came from a Marine Corps Family this Marine WM got real nasty with him and she told him I am gonna break you. She water boarded him then beat him with a wet towel…. He held tough for 24 hours of her treatment. She called me when He graduated and told me “Thank You”, She replied, I think America can trust their secrets to him. No joke Air Force SEER school means to make your understanding clear…
@@Brecconable myself and 3 other Marines took this course and graduated. We never broke. You can do it if you really pack the gear. After 72 hours if you won't break they give up on you.
I'm new army. Went through basic on sand hill in 2018. I can say to this very day this still would've happened. Yes there are "rules" that say they can't touch us but as my drill sgt told us on day one the rules aren't always looking. We were taught to go the other direction if we saw a circle of drill sgts facing outward. If it wasn't seen it didn't happen.
Jamesons Travels the recruits ? Really ? I have no experience with the military but why would the recruits have at him ? Maybe if their instructed to I can see but that’s about it
I've never served, but I did hear of a common response, told to me by vets, that was said when recruits protested that their rights were being violated; the response to them was "You're in the military, You have no rights!." in DS fashion.
Oh forgot to mention. It is my understanding that a DS job is to give recruits the best chance of surviving combat. Why don't DS care about their feelings? To hammer home the point that their feelings are not going to matter in a War Zone. Also, the shouting and yelling is to accustom the recruits to the loud noises that will occur on the fields of battle. Those are my understandings, please correct me should I be in fact wrong.
My Dad was a Okinawa/Guadalcanal/Mariannas Marine (he is guarding the gates now!), my second oldest brother was a Vietnam/Gulf War Marine starting in '67 to '91 (if there are gates to hell, he may be guarding them!), my third oldest brother served in the Marines (Vietnam) from '70-'74 and I am a Marine having served from '78-'00. With my lineage, I was so prepared for Parris Island having been "prepped" all of my childhood. Semper Fi!
My family has a similar history of service. Some of us served out of patriotism others just did their duty even though they did not believe in what they were doing. To avoid service is to just force some poor unfortunate to take your place.
I showed this to my dad...a USMC Infantry Vietnam Vet and he said in his era, the DS wouldve beat him to death, and then the recruits wouldve beat him to death later on
Let’s be real the guy probably deserved it but the drill didn’t deserve to have his career (or what’s left if he’s close to retirement) ruined for some shitbag
MDJ963 might even be a fitness training unit. Was out there once to pass PT and I did it within a week. Lotsa guys were just there waiting to get into actual BCT cycles
TheEverythingGuy _ Ft Benning D-2/47 2010 drill sergeant DID throw a private down the stairs ! 😂🤷🏽♂️ mouth off to a Level 3 MAC instructor and not expect an ass whoopin. Good times HOOAH
Shit wouldn't have happened at Ft. Benning in 2000. I got smoked so bad for a magazine on Sunday, I couldn't lift my arms at PT on Monday. I saw my drill sgt as a civilian and still called him Drill Sergeant. And the short ones and foreign ones were the worst💯
Army here. Only ever seen one time where an NCO laid hands on a lower enlisted. POS soldier shows up to the unit in Korea and he has no problem talking shit to his squad leader. Eventually the NCO brings boxing gloves to work and takes him out to an empty connex and tells him if he wants to fight then this was his chance. What the soldier didn't know was that SGT Anderson is a trained boxer and competes in competitions in the local gym. Boy did that soldier get his ass beat. Good times.
@Andrew Cromartie People don't have restraint, man. Maybe back then, a fist fight could end respectably. Folks can't take that L anymore, it seems like. I agree some military dudes need to drop the god complex (usually it's the slackers or dishonorable discharges putting on the act from what I've seen). People in general need to quit acting like every slight or insult is a life changing attack on their honor. We ain't samurai, death matches are retarded, and some folks need to drop the ego. I think it's somewhat sad that two men can't just have a scrap to settle their grief, but I get what you're saying. Went too far once or twice myself when I was a little shit, so I learned to bite my tongue and stay my hand. Later, a couple servings of humble pie helped with that too, lol
@Andrew Cromartie If only it was the 1950's where you settled with your fist. I don't even know if you know, but statistically, black people really don't get killed that often unjustly. Plus, as Jamesons said, a good beating will get anyone's attention. Think of it like spankings. They get the kids attention and show them what not to do. So what if he slapped him, shouldn't have called him a name, he is your superior. Compare it to a father and son relationship. You aren't just gonna go around calling your dad names with no repercussion, your dad likely gonna beat your ass.
@Andrew Cromartie This is sooooo true. I know a few people that would come back after getting their ass beat and get revenge in the most cowardly way if they had to. It's not about "being a man" or whatever. It's about evening the score in their eyes. These people don't fight by the rules. They fight to win.
I had an uncle who was a Marine DI when they could and would lay hands on recruits. He joined the Corps in 1945. Recruits got beat like scrambled eggs.
@@elavke5441 that's because your parents were abusive and controlling, not a good environment to raise a child and if you were a bit more self aware you would realise how bad that is
@@williamwoods477 my mom never raised a hand to me even if I needed it, time outs or privalege loss was her thing but I didn't push it past that. Her thing was Wait til your daddy gets home. I hated his lectures but when I got older it was the belt. I looked at mom one time and said, I needed that but I ain't gonna tell him that. She looked at me dumb founded.
@@williamwoods477 sometimes a kid needs a good ass whoopins to get the point across due to pier pressure or extreme stubbornness or just testing the boundaries one time too many. They care cared enough to discipline me. I am alive and well, thank you
Any Di does this with me. They leave in a coffin. I have a legal right to defend myself and this prick kept escalating things, just the sort I like. Calling someone out when they are held down, is an act of cowardice. Let me teach this Di that he is incompetent and stupid.
I'm a Marine...I can tell you that my drills staff would have made sure that was the last thing I ever did before going to prison for the rest of my crippled life.
I don't think anyone challenged a Drill Sergeant during my time in training 1974, Those DIs were fresh out of vietnam and crazy enough to kill you, We tried to stay clear of them, We knew they weren't quite right in the head.
YES my Basic Fort Jackson SC. ( 1975) the first week in barracks, we had cry baby's to Chaplain. All the ( DI) did was throw his rack messed up not proper out the new block building. All they did was split us all up. The ( DI) I found out later had gotten ribbon for best company. Are new ( DI) talk to us told us what was going on. He wanted us to be the BEST trained soldiers the Army had. That if all we did was complain the ENEMY doesn't care. We had one Trainy hide drugs ( Pot) in overhead Roof. The MPs Dog was right there sniffing it out. This Lazy Trainy ended up on sick leave call. You walked to Hospital. We had at the time Lots of big city youths from East coast city's. I was one of 4 with highschool graduation, in my whole company. YES all are ( DIs) were Vietnam vets. They had been through Heck over there.
I had Drill Sergeant Pratt at Ft. Leonard Wood in 1969. He was JUST back from 'nam and crazy as a bedbug. If Pratt walked into the room I'm in right now, all my blood would be in my feet. I was a 19 year old draftee. So my attitude was in serious need of adjustment and Sgt. Pratt was the wrench. He often said If I lived through the next two years it would be because of him. He was right. No details, but understand there were times when his voice in my head saved my ass. I'm sure he's gone now and that a quarter can bounce off all the racks in heaven and all the Angels are badasses.
I went in February 1979 Ft.Dix N.J. and they had all been in 'Nam. All airborne Rangers! You couldn't a away with a single thing with those guys around.
All of the drill sergeants in my basic training company saw time in Vietnam. They were tough but never abusive. If they thought we screwed up they would just run us into the ground. They did the same running we did.
Army gets their phones on sundays now lmao, I heard about a recruit a few companies ahead of me in boot camp at Paris Island who hit his DI in boot camp, the Drill instructor was a black belt with a red stripe, kid left with a broken leg 😂 Drill Instructor became a combat instructor after that
Cheers. I know this is late, but I had to add. When I was in basic, we had a guy beat the crap out of 4 drill sergeants before they finally got him down. Apparently he blacked out from heat deprivation. He was so apologetic the next day, and felt so bad. He already knew he was getting kicked out. But he genuinely felt terrible for it. They let him recycle and try again, and he’s still in to this day! 🤘🏻💀🖤
Hell I remember laughing a D.I because he scared the shit out of me getting off the bus Next thing I knew I was picking myself up and the D.i was still yelling at me for getting blood on the yellow foot prints
P.s I left the corp because of weak shit like this. For some odd reason i didn't trust my life in the hands of someone the cried about taking a smack because they fucked up
I was a combat engineer in the Army. While i was part of the E4 Mafia there were two occasions where the platoon sergeant quietly asked for help in 'squaring away' someone with an attitude problem. The second time I lost my cool in the barracks and slugged the guy in the face several times, in front of the whole squad (including the squad leader). My only punishment was I had to wash my squad leader's Humvee. Totally worth it!
If u refer to your group as "Mafia" and talk with pride about "slugging" someone in the face... U should be sent straight to prison. Is this what the army is truly all about? Jeeeezus christ, a bunch of criminals with a uniform.
