PeterLT said:As far as Officers being addressed by their first name, I would not only frown on it, I'd discourage it very heavily amongst any troops. It's a very bad habit to get into. While it may be socially acceptable at the ball diamond, it will be deadly on the battlefield. As a now retired soldier, I would advise any serving Officers regardless of branch or element not to fall into that trap, lest you pay for it in some desolate place when you need instant action. By allowing the troops to address you by your first name you give up your authority over them and that can be very costly indeed.
pbi said:The comment on the Air Force is understood and I know first name basis is part of aircrew culture and has been for years. Seen. However, a former Inf Offr I knew who became a pilot years ago told me that where it can cause problem is amongst all those thousands of Air Force people who will never set foot in a plane except as a passenger. Particularly, he said, in situations like BDF, and ground search and rescue under demanding conditions, where they are called upon to do things that may be more "Army" than "Air Force" he stated that he had seen situations in which the "buddy" approach started to come undone.
However, I am a strong believer in separate services, each with their own culture for their own reasons. We Army (esp Cbt A) act the way we do for our own reasons, as do the "blue guys". Where the problem arises IMHO is when Joe the Supply Tech who just came off three years in Wing Supply arrives in Admin Coy of an Inf Bn and wants to call the CSM "Jim". This does not work, but IMHO is an example of one of the inherent failings of Unification: the attempt to deny that there are separate military cultures for good reasons. As evolution since 1967 has shown us, these cultures are still strong and have survived the attempt to mush us all into one purple blob. Cheers.
2Bravo said:The whole rank and first names issue outside of unit time can be tricky in the reserves when superiors and subordinates can be peers in their civilian lives. Go with your gut, but freely using first names is a step down a potentially slippery slope. I went to school with many of my soldiers in my Troops in the Reserves and it was tough to strike a balance. As for me, I addressed my superiors as "sir" regardless.
I agree fully with you especially with your use of professionals. The unfortunate thing is that there are a lot of unprofessional soldiers in at the moment. The worst part is Pte or Cpls calling Snr NCOs by their first name at work because they use it on the ice. My wife has several friends of high commanders in Kingston and personally I feel uncomfortable calling them anything other than sir. I call them by their first name at their place or at church, etc but definitely not at work.pbi said:I have a good friend who is now a CWO. We have known each other since before we joined the RegF, and I was best man at his wedding. His wife and mine are friends from high school days. When the CWO and I see each other on duty, it is by the rules. When we are at each others' houses or I am out shooting gophers with him, it is as friends. Professionals know where the line is.
Cheers.
The unfortunate thing is that there are a lot of unprofessional soldiers in at the moment. The worst part is Pte or Cpls calling Snr NCOs by their first name at work because they use it on the ice.
Sandbag said:Sailing Instructor, no you do not sing during the Royal or Vice-Regal Salute. My background on this is based upon three years as an HADC to LGov of Manitoba. Regarding the Vice-Regal, this is practical as well as customary because near of the two anthems are completely played. On many occasions I have seen the consternation of many civilian dignitaries when "all of sudden the music stops".
Regarding who salutes in the hallway, or whenever a group of officers are moving from one place to another, it should be the senior person return the compliments. This seniority is determined by rank, position, commissioning date.