Kidswarrior, yes as I stated above, injuries and deaths do occur during military training, and as I tried to state as well is that is different than deaths from hazing at our military academy’s. There can be found many deaths, injuries and suicides (attempted and successful) from military training in all the worlds militaries, usually the result of poor leadership, or Murphy, it happens. Different types of hazing occurs as well, but in my opinion that is very different from saying that a “few have died” resulting from hazing in our military academies.
So again the disclaimer, I am not accusing anyone here on this thread of deliberately insulting or besmirching the military, Mark, Deaf, you or me, we all fall under “anyone” I did not mean to drift this thread on the testing or torture question. A statement was written that I had not heard before and was I was merely seeking sources as I could not find any. I am hoping that people do not respond having to defend or prove by saying I heard once or the famous military “No ****, this really happened” LOL or “there I was”. Links of deaths or injuries that occur during training are valuable to me as I both teach and train and we train hard and honest and it is easier learning from others mistakes and situations than from experience I agree with Sheldon perhaps a separate thread might be started for that topic and discussion (the military and LEO sections perhaps) I am off to teach and will be off line till this late afternoon, so I hope that someone else can start that thread. Thanks.
Again sorry for the thread drift
Warmest regards
Brian King
Since the ability to quote multiple threads confounds me I'll respond to kidswarrior to start. You are not mistaken, I am currently on active duty with the U.S. Army. I am a Staff Sergeant, not sure how much street cred that's worth but I appreciate that you noticed. I hope to retire in a decade or two.
Now on to the meat and potatoes of what I'm intending to post.
Various forms of hazing have been part and parcel of military life, I would suspect, since the first cavemen banded together to defend their cave. Part of it is bonding through a shared hardship, part of it can be chalked up to rites of passage type experiences, and some to just plain bullying. I would say that an individuals personal tolerance level goes a long way in determining where, on that scale, a particular sort of hazing happens to fall. For instance in the Army we used to get "blood rank". When we would get our new rank pinned on us after we were promoted everyone in the unit that still outranked you would smash your new rank into the collar with their fists. This was done without the damnits on the back of the rank pins. I still have scars from my corporal promotion. I've known a few guys that suffered broken collars.
The practice is no more, due largely to the fact that our rank is on velcro patched affixed to our chests. No one is wiling to get punched in the sternum, as well they should not be. As a younger man that frequently suffered from testosterone poisoning, I was all about blood rank, getting kicked in the gut on belt rank promotions, marathon tests, and other such dangerous and pointless exercises of macho idiocy. We learn as we age, I guess.
If a martial art rank test is to be relevant as a rubric for determining skill in a particular art then that test must test skill in that art. If the test is set up so that what is really being tested is the ability to withstand exhaustive training conditions, m[FONT="]asochistic tendencies, blind loyalty to the instructor or organization, dedication to the mythical "samurai ideal", or r[/FONT][FONT="]eligious[/FONT][FONT="] devotion then the testing requirements should be ordered to those ends. Should that be the case then I'm sure a 12 hour test including thousands of reps of kihon, exhausting conditioning tests, walking on coals, interpretation of koans or Bible passages as appropriate, self-flagellation and fasting would quite fit the bill.
Brian.
I didn't take any offense nor read into your posts any intent to paint my posts as disrespectful to the military. In fact, I find you tone to be polite and I appreciate that you defend us in debate with those that attempt to discredit us. Also no worries on the thread drift. Drift Happens:ultracool
Mark
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I'm not sure how I shrunk the font in the last lines of this post, sorry for the difficulty in reading it.