What Hard-Charging Air Force Recruits Endure In Basic Training - BMT

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  • Опубликовано: 10 окт 2021
  • NEW Basic Training. Air Force introduces beta v2 of basic training. Top General discusses the new grueling fitness requirements - • Air Force 1-Mile Walk ... . AF Basic 18 months ago - • Air Force BMT - Basic ... .
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Комментарии • 1,9 тыс.

  • @JamesonsTravels
    @JamesonsTravels  2 года назад +140

    this was the Air Force basic 18 months ago - ruclips.net/video/hpbr2mPisLk/видео.html. the marketing focus group (apparently) has found in marketing research the weakling model brings in less recruits.

    • @aaronlopez3585
      @aaronlopez3585 2 года назад +11

      "Air Force training is the hardest thing I've ever had to face". Said the woke, snowflake, crock wearing genderless participation trophy receiving recruit.
      PS; I'm originally from Cuba and screaming to us is as a morning sunrise.🤭

    • @Jay0321
      @Jay0321 2 года назад +1

      Cheese dicks.

    • @MisterNi
      @MisterNi 2 года назад +3

      For the E-ranks a more standard BMT will probably be good for them. For anyone attending the AF Academy, more instruction and less yelling would likely be more productive.

    • @JEDIAL9
      @JEDIAL9 2 года назад +6

      Other than the Air Forces' 7-weeks of Day Care, I've heard that well over 98% of them never touch a weapon after Day Care. So, there's no point in their theatrics and pretentious acting to make themselves appear in any shape or form close to a soldier or Marine standards. Instead, the main focal point of the Air Force should remain grounded to their expertise, nothing more and nothing less.

    • @clickhereforshowittoothers2184
      @clickhereforshowittoothers2184 2 года назад +1

      1. First plan on the Georgia Guidestones is for 93% of all people to be disappeared. (That includes blacks, whites, Mexicans, Christians...and Democrats aren't safe either.)
      2. True width of Washington Monument is 666 inches wide on each of its 4 sides.
      3. Former elite banker R-onald Ber-nard says most billionaires are Luciferians (Satanic).
      All atheist nations end up in poverty and dictatorship, unless helped by Christians.
      Jesus said, and you shall know the truth, and the truth shall set you free.

  • @rocklobster2929
    @rocklobster2929 2 года назад +1078

    In the event of a war, airbases are extremely valuable targets, airmen should absolutely be ready to fight just like marines or soldiers

    • @lancefisher8358
      @lancefisher8358 2 года назад +93

      Exactly been arguing this for years

    • @arnauservaux3936
      @arnauservaux3936 2 года назад +69

      In the event of war, the valuable air bases will likely be loaded with troop transports of soldiers who SHOULD be fighting.

    • @justthefacts4216
      @justthefacts4216 2 года назад +34

      This is BS, in reality we will just turn the Air Base over to whatever corrupt military we "trained*" up so their people can be "Free*" and they will promptly give it up to the enemy without any resistance. See Bagram AB

    • @benfrank1583
      @benfrank1583 2 года назад +1

      @@justthefacts4216 🥶

    • @danielaramburo7648
      @danielaramburo7648 2 года назад +30

      No, it’s ok. The Air Force will call 911 and the police will come defend the base. The Air Force will be busy learning how to be extra woke.

  • @marcuspayne9744
    @marcuspayne9744 2 года назад +361

    Other than the normal "service rivalry", I still have a lot of respect for the Air Force, as a Paratrooper veteran at Bragg, we had Pope Airbase that we relied on, and we got to know a lot of those folks on the planes and all, and I found them to be very professional and good to go.

    • @Red13.0
      @Red13.0 2 года назад +26

      The other branches hate on air force because they get treated better and are managed better, not to mention the budget they gave… just saying you just joke around hating Air Force are lies… you actually grow jealous when you start realizing that Air Force gets to do the job without all the bs the other branches go thru it’s some like a petty jealousy

    • @ricoo1861
      @ricoo1861 2 года назад +2

      I appreciate this honesty, keep up the positive waves!

    • @lawv804
      @lawv804 2 года назад +12

      AF basic is a joke compared to the other services. But why should it be like the army or marines? These airmen, with a few exceptions, will have technical jobs keeping planes in the air and keeping air bases operating. There're some AFSCs that saw quite a bit of combat, and they received appropriate training after basic. And yes, our lodging, chow, and general treatment was better than the army and marines. Don't really know about the navy.

    • @jayklink851
      @jayklink851 2 года назад +14

      Yeah, people like to give the Air Force a hard time, but they're a solid branch. As for the "softening of standards", I heard the AF was trying to recruit more tech savvy recruits (engineer, programmers ect.) for their intelligence / electronic warfare, which I suppose could be challenging for (some) folks that spend hours in front of a screen. There are phenomenal tech wizards who quite capable in many regards, but couldn't do 10 pull ups to save their lives. Was the initial lowering of standards right or wrong, I couldn't say.

    • @marcuspayne9744
      @marcuspayne9744 2 года назад +2

      @@lawv804 people need to remember that this is the 21st century and society as a whole is changing and we are just more tech savvy now. I was a Airborne Infantryman- Pathfinder in the Army back in the mid to late 80's and it's my understanding that the Army is doing away with their Pathfinder School at Benning and will no longer feel the need for Pathfinders anymore, again Technology with GPS now, hi tech. The Air Force and Army work closely together, the Army needs them for Airborne operations and Troop movement. I found most of the Air Force personnel to be professional and good to go. Except for PJ'S they really don't need to be trained physically as hard as a Soldier and Marines need to be.

