It doesn’t matter. It’s tradition.But is it good soup?
Thank you! Glad to see I'm not alone.I’m not a big fan of the empty table. The mess dinner is a time for good cheer comradeship. If the PMC insists on the table then please skip the preamble, the Sunday toast covers that.
I feel the same about our acquired fetish for coin culture. Hell the Americans use them as momentos; we have taken them as a cheap alternative to our Byzantine and miserly H&A system.
I received one from Comd CJOC a while back. He said "Here's one for the mantle" something of the sort. I retorted "you mean the shoebox I keep them in my leaky basement, Sir?" He didn't find the same kind of humour as I did.I hate coins. They are a cancer.
I love the people who have those stands for them. And then when you go to CANEX for a pack of DuMaurier, to keep from killing, you see all the coins they had on their desk for sale at the cash register. These things are worthless.
True story, young Bos'n on FRE was given a COs coin, made the one pace step back, salute and right turn and promptly threw it over the side in the Reykjavik harbor.
I received one from Comd CJOC a while back. He said "Here's one for the mantle" something of the sort. I retorted "you mean the shoebox I keep them in my leaky basement, Sir?" He didn't find the same kind of humour as I did.
The TF SM didn't either...
Our DCOS was U.S. Army. He was baffled by our reluctance and often times hostile attitude to awarding H&A to deserving members.The truth hurts. Our H&A is so broken.
Our DCOS was U.S. Army. He was baffled by our reluctance and often times hostile attitude to awarding H&A to deserving members.
He said it was less effort to get the DoD in the U.S. to award an AAM/MSM to a Canadian than it was for him to get Canada to award a CDS Commendation or MSM/MSC to a Canadian.
That is absolutely fucked and should not be the case.
The Canadian Forces Honours Policy Manual (A-DH-300-000/AG-001) is a fascinating read, in all honesty. Nothing more Canadian than setting up a committee to advise a committee to advise the National Committee, to advise the PM, to recommend to the GG, to award the honour.It shouldn't be hard to fix either, but when CJOC tells you who gets what before you even leave Canada I am not sure what can actually be done.
One of Canada's strongest traditions is reflexive anti-Americanism. Look at pretty much any uniform change and you'll see someone comparing it to the Americans, and complaining about us looking like boy scouts.Our DCOS was U.S. Army. He was baffled by our reluctance and often times hostile attitude to awarding H&A to deserving members.
He said it was less effort to get the DoD in the U.S. to award an AAM/MSM to a Canadian than it was for him to get Canada to award a CDS Commendation or MSM/MSC to a Canadian.
That is absolutely fucked and should not be the case.
This ^.One of Canada's strongest traditions is reflexive anti-Americanism. Look at pretty much any uniform change and you'll see someone comparing it to the Americans, and complaining about us looking like boy scouts.
The whole "NASCAR Jacket" thing when the RCN added the "Navy/Marine" and SSI to the NCD jacket was pretty telling. The RN wears a "Royal Navy" tape, and the White Ensign, but nobody said we were looking too British, they went straight to working class American, because it is the thing most likely to get a reaction out of other Canadians.
The CAF would rather not recognize our people than potentially give out a couple of actual merit awards, just because it might make us look "American".
One of Canada's strongest traditions is reflexive anti-Americanism. Look at pretty much any uniform change and you'll see someone comparing it to the Americans, and complaining about us looking like boy scouts.
The whole "NASCAR Jacket" thing when the RCN added the "Navy/Marine" and SSI to the NCD jacket was pretty telling. The RN wears a "Royal Navy" tape, and the White Ensign, but nobody said we were looking too British, they went straight to working class American, because it is the thing most likely to get a reaction out of other Canadians.
The CAF would rather not recognize our peopleThe CAF would rather just recognize senior officers and CWOs than potentially give out a couple of actual merit awards, just because it might make us look "American".
nothing worse - a jealous boss.This ^.
I remember defending one of my troops because a crusty dinosaur of a WO called him a "bling chaser" "boy scout" for wearing his qualification patches on his combats. He was a CIMIC dude in AFG and had also been flight crew on the AWACs down in Oklahoma.
I very calmly and pointedly asked the WO what cool shit he did that merited a badge like my troop? Silence.
It's not about the "bling" or "pieces of flair" or "Me, me, me"... it's full about recognition. It's about the organization saying "you did the thing. You deserve recognition." The CAF doesn't do that well at all and will chastise and condescend achievements because "well you're just doing your job, quiet professionals, etc."
And people wonder why to this day we don't commemorate Medak or why we award "Expedition" ribbons for missions that really should have their own separate awards.
I guess it depends on the story behind it.I hate coins. They are a cancer.
I love the people who have those stands for them. And then when you go to CANEX for a pack of DuMaurier, to keep from killing, you see all the coins they had on their desk for sale at the cash register. These things are worthless.
True story, young Bos'n on FRE was given a COs coin, made the one pace step back, salute and right turn and promptly threw it over the side in the Reykjavik harbor.
I guess it depends on the story behind it.
Every single coin I have or care to have has a personal story attached to it. None were given to me on parade or anything but were more personal in nature. I do have a couple of commemorative ones for specific milestones or events.
But yes, they should not be used as a cheap replacement for our honours and awards.
Agreed, and yes coins seem to easy way out.If you've done something worthy of being called in front of your peers and recognized then it should be a official award or decoration. We have a slew of options for this; coins are the cheap and easy way of avoiding our broken H&A system.
I unabashedly told a captain that at the Troops Festive Dinner the empty table would not be there. He listened.I’m not a big fan of the empty table. The mess dinner is a time for good cheer comradeship. If the PMC insists on the table then please skip the preamble, the Sunday toast covers that.
This is the problem. The fact that you automatically dismiss the problem. Well there is something wrong with Heart of Oak. Plenty have been saying it for years. Its British and NOT something Canadian, and unlike a lot of inherited British ceremonial it hasn't evolved. And that's the core of the thing here.This is the problem. There is nothing wrong with Heart of Oak, but some "Good Idea Fairy" who wants some bubbles filled is pushing this, possibly under the veil of some perceived slight or insult. The insult is to sensible people that have better things to think about. Not 1 minute of CAF/RCN/DHH time should be spent, no, wasted on this.
Tried that with a joint mess diner (in naval style). The Army Sgt/WO mess members just about started a fist fight they were so upset and created their own empty table (ripping apart the other tables to do it) even though they were told naval style mess diners do not have empty tables.I’m not a big fan of the empty table. The mess dinner is a time for good cheer comradeship. If the PMC insists on the table then please skip the preamble, the Sunday toast covers that.