@@uncle_martin1131 Who the fuck wants to deploy with scumbags that have issues following orders and fail to function as a team asset??? Lets get one of your Sons or Daughters on a highspeed squad and add Mr. 1body to it. Hope you sleep well at night knowing some low life pos is NOT watching your loved one's back
You were a disgrace a real drill sergeant does not hit trainees. There are many ways to physically council a trainees without laying a hand on him I saw this in practice.
@@woodywoodpecker9408 1970 Ft. Ord, Ft. Gordon, Herzogenaurauch W. Germany. 1972 Ugsburgh W. Germany. 1974 and 75 Vietnam75, 76, 77, 78 Germany 79 Ft. Ord. Both in military intelligence and later combat arms.
I was in basic at Ft. Sill in 2003 and we had a mouth off the first week of basic, they put us in the front leaning rest and told us to look at the floor, then the guy who mouthed off got smacked around by the DS. I could hear the smacks, and the guy start to cry ( this happened right across from me) but I was looking down at the floor. I was called in to the CO's office to be a witness...they asked me what I saw...I did not see anything, I was looking at the floor. They did not ask me what I "heard". They smacked him around and stuffed him in a locker, and I was glad it happened, that guy had a big mouth, and could not back it up.
Wow, no kidding. The cadre knew how to play the game. That's brilliant. I would have drawn the line at stuffing him in the locker, but that was really good.
First day in BCT I got dropped with one other female (i don't remember why, I think we looked at each other on accident or something) and the drill Sgt was riffing on us, saying we were disrespectful little sh*ts. I kept my mouth shut and did pushups like I was supposed to coz I'm not an idiot. The other female however... She stood up when he insulted her somehow and said "Excuuuuse me, I-" ...And I will never know what she had to say because IMMEDIATELY the other two drill sgts and the one that was already on her were shouting so loud, her face shriveled into her head, and they completely forgot all about me. She opened her mouth again, and one of them grabbed her by the collar and threw her face into the dirt, where she started doing push ups with angry tears in her eyes. It was hilarious. And she never back talked again.
@@isildurelendurion1822 oooh, good question. Female trainees didn't tend to get physically defensive with non female Drills... Never that I saw. Had the trainee been a male he probably would've had his face in the dirt much faster... Had it been a female Drill though? with the way the female trainee stood up and spoke at them??? I wouldn't be surprised if that trainee had tripped into the drill Sgt on the way to the barracks... And somehow sustained enough injury in her fall to be medically discharged. Or could have healed but still gone on to "fail to adapt" over the coming weeks, and been discharged by those standards... As a female, Male drills would fvck up your day. Female drills would fvck up your life. I'd imagine it's a similar reverse for the males.
When I was in Basic Training there was a guy like that. His uncle was a Command Sergeant Major somewhere special he had more chances than most but he ended up getting kicked out.
Had a guy that made into active duty. Total fuck up. His dad was supposedly a Col or General somewhere. His file finally got big enough they booted his ass. But it took a hell of a lot cuz his daddy kept saving his ass.
We had a recruit quit when I was at Paris island, the drill instructors made us turn around and sit on the deck, the MP's showed up this kid was tossed around like a rag doll while they put him in an orange jumpsuit. Funny thing is a few days before graduation we saw him still in an orange jumpsuit picking up trash. This was probably a month and a half after he quit! We all beat him off the island!
Last in-ranks inspection before they cut us loose, Drill Sergeant Stio told me I was squared away and said, "Harris?!? Who are you, boy? I don't remember seeing you at all the whole cycle!" I answered that I had a mission to keep a low profile. "Mmm hmm, and that's the secret, ain't it?" Yes, Sergeant!
I spent 4 years as a Marine Corps Drill Instructor, and many times my career was on the line. That day I more then would of lost my career. Even if this kid said it to another Drill Instructor, I still would of more then lost my career that day. I'll be damn if that happened to any Marine DI.
Drill Instructor, I truly understand your feelings. Wearing the Hat means having the credibility to back it up. Some not-too-smart wannabe is less than nothing next to the men and women who keep our military staffed, strong, and ready. It is sad that more and more young people leave home without maturity and discipline. Fortunately, incentive training and quarterdecks are still very effective. Many thanks for your service.🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸💪💪
Any drill sergeant going hands on is out of control. I did something to a PFC (trying to throw him out the 3rd floor window) that I have regretted for 50 years.
I told my dad that I could kick his arse when I was 14. He convinced me otherwise with a slap that knocked me into the next week. Right in front of all my friends. Needless to say I made it through boot practically unknown. Never got in trouble. Had a great 10 year run. Thanks Dad!
Same here. Same age..same outcome. Young men sometimes need a good "slap" to remind them where they're at. Saved my life in the long run. You mouth off to the wrong guy no matter how big or small, you could breath you're final breath you never know. A lot of young men without fathers have a real problem with that. There used to bieng little bitches to their mommies. like i said..sometimes they need a good "slap"!!
same, i was 15 at the time, we got in the truck and drove to this open field. my dumbass got ready to fight and my Vietnam vet that flip and drop me in a sec and fuck me up. my rebellious phase lasted a couple of hours.
I sadly thought I was a badass at the age of 10 and told my grandfather about it... when I regained conscious I discovered I had a lot to learn. I made thru boot camp practically unknown, All 3 junior Di's were big and buff (I say big and buff being 6'4)the senior had a crazy look in his eyes... Not sure who the professional wrestler (discount Sgt Slaughter)cutting a promo is...
My dad was a D1 college wrestler so he could pin me no problem. He didn't really street fight and couldn't punch all that hard. We had some good brawls in the kitchen.
You would believe that whomever won any fight is in the right. The fact that playing along with someone would help you in a fight along side him or his other recruits does not mean that he isn't likely to be in charge of a troop against his own neighbors if ordered. If a man calls out his boss, his boss just as likely deserves it. Being the tougher guy or the one in the in charge position does not make one the better person more worthy of or automatically at all of respect.
@@jasonlisonbee you ought to come to Asia where we respect our elders for their experience. There's no mollycodling like the US - and definitely no ice-cream on the front line!
@@messrsandersonco5985 Age and experience are decoupled. Unless you count time being distracted by things that don't affect you but that person's wants should, because of their higher existence period number, always override the sense of duty of those who spent most of their time listening to experts on how the world works and how to solve problems without restricting or shoving people around against their will. Reality restricts. Some only happen to notice when someone makes a move toward creating abundance in something, then blame and force that person to stop under threat of teams of other people who don't care about that person's perspective only that someone appeared to be disrespected by them.
@@jasonlisonbee This sounds like mumbo jumbo from self-help books. We respect our elders and we hope to learn from them - not least of all because they went through the war years. Look around and see how seniors are treated in the US - where 40 is considered 'old'. We had a PM who was 93 and years old. He was as bright as pin, and spoke far better English than your current President even though it was his second language. My advice to you: join the marines and find out what respect means.
German tanker here. Had once a different training crew. I told the loader to turn the turret (which he was educated in, cause all loaders are). He refused twice. By law you have to remind him on his duties, remind him what an order is, remind him about the consequences, and finally repeat the order again. Well, he replied the last order with: "All NCO'S are fucking assholes." Took him, pulled him down from my tank, behind it so the other 2 guys couldn't see, kicked in his balls and threw him into the brig. If I remember he got 14 days in the brig and a quarter of his monthly pay.
@@theanniversary2684 Nope, just somewhere else in Germany, 25 years ago. If I remember correctly it was during a training course (Stationsausbildung) in various topics. Each tank commander had one topic and the crews cycled.
@@couryrussell7653 In all my time as tank commander and platoon sergeant/leader I only had this "incident" with the conscripts. I would not say they were very happy when they had to attend to their service. But especially after basic training by far the most enjoyed their time and were good soldiers.
@@9thbloodandfire508 I always find these situations strange in hindsight. Like your situation all you said was "turn the turret". It's a very simple and easy order to comply with. It's like there are these times when you can ask somebody to do such a simple task, even politely, but something inherent in them just denies the outcome, somehow even being the most pathetic of reasons for the noncompliance. It's always been an enigma to me.
..back in the day, the drill instructor would assign a couple of recruits (usually 'squad leaders') to take the 'mouth' into the head to 'learn him some manners'.
@@wuhanclan You NAILED it! life is toooooo easy for these snowflakes.... everybody should have to do some hard labor so that they respect it. Parents are definitely part of the problem with good intentions but poor execution, they do their kids a disservice. My kid works outside in construction with me for the last year. He's 17 and understands why it's important to appreciate EVERYTHING he has.
@@rjmeyers81 you can still be soft and violent? Look at antifa beating people up because they disagree with them or they just have a different opinion... I think OP meant they can't take criticism... Thin skin...
in boot camp we were allowed to keep our skittles in our MREs. that was the extent of our pleasure. i always appreciated that because it was the one thing we had.