  • @darrylyoes414
    @darrylyoes414 2 года назад +325

    Jameson has a great perspective... What does the Air Force really need? With very few exceptions, they do not need to be star athletes. They need to be academics, or technicians. Same with the Navy. Yes, I know there are exceptions for specialty combat roles. But for the most part, be healthy and fit, and develop their minds. I don't care that a jet mechanic or a navy nuclear operator can bench press 200#, I'd rather those guys not be fat asses and understand math and physics. Leave the grunt work to the Army and Marines.

    • @skyhawk_4526
      @skyhawk_4526 2 года назад +22

      That tends to make sense. And for those going on from basic to be Security Forces, PJs or Combat Controllers, they go through additional training in tech school that's a lot more demanding than the training in basic is when it comes to weapons skills, PT and combat tactics.

    • @twentysecondcenturywoman
      @twentysecondcenturywoman 2 года назад

      Thank you. The crayon eating marines cannot understand that if the Air Force kills someone, it’s behind a screen.

    • @Mr2915Official
      @Mr2915Official 2 года назад +27

      @@twentysecondcenturywoman not everyone in the AF is a Joystick Jockey, they all need to be proficient in basic warrior skills. in the military, everyone is an infantryman first, and their PMOS second.
      if a naval ship gets air assaulted and there are Russians infiltrating their ship, they all need to be able to combat that threat.
      if an AF base gets para dropped and there's Chinese swarming them, every airman needs to be able to combat that threat.
      there's a reason the Army and Marines laugh at the average Airman/Sailor because they know they aren't held to the same fighting standard that they are

    • @hurricaneace143
      @hurricaneace143 2 года назад +2

      @@Mr2915Official fair nough

    • @nutyyyy
      @nutyyyy 2 года назад +9

      Exactly a decent level of fitness which is what everyone should be striving for civilian or military. Men got by throughout most of history without being giant body builders. Being lean and in good shape is the ideal.

  • @amarty7278
    @amarty7278 2 года назад +10

    12:01 I laughed because I’m 18 and have been laying down cement and working with bricks for some years… it’s so true that there isn’t too many guys or gals my age who know what hard work is and what it means to be really dirty and sweaty

  • @Studio731
    @Studio731 2 года назад +91

    Say what you want, at least it’s not a 5 minute commercial talking about “my two moms”. Looking at you army😏

    • @jjayyoung7335
      @jjayyoung7335 2 года назад +5

      “ my two moms” a total detriment to unit good order and discipline and worst of all unit cohesion.

    • @BBouncer
      @BBouncer 2 года назад +3

      @@jjayyoung7335 Well, there's dumb and there's Army dumb.

    • @MareEnjoyer
      @MareEnjoyer 2 года назад

      @@jjayyoung7335 No, it isn't a detriment. But keep repeating Tucker Carlson talking points

    • @tyrone-tydavis5858
      @tyrone-tydavis5858 2 года назад +3

      @@MareEnjoyer
      Say what you want because clearly you have no idea what you're talking about. I currently work at a joint command training center. The pathetic part is you've got a segment of recruits that are trying to out-woke each other. They spend more time seeing how far they can push the limits of what they can get away with than they do with their nose in a book.
      There have been groups that have gone through where not a single person has passed. I'm not talking about a test. I'm not talking about a block of training. I'm talking about an entire Tech school. But yet, they have all kinds of time in class to jerk around where time is wasted trying to discipline a bunch of dumbasses who think they're back at the hometown gay bar.

    • @danielvulaj1463
      @danielvulaj1463 2 года назад +1

      @@MareEnjoyer you clearly know what you're talking about with your fuckin my little pony icon lmao.

  • @amamsurri5454
    @amamsurri5454 2 года назад +215

    hopefully it's more intense when the cameras are cut off. It looks like good training but the relaxed environment isn't keeping the pressure on. Basic was the hardest easiest thing I have ever done. Stupid simple tasks but with the pressure and the lack of sleep you can start messing up the simplest things. I was picked up for premob training two weeks after leaving AIT and a few weeks after put boots on ground in Iraq. I wasn't GI Joe but the pressure from basic definitely got me ready to handle the long hours and stress. You could tell the guys that had an easier time in training were struggling hard overseas.

    • @flubaflabawesome
      @flubaflabawesome 2 года назад +11

      Cant speak for nowadays, but even just a couple years ago this was an accurate representation. Generally it was harder for younger people that didnt have any discipline prior to joining. I will say, however, nearly every new airman we get in the shop doesnt have any discipline. Showing up 10-20 minutes late, talking back to nco's snco's and officers, asking questions instead of doing what they are told, not even working 50% of the time. This could just be the specific people that went to my shop, but i wouldnt be surprised if the further relaxed nature coupled with covid restrictions made a completely different airman outcome

    • @Tyrannosaurus_STFU_III
      @Tyrannosaurus_STFU_III 2 года назад +16

      @@flubaflabawesome This is why when I left the Corps and applied to the Air Force, they told me they didn't want me.
      I wasn't a shitbird, I was the NCOIC of my shop as a Cpl for a year. I was the only CDI/QAR for J-52's in Westpac for about a year.
      They didn't want me because I'm a Marine and we don't mix with Air Force "culture". When did the Air Force stop thinking like a military unit? Good order and discipline works.
      Now my beloved Corps is going the way of the Air Force and I do not like it. So I'm not just Air Force bashing

    • @flubaflabawesome
      @flubaflabawesome 2 года назад +3

      @@Tyrannosaurus_STFU_III i would gladly welcome a marine to my shop, though that more than likely wont happen in the 2w2 career field. I dont like the way the military is going either, and is why im getting out in 4 months. Leadership that only care about making themselves look good instead of ensuring proper training and experience for newly certified, grooming certain airman despite them not even putting in the work, lack of addressing morale, senior enlisted official not following guidelines she put in place. Not a force i want to be in

    • @sirturd2954
      @sirturd2954 2 года назад +1

      I would imagine it is (can’t say for sure no insight) they tend to omit a lot of the stuff from videos.

