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He’s implying that enlisted people are rocks...and clearly not as capabale, intelligent or as awesome as he is.Care to elaborate?
He’s implying that enlisted people are rocks...and clearly not as capabale, intelligent or as awesome as he is.Care to elaborate?
i dn't fly at falloon, i mst b rckHe’s implying that enlisted people are rocks...and clearly not as capabale, intelligent or as awesome as he is.
Me tooi dn't fly at falloon, i mst b rck
Others have touched on it, but bottom line is in order to properly make operational use of flying Warrants or some other kind of LDO, O-4-for-life, whatever, Navy Air would have to pretty fundamentally restructure itself. That’s a hard sell.
The Reserves have the structure to allow the Navy to keep their saltier dudes around and in the cockpit, but it’s under-utilized. I can see several ways the Reserves could be more efficiently used, but they all cost money. And right now Big Navy doesn’t have extra investment capital lying around. Or at least, what money they do have, they’re loath to spend on ‘goddamned part-timers’.
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This is what I was referring to earlier.Squadron Augment Concept (SAU)
Brett, et al,This is what I was referring to earlier.
Weird, most of the Aussies have no college degree and they fly Rhino (and the chuck truck) real good. Must be something in the water...I agree that we need options for keeping guys in their aircraft, but I don't think the WO is the solution for many communities.
I wholeheartedly disagree that you could replace every pilot with a warrant. Hopefully you agree that not everyone can be a Naval Aviator. It takes some level of intelligence, dedicated work ethic, hand-eye coordination, expeditious decision making ability, and the capacity to multi task while keeping SA to a multitude of things. A college degree shows that you are at least somewhat competent in the first two categories. Are there outliers? Sure. But showing that you can focus long enough to get a 4 year degree is a good indicator that you can handle the stresses and workloads of flight school, and the fleet.
The task loading put on an aviator acting as the strike lead for an Airwing strike is a lot different than on a guy whose job is to take off from point A and then go land at point B. There might be areas where the warrants would work, but there are also areas where it definitely would not.
Weird, most of the Aussies have no college degree and they fly Rhino (and the chuck truck) real good. Must be something in the water...
Has nothing to do with the intellect of enlisted folks or anyone else for that matter. The point I was trying to make was that the air force is looking for the fastest and cheapest way to take someone off the street and put them into fleet seats. Jesus, everyone is so fucking sensitive these days.He’s implying that enlisted people are rocks...and clearly not as capabale, intelligent or as awesome as he is.
When the balloon goes up.At what point does NAVAIR leadership say: “enough with the grooming for major command, we need trigger pullers, and a lot of them.”
When the balloon goes up.
Yeah, I know, that’s kinda my point. You would think that we have enough historical perspective and 4+1 I&W to “maybe” make adjustments “before” the first airwing gets wiped out.When the balloon goes up.
That’s a great question, but from my understanding, that would require a host of statutory changes, not mere policy adjustments. I don’t think that a system which incentivizes upward mobility and leadership opportunities is mutually exclusive with mid-grade retention. We’re experiencing a bit of a perfect storm, where airlines exert pressure at the same time that our people and platforms are operating under the duress and fatigue of our perpetual state of war.Brett, et al,
I’m curious, having not done a tour at NPC, how does the massive, convoluted beauracracy called the Navy, ramp-up to meet a projected demand for mid-grade aviators to fight what everyone says is looming on the horizon. At what point does NAVAIR leadership say: “enough with the grooming for major command, we need trigger pullers, and a lot of them.”