When you join the military, you are agreeing to be a part of a hierarchy of rank. If you don't want to respect that or be a part of it, then why join in the first place?
uomo d'onore The recruit could had just snapped. It’s not that he didn’t want to be a part of it. Maybe he just felt the D.I was being unfair with him. I hope the DI got in trouble man. You don’t respond to insults with violence. It’s only going to make things worse. Bad DI.
Those are the hold overs too. I know the guy. They kept recycling him through Boot Camp. He kept yelling at the Drill Sargents and failed to listen to their instructions. I knew him in high school from JROTC, and made a pledge to serve and he always kept bragging. Look who's bragging now.
I was never in the Military (other than as a dependent) but my "Business Law 101" class in college ('87) was taught by a Retired Marine Drill Instructor. I loved that class! Professor (PhD) told us he started in the Marines when a DI could do whatever they needed to do to recruits. Then the rules changed to prevent them "touching" the recruits. Apparently their interpretation of that rule was that while they could not touch the recruit, that clothing that the Recruit was wearing was property of the US Marines, and could be thrown across the room regardless of the Recruit wearing it. And that recruit better take care of that uniform, don't get any blood on it until Authorized! Sounded reasonable to me.
I never saw a Company Commander beat a recruit but I did see some recruits who got bloodied when they fell in the shower and smacked their heads into the tile walls while they and the Company Commander were inspecting the cleaning of the head. Those floors can be slippery.
In basic in '78, somebody mouthed off to another trainee about being Navajo. The Navajo jumped at him and then stopped and looked at the drill. The drill said, "Go ahead, I don't see anything."
I mean isn't that the right thing to do? What happened to personal honor? I'm not talking about having a duel.. I'm saying standing up for yourself is now illegal.
@@bearsquatchadventures4356 ya, they're trying to take the warrior out of men. It's pathetic.
That's old school.
I like di's like them
Now THAT is awesome 😂😂😂
I never saw a Drill Sergeant beat up a private. I did -- however -- see a lot of privates fall down the stairs.
Yeah, those magical stairs that tend to come out of no where
Anthony Wyse Every now and then, you’ll get domed by those damn ammo cans falling from the top of your wall locker...
I never had a DS get physical with me, but a couple guys got black eyes...that was in 1971 and these guys were real screw ups. Once when we were getting punished as a group, a trainee yelled out, "Mother f**king drill sergeants!" He thought he was in the background and wouldn't get caught...he got caught. I was glad because I knew we would all catch hell, and I was having enough hell.
🤣🤣
Tie your shoe !!!!!! Lol as they hit the bottom
This is a true story that happened with me: I enlisted at the age 17 for the Army. I was a junior in high school so I had to do split op. Basic between me junior and senior year, then A.I.T. after I graduated. I went to basic at Ft. Sill. One of my drill Sgt.s was named T. Jackson. Well I felt the Drill Sgt. paid extra attention and focus on me since I was the youngest in my platoon. At the time being young and stupid I thought he was purposely singling me out. So I devised a plan to leave. Again, I want to point out I was young and stupid. I discussed my plan with a few of my friends and it got back to Drill Sgt. Jackson. He told me:" I heard you were leaving? There ain't no fences, but when you get caught your ass is mine" That night I decided to put my horribly inexperienced and executed plan in to motion. They had our personal belongings in a room locked up. I tried kicking the door in but failed. I went to the drill sgts office and tried picking his lock. He had a Charlotte Hornets sweatshirt he loved hanging on the wall. I ended up getting his door open and grabbing the swearshirt. (So i can blend in. ) it was june and hot so i ripped the sleeves off and threw it on with my pt shorts and shoes. I took off outside and to the railroad tracks located next to Charlie battery. Now I did not know Ft.Sill or Lawton well. This was only 16 days in.( I was in receiving for 5 days then we went to actual boot camp. ) I walked the tracks to Lawton and came across a shopping mall. I walked around it knowing I was now in some deep sh*t. I found a water park that was just opening for the day and went up to it. I had my bank card so I was just going to stay there until i figured out how to get home. Well an M.P. from Ft. Sill was taking his family to the water park noticed me. He made a b line to me and asked me if I was in the service. I thought there is no way he could tell because I have on a sleeveless sweatshirt and shorts. I blend in. Apparently not. He asked and I wasn't going to lie. Would have done no good since he recognized the shirt being Drill Sgts prized signed shirt. I never noticed it was signed until i took it off. He asked me what I was doing and I told him. He was nice and said he didn't want to make a scene but i needed to get in his car. He took me back to base and to the senior drill Sgts office and I explained my thoughts. Then came drill Sgt Jackson. He came in snd and with one hand picked me up and slammed me to the wall. He then made me go back with him to the barracks and into his office. I then donned a gas mask and did so many push ups, sit ups, squat thrusts, that I lost count. I would do 10 extra everytime he said rest just in defiance. He told me he was not pressing charges if I stayed in and would make recommendation that i would not be discharged. He broke character and discussed that he wasn't doing it out of harm or anger, but to strengthen me. I had to eat with him and the other drill Sgts with a bib and he put a top bunk on my bunk. Which i had to sleep in. He also, made it where I had a bunk mate who was responsible for knowing what i did at all times. That went on for 5 weeks and I was smoked every day for 5 weeks then it just stopped. Everything went back to normal. I didn't ask questions, but I scored the highest in my P.T. tests and was the fastest runner in the entire base. After graduation, I sent him a check for the sweatshirt and he returned it saying his payment was my improvement and dedication. To this day I consider him one of the most influential people I have ever known, and only knew him 9 weeks.
This here is probably the best comment posted. I won't question whether it's true or not, it exemplifies the purpose and spirit of basic training. I know Fort Sill as well as Lawton Oklahoma, so this comment has resonated with me.
Thank God you didn't desert. Most deserters regrets it later.
Ghost,you proved to yourself that you were stronger than you ever knew. Thank you and our other Military for your wonderful,brave hearts!! You ROCK,and I am SO proud and EXTREMELY grateful for each of you!
Wow bro! Good job!!
Did you ever keep in touch with him?
When I was in USMC bootcamp in the 1990's I was slapped in the face a few times. Regardless of what happened, I never let the DI know that he got me. I learned early on that they were looking for the reaction, the power a recruit/private has is not giving them the reaction they want. The mindset you must have is that they are not doing it to you, but somebody else. If you take it personal you become a marked man. If you show emotion or displeasure, they will make it their mission to take you down.
@@letsgobrandon821 In our platoon and compnay India MCRD San Diego 1991 we were privates during bootcamp. Other companies they were recruits. Our heavy made it clear on drop day that we were privates. It would have been better to go by recruit because the word private had a negative association with it. After graduating as a private it was like nothing had changed.
A slap is more insulting than a punch
Ah good point. The B slap.
Correct. A slap in the face with a glove, lead to duells among the so called gentlemen in the 1700- early 1800s...
it sure is, a slap is to humiliate, it wounds your ego harder than a punch
That’s the same type of slap my mom used on me when I was being a disrespectful little shit
Done properly. Almost casually with the back of the hand. No need to rattle a chap's teeth. They are a child again, in front of all their mates.
As a former DI I can honestly say that if a recruit said that about me I would have ripped his soul from his body
That is something a DI would honestly say to
Jim Smallwood death by PT lol
One recruit was freaking out in the head at like, 1AM. Drill instructor walks in for some reason, and the recruit attacks him.
Next morning, the DI was fine, and the recruit was leaving... On an ambulance...
This was forming week... Hadn't even met his real DIs yet...
@@dennissaintaubin717 pizza party
Worse still would be if the offending recruit were made to stand at quarterdeck whilst the platoon was ordered to do punishment PT ( death within 24 hrs !!! Lol )
Never heard of any soldier getting PTSD from getting their ass beat in boot camp.
Watch Angry Cops Anti-military kid video. You’ll have your mind blown from the “PTSD” on this dumbass.
@@lifotheparty6195 May you please inform me on what the tap tap signifies? I'm failing to see the connection between the DS question and the tap.
@@lifotheparty6195 Thank you for clarifying the meaning for me.
Can I make a FMJ reference, or are we keeping this in the realm of reality lol
Exactly! I see US veterans getting beat up in the streets almost everyday, and they love it. If you see a US Veteran, punch him in the face, they actually like it!
My recruiter told me, "Your goal is to get to graduation and the drill sergeant not know your name."
Very True
Mission accomplished
I don't really agree. I felt my Drills knew me and it helped!
Put that in EVERY smart book!!!!
old school
hoorah
continue to march
The Most Well-Respected Rule: If your gonna disrespect someone, expect retaliation.
If a beat down is what comes of it, the disrespect was proved earned.
Not retaliation, absolute smokery
Even a much older and simple one, action = reaction.
I think many young people today think there are no consequences of their actions.
@@Chibanah They probably get it from the adults acting the same. Too many people believe that ultimate hell won't come from being strictly obedient to the government in spite of it being spelled out by recorded history of every empire that has a recorded history.
"I'm The Guy Reacting To A Guy That's Reacting To Another Guy Reacting To A Guy" 😂😂 I had to do it great video
Guy-reacting-to-a-guy-ception? lol
This deserved way way more thumbs up’s
Inception......
I'm confused.