    • @Tyrannosaurus_STFU_III
      @Tyrannosaurus_STFU_III 2 года назад

      @@flubaflabawesome Semper Fi

  • @warren8525
    @warren8525 2 года назад +57

    So I went through basic back in July and I definitely believe your level of training depends on your MTI's (air force version of drill sergeants). Covid made it easy for everyone to get lazy but luckily I had two MTI's that wanted us to be ready for the military. It was shocking to see the difference from our flight to others. You can tell how motivated a MTI is by the quality of the flight. Beast week was a vacation basically lots of fun. CATM is purely to show you can shoot and follow orders at the same time. We were supposed to do the gas chamber but covid stopped that.

    • @dixonbuttes
      @dixonbuttes 2 года назад +1

      See this is interesting I hadn’t thought how Covid would affect things.

    • @drake.707
      @drake.707 Год назад +2

      That's hella pathetic.

    • @toddforbes2079
      @toddforbes2079 9 месяцев назад +1

      That must have sucked ass to go through basic wearing a mask, like a mask was going to do any good considering how close you are to everyone else 24/7.

  • @clvyboipvrti8523
    @clvyboipvrti8523 2 года назад +36

    I went through air force basic a year ago and let me tell you it was interesting. I went during the height of covid so very little running, lots of drilling, and no shark attacks. They cant touch you, curse at you, or get too close due to covid guidelines. I sat more than i thought i ever would during bmt. Drill wasnt so bad because i had good intructors. Speaking of which my instructor was very cool. Friendly even, but very motivating. Lots of yelling cause thats all they could really do. If youre soft and wanna join the military, the air force is the way to go.

    • @duped8273
      @duped8273 Год назад

      Is it also for something like me I’m kinda incompetent

  • @mastersheff37
    @mastersheff37 2 года назад +47

    I'm stationed in San Antonio. Any time I have to go to Lackland and see the trainees out in the open it's painfully obvious the discipline is not there.

    • @bubblehead4270
      @bubblehead4270 2 года назад +10

      I just went out there the other week to see my sister graduate from BMT. I was seeing the discipline being essentially non existent in the Navy and I saw some of it in the way the airmen carried themselves as they marched. Some of these airmen (most of them were the guys) had jacked up uniforms and they slouched. I never thought things like that made a difference but now that I’m a bit older, I understand the reason for drills, marching, and uniformity as well as the importance of posture. My sister was disappointed in her BMT experience because she said she felt coddled, and like me, left home to escape that environment and experience something new.

    • @SymbolicLogic24
      @SymbolicLogic24 2 года назад +3

      @@bubblehead4270 Of course she was coddled it's the AF. If she truly wanted an experience she would have gone to ANY of the other branches provided. No one goes to the AF for a difficult experience unless they plan to go Pilot or PJ afterwards.

    • @bubblehead4270
      @bubblehead4270 2 года назад +1

      @@SymbolicLogic24 I told her it would be easy. Navy bootcamp was cake i dont imagine AF bootcamp being much more difficult lol.

  • @zaynevanday142
    @zaynevanday142 2 года назад +100

    Female Trainees should get their hair cut as well

    • @bigholli8449
      @bigholli8449 2 года назад +17

      Equality for all

    • @zaynevanday142
      @zaynevanday142 2 года назад +7

      @@bigholli8449 exactly

    • @argantyr5154
      @argantyr5154 2 года назад +4

      was about to write that aswell.

    • @Laocoon283
      @Laocoon283 2 года назад

      Why

    • @NYG5
      @NYG5 2 года назад +9

      @@Laocoon283 because the men have to

  • @alancranford3398
    @alancranford3398 2 года назад +96

    There's a reason for having "contractors" run training--especially weapons training--Congress sets manpower limits. Contractors don't count. Proficient firearms instructors are available and in most cases these trainers were soldiers or police or both. When I attended my 80 hour Unit Armorers Course at Fort Riley, Kansas, the instructor had been a soldier and was teaching the course because it freed up an enlisted soldier slot. Decades later, my satellite ground terminal instructors were retired soldiers that had been hired as contractors. The expertise is there. Perhaps having all instructors be active-duty military is better--but it doesn't matter when Congress limits the number of active duty military personnel for political reasons.

    • @jamesstorey2476
      @jamesstorey2476 2 года назад +1

      People, i.e., Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen, Coasties and Marines, cost MONEY..... Congress (the American people) controls the military, so Congress decides how big / small the various Services will be; therefore, every "instructor" counts toward a Service's End Strength.
      Sure, Congress limits the size of the military because they look at the big picture and costs.
      Stretch your brain housing group and think about it.

    • @Aaron-rj7bv
      @Aaron-rj7bv 2 года назад +8

      @@jamesstorey2476 Your response is void of all reason. You say that it's limited because of cost, yet the US government pays companies to hire these contractors. Those contractors make more money than the servicemember that could be teaching the same thing. I dealt with the same during my time in, we weren't even allowed to work on much of our own equipment because contractors had been hired to do the maintenance. The same went with anything that needed constructed on fobs, work orders had to be submitted, approved, etc... before a contracting company would build anything, even a shelving unit. It's beyond stupid and actually costs more.

    • @tonygryboski8593
      @tonygryboski8593 2 года назад +2

      This. Towards the end of my enlistment in the USAF in the 1980's the flight training squadrons were turning to civilian aircraft maintenance for this very reason. If you were active duty, you went to a combat squadron.

    • @davidlemmon4603
      @davidlemmon4603 2 года назад +5

      I guarantee you that those CONTRACT Range Instructors are all prior military with extensive experience (Maybe some Law Enforcement Range Masters).... True they are not active military BUT they are probably all far more experienced than just about anything the Air Force could provide..

