Not only is this a rant, but it's a ramble, too. I just got back from 9 days aboard a ship, and every time I go to one of these things, I see stuff that for me, at least, is a clear indicator of why the gears are starting to grind more often. Morale on most of the ships I've been on is very low, but guess what? It isn't because of the job itself. It's something else - something deep. So, in order to deal with it, I just started writing in a word document about some little things that bug me. It isn't well written, but I publish it because...well, because that's all I ever intended this blog to be for. For me to spew whatever I wanted to now and again.
Enjoy. Or don't.
Once upon a time, men were conscripted into armed services. They were conscripted by various means - law and societal pressure being the most prevalent. Yes, there have been times when lots of people joined for a cause sparked by some international event, but for the most part, people don't grow up aspiring to kill others or be killed by others in a war.
These days, the military is different. People join it voluntarily, but their choice to do so is varied. Most do not actually want to go to some war and put their lives on the line for what they believe. Hell...many would be hard pressed to tell you, and defend with anything that remotely resembles reason, what exactly it was that they DID believe. The truth of the matter is, the military is a place to turn for many people that have no other marketable skills. It's also a good place to go do a quick 4 years and walk out with a lot of college money. The military offered me, as a musician, far more than the guy that ran the bar down the street. That guy would have me play four hours a night for a pittance and no future. So it isn't a stretch that I joined. It was a good business decision for my family. For our survival.
Over the 17 years I have been in, I have heard a lot of rhetoric. Things like "Mission first, people always," and a whole bunch of lip flapping about "honor, courage, and commitment." And then I walk by the closest 15 parking spaces to the commissary which are reserved for O-6 (high ranking officer) and above and it makes me wince. Not because I want to park closer, but because it is so clear to me that the words "people always" are Orwellian in nature. It’s “people always, but me first.” In the military, all are created equal, but some are more equal than others.
It is necessary in the military (and I would argue in ANY business) for some person to be definitively in charge - to lead the way ahead. But why is it necessary to magnify the value of those in charge to the point that they get better parking privileges? (And hopefully you realize that parking is just an example of a whole trend of other perks that the "more equal" set gets) It has been said that "rank has its privileges" but that is an outdated counterproductive way of thinking in today's age. We are one team, set to accomplish one mission, and no person on that team should receive one iota less treatment in something that has nothing to do with that mission. This includes who gets to sit where on a plane, who gets to board the plane first, who gets the first meal, what time liberty expires, best parking places, best housing, and etc...
The people that join the military, though they do so for varied reasons, are preached to from the outset, that the military is one big team. That every person doing his or her job is of equal importance, and they're right. With downsizing of the military and limited funds an increasing political camping ground, every person doing his or her job IS of the utmost importance. It is for this reason that I suggest lines between ranks need to be erased. It isn't so that Private First Class Schmuckatelly gets to burn less calories on his long walk to the commissary door. It's because if we're all the same team, then why are clean lines of differing values of individuals on the "one team" being drawn? The answer is simple. So that some team members can be more equal than others. In other words, it's a lie.
Admirals live in large houses with servants, people to cook their meals, and a wealth of people, military and civilian alike, to do their bidding. They have people to screen their e-mail. And I grant - they have some rough decisions to make, and sometimes the things they do can be the deciding factor between failure and victory. That’s why they get paid more money. Why do they need more compensation beyond what they're paid if they value a "one team" concept so highly?
Here's the real truth. While they’re spouting off about the one team, they secretly harbor the belief that they deserve more than just their paycheck over the guy whose job it is to clean the toilets. It's "Mission first, people always, as long as I get mine off the top." And why do I say this? Because I believe in honor, perhaps foolishly, and I have the courage to say it, and I'm committed to the idea that all people are created equally.
I remember one time me and three guys in my band were flying back from somewhere on an Admiral's plane. And there were cooks on the plane! And they were serving breakfast like it was a restaurant!! And they started to serve us and went to me first because I outranked the guys I was with. I said "screw that...serve them first. I can wait." It wasn't that I was trying to be noble. It's just that the idea that because I had some extra stitching on my sleeve made me more valuable than they were made me sick to my stomach.