For Those Of Whom Dont Get It It Is A Tropic Thunder Reference One Of Robert Downey Jrs Most Remembered Script Lines
I had a drill that was Japanese. We call him (when he couldnt hear) "Little Godzilla" cause that little guy wrecked shit everywhere he went! We all loved him!!!
I had a Puerto Rican DI wasn’t overly built but was tougher then nails
My Drill Instructor was Japanese also. SSGT Cabot! San Diego CA . "82" That guy treated us like Prisoners of War.
This has truly made my day. My brother is in the Air Force and he had an instructor in the academy (I can’t remember his name), now this instructor was Russian and was proud of it. Every Christmas, every class gave him a small bottle of vodka (for the stereotype) and one day, a “student” called him a drunk c*nt and the instructor beat the ever living sh*t outta him WITH A VODKA BOTTLE. Rest of the class just looked the other way and carried on with their work. Best story I’ve ever heard from the military
Sounds like Robles.
Was it Sergeant Soto?. My platoon sergeant in Iraq was an ex drill sergeant. Brave man, I saw him (recorded it too) walk through an attack by 12 mortors landing all over the place on the front lawn of the NEC at the IZ (area about half a foot ball field). I have never seen something like that was freaking awesome to see.
There's a fraction of a razor thin line between bravery and stupidity. If someone said that to one of my drill sergeants? Well, we learned to respect our drill sergeants through anxiety ridden fear....except the quiet one. That one......the quiet one: was the scariest.
I went to basic training 25 years ago. I recently found out that drill sergeant has since passed away. That hit me in the feels, the hardest ever. Rest well and peacefully SFC M.T.Swift.
I had 2 black, 1 white, and 1 Hispanic drills. The Hispanic drill still scares me and I’ve been out for 15 years
Never make someone from africa, s.america or the carribean mad or you'll be shitting out of a tube for the rest of your life and if you make one of their women mad then god help you.
@@--------352 lol
@@--------352 Lol
I am a standard issue white guy and felt that all of the drill sergeants treated me the same - regardless of their race or ethnicity. I do remember the black drill sergeants were the toughest on black trainees. I mean, they were harsh.
Puerto Rican drill sergeants were definitely the LOUDEST - with the Filipino (especially the short ones) being a close second. As an enlisted soldier who later became an officer, I extend a salute to anyone who was ever a drill sergeant in ANY branch of the armed forces.
@Ghost Of Recon
Do you mean 2 dark green, 1 light green and one latte green?
My grandfather was a soldier and not the best kind of guy. He called his black drill Sgt a racial slur and he got his four front teeth knocked out because of it
Wow. Old school. He never called that Drill a name again. Hope it work for him long term.
@@JamesonsTravels At least he had free dental
@@derkernspalter sure you would've bud.
@@derkernspalter I mean, if he's just knocked your teeth out, chances are, you ain't doing shit. You're one of the bad guys that Angry Cops mentioned in his video. Really dude? You're going to call your drill sgt a racial slur and then get upset when he doesn't appreciate it. Okay.
@@jonnywilson9117 I want to see your dumb face if someone "just" knocks 4 teeth out of your mouth for a slur.
Basic training was the most life changing experience I ever had.
You either did what you were told or you were out. No BS period.
I think every 18 year old should experience a real wake up call like military basic training one.... I am honored to have made it and had really good DI’s.
What branch were you in? I'm enlisting in the marines next june.
Loved every moment of basic the more I think of it the amount of fun and good memories I had. Some of the most fun I don't want to do again
@@cummdiggitydoogenstein any tips for basic? or getting better prepared for basic?
I disagree. Most men around the world get drafted. They have just the duty to learn to defend the country and not to get broken and rebuild as killing machines. In most countries you dont even get a passport if you did not your duty.
My platoon leader said once: "If I knew that we had a possible war coming up, I would train you hard. We have no war upcoming, so we want to have fun and normal discipline.". I agree, that you US-Soldiers go to war and you enlist yourselfs, and that makes the whole purpose of the training different.
@@beebadoobie8429 Just remember, it‘s all a game. And you can never win it. You’re gonna get smoked no matter what you do.
I joined the Air Force in 2003, and while basic training wasn't *extremely* hard, there's absolutely no way they'd have let somebody get away with that level of disrespect. I highly doubt they'd have actually taken it as far as beating somebody, but they'd have definitely made it look like a very aggressive arrest going down.
My DS was from Samoa that was about 6'8" and 300 lbs of absolute muscle. His arms were the size of my leg. ENORMOUS. There was never a question of who was in charge.
Sounds a little like my Platoon Sergeant.
One of our Sgts when I was in training was about 5' 6" and 12 and a bit stone, he still scared the shit out of me!
I had a Marine Samoan friend like that in Navy A school. He was an E-3, and told his corporal that he would rip his arms out of their sockets if he ever threw his stuff on the floor again. One E-3 that didn't get a lot of shit from anyone. Nice guy though.
Your DS honestly sounds like Dwayne Johnson
Sounds like my uncle nah lol Samoans may look scary but they are really nice in person tho
“Be humble or get humbled”- Jocko willink
@Andrew Cromartie Jesus was all about being humble. I think the Di's just have a different way of getting there.
Wisdom
I love the feeling of a humbler on my spot
If you're old enough to join, you're old enough to own your actions.
SPOT ON. BEN.
Agreed. I shouldn't be getting shouted at by some douchebag drill sergeant. Because it's MY actions. In what time did they have the ownership of my action.
@@saryrios6029 Sounds like you've been shouted at by your drill sergeant
@@nicholasjeremyson i mean hes rigth tho
Ooffff imagine saying that to a new recruit and then having his CO say you gon die😂😂
In my day, not saying it ever happened. He’s getting a blanket party with a bunch of love from his fellow recruits.
If private can't handle a slap, how can he handle life let alone military life.
Life killed this man
The military today he can totally handle. It's Combat he will have an issue with. I had said in another comment. My husband was on the trail in 13. Even then you can't cuss them , well not supposed to. Just insanity
My god, I've never seen combat but have still seen the struggles of life through multiple home invasions one resulting in me having to shoot and kill the intruder. A part of being able to handle being yelled at is so when a mortar lands 10m from you and rounds are snapping over your head you're not paralyzed in fear and calling your command insults unable to control your emotions and conduct yourself professionally. It's stress innoculation so that you can make the hardest decision in life - snuffing another soul. If nothing else this is a lesson in humbling oneself and picking ones battles.
@@StockedShelves true dude true
He talked about the 2 groups of people pissed off, he forgot the third, the group I'm in, those who are pissed off because the drill instructor didn't draw enough blood
I was in USMC boot camp in 1998. Once, one of the recruits in our platoon shoved a DI. He got swarmed by like 5 other DI’s. They chased him off, and we didn’t see him for the rest of the day. That night, he comes stumbling in the squad bay during free time: he was breathing hard, covered in dirt and twigs and stuff, and he just sat down on his footlocker and stared into space for about half an hour. He wouldn’t talk, and he never told us what went down.
Awesome, I went through PI June 2 - Aug. 28 1998. Semper Fi brother!
I was there January of 1998. It was cold. 1st battalion was doing the crucible. We were there as pullies. Wished could of join. 3 days at the PI... didn't take long to get lock on!
@@bigbuss7419 Lord said it wasn't in his plans for ya brother.
@@familyman3942 I wish I could of bro. I wish..God's good.
I never saw that in 1986 brothers. Our Heavy actually dared recruits to take him on. F no
My grandfather said on his first day in basic training, the first thing his drill sgt said was "the rules say I'm not allowed to hit you, but the rules arent always looking" . Or something like that. Yall get the point
Go ahead and don’t follow the rules dey goin be the first drill sgt to get popped by a recruit 🤣
@@memo5230 nice try no dice.
That's bad follow the rules
@@YoungRin-ms things were a lot different back in the late 1940's lol
Lol sounds like my grandfather's and my great uncle.
The only Drill Instructor I’ve met was from the USMC and holy crap he is the most intimidating and inspiring person I’ve ever met
That Drill Sergeant must be Italian. I listened to a whole conversation just by watching his hands. :)
EY ...OH... Whatsa matta wita you huh? You no lika dah way I talk?
Angry cops is one of my favorite UA-cam’s, lmao
>thinking italians are not white
@-- um, im italian man. Italians are white. I realize we tan well but......do you not know italians are white?
@@alevegaliolios Is this guy serious?
We had a guy at Boot who boasted about his Grandfather being a Grand Wizard in the Klan. Our Drill Sergeants assigned the biggest black dude in the platoon as his Battle Buddy.
He got his ass kicked daily for about a month. Nobody knew anything. Nobody saw anything. Nobody said anything.
They both became Best Friends.
Mickey Ekanger hehehe I love that shit 😏
😂😂😂
Mickey Ekanger 😅😅😅😅😅
😅He loves the hate out of him😅
Mickey Ekanger and they both grew as men. Sadly things are way out of wack now and we are all reaping the results.