    • @MrJeepguy1974
      @MrJeepguy1974 2 года назад +2

      These are not contractors. The people wear red signifies they are CATM combat arm trainer part of the security forces

  • @AvocadoXenomorph
    @AvocadoXenomorph 9 месяцев назад +3

    Was on an airforce base for my A-School, met lots of airmen and asked them about bootcamp. Was told they would have meetings where they would color/draw pictures to show how they feel. Wild.

    • @Me-eb3wv
      @Me-eb3wv 7 месяцев назад +1

      lol wtf

  • @lukesdoings7150
    @lukesdoings7150 2 года назад +77

    I went through Air Force Basic Training at the age of 26, and 21 years ago. The hardest thing about Air Force BMT was staying awake!! Hell, my mom and the foreman on the construction site I work on prior, yelled more the the MTIs. Looks like they made it a little more respectable....

    • @shonseibert48
      @shonseibert48 2 года назад +13

      🤣🤣 I started on March 29th of 91, ur absolutely right. I remember napping under the bed with fingers in springs pretending like I was tightening up my rack.......

    • @comm2531
      @comm2531 2 года назад +7

      We believe it. Especially us Marines.

    • @OO-nb2kt
      @OO-nb2kt 2 года назад +2

      I call bs lol. My TI screamed at me to the point his spit was all over my glasses …..

    • @quintfl
      @quintfl 2 года назад

      I started basic on February 19,1999 and the first TI to yell at me was Sgt Newhouse. I was at 320 TRS

    • @9999plato
      @9999plato 2 года назад +4

      @@shonseibert48 It's nice and cool under the bed on the deck.

  • @zaynevanday142
    @zaynevanday142 2 года назад +118

    First day of Basic I accidentally bumped into an NCO on our way into the barracks it was winter so there was about a foot of snow on the ground and we got off the buses and we were told to run into the barracks and someone tripped me up and I fell into the back of this Corporal I got up that fast and sprinted in hoping he didn’t see me among the crowd uh uh nope he screamed at me to get back there so I ran back and stood to attention which was when I noticed his little trip on the deck covered his good Service Dress in Snow mud and water anyway here I was standing to attention shitting myself and he leans forward and whispered “You push me and I push you” and punched me dead in my solar plexus well needless to say I wasn’t expecting this so when he drilled me in my chest my mouth few open and a ton of saliva flew out of my shitmixer and flew all over the DS Corporal I thought I was dead 💀 but he just screamed at me to get inside where I found out that this Infantry Corperals name was Cpl Turner and that he’s was in charge of our Squad/Section 😂 he turned out to be a great guy 😂

    • @zaynevanday142
      @zaynevanday142 2 года назад +8

      @@JohnDoe-bo3zi and it’s Pogo Piss Off Grunts Only you waste of Rations

    • @zaynevanday142
      @zaynevanday142 2 года назад +6

      Monkey Foreskin Eyes My my service was infantry units, Assault Pioneers, Paratrooper 3+yrs, Mortars and various Infantry Coys 😂 😂 😂

    • @zaynevanday142
      @zaynevanday142 2 года назад +9

      @@JohnDoe-bo3zi you sound like a Biden voter lol

    • @zaynevanday142
      @zaynevanday142 2 года назад +6

      @@JohnDoe-bo3zi if you want to be a Homosexual be a homosexual be proud about it

    • @zaynevanday142
      @zaynevanday142 2 года назад

      @@JohnDoe-bo3zi you are a Commie Joe Biden voter don’t try and deny it

  • @paulgordon9648
    @paulgordon9648 2 года назад +9

    I did Air Force BMT in the mid 70's it was one of the toughest things I've been through since the Cub Scouts . I'm retired International Laborer & Hod Carrier .

  • @nickleonetti8532
    @nickleonetti8532 2 года назад +16

    I graduated BMT in late September and am now in security forces tech school. A majority of the Combat Arms instructors I’ve been around are actually other airmen. I believe the contractors are there to supplement the other cadre.

    • @skyhawk_4526
      @skyhawk_4526 2 года назад +2

      Good for you brother. I was doing the same thing around this time of year in 1994. Back then it was still called "Security Police" and the career field included the separate AFSCs of Law Enforcement Specialist, Security Specialist and CATM. They merged LE and Security when I was still in in 1997 and it became Security Forces. Hang in there and earn that beret! Even if you go through some shitty times, you'll look back at it fondly one day. It was nearly 30 years ago for me, but I do, and I still have quite a few good friends I talk to and see each year that were in my squadron. We meet up for a few days every year over Veteran's Day.

  • @ChrisDIYerOklahoma
    @ChrisDIYerOklahoma 2 года назад +38

    Retired USAF here -- basic is basic. They cram so much down you in a short period of time. Glad it is longer now. Many Airmen go through additional schools (esp weapons training and field survival) depending on the AFSC...some of which are taught alongside the Army/Navy. Most other branches knock the USAF BMT, but for us it is just the first door into the big room. ie -- not as a big deal as other branches make their BMT out to be (like the Marines). When we are all downrange, we are all in the same shitters, eat at the same chow hall, and carry around pretty much the same amount of gear.

    • @voltzballer8529
      @voltzballer8529 Год назад

      Talking for a friend. Air Force BMT is a joke. We specialize in certain positions that can only really be trained in those positions. I know my training was 72% fail rate for the first time you took the test. My friend has since moved on to a couple bases tackling multiple issues at different AOR's. He also has to brief critical things daily to leadership that are affecting things. While people make fun of my friend, there is so much more about making sure people on the ground aren't getting injured for something that can be prevented.

    • @donaldburkett9307
      @donaldburkett9307 Год назад +2

      Ate at Hickam AFB. It's not the same chow. Believe me.

