GAP said:Boy there sure is a lot of hand wringing over a minuscule number of pers....I'm not talking about the malingerers, but the injured vets. So long as the numbers a low, LEAVE THEM ALONE.
When it gets into the thousands revisit it...
my :2c:
The CF does already have too many people, and it is by four digits in at least one occupation. Your threshold of excess has already been met.GAP said:Boy there sure is a lot of hand wringing over a minuscule number of pers....I'm not talking about the malingerers, but the injured vets. So long as the numbers a low, LEAVE THEM ALONE.
When it gets into the thousands revisit it...
my :2c:
TN2IC said:Sad thing to add... but doing the IPT program. Seeing some folks fail the EXPRES test, and then the BFT (Tap out at 2km mark). But yet, still deploys, while the rest of us have to do both fitness tests. Fair or what?
Only thing wrong with them, is the lack of PT they do. Also over weight and smokes... hmm.
Regards,
TN2IC
*edit for spelling*
gun runner said:Don't forget the alcoholics, chronic pill poppers, dope heads, and anyone with mental disabilities from training injuries if you are going to paint with that brush. And trust me..alcoholics outnumber the smokers 3/1. Fact, not fiction!
57Chevy said:"As long as they are employable, if they don't want to leave the Canadian Forces we are going to look to provide them options to stay in the forces in areas where the overlying principle of universality of service doesn't apply."
He said the two main areas for that is employment with the cadet program or with the Rangers in Canada's North. There could be training or administrative jobs with either organization.
Let's use 25% as the estimate of CF members who smoke (perhaps an underestimate, especially in the sandbox). That leaves the remaining 75% of the CF - i.e. 3:1 - as alcoholics. We can confidently conclude, therefore, that if you don't smoke you must be alcoholic. :nod:gun runner said:Don't forget the alcoholics, chronic pill poppers, dope heads, and anyone with mental disabilities from training injuries if you are going to paint with that brush. And trust me..alcoholics outnumber the smokers 3/1. Fact, not fiction!
gun runner said:And trust me..alcoholics outnumber the smokers 3/1. Fact, not fiction!
Trust me
alcoholics outnumber the smokers 3/1
Fact, not fiction!
gun runner said:Experience...3 yrs on the guns. I have been to a lot of course smokers, seen a lot of parties, been hammered more than a few times and yes, I smoked. But back in the eighties that was a norm. It was a different army. We did PT every day regardless of the weather, that hasn't changed..has it? We worked hard, and partied hard. The majority of the battery members that served were out until o-dark stupid getting loaded, just to start all over again the next day. Getting drunk/high,whatever was just what happened when you were not smacking bullets downrange. Spent more than a few paycheques at the jr.ranks mess in Shilo, and loved every freakin' minute of it. My 2 cents.
Grimaldus said:I thought Hillier made it a rule that you can't be promoted unless you pass your PT test?
Or is it a rule that mostly kind of usually gets followed.