As an ARMY vet I cannot believe the DS hit him... OPEN handed, that private would have been swallowing teeth if he pulled that shit at his unit
That's cause open-handed only lands him an Article 15. Closed fist would've been a court martial.
Definitely share your sentiments.
@Guns4 aghost I bet he gave that kid's mom 60-90 days of "extra duty" when she came to pick up her son. DAMNNN!
He ran that sewer. He got an education in short order as he should! You step up and run that head you are up to get it knocked off. Drill instructors and drill sergeants have a tough job they don’t have time for B.S.
That would not have happened in my days they didn't have cell phones and the di would not have bitch slapped him he'd have layed him out
Guys tried at my unit and I would dead ass throw them into a locker and beg them to hit me. Always tried to go to our CSM and he laughed and told them they probably should listen next time.
Respect is a foreign word to this new gen
Old Marine Corp quote "If I can't make ya smart I can make you Strong"
Some of my battles were told this during basic in 2016, I guess it just depends were you go. Didn’t even know we had stress cards mandatory sleep times until we graduated.
My old man used that on me all the time and now I use it on my sons.
I eventually got strong. I never got smart...haha.
My DI sure did make me stronger but I didn't quit get smarter
@Roy Billings Some of that Old Marine Corps spirit huh 😂
3rd Bat 2nd Mar Div
I was instructing a young recruit on a test equipment. After I warned him not open a valve during testing to avoid serious injury. He then proceeded to reach for the the valve. I yelled at him not to touch the valve. He said "time out". Time out, what is that I asked. He said "If I say time out you need let me have space and give me time regroup". This, to me was the beginning of the decline of discipline in the military.
Yep
Shoulda sent him to the naughty corner like a kindergartner.
oh my gawd, he told you "time out"? , i'd stop the clock and say I agree with him and get the CO, that's hilarious.
Jaynology either that or he never got punished in his entire life. Pretty sure you’d be vacuuming the parking lot for a while if you said that.
I’m just saying this from what I’ve heard, I’ve never been military.
WHAT!? LET YOU HAVE TIME AND SPACE!? ! I see what DI's go through now...
I saw a dude tell the Drill Sergeant “you can’t touch me.” DS walked behind him and choked him out, threw him to the ground, looked at me and said “when that bitch wakes up, bring him to the 1SG.”
He got dropped
🤣🤣🤣👏👏👏👏👏
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
Holy Jesus that's awesome lol
Saw a similar situation at MCRD PI in 1982. Recruit called the SDI homey, thought the SDI was going to kill him, had him by the throat and turned 2sets of racks over with him, scared the hell out of all of us
That fool was asking for a beat down. S.D.I ARE NOT TO BE PLAYED WITH.
We need to toughen up our bootcamps again. This PC CRAP is BS
True
Gregory Maupin I agree. Even in 2008 in British Army they could only give a max of 25 press-ups for group punishment in training. At the time I could do 100 press-ups in under 2 mins back then
@RIP Lil Peep I'm 100% positive you never been in the military lol and I'm black
RIP Lil Peep wtf are you talking about guy. I’ve never seen that happen
Preach it!
I was scared shi*less of my DI when I was 19. The thought to even look at him wrong never even crossed my mind! 🤣
I was 18 and on the Island for 4 weeks. I threw a laundry bag to get it to the pile in time and accidentally hit one of my D.I in the face with it and knocked his cover on the deck! It was a long 2 months after that. He tried to kill me!
My Army DIs were all Vietnam combat veteran's and in '72 the Army was still drafting in a lot of gangsters and thugs but NONE of those guys messed with those drill sergeants...
They talked smack in the barracks a lot but none of 'em did squat...
and thats the way it should be
@@adamhalcyon3393 I feel bad for you. Damn
When you join the military , they are your new owner.
You Reap what you Sow!!! Quit blaming others for your Inanity!!! I am retired disabled after almost 3 decades of service!!! Mr T??? What does that stand for??? Mr Traitor???
@@kellysheros1 dude, chill the fuck out, you read something that wasn't written
@@christianbateman2 ??? Read something that wasn't written??? Did I also hear something that wasn't said??? I am to old for your Games Sonny so on that note, Go back to your COD and GS GO!!! My son could get you in a H2H and I could probably do just as well on a real Battle Field!!!
@@kellysheros1 Nice troll bro.
@@kellysheros1 Shut the fuck up 🤦🏾♂️
Unless you're a Man of discipline and moral conduct I strongly advise you shut ya ass up.
We had a $hitbird from New York talking Rangers, SF, only to fall out of our 1st PT test and "pull a muscle" during our first road march... He begged to be chaptered out immediately, and even though he expected to be sent right home right away, they held his ass and made him CQ runner (the 1st Sgt's runner/btch) and sweep and buff floors in the company area all day until we graduated basic. Yet he still talked about how he could have handled the crap we were going through and how he was a tough guy back on the block... They eventually had to set up a cot for him in the CQ office so he wouldn't be the guest of honor for a blanket party. The thing is, he might.. MIGHT have been considered a decent guy if he had just kept his mouth shut.
I’m a US Army veteran and this private was definitely in need of “wall to wall counseling”.
Yeah. That punk-ass E-nothing had it coming.
“E-Nothing”🤣🤣🤣🤣
He was in need of a blanket party
Disagree.
Potter's Police, Security and Railway videos you’re soft then
I seen it happen a few times. Seen a DI get attacked after he was warned by said DI it wouldn’t be in his best interest. The recruit broke a window and tried stabbing the DI with broken glass. Recruit got his ass kicked, then the MP’s said he fell down the stairs, and was tasered.
wow. I remember one recruit did something way down the squad bay. not sure what but next thing I know DIs were tossing racks, foot lockers, him. grunts and screams later - he never came back.
@@JamesonsTravels I think he's dead
@@JamesonsTravels Who ordered the Code Red? YOU CAN"T HANDLE THE TRUTH!!!
Heading into the barracks from a ruck march I was cut off at the doorway by a soldier. Their camelback had their last name on it and as I read it out of reaction I said "Sorry about that Barrera." He stopped and turned around and as soon I realized it was one of the DS he says "What in the f*ck" he then smoked me for an hour had me run the fenceline and do updowns while saying things like "I guess we're buddies now what's your name Tom? John? Timmy? You look like a Timmy let's get a beer after this Timmy." Other DS came up wondering why I was getting smoked so bad. They just laughed and watched until they got bored. I was private dumbdick for a week after that.
Lol
There was a guy in my basic unit who did a similar thing after chow. Smoking his butt was a team effort by the Drill Sgts. Three ganged up on him and smoked him soo bad he was throwing up all over the grass in front of the barracks. They then made him do pushups in his own vomit. That was over 30 yrs ago.
I made the mistake of correcting my DS when he butchered my last name, during our first mail call. He never even attempted to come close to getting it right, after that
This DI should be given a pay increase. Idk maybe 3% basically nothing but a thank you none the less. God bless him.
1977 Fort Dix told my Drill Sargent F-off he said quietly private we need to have a talk in this room I went in the room he closed the door I turned around to face him and his size 11 boot came up and kicked me in the middle of the chest I went backwards threw the side of a gun metal gray locker then he came over pulled me out of locker and calmly asked if I need any further instruction, I did not, I did graduate with my class and never forgot that lesson. Drill Sargent Hines was a very good teacher.
Lesson learned and well done for graduating 👏
I'm not military, but a Marines friend of mine said a recruit in basic had a very similar story. Only it was cleaning supplies all over the recruit when they came out.
Sounds like my Grandparents, Parents, and yours truly. I don't feel bad for my Grandsons...their parents came from a long line of shut the hell up and do as I say.
Get a size 11 boot print on your chest in case you ever meet him again.
@@britvic4334 they did not
I grew up with my Daddy who was a Drill Sergeant in the Army. He could go from zero to a thousand in a split second! He rarely spanked us kids, but we sure did a lot of PT for punishment. I could do a few hundred sit ups and push ups at a time when I was a wee little girl. He had some very creative ways to punish us. He died 2 months ago from brain bleeds. God rest his soul. I miss him so much. ❤️❤️❤️
so sorry for your loss
condolences.
Sorry 😞 for your loss.
Don’t even want to imagine the feeling.. God rest his soul.
God Bless you and your family. You sacrificed too for the benefit of our country. Thank you
Sorry for your lost
Private: "He slapped me!"
SERE training: "Really?"
My Son is in the Air Force. When the SEER interrogation team discovered He came from a Marine Corps Family this Marine WM got real nasty with him and she told him I am gonna break you. She water boarded him then beat him with a wet towel…. He held tough for 24 hours of her treatment.
She called me when He graduated and told me “Thank You”, She replied, I think America can trust their secrets to him.
No joke Air Force SEER school means to make your understanding clear…
@@curtiscains8533 The lady tortured him for 24 hours? She didn't sleep?
@@appa609 They take it in turns. Most RTI (Resistance To Interrogation) lasts from 24-72 hours.
@@Brecconable myself and 3 other Marines took this course and graduated. We never broke. You can do it if you really pack the gear. After 72 hours if you won't break they give up on you.