    • @phantmfxr
      @phantmfxr Год назад +1

      @@donaldburkett9307 Come to the flightline and eat hot dogs, hamburgers, fries and chicken with greasy hands at the little shacks, everyday or at nite the box nasty the expediter brought you.

    • @donaldburkett9307
      @donaldburkett9307 Год назад +2

      @phantmfxr lived in the desert for 6 months. No running water, maybe warm chow at night mare's for lunch. Marine Arty during Desert Storm. You guys have better chow. I'd change places with you flight line guys any day.

  • @ArkyJane
    @ArkyJane 2 года назад +59

    Back in 67 went thru basic. It was a mostly easy 6 weeks. However; weapons training was two days long. Day one was learn the M16. Day two was shot 100 rounds at a target. Never saw an M16 again until Feb 1968 in up north South Vietnam.

    • @kmdunn72
      @kmdunn72 2 года назад +1

      Then what happened?

    • @skyhawk_4526
      @skyhawk_4526 2 года назад +6

      @@kmdunn72 I know... the suspense is killing me... Perhaps he single-handedly suppressed the entire Tet Offensive! Or maybe he forgot how to use it. Lol.

    • @martaamance4545
      @martaamance4545 2 года назад

      Did you qualify as expert?

    • @aj897
      @aj897 Год назад +1

      @@kmdunn72 Well we know he made it back lmao

  • @sharpemang
    @sharpemang 2 года назад +12

    After just graduating from BMT on October 14th 2021 (Mustangs to Wolfpack in Disneyland) I can say I was shocked how easy Airforce BMT is even going in at my age being 32. I was training for a year watching Marine and Army videos and the hardest part about AF BMT was having a weird green diarrhea from eating the food at Lackland. I couldn't believe how many people in my flight quit because of the physical and mental demand. A guy quit because he messed up his Achilles which makes sense after he was in med-hold for the entire BMT but the younger guys that quit and me at 32 years old running circles around these kids that are fresh out of high school was embarrassing. I was literally older than most of my MTI's and was outperforming them. BMT was a joke. Only went Airforce because they're basic is shorter than the Army and Marines and I don't know how to swim.

  • @JeffNeelzebub
    @JeffNeelzebub 2 года назад +10

    I don’t know how how much things have changed, but I remember about 10-15 years ago, the Air Force had basically the “toughest” boot camp in terms of washout rates and even their basic physical fitness requirements simply because they had far too many applicants than open positions and needed to weed a bunch of them out.

    • @ralphalvarez5465
      @ralphalvarez5465 2 года назад

      I don't know about that "toughest boot camp." I went through Army Jump School in 1984. Only 1 of 12 Air Force airman graduated and the other 11 visited the "white house" during ground week. Out of the 30 Marines, only 1 didn't graduate with the class and he recycled due to injury. That Marine was devastated because he felt like he let the other Marines down. The lone airman that passed was training to be a Combat Controller.

    • @JeffNeelzebub
      @JeffNeelzebub 2 года назад +1

      @@ralphalvarez5465 yeah I don’t know if it was the toughest, but the Air Force sure was keen to weed as many people out as possible.

  • @pelosishammer
    @pelosishammer 2 года назад +42

    In Canada, Army, Navy and Air Force all partake in the same basic training (BMQ). Combat Arms trades go off to Battle School to separate themselves from the lesser beings.

    • @kurger100
      @kurger100 2 года назад +2

      I don't think thats very useful... They fight in very different elements

    • @SanLeMans
      @SanLeMans 2 года назад +3

      @@kurger100 every soldier is a infantry soldier to begin with where I’m from

    • @kurger100
      @kurger100 2 года назад

      @@SanLeMans That's not true... Every soldier cannot be made an infantry soldier (unless your 'Basic training' is about 20 weeks long)… That's how long it takes for a civilian to be taught 'infantry' tactics..

    • @kurger100
      @kurger100 2 года назад +1

      @@SanLeMans But again I'm from United States where world's greatest army is.. But its common in smaller armies to teach soldiers few infantry skills so that they can be used as manpower shortages dictate

    • @SanLeMans
      @SanLeMans 2 года назад +3

      @@kurger100 but again, I’m from France, well known to have the highest quality professional soldiers who actually do train the US, France being a powerful world power right behind the huge US and Russia with the UK behind us with China.
      Plus European soldiers are just put to a higher standard, a thing you would know if you did your own research.

  • @rjohnson2813
    @rjohnson2813 2 года назад +44

    Having a rifle specialist in the airforce is like the navy having a road March specialist

    • @BBouncer
      @BBouncer 2 года назад +4

      Hmmm...I qualified expert every time I fired over 25 years, including the many times I fired the Army qualification course. You? Maybe you should do some basic research before running your neck hole as your showing your ignorance.

    • @MrJeepguy1974
      @MrJeepguy1974 2 года назад +7

      ABGD
      Air base ground defense is every Airmen’s duty
      I was stationed in Columbia protecting satellites from the cartels trying to destroy them……
      So it’s more like Navy being trained as firemen….. no bldgs no fire trucks but lots of threats of fire

    • @BBouncer
      @BBouncer 2 года назад +3

      Having a high school diploma in the army is like the navy having a tank driver.

    • @BBouncer
      @BBouncer 2 года назад

      @@MrJeepguy1974 I was on a CSE team and was set to deploy to South America for the same mission in the early 90's...I ended up getting orders to FEW and didn't get to go.

    • @franciscoroman7290
      @franciscoroman7290 2 года назад

      @@MrJeepguy1974 *Colombia

  • @user-kk8rb2px6y
    @user-kk8rb2px6y Месяц назад +1

    The Chair Force Bootcamp. Trained in proper chair sitting posture and form. Very important.

