ByteOnBikes to People [email protected] • 4 days agoUS Military never really trained for these types of dog and pony showsdiscuss.onlineimagemessage-square291fedilinkarrow-up11.16K
arrow-up11.16KimageUS Military never really trained for these types of dog and pony showsdiscuss.onlineByteOnBikes to People [email protected] • 4 days agomessage-square291fedilink
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish1•edit-23 days agoD&C is used daily by the US Army, to move personnel from point A to point B. During running. During inspections. During pass and reviews. 15 years out, and “9 to the front and 6 to the rear” is still drilled into my head. Even my “about face” is still solid, while needing some practice.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish1•3 days agoThis depends a lot on your branch and unit. Many many people never do a pass and review or any type of inspection other than counting inventory. I disagree that marching skills are used during running, that’s freeform.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish1•3 days agoAnyone who has served longer than 3 years has done a pass and review. Anyone who has been to a perm duty station has had a class A inspection. Anyone who has ever served has marched daily, in formation, from point A to point B. Double time is a marching speed, aka running, and you have to run in step.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish1•1 day agoOk. I guess your perspective is correct and there is just one military that is all the same.
D&C is used daily by the US Army, to move personnel from point A to point B. During running. During inspections. During pass and reviews.
15 years out, and “9 to the front and 6 to the rear” is still drilled into my head. Even my “about face” is still solid, while needing some practice.
This depends a lot on your branch and unit. Many many people never do a pass and review or any type of inspection other than counting inventory. I disagree that marching skills are used during running, that’s freeform.
Anyone who has served longer than 3 years has done a pass and review.
Anyone who has been to a perm duty station has had a class A inspection.
Anyone who has ever served has marched daily, in formation, from point A to point B.
Double time is a marching speed, aka running, and you have to run in step.
Ok. I guess your perspective is correct and there is just one military that is all the same.