I'm new army. Went through basic on sand hill in 2018. I can say to this very day this still would've happened. Yes there are "rules" that say they can't touch us but as my drill sgt told us on day one the rules aren't always looking. We were taught to go the other direction if we saw a circle of drill sgts facing outward. If it wasn't seen it didn't happen.
Exactly.
When I was basic in 2017/18 in MCRD San Diego some recruit throw a punch at his SDI and ended up in the hospital. So don’t fight your DI or SDI
it usually ends up poorly for the recruit.
He had a death wish
The brother hood of steel has a base in San Diego??
It sucks that this Sergeant is probably gonna get disciplined for putting his hands on him. I don’t even want to imagine what DI’s would’ve done
Darn camera. Beat down would have been unreal in the Corps.
The recruits would have got him worse than the DIs.
Yeah haha
Jamesons Travels the recruits ? Really ? I have no experience with the military but why would the recruits have at him ? Maybe if their instructed to I can see but that’s about it
dawsyn, because that guy probably got the whole platoon smoked. Recruits don’t want a dumbass getting them into trouble
The military shouldn’t care about your feelings. Play stupid games, win stupid prizes.
It's been my experience they don't
Trust me, they don't care about your feelings lmao
I've never served, but I did hear of a common response, told to me by vets, that was said when recruits protested that their rights were being violated; the response to them was "You're in the military, You have no rights!." in DS fashion.
Oh forgot to mention. It is my understanding that a DS job is to give recruits the best chance of surviving combat. Why don't DS care about their feelings? To hammer home the point that their feelings are not going to matter in a War Zone. Also, the shouting and yelling is to accustom the recruits to the loud noises that will occur on the fields of battle. Those are my understandings, please correct me should I be in fact wrong.
Somthing bout bulls having horns n what happens when u fuck with either
My Dad was a Okinawa/Guadalcanal/Mariannas Marine (he is guarding the gates now!), my second oldest brother was a Vietnam/Gulf War Marine starting in '67 to '91 (if there are gates to hell, he may be guarding them!), my third oldest brother served in the Marines (Vietnam) from '70-'74 and I am a Marine having served from '78-'00. With my lineage, I was so prepared for Parris Island having been "prepped" all of my childhood. Semper Fi!
My family has a similar history of service. Some of us served out of patriotism others just did their duty even though they did not believe in what they were doing. To avoid service is to just force some poor unfortunate to take your place.
Your families certainly stood their watch for their country.
Thank You, to all of them.
Semper Fi, Marines.
Wow, there was no pressure on you there!!
I showed this to my dad...a USMC Infantry Vietnam Vet and he said in his era, the DS wouldve beat him to death, and then the recruits wouldve beat him to death later on
Ft. Benning 2019, absolutely no phones and I had to stop my DS from throwing a kid down the stairs.
😂😂😂😂🤣🤣🤣
Let’s be real the guy probably deserved it but the drill didn’t deserve to have his career (or what’s left if he’s close to retirement) ruined for some shitbag
MDJ963 might even be a fitness training unit. Was out there once to pass PT and I did it within a week. Lotsa guys were just there waiting to get into actual BCT cycles
TheEverythingGuy _ Ft Benning D-2/47 2010 drill sergeant DID throw a private down the stairs ! 😂🤷🏽♂️ mouth off to a Level 3 MAC instructor and not expect an ass whoopin. Good times HOOAH
Shit wouldn't have happened at Ft. Benning in 2000. I got smoked so bad for a magazine on Sunday, I couldn't lift my arms at PT on Monday. I saw my drill sgt as a civilian and still called him Drill Sergeant. And the short ones and foreign ones were the worst💯
Army here. Only ever seen one time where an NCO laid hands on a lower enlisted. POS soldier shows up to the unit in Korea and he has no problem talking shit to his squad leader. Eventually the NCO brings boxing gloves to work and takes him out to an empty connex and tells him if he wants to fight then this was his chance. What the soldier didn't know was that SGT Anderson is a trained boxer and competes in competitions in the local gym. Boy did that soldier get his ass beat. Good times.
@Andrew Cromartie People don't have restraint, man. Maybe back then, a fist fight could end respectably. Folks can't take that L anymore, it seems like. I agree some military dudes need to drop the god complex (usually it's the slackers or dishonorable discharges putting on the act from what I've seen). People in general need to quit acting like every slight or insult is a life changing attack on their honor. We ain't samurai, death matches are retarded, and some folks need to drop the ego.
I think it's somewhat sad that two men can't just have a scrap to settle their grief, but I get what you're saying. Went too far once or twice myself when I was a little shit, so I learned to bite my tongue and stay my hand. Later, a couple servings of humble pie helped with that too, lol
@Andrew Cromartie If only it was the 1950's where you settled with your fist. I don't even know if you know, but statistically, black people really don't get killed that often unjustly. Plus, as Jamesons said, a good beating will get anyone's attention. Think of it like spankings. They get the kids attention and show them what not to do. So what if he slapped him, shouldn't have called him a name, he is your superior. Compare it to a father and son relationship. You aren't just gonna go around calling your dad names with no repercussion, your dad likely gonna beat your ass.
@Andrew Cromartie Well real life isn't a movie. Things that seem crazy happen to plenty of people every day. Oh, and I 100% support what that NCO did.
@Andrew Cromartie This is sooooo true. I know a few people that would come back after getting their ass beat and get revenge in the most cowardly way if they had to. It's not about "being a man" or whatever. It's about evening the score in their eyes. These people don't fight by the rules. They fight to win.
@@rustifowler9384 “they fight to win” sounds like the logical path to take
I had an uncle who was a Marine DI when they could and would lay hands on recruits. He joined the Corps in 1945. Recruits got beat like scrambled eggs.
THE " OLD BREED " , MAKING OR BREAKING ONE , ATTITUDE ADJUSTMENTS WHEN NEEDED.
I didn't go to the military, but Dad did. And I guarantee you, if I'd EVER talked to him or mom that way, I'd be missing a tooth or two today!
my mother would have knocked my teeth out,
Not sure what mine would have done but where or not she did anything to me, I would have been done when dad got home
@@elavke5441 that's because your parents were abusive and controlling, not a good environment to raise a child and if you were a bit more self aware you would realise how bad that is
@@williamwoods477 my mom never raised a hand to me even if I needed it, time outs or privalege loss was her thing but I didn't push it past that. Her thing was Wait til your daddy gets home. I hated his lectures but when I got older it was the belt. I looked at mom one time and said, I needed that but I ain't gonna tell him that. She looked at me dumb founded.
@@williamwoods477 sometimes a kid needs a good ass whoopins to get the point across due to pier pressure or extreme stubbornness or just testing the boundaries one time too many. They care cared enough to discipline me. I am alive and well, thank you
Afterwards he was asked "why the dishonorable discharge?"
He answered "the Army failed to adapt to me." 😂
The kid asked for an attitude adjustment... his wish was granted. To be honest, I'm quite impressed with the DIs restraint.
Any Di does this with me. They leave in a coffin. I have a legal right to defend myself and this prick kept escalating things, just the sort I like. Calling someone out when they are held down, is an act of cowardice. Let me teach this Di that he is incompetent and stupid.
@@feartheduck6664 oooo shiver me timbers ooooooo I bet the DI is pissing himself rn oooooooooooo shaking in his boots oooooo
I'm a Marine...I can tell you that my drills staff would have made sure that was the last thing I ever did before going to prison for the rest of my crippled life.
I don't think anyone challenged a Drill Sergeant during my time in training 1974, Those DIs were fresh out of vietnam and crazy enough to kill you, We tried to stay clear of them, We knew they weren't quite right in the head.
YES my Basic Fort Jackson SC. ( 1975) the first week in barracks, we had cry baby's to Chaplain. All the ( DI) did was throw his rack messed up not proper out the new block building. All they did was split us all up. The ( DI) I found out later had gotten ribbon for best company. Are new ( DI) talk to us told us what was going on. He wanted us to be the BEST trained soldiers the Army had. That if all we did was complain the ENEMY doesn't care. We had one Trainy hide drugs ( Pot) in overhead Roof. The MPs Dog was right there sniffing it out. This Lazy Trainy ended up on sick leave call. You walked to Hospital. We had at the time Lots of big city youths from East coast city's. I was one of 4 with highschool graduation, in my whole company. YES all are ( DIs) were Vietnam vets.
They had been through Heck over there.
I had Drill Sergeant Pratt at Ft. Leonard Wood in 1969. He was JUST back from 'nam and crazy as a bedbug. If Pratt walked into the room I'm in right now, all my blood would be in my feet. I was a 19 year old draftee. So my attitude was in serious need of adjustment and Sgt. Pratt was the wrench. He often said If I lived through the next two years it would be because of him. He was right. No details, but understand there were times when his voice in my head saved my ass. I'm sure he's gone now and that a quarter can bounce off all the racks in heaven and all the Angels are badasses.
I went in February 1979 Ft.Dix N.J. and they had all been in 'Nam. All airborne Rangers! You couldn't a away with a single thing with those guys around.
Looking at you all cross eyed and S&$#.