  • @jamesbice9423
    @jamesbice9423 2 года назад +14

    the yelling is polite compared to when I went threw AFBMT in 81

    • @TH-sm9ef
      @TH-sm9ef 2 года назад

      It changed after the BMT rape/sex scandal in 2011ish. MTIs were walking on egghells for a bit and had more rules imposed by big AF.

    • @beercules8608
      @beercules8608 2 года назад

      @@TH-sm9ef Bobby Bass and I think he got off with a slap on the wrist considering the charges.

    • @SpaceRanger187
      @SpaceRanger187 2 года назад +3

      My DI got court martialed for sleeping with trainees..Was in 01.Crazy how dumb people can be

    • @jamesbice9423
      @jamesbice9423 2 года назад

      @@SpaceRanger187 There is just some things you don't do

  • @Tyrannosaurus_STFU_III
    @Tyrannosaurus_STFU_III 2 года назад +19

    Jameson..... This will be our beloved Corps in 10 years if we don't get real leadership soon.
    Breaks my heart to say that.

    • @BulliezInc
      @BulliezInc 2 года назад +7

      It will be your corps regardless . Society is the military . People always forget that . That’s why every generation of the military is less “tough” and disciplined as the last . Natural progression of things ….

    • @lawv804
      @lawv804 2 года назад +6

      Judging by the recent video I saw on gender integrated Marine boot camp, your beloved corps is already there.

    • @Jayjay82828
      @Jayjay82828 2 года назад

      @@lawv804 ok hard ass

    • @charlessacramento6048
      @charlessacramento6048 2 года назад +2

      “Hard times create strong men, strong men create good times, good times create weak men, and weak men create hard times.”
      -G. Michael Hopf

    • @lukealley5736
      @lukealley5736 2 года назад

      It’s gone sadly

  • @quintfl
    @quintfl 2 года назад +3

    When I went through BMT in 99 it was a walk in the park. During firearms training I'm not even sure we fired a whole magazine. It's good to see things have changed.

  • @kinch613
    @kinch613 2 года назад +7

    As a former AF troop, father of a ( recently former) Marine, I am VERY concerned about the current status of our military and it’s “leadership”! From what I’ve seen the last several years with the politicization of top flag officers and all the way up to the CINC, I am not sure we have a force capable and willing! So many are being forced out, and our readiness is very suspect and I fear, fatally flawed! EVERY military service basic training/boot camp should be very difficult! Quitters need not apply!

  • @sez1742
    @sez1742 2 года назад +81

    The one dislike is from the airman who believes his/her/their/it’s basic training is equivalent to special forces training.
    This solid gentleman (Jameson) went through Marine Corp boot camp….check your feelings at the start of this video. (Ha)

    • @mrconfidential638
      @mrconfidential638 2 года назад +1

      💯🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @SpaceRanger187
      @SpaceRanger187 2 года назад

      Just assume that's how the identifier identifies how phobic 🙃

    • @spencerfoote6977
      @spencerfoote6977 2 года назад +2

      Yeah this training doesn’t seem that intense compared to Marines at least seen on this footage.

    • @jroc5438
      @jroc5438 2 года назад +7

      I’m a vet for the Air Force and even I agree. It really ain’t equivalent at all 😂

    • @kmdunn72
      @kmdunn72 2 года назад +3

      Hell, I went through army basic in 93 and it wasn’t anything like special forces…

  • @Bam01000
    @Bam01000 2 года назад +4

    You’re channel is awesome 👌🏻 Thanks

  • @loudmcleod7127
    @loudmcleod7127 2 года назад +1

    I'm glad there have been some updates to Air Force BMT. If this is actually what they're doing now then it's a great thing.

  • @garyjust.johnson1436
    @garyjust.johnson1436 2 года назад

    Great video! Happy holidaze to jameson travels and prosperous newyear 2022!

  • @jtgrec3179
    @jtgrec3179 2 года назад +12

    Most contractors are prior service, especially at the range, it provides consistent training,

    • @skyhawk_4526
      @skyhawk_4526 2 года назад

      I had never seen civilian contractors working for CATM when I was in, but it sounds like a good retirement gig!

    • @davidlemmon4603
      @davidlemmon4603 2 года назад +2

      I guarantee you that those CONTRACT Range Instructors are all prior military with extensive experience (Maybe some Law Enforcement Range Masters).... True they are not active military BUT they are probably all far more experienced than just about anything the Air Force could provide.. Yes, great retirement gig.

  • @themanthemythtyler5584
    @themanthemythtyler5584 2 года назад +7

    The weapons part is just for the qualification, if you go overseas as your first assignment you’ll have to go to CATM for more training after AiT

  • @shibblesshalzabot6320
    @shibblesshalzabot6320 2 года назад +15

    We’ve had civilian contractors working as range cadre since the 90’s. I agree that this job should be done solely by military personnel however a majority of these contractors are prior military.

    • @skyhawk_4526
      @skyhawk_4526 2 года назад +1

      I was in the USAF from Sep 1994 to Oct 2002 and never saw a contractor teaching at an Air Force range. All our CATM instructors were active duty airmen or reservists (depending on the unit I was in). Maybe it depended on the base though. I was also Security Forces (which CATM is/was a part of), and I had also never seen a base with contract or civilian base police/LE services either (except one base I briefly trained at - Indian Springs NV - which is a training base) when I was in; but I know its fairly common at bases today to have a mix of active duty cops and civilians. (It was also more common at Army bases at the time - even when I was in Kuwait.) I personally think we were better of in the 90s when it was all in-house, but I don't have a big problem with Lackland using contract rifle instructors since as others have mentioned, these guys are likely all prior military and law enforcement instructors and are likely very competent instructors. I'm just noting that I had never personally seen a contract CATM instructor in my 4 years active duty from 94 to 98 and subsequent 4 years as a reservist from 98 to 02. In fact, when I went into my reserve unit at Travis, I was in the process of cross-training into CATM, but 9/11 put that on hold as we all got activated for a year (some for 2) and my training was cancelled. I ended up going inactive after that due to a job offer.