The fear I have is that rank-based respect will be our undoing. It may seem trivial to the average reader that I resent having to call a man "sir," with the clear implication that I am "not a sir," to a guy who was in diapers when I graduated high school. But I have seen the effects of this rank based thinking, and it isn't good. People deserve respect based on their merits that they prove over a period of time, and it doesn't matter whether they are enlisted, officer, or how many years they have in. If their character, and especially their competency, is such to warrant the respect of the people around them, they need to be compensated as such. And I don't care if it's an 18 year old Seaman Recruit just out of boot camp who happens to be a ninja at his job or if it's a venerable Admiral who's seen a world that's hurting and has had to make some tough decisions along the way. If the "one team" paradigm is going to work, it means that each team member has an equal value. Extra perks that accumulate with every 10 cent stripe you add to your costume – er, I mean uniform - are an indicator that “one team” is just more rhetoric. And though the financial compensation may differ due to the gravity of the situations dealt with and the responsibilities that must be born along with those decisions, the individual team members will not be at their best on the "one team" if they are taught to perceive themselves as "less than." Cloths don’t make the man, I hear. Well rank doesn’t either.
Rank is archaic. It's unnecessary. And it makes people on the "one team" feel like they aren't a major part of that one team when, in fact, they most definitely are. Once upon a time, it worked and it made sense. Today, not so much in my opinion.
It's hard to answer that without knowing more specifically what you're implying. Instead of guessing, I'll just hope you come back and clarify.
I'm sure that many of them do. Many might agree with me so far as to say that they shouldn't receive "extras" due to their rank. The individual officers aren't at fault (nor the upper enlisted, nor the upper brass.) It's the system itself that is flawed. The paradigm is broken.
As I mentioned, this was something I literally brainstormed out onto virtual paper as a catharsis. It was published here as is...a very rough rough draft of an idea. But I alluded to something deeper, and I'd like to probe that depth. This isn't about who gets what and what perceptions that may cause. It's about what is right.
You can find the salary tables of the US military on the web. You basically get pay increases for two things (aside from yearly cost of living raises). Time in and what rank you are.
I think my overarching point here is that as an E6, I get paid more than an E5 because I have extra responsibilities that the E5 doesn't have. And THAT is my compensation for that. My pay increase. I shouldn't then get special treatment for things that have nothing to do with completing the mission, aka my job, on top of it.
And in the pay department, our base pay isn't all we get. We get something called Basic Allowance for Housing (BAH) to offset the cost of setting up a home. But an officer with a wife and 2 children gets a much bigger sum than an E1 with a wife and two children. Why? The space they require is the same. They're both humans and they're both integral parts of the military machine.
I think examples like the above one can cause that E1 to feel "less than" when the truth of the matter is he's anything but less than. This affects his morale and can possibly affect the quality of the work he does. Whether or not he should let it bother him is a different article. My point is that since it doesn't have anything to do with accomplishing the job at hand, Human A with a wife and 2 children = Human B with a wife and two children. The difference in rank is absolutely irrelevant.
Ah no, not really. I understand the higher pay thing. Maybe if I narrowed the scope a bit, it would make more sense what I'm driving at. I tend to get an idea and then make it extreme as a form of example. So to be less extreme...
As an E6, do I deserve to eat before an E5? A better parking space? More money to buy housing to house the same size family? First choice of seats on a C-130? Is it ok for a 30 year old E6 (um, that wouldn't be me) to have a liberty curfew of midnight while a 30 year old E5 has to be in by 2300? @Jythier, I can tell you that those perks have NOT been what kept me in. All they breed is resentment.
There's another facet that bugs me between E6 and E7 in the Navy. E7 is the transition to khaki. It's sort of a big deal - for some reason. I had a friend who picked up Chief (E7), and about 6 months later I was on the phone with her and asked her how it was. She said that for the most part it was good and that only one thing bugged her. As an E6 she had taken an idea for an improvement in systems and operations up the chain and got squashed flat for even suggesting there was a better way to run things. When she made Chief, she took the same idea up and suddenly, *poof*, it was brilliant. It's only one paygrade - what gives?
Only us military folk would fully get the point of that comment. Even with multiple powers of attorney that basically allow my wife to make my mind up for me in any situation, some people just won't talk to her because she isn't the service member. That sucks, too, but that's another thread.
As for the rest of what you wrote, TW, thanks. Very illuminating and spot on.
Here's another opinion.
Those higher rankers are in the positions they are because they have earned it. They have put in the hard work and built their way up. The military doesn't work like the civillian world where you might become CEO of a company just because your Daddy owned the business. All military members begin on level playing ground, the first few promotions are virtually guaranteed, after that the decisions they make as individuals and the hard work they put in to the job influence their ability to climb the rank ladder.