All of the drill sergeants in my basic training company saw time in Vietnam. They were tough but never abusive. If they thought we screwed up they would just run us into the ground. They did the same running we did.
Army gets their phones on sundays now lmao, I heard about a recruit a few companies ahead of me in boot camp at Paris Island who hit his DI in boot camp, the Drill instructor was a black belt with a red stripe, kid left with a broken leg 😂 Drill Instructor became a combat instructor after that
I never served (born disabled) and I always wondered if anyone ever hit a Drill instructor
@@NATEDOG well. It's like what you are now...disable
@@IamG3X got ya
Where is Paris Island?
Ah, so he was 1 xp short of levelling up and that fight provided just that.
Hard to imagine how this kid got along with his parents if he thinks he can mouth off to his DI.
Cheers. I know this is late, but I had to add. When I was in basic, we had a guy beat the crap out of 4 drill sergeants before they finally got him down. Apparently he blacked out from heat deprivation. He was so apologetic the next day, and felt so bad. He already knew he was getting kicked out. But he genuinely felt terrible for it. They let him recycle and try again, and he’s still in to this day! 🤘🏻💀🖤
Leave a message in the comments if you've ever watched a reaction to a reaction to a video before
Reaction to a reaction of a reaction video. These rocks.
😄👍
@@JamesonsTravels Keep making these videos. As a disabled Army veteran, I love them. Thank you for your service, brother.
Okay, who's gonna react to the reaction to the reaction now?
Hell I remember laughing a D.I because he scared the shit out of me getting off the bus Next thing I knew I was picking myself up and the D.i was still yelling at me for getting blood on the yellow foot prints
P.s I left the corp because of weak shit like this. For some odd reason i didn't trust my life in the hands of someone the cried about taking a smack because they fucked up
Ok I'm Mexican and I said that to my mom I would be dead in 0.000000000001 second
Think you misses a few 0000s off
@@davewalker3873 probably
@@davewalker3873 and black moms too😱😨
A M E N to that my brother
And a drill instructor is not even related to you so he's not having it either.
This man is so excited about violence it scary.
"Oh hold me back!" I'd rather wrestle an alligator than fight a drill sergeant, I'd have better odds of survival.
I'm siding with the DI.That recruit deserved more of a smack down.
“Kill people, break things, and support that effort.”
Now I’m no expert on mottos, but I like this one.
"May the bridges I burn light the way" is my personal life's motto, and sounds like it'd fit the military pretty well.
@@anubispup4760 but what does it mean?
@@Dankster-yo8xv "I burn down the world around me and don't give a fuck if it comes back and bite me in the ass down the line"
@@MrOddball63 sounds like pretty much everyone from/in the Greater DC area, tbh...
There goes another recruit.
I was a combat engineer in the Army. While i was part of the E4 Mafia there were two occasions where the platoon sergeant quietly asked for help in 'squaring away' someone with an attitude problem. The second time I lost my cool in the barracks and slugged the guy in the face several times, in front of the whole squad (including the squad leader). My only punishment was I had to wash my squad leader's Humvee. Totally worth it!
Did the Squad Leader then have the Humvee driven through the mud and then told you that you missed a spot?
Essayons!
If u refer to your group as "Mafia" and talk with pride about "slugging" someone in the face... U should be sent straight to prison. Is this what the army is truly all about? Jeeeezus christ, a bunch of criminals with a uniform.
@@uncle_martin1131 Shut the fuck up
@@uncle_martin1131 Who the fuck wants to deploy with scumbags that have issues following orders and fail to function as a team asset??? Lets get one of your Sons or Daughters on a highspeed squad and add Mr. 1body to it. Hope you sleep well at night knowing some low life pos is NOT watching your loved one's back
As a drill in '74, our best line was "how many drills did it take to throw a recruit down the steps" answr, "none, he fell"!!!
LOL.
You were a disgrace a real drill sergeant does not hit trainees. There are many ways to physically council a trainees without laying a hand on him I saw this in practice.
@@walterarrit5511 and when were you in, if ever?
@@woodywoodpecker9408 1970 Ft. Ord, Ft. Gordon, Herzogenaurauch W. Germany. 1972 Ugsburgh W. Germany. 1974 and 75 Vietnam75, 76, 77, 78 Germany 79 Ft. Ord. Both in military intelligence and later combat arms.
@@walterarrit5511 suuuuure ya were bud 😂
I was in basic at Ft. Sill in 2003 and we had a mouth off the first week of basic, they put us in the front leaning rest and told us to look at the floor, then the guy who mouthed off got smacked around by the DS. I could hear the smacks, and the guy start to cry ( this happened right across from me) but I was looking down at the floor. I was called in to the CO's office to be a witness...they asked me what I saw...I did not see anything, I was looking at the floor. They did not ask me what I "heard". They smacked him around and stuffed him in a locker, and I was glad it happened, that guy had a big mouth, and could not back it up.
Mitch Connor fort sill 2008 A-1/79
Wow, no kidding. The cadre knew how to play the game. That's brilliant. I would have drawn the line at stuffing him in the locker, but that was really good.
@@Agent1W Me personally I wish that this happened at my military school. Half the fuckin' platoon were fuckin' punk asses.
@@wisemankugelmemicus1701 If they can be broken, good. If not, drum them out. I don't believe in punk-asses staying that way the entire ride.
My father always said one lived by two choices at all times in the Army ..Do what your told, or wish you had!!!
Army Vet here: that kind of talk wouldn't fly on the street and certainly won't be allowed in my beloved Military.
Damn straight, brother.
hoorah
Hell yes brother.
That recruit would have had a training accident when I was in the Corps.
Walter Williams Sure he would had.
Hahahaha still would.
Hey that guy would've had 'an accident' even in Navy boot camp trust me!👍💪💪😎
First day in BCT I got dropped with one other female (i don't remember why, I think we looked at each other on accident or something) and the drill Sgt was riffing on us, saying we were disrespectful little sh*ts. I kept my mouth shut and did pushups like I was supposed to coz I'm not an idiot. The other female however... She stood up when he insulted her somehow and said "Excuuuuse me, I-"
...And I will never know what she had to say because IMMEDIATELY the other two drill sgts and the one that was already on her were shouting so loud, her face shriveled into her head, and they completely forgot all about me. She opened her mouth again, and one of them grabbed her by the collar and threw her face into the dirt, where she started doing push ups with angry tears in her eyes. It was hilarious.
And she never back talked again.
I would have played to watch that.
And if she had been male? Wonder what would have happened?
@@isildurelendurion1822 oooh, good question. Female trainees didn't tend to get physically defensive with non female Drills... Never that I saw. Had the trainee been a male he probably would've had his face in the dirt much faster...
Had it been a female Drill though? with the way the female trainee stood up and spoke at them??? I wouldn't be surprised if that trainee had tripped into the drill Sgt on the way to the barracks... And somehow sustained enough injury in her fall to be medically discharged. Or could have healed but still gone on to "fail to adapt" over the coming weeks, and been discharged by those standards...
As a female, Male drills would fvck up your day. Female drills would fvck up your life. I'd imagine it's a similar reverse for the males.
Greetings from Oregon. Thanks Bro for bringing it home. '81 to '91. Miss it every day.
When I was in Basic Training there was a guy like that. His uncle was a Command Sergeant Major somewhere special he had more chances than most but he ended up getting kicked out.
Good lol
Oh shit its you...I follow you on my other account
Had a guy that made into active duty. Total fuck up. His dad was supposedly a Col or General somewhere. His file finally got big enough they booted his ass. But it took a hell of a lot cuz his daddy kept saving his ass.
Maybe they can join Emma and her two moms sissy woke army 😀
Once all documents are signed and you're sworn in, parents are no longer a part of the equation.
We had a recruit quit when I was at Paris island, the drill instructors made us turn around and sit on the deck, the MP's showed up this kid was tossed around like a rag doll while they put him in an orange jumpsuit. Funny thing is a few days before graduation we saw him still in an orange jumpsuit picking up trash. This was probably a month and a half after he quit! We all beat him off the island!
Jeff shit is dumb
Jeff crazy jar heads always beating each other off.
@@adammosley88 you actually spell check comments, like your not aware of auto fill. Your making the world a better place dumbfuck
Jeff says you my guy you can’t even use the word “your”correctly 😂
Think you meant you’re
Love this drill Sergeant! He is 💯 correct on the corrected action!
On the first day our drill said, if you make it through this without me learning your name, you’re doing good. Great advice
Last in-ranks inspection before they cut us loose, Drill Sergeant Stio told me I was squared away and said, "Harris?!? Who are you, boy? I don't remember seeing you at all the whole cycle!" I answered that I had a mission to keep a low profile. "Mmm hmm, and that's the secret, ain't it?" Yes, Sergeant!
My bed was right by the door so my MTIs would always spy on me. I sure got good at making my bed.
I feel bad for the guys in hold over with real injuries that are surrounded by these tools.
Big facts bro
I was one of those. It SUCKED. Two of us were there for injuries, the rest were all shit bags. It was a long three months.