    • @ryanm7832
      @ryanm7832 2 года назад

      I think the early 2000s really caused the military contractor jobs to explode, in general, not just the shooter jobs (static security, PSDs, etc). Someone figured out that little "contractors don't count" loophole and the industry ran with it. I know Blackwater was paying guys $1k~ a day early on...but by the time I was qualified enough, pay was around $200/day :/ I still did it, but I was a bit disappointed. Then I was pissed, when I found out I can make $200/day working in construction back home, so I left. :p

    • @acfirby
      @acfirby 2 года назад

      I was in the AF in the early 2000's. All our weapons instructors were military. At Lackland and Davis-Monthan.

    • @shibblesshalzabot6320
      @shibblesshalzabot6320 2 года назад

      @@acfirby our instructors/teachers were also our Drill Sergeants, but I was specifically referring to the range cadre.

  • @sully4627
    @sully4627 2 года назад +6

    Air Force basic has changed since I went through. I was prior Army National Guard for four years before joining the active duty Air Force. (Did Army basic and AIT at Ft. Sill in '84 and went USAF in 88). Thanks to that, I only did 11 training days of Air Force basic but it was a laugh riot. Seriously, I had to stifle my laughter at every turn.

    • @harthart7529
      @harthart7529 6 месяцев назад

      because you were so tough as a weekend warrior...

  • @davidhughes4089
    @davidhughes4089 2 года назад +10

    I think your comments on the yelling and diverse intake is your best take yet on the subject.

    • @JamesonsTravels
      @JamesonsTravels  2 года назад +3

      it came to me. the why. other countries do it one way but they dont have the diversity for the good and bad we have in states.

    • @airmanfloyd719
      @airmanfloyd719 2 года назад +2

      @@JamesonsTravels Most of the rounds they were talking about are practice shots. I believe we had 24 test rounds and needed 12 to hit. Most of us were above that. The targets were not that far away and we had red dot sights. I still think 12 is too low in my opinion. What do you think? I hit 19 and never fired a M4. It was definitely not set up to make you even a decent shot if you asked me. Just know enough to load, aim at something, and fire.

    • @skyhawk_4526
      @skyhawk_4526 2 года назад

      @@airmanfloyd719 I was in in the mid-90s and we had a different Q course for the M16 back then. I can't remember precisely, but I believe it was a 40 round course at various sized and shaped targets on the paper with a minimum passing score of 70% (in basic), (80% for Security Forces and 90% for small arms expert/marksmanship ribbon or to become a CATM instructor.)

  • @boonmsgt
    @boonmsgt 2 года назад +15

    I was a Drill Instructor in the Marine Corps! 1998 to 2001. All I can say is 😂🤣😂

    • @yankeeecho2862
      @yankeeecho2862 2 года назад

      Thank you for your service sir!

    • @clarenceboddiker9559
      @clarenceboddiker9559 2 года назад

      @@ShaneCawthon Herp Derp

    • @pricelessppp
      @pricelessppp 2 года назад

      This civilian patriot thinks you for your service! Any cool insults you have gave your trainees?

    • @boonmsgt
      @boonmsgt 2 года назад

      @@pricelessppp 🤫 while Drill Instructors might seem to hate recruits the only reason is that they have a greatest passion for them to be Marines!
      I did have a recruit that had a huge mole on his back with hair growing out it, I asked him if he was aware that pets where not allowed in boot camp!😂
      Some of my best memories in life came from Marine Corps boot camp as both a recruit and a DI.
      Ask any Marine and most will tell you the same.

  • @AOYungLas
    @AOYungLas 2 года назад +6

    Stationed in Germany, our CATM instructors are combat arms AF, was the same way when I went through basic too so that’s a newer change.

    • @skyhawk_4526
      @skyhawk_4526 2 года назад +1

      Yeah. Another poster said we (USAF) had contract range instructors back in the 90s, but I can say I never saw any. I was active duty from 1994 to 1998 and in Security Forces, and all our CATM instructors were active duty airmen. After my active duty enlistment, I went to a reserve unit at Travis (349th SFS). Part of that enlistment contract was that I was going to be cross-trained into CATM. I worked with the active duty CATM guys (60th SFS) and our own CATM instructors and I never once saw any civilian instructors. (I never got a chance to go to the CATM school because 9/11 happened right before I was supposed to go, so my training was cancelled and we were all activated for a year (half the unit stayed on for a second year) After that, I ended up going inactive due to getting picked up by a civilian LE agency. But as of then, all the CATM instructors I'd ever met (at numerous bases) were service members and not contractors.

  • @Jib230181
    @Jib230181 2 года назад

    Completely agree with everything you said in this video.

  • @donniemolchan7476
    @donniemolchan7476 2 года назад +4

    I enjoyed BMT, that was 1985. On to be a security troop. Went to 60 school, ABGD, later GLCM training and Silver Flag.
    Times have changed. Wish I had the gear and equipment this generation has.

    • @skyhawk_4526
      @skyhawk_4526 2 года назад

      I was about 9 years after you, but an LE troop. Also went to Silver Flag. I was in during the merger in 97 when they combined LE and Security. (It was a mess at the time.) Were you guys doing ABGD at Fort Dix back then? I did, but a year or two later they moved it to an Army base in TX within a couple hours drive from Lackland, and they started using USAF cadre.

    • @BBouncer
      @BBouncer 2 года назад

      Huah!

    • @donniemolchan7476
      @donniemolchan7476 2 года назад

      @@skyhawk_4526 I went to Camp Bullis TX. Then a year or so after that moved to Dix. Then back to Bullis.

