Halifax Tar
Army.ca Fixture
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Any way you look it, this particular issue is a Naval issue and that needs to be raised and addressed by Naval personnel
Im army...what does that tell you, mind you all my time has been with the navy.Ex-SHAD said:I’ve noticed that whenever the NAVY and its servicemen discuss bringing back some of the old RCN traditions; it seems that the strongest and most vocal opponents tend to be members of the ARMY/MILITIA.
Ex-SHAD said:I’ve noticed that whenever the NAVY and its servicemen discuss bringing back some of the old RCN traditions; it seems that the strongest and most vocal opponents tend to be members of the ARMY/MILITIA.
I have to wonder though; would members of the Army/Militia be so quick to criticize if they had suffered as harshly under unification as the RCN & RCAF did?
Ex-SHAD said:Now admittedly, yes the Army and Militia did lose both the Canadian Guards Regiment and the Black Watch Regiment, which were very politically motivated decisions, and yes officers don’t wear stars and crowns anymore, and have to wear their rank on their sleeve rather than on their shoulders (though if we’re to go back historically, wearing rank on one’s shoulders was only introduced during WWI), but overall the land forces of Canada were not horribly shaken by unification.
Ex-SHAD said:If tomorrow however, it were to pass that all regiments across the board were to lose their “Royal prefix”, their scarlet dress uniforms (or blue or green affiliation dependent), their regimental flags/guidons/pennants etc, I highly believe that a majority would cry foul and demand that the destruction of their traditions and their regiments cease.
Ex-SHAD said:Hopefully this sheds some light on the discontent of Naval personnel and why they long to have a service of their own, rather than being forced to incorporate Hellyer era follies and failures.
George Wallace said:This is not in the spirit of this discussion and a red herring. We are not talking about getting rid of something, but of reverting back to something we had in a soon to be distant past. Perhaps we should also be looking at having the Navy revert back to wooden Tall Ships -- a lot cheaper to build that what we have now. Just think -- a "Green" Navy. No Diesel engines. No carcinogenic grey paints. All wind powered.
George Wallace said:I think all Elements suffered, not just the RCN and RCAF. If you think that they are the only two to have suffered, then you are looking at a false history through rose coloured glasses.
George Wallace said:The whole CF was cut back.
As for uniforms and rank; where do you figure the officers bars came from? Why yes! Those were Air Force and Navy ranks; not Army. Where did the CF (Rifle Green) Uniform come from? It was a compromise that did away with the uniforms of all three Elements. Now we see the Air Force and Navy have brought about changes and we now have DEUs which now make all formal parades at most units look like a gaggle of ________.
George Wallace said:This is not in the spirit of this discussion and a red herring. We are not talking about getting rid of something, but of reverting back to something we had in a soon to be distant past. Perhaps we should also be looking at having the Navy revert back to wooden Tall Ships -- a lot cheaper to build that what we have now. Just think -- a "Green" Navy. No Diesel engines. No carcinogenic grey paints. All wind powered.
Sorry. I figured if you want to live in the past, then lets go all the way.
George Wallace said:Actually it only sheds light on your opinions. As I said, you are looking through rose coloured glasses at a warped sense of history.
Halifax Tar said:SO lets just separate ? No need to waste money posting people from element to element.
Ex-SHAD said:I've noticed that whenever the NAVY and its servicemen discuss bringing back some of the old RCN traditions; it seems that the strongest and most vocal opponents tend to be members of the ARMY/MILITIA.
I have to wonder though; would members of the Army/Militia be so quick to criticize if they had suffered as harshly under unification as the RCN & RCAF did?
xFusilier said:Unification had a cross board effect, on the three armed services. To state that the consequences of unification for the army were simply the transfer of the Cdn Guards to the Supplementary Order of Battle, and the striking to nil strength of the two Regular Force Battalions of the Black Watch is a simplification of the effect that unification had on the Army. Not only did unification have a dramatic effect on the Army, but as a whole the 1960's were a challenging era for the Army. The Queens Own Rifles and The Fort Garry Horse ceased to exist as Regular Force regiments. A number of Militia Regiments were either amalgamated or placed on the Supplementary Order of Battle. And the implementation of National Survival caused severe retention problems for the Militia. Many Corps, with proud histories, such as the Royal Canadian Corps of Signals, the Royal Canadian Engineers, and the Royal Canadian Ordnance Corps ceased to exist post-unification, and its members dispersed into branches that were an amalgamation on the support functions of the three services. I will caveat these statement that these are based on my understanding of the history of that time, and will defer to the members of the board that actually lived through unification.
As we look into the more recent past the army has looked to address some of the decisions that were made at that time. The renaming and rebadging of LORE to EME, the renaming of 2 NSH to the Cape Breton Highlanders among some of the initiatives. However none of these indicatives involved getting in the way-back machine to the good old days of yore. LORE became EME, not RCEME. The Cape Breton Highlanders was a change in name alone, they did not re badge or revert to wearing Argyll kit as they did before.
It seems that this discussion has once again degenerated to a "bows and buttons" argument. The reality is that the most important part of any uniform or order of dress is the soldier/sailor/airman wearing it. The reestablishment of the Ordnance Corps, or the reversion to stars and crowns, or the introduction of khaki uniforms for the Army will have little effect on the ability of the soldier of the day to do his job, and the introduction of a Naval Ensign, or the return to square rig, or eight button tunics will have an equally negligible effect on the Navy of today.
Scott said:So someone Army made this make sense to you?
Here I thought it should be left to Navy pers...
Bows, buttons, beards...*sigh*
Michael O'Leary said:What some people seem to miss is that if we did something wrong in the past, sometimes what need to be changed the most is the way we change things.
Halifax Tar said:No being Army or not has nothing to do with his post. He formulated and articulated a solid view point in a debate without being condescending or rude, a rarity on these forums at times. I appreciate this.
I stand where I did, its a Navy issue and should left for Navy folks, xfusilier simply provided some examples of how the Army suffered during and after unification, I can appreciate this to.
Not entirely. Implementing this issue would require CF resources. All the environments have input into the approval of eachother's big projects.Halifax Tar said:... this particular issue is a Naval issue and that needs to be raised and addressed by Naval personnel
MCG said:Not entirely. Implementing this issue would require CF resources. All the environments have input into the approval of eachother's big projects.
The benefits of change for the sake of change feel-good initiatives will be negligable and short lived. The spent resources will be gone forever. In most of these cases, the consumption of staff hours will be more significant than the money - but in many major projects it is staff capacity that is the limiting resource. This really is a question of prioreties - capabilities or symbols.
I've got nothing to say in the "flag change" hand-wringing; I'm not Navy. The topic, however, morphed into a "return to Royal Canadian Navy because the Navy's been screwed over all these years" thread.Halifax Tar said:How is the change of a flag a "big project" and I would be interested to see how it would impact the Army or AF ?
FSTO said:To O'Leary - no insult intended, just trying to point out an example of changing a proud organization into something else just for the sake of change.