It's pretty well known that in order for any organization to function, be it a business, the government or even the home, there has to be a pecking order. Someone needs to be in charge - generally someone who has earned that position - and someone has to be low man on the totem pole. Otherwise you have chaos....."Everyone equal" has been tested and doesn't work. It's called Communism.
My son is actually struggling with this at his own work. He has a handful of 2nd LTs who came in about a year ago, who he was instructed to mentor. They won't have it. He has tried to give them advice, and guide them, and they have yelled and put up a fit telling him he's stepping on their toes. They try their hardest to knock him down, then turn around to ask for help when they don't understand something.
The way he describes it is they want everything handed to them on a silver platter. They see his awards and the respect he has earned in the labs. They want the hard work he has put in, without actually putting in the work. So while he goes in every morning at 7, and leaves every night between 5:30 and 6, often skipping lunch to work, these guys stroll in around 9 or 10am, take a two hour lunch break to play video games together then call it a day at 4. Yet they are angry at him for gaining all the recognition. This is exactly why the productivity in our country is so low. Everyone wants to put in minimal effort, but expects equal recognition.
I saw this same thing in Little League years ago. Somebody got the bright idea that we need to give all the kids the same exact trophies at the end of the season no matter what place they come in. By the second year of this we could see a noticeable diff in the kids. They had no incentive to work for it. They knew no matter what all would receive the same prize at the end regardless of output. I remember one kid shrugging his shoulders and saying,...."what does it matter, I'm still getting a trophy anyhow."
As far as parking goes.....I know Wright-Patt is a good sized base. At their commissary only the first TWO spaces are reserved for high rankers - after handicapped of course. The next two are reserved for pregnant ladies and patrons with small children.
Just be glad you're a fit individual due in part to your walking a few extra paces through the parking lot. There's a lot to be thankful for.
But yes, I agree nice rant.
Brandie:
When it comes to military spouses, I'm not sure who has it worse. There are the enlisted and NCO spouses, who don't seem to matter at all. Then there are the Officers' spouses who, every word they say, every party they don't attend, every friend they don't make, every club they join, or don't join effects the career of the Officer.
You've known me long enough to know the soft spot I have in my heart for military spouses. Whether Enlisted, NCO or Officer, I always considered the spouse just as "in". The only differences are the pay, job description and acknowledgements for service.
My husband was an E-7 (MSGT) when he decided to become an officer.
He did it for several reasons, one of which was there was only two more stripes for him to make as enlisted and he was at ten years in service.
So he can speak about both sides of the fence on active duty and I can on the spouse/family side.
I wondered when we were enlisted why officers got bigger housing. Especially when our families were the same size. Answer: It is part of the compensation/enticement to get educated professionals into (and keep in) the service.
When we were enlisted we looked at the pay chart and thought it was unfair.
Now we know that my husband's Master's Degree pays almost three times more than a Major in the AF doing the same type work (without all the military drama) in the civilian sector. So yeah, the housing, the parking, the "perks" are to help keep educated professionals in. (Yes I understand some enlisted people have higher education. The difference? They don't HAVE to have it...and chose a job that doesn't compensate them for it.)
Even as a Senior NCO, the scope of leadership was more micro than macro. When he had 150 guys working for him it was still micro...he needed to know the details of the enlisted jobs to make sure things were going as they should.
As an officer most everything is on a macro level. You don't learn the details of a certain career field (that's what Senior NCO's do)..you run SEVERAL different career fields at the same time. (And my husband would say...take care of your people, always.) ...This is of course not every career field...I am speaking from a perspective of running a squadron, wing, base....certain jobs (Drs for instance) are different.
I think rank is a wonderful thing. It echoes our capitalistic values in this country in compensating people for their education and leadership. Yes, there are educated enlisted people...but they chose a job that didn't require a degree so while its great they have it...the military doesn't really care.
KFC is right. Everyone starts out on the same playing field. Everyone makes decisions which affect their careers later in life. Some people choose college and then military. Some choose military then college. Some choose military AND college and then take the initiative to be compensated for their degree. No one is stopping an enlisted person with a degree from applying to become an officer.
BFD said its not about the money, the perks. That's right, its not ABOUT them at all...but they do matter. Though its not militarily correct for an officer's wife to say so is it? We have it sooooo easy...
Heh.
Does my husband deserve more respect for his rank and time in service?
Damn straight.
He earned it.
But you know what? He'd be the last person to demand it. He's more about earning it.
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