I spent 4 years as a Marine Corps Drill Instructor, and many times my career was on the line. That day I more then would of lost my career. Even if this kid said it to another Drill Instructor, I still would of more then lost my career that day. I'll be damn if that happened to any Marine DI.
Drill Instructor, I truly understand your feelings. Wearing the Hat means having the credibility to back it up. Some not-too-smart wannabe is less than nothing next to the men and women who keep our military staffed, strong, and ready. It is sad that more and more young people leave home without maturity and discipline. Fortunately, incentive training and quarterdecks are still very effective. Many thanks for your service.🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸💪💪
@Wayne M Thank you
@@trudrewroach1217 Shoutout to you saying "Thank you". I wouldve told that grammar Nazi to fuck off. Better man than I.
Any drill sergeant going hands on is out of control. I did something to a PFC (trying to throw him out the 3rd floor window) that I have regretted for 50 years.
The system has worked well for years and kept a lot of people alive under fire that otherwise might not have been. Let it keep on doing that!
And that is the reason for the toughness, and demand of respect from Sergeants, Drill Sergeants.
I told my dad that I could kick his arse when I was 14. He convinced me otherwise with a slap that knocked me into the next week. Right in front of all my friends. Needless to say I made it through boot practically unknown. Never got in trouble. Had a great 10 year run. Thanks Dad!
Same here. Same age..same outcome. Young men sometimes need a good "slap" to remind them where they're at. Saved my life in the long run. You mouth off to the wrong guy no matter how big or small, you could breath you're final breath you never know. A lot of young men without fathers have a real problem with that. There used to bieng little bitches to their mommies. like i said..sometimes they need a good "slap"!!
same, i was 15 at the time, we got in the truck and drove to this open field. my dumbass got ready to fight and my Vietnam vet that flip and drop me in a sec and fuck me up. my rebellious phase lasted a couple of hours.
I sadly thought I was a badass at the age of 10 and told my grandfather about it... when I regained conscious I discovered I had a lot to learn. I made thru boot camp practically unknown, All 3 junior Di's were big and buff (I say big and buff being 6'4)the senior had a crazy look in his eyes... Not sure who the professional wrestler (discount Sgt Slaughter)cutting a promo is...
You want to get through basic unknown unless you're going for a commander's or leadership award in basic.
My dad was a D1 college wrestler so he could pin me no problem. He didn't really street fight and couldn't punch all that hard. We had some good brawls in the kitchen.
Civilian perspective here. Turn the camera off and smack him around.
You would believe that whomever won any fight is in the right. The fact that playing along with someone would help you in a fight along side him or his other recruits does not mean that he isn't likely to be in charge of a troop against his own neighbors if ordered. If a man calls out his boss, his boss just as likely deserves it. Being the tougher guy or the one in the in charge position does not make one the better person more worthy of or automatically at all of respect.
XD
@@jasonlisonbee you ought to come to Asia where we respect our elders for their experience. There's no mollycodling like the US - and definitely no ice-cream on the front line!
@@messrsandersonco5985 Age and experience are decoupled. Unless you count time being distracted by things that don't affect you but that person's wants should, because of their higher existence period number, always override the sense of duty of those who spent most of their time listening to experts on how the world works and how to solve problems without restricting or shoving people around against their will. Reality restricts. Some only happen to notice when someone makes a move toward creating abundance in something, then blame and force that person to stop under threat of teams of other people who don't care about that person's perspective only that someone appeared to be disrespected by them.
@@jasonlisonbee This sounds like mumbo jumbo from self-help books. We respect our elders and we hope to learn from them - not least of all because they went through the war years. Look around and see how seniors are treated in the US - where 40 is considered 'old'. We had a PM who was 93 and years old. He was as bright as pin, and spoke far better English than your current President even though it was his second language. My advice to you: join the marines and find out what respect means.
German tanker here. Had once a different training crew. I told the loader to turn the turret (which he was educated in, cause all loaders are). He refused twice. By law you have to remind him on his duties, remind him what an order is, remind him about the consequences, and finally repeat the order again. Well, he replied the last order with: "All NCO'S are fucking assholes." Took him, pulled him down from my tank, behind it so the other 2 guys couldn't see, kicked in his balls and threw him into the brig.
If I remember he got 14 days in the brig and a quarter of his monthly pay.
Serves him right! Dumbass people can’t take an order without whining like a bitch haha
Hört sich stark nach munster an
@@theanniversary2684 Nope, just somewhere else in Germany, 25 years ago. If I remember correctly it was during a training course (Stationsausbildung) in various topics. Each tank commander had one topic and the crews cycled.
@@couryrussell7653 In all my time as tank commander and platoon sergeant/leader I only had this "incident" with the conscripts. I would not say they were very happy when they had to attend to their service. But especially after basic training by far the most enjoyed their time and were good soldiers.
@@9thbloodandfire508 I always find these situations strange in hindsight.
Like your situation all you said was "turn the turret". It's a very simple and easy order to comply with.
It's like there are these times when you can ask somebody to do such a simple task, even politely, but something inherent in them just denies the outcome, somehow even being the most pathetic of reasons for the noncompliance. It's always been an enigma to me.
..back in the day, the drill instructor would assign a couple of recruits (usually 'squad leaders') to take the 'mouth' into the head to 'learn him some manners'.
Honestly people are getting softer every year.
It's a combination of parents not disciplining their kids and life generally being very easy in western societies.
@@wuhanclan You NAILED it! life is toooooo easy for these snowflakes.... everybody should have to do some hard labor so that they respect it. Parents are definitely part of the problem with good intentions but poor execution, they do their kids a disservice. My kid works outside in construction with me for the last year. He's 17 and understands why it's important to appreciate EVERYTHING he has.
That's the goal right? To become more civilized and less violent over time.
@@rjmeyers81 you can still be soft and violent? Look at antifa beating people up because they disagree with them or they just have a different opinion... I think OP meant they can't take criticism... Thin skin...
@@ib1ray Yeah, and like all of the ring-wing terrorists shooting up places. I guess it is caused by people being snowflakes to the extreme.
in boot camp we were allowed to keep our skittles in our MREs. that was the extent of our pleasure. i always appreciated that because it was the one thing we had.
You really learn to value things when you're in the s%$#
I HATE Skittles. That is NOT candy. I finally figured out why (besides being nasty) it's all chemicals and preservatives.
Lol ours got trashed (98) and I was second battalion which isn’t generally as rough lol
the caffeine gum was the best from the MOREs >);;; in my opinion ♥
Musta been army or air farce. Not Marine Corps.
When you join the military, you are agreeing to be a part of a hierarchy of rank. If you don't want to respect that or be a part of it, then why join in the first place?
Judge suggested it to me.
It seems military is a completely different world than ours.
30 years ago when I went in a lot of the kids were there for the college money. Not everyone joins for the right reasons.
Yup, you sign a contract. They own your ass til they're done with it.
uomo d'onore The recruit could had just snapped. It’s not that he didn’t want to be a part of it. Maybe he just felt the D.I was being unfair with him. I hope the DI got in trouble man. You don’t respond to insults with violence. It’s only going to make things worse. Bad DI.
I think some these kids need to show Respect.
“Politically correct helicopter parents” lmfao.
...still laughing! 🤣🤣🤣
The DI was just allowing the recruit to take full advantage of the military dental insurance😂😂. 11B hoooahh!!
Dude stop
Really?
Those are the hold overs too. I know the guy. They kept recycling him through Boot Camp. He kept yelling at the Drill Sargents and failed to listen to their instructions. I knew him in high school from JROTC, and made a pledge to serve and he always kept bragging. Look who's bragging now.
I feel deprived. I was in and out b4 stinkin cell phones were born. Recruit got off easy. Needs a blanket party.
As a USMC Drill Instructor I prayed for this or something like this to happen.
this would never happen in the marines
I took the navy iam not stupid I don't like u.🤫🤯 u were across the fence with a ambulance we ran 1 mile in under 15 had a sig n look at u nope.
My Drill Instructors where the same way
@@izzymarz6788 😉
I would pray for it to happen to, just so you could throw hands at that punk and let off some aggressive ass kicking. Semper Fidelis
If I had said anything like that, I probably would have been murdered on the spot. LOL
The beat down would be terrible.
@@JamesonsTravels that is an understatement
I was never in the Military (other than as a dependent) but my "Business Law 101" class in college ('87) was taught by a Retired Marine Drill Instructor. I loved that class!
Professor (PhD) told us he started in the Marines when a DI could do whatever they needed to do to recruits. Then the rules changed to prevent them "touching" the recruits. Apparently their interpretation of that rule was that while they could not touch the recruit, that clothing that the Recruit was wearing was property of the US Marines, and could be thrown across the room regardless of the Recruit wearing it. And that recruit better take care of that uniform, don't get any blood on it until Authorized!
Sounded reasonable to me.
Sounds reasonable to me too!
That explains a lot to be honest.
I never saw a Company Commander beat a recruit but I did see some recruits who got bloodied when they fell in the shower and smacked their heads into the tile walls while they and the Company Commander were inspecting the cleaning of the head. Those floors can be slippery.