DrW wrote:Unbelievable. Faqsless says the US Maine Corps is less prepared than a teen Trek run by volunteers. Words fail me. The other stuff he says here is of course his usual brain dead parroting of black and white thinking. He is so far off not even people supporting these Treks would agree with him.
One question, what on god's green earth is 'a fast near slow pace'? Faqsless, you really shouldn't be talking about military experiences here. You've made it perfectly clear the only part of your experience that people can trust was non-imaginary is the time you told us you spent in the brig for failure to fulfill your commitment.
FAQs is talking about ITR at Camp Pendleton (as far as he got). What he conveniently left out is the training that every Marine received (during boot camp at MCRD) before arriving at Camp Pendleton. Here are some of the things that Marines learn, and perhaps even experience, about heat exhaustion, heat stroke, and sun exposure in general, in boot camp:
Number one: If you allow yourself to get sunburned on duty, or on leave, to the point where it interferes in any way with the performance of your duty, the Corps can court martial you - and probably will.
Number two: As you are marching or standing in formation, you are, at any time upon request by those in command, required to recite (loudly and clearly) the causes and symptoms of heat exhaustion, heat stroke and the immediate measures to be taken by all involved when such symptoms are detected. And if you don't get it word perfect, you will be doing an insane number of pushups.
Number three: You are required, at all times while in the field, to carry and consume the amount of water deemed necessary to avoid dehydration. Your canteens will be checked by your friendly local NCO.
Number four: On long runs or dismounted troop movements in hot weather - during training - there is always a vehicle that is somewhere in the area, in radio contact, to pick up stragglers or those who go down (whether they are faking it or not) and render them professional assistance as needed.
Number five: As a US Marine, you are the property and responsibility of the U.S. Government, which Government has spent a lot of time and money to train and equip you. As a Government assets, it is your responsibility take proper care of yourself and those around you to the best of your ability. And to my knowledge, no unit I was ever in lost anyone to heat stroke.
So, while I believe that FAQs probably did go through USMC training, I don't think he was paying very close attention.[/quote]
We know a lot more now about heat related illnesses and the stresses caused by heat on people. Or even if known back when Ldsfaqs was alleged in the service, we've learned how to implement policies that address the risks.
A similar analogy is high school football. I think all states now have implemented mandatory rules for practices and games that dictate how much and how long you can practice based upon some heat index, whether pads can be worn, how many breaks per hour, and whether practices have to be called off. I know some coaches had to be dragged kicking and screaming into compliance -- they had the "suck it up, it'll toughen you up" approach. But they were wrong, and now everyone's on board.
It would be quite easy for the Church to implement mandatory safety rules for youth activities along the same lines. (It already does in some aspects, but it's haphazard.)
For once, it'd be nice to see the Church ahead of the curve.