  • @geneziemba9159
    @geneziemba9159 2 года назад +11

    This training is leagues beyond what was provided 20+ years ago, when we deployed airman without virtually any expeditionary skills. We did CBRN, qualified with our weapons, and practiced ops in a chemical environment, but in terms of ground combat zero unless you were in certain specific specialties, no training. Two thumbs up.

  • @WalkerBait
    @WalkerBait 2 года назад

    You make an excellent point at the end about the families at home. I am the proud father of a Marine infantryman, and I every deployment I am comforted by the fact that my "baby boy" has received the best training on the planet.

  • @JoeCab
    @JoeCab 2 года назад +2

    When I went through Air Force basic in 2007, it was mostly drill and ceremony.

  • @bluecollarwatches7048
    @bluecollarwatches7048 2 года назад +5

    I was usaf 81/93, if you go to a combat oriented squadron, you’ll get that training there and probably field #9 at Hurlburt field in Florida. I was red horse/prime beef my whole time in the usaf. I can tell you in a real world situation, there we be only the sps and combat engineers on the base, for base denial. I went through several hurricane situations and that’s all that was on the base. We were not truly grunts, but we had field training and weapons training, I was trained on grenade launcher, m16, m60, and back then we still carried .38s. Yes, I’ve actually dug foxholes and had to man a perimeter. Again not truly grunts, red horse training was more intense since we were a completely independent combat engineer squadron. Oh, red horse is airborne. Semper Ducimus.

  • @DDGVET4
    @DDGVET4 2 года назад +11

    That "Aussie Boonie" hat looks ridiculous on that drill instructor.

    • @rocnoir4233
      @rocnoir4233 2 года назад +1

      He just wishes he were one of us.

    • @rh906
      @rh906 2 года назад

      That would be Army culture, US Army does the same thing with female Drill Sergeants. Don't know what the reasoning for it all was.

  • @menopillion9853
    @menopillion9853 2 года назад +2

    I was an infantryman in the 80's. At that time, only men were in combat arms. The 22 weeks of basic training at that time were no joke. This 7.5 weeks of Air Force basic training looks really cute.

  • @swampfoxpeterslass4385
    @swampfoxpeterslass4385 Год назад

    I gotta thank you for caring & teaching these things about & to the parents & youth. My son is 12. Super hooked on “military”! We’re trying to teach him a balanced view/facts on “military”. Pros & cons. His friend just came back from being “turned into a Marine”! Must admit. I was sorely disappointed. He seems less mature & more clumsy than ever. He’s a accident waiting to happen. My son really looks up to him.

  • @Silky808
    @Silky808 2 года назад +5

    Military loves their acronyms so much, they have acronyms in acronyms.

    • @Shelldrake489
      @Shelldrake489 2 года назад +1

      The military loves its TLA’s……….( three letter acronyms ).

  • @daBEAGLE1017
    @daBEAGLE1017 2 года назад +108

    God Bless the Chair Force.
    Lets go Brandon!

    • @xxsilver_gamingxx389
      @xxsilver_gamingxx389 2 года назад +3

      🪑

    • @MJA5
      @MJA5 2 года назад +19

      @@xxsilver_gamingxx389 yeah, says the guy with "gaming" in his user name.

    • @xxsilver_gamingxx389
      @xxsilver_gamingxx389 2 года назад +2

      @@MJA5 ok

    • @mrconfidential638
      @mrconfidential638 2 года назад

      @@MJA5 🤣🤣🤣

    • @americasdream1265
      @americasdream1265 2 года назад +3

      I guess you people never met a pararescueman if you did you might be taught some respect because the average soldier, sailor, marine and airman couldn't hang 30 minutes with those men on the obstacle course, the water or even on the battlefield. It would be like calling a SEAL a Swabbie or a army delta force a cook and a marine recon a drill sargent

  • @mikenyny755
    @mikenyny755 8 месяцев назад +1

    The look on your face - while you are watching this - is enough for me to understand exactly what you are thinking.

  • @jasonczfan8658
    @jasonczfan8658 5 месяцев назад +1

    My daughter just finished BMT. She had to fib to the doctor about her shin splints or she was getting recycled. It was very tough on her but she got through it. She's in security forces training now and she said it's way tougher than BMT. She did get her marksmanship ribbon for the M-4 so that is cool. Apparently SF is no longer doing any of the law enforcement training as they are 100% focused on base and ICBM site defense. All her training is combat and weapons related stuff and that wasn't what she was wanting to do.

  • @tmoss1900
    @tmoss1900 2 года назад +7

    Things are improving for now! During and after Vietnam the Air Force seen the necessity to train most enlisted after some bases we're over ran. Also this training continued into the late 80's. Weapons familiarization, basics of Air Base Ground Defense were provided by Security Forces/SP's twice a year during Red Flag Excersises for general enlisted Air Force members. SF/SP would teach basic Fire team tactics, overwatch, bounding overwatch, Defensive fighting positions for the 60, TNE, setting up sectors for the 60's, compass and grid, also the use of APC's with 60 turrets.
    During the cold war era you could have up to, 200/300 Security Forces/SP's on an installation. Some of the training SF/SPs go through would be, Basic SF/SP academy, Air Base Ground Defense, M60 school, Bayonet School, Infantry School Ft. Dix, NJ. A few not all are excepted into Ranger School, and various EST schools which I won't go into.
    The training is more inclusive to the mission of the base and sustainability long after a counter strike from certain countries with like capabilities. Some bases have certain priority resources on them that can't be trusted to anyone and defended by anyone, a lot of quiet silent work, now this was 70's/80's/90's.
    Some SF/SP training does include Survival and Extreme Cold weather training. SF/SP's used to have regular PT which is very different from general Air Force requirements.
    In a nutshell there's a lot more going on behind the scenes and is kept out of the limelight for a reason.
    No where not Army or Marines, it's not our mission. Some bases also can be 40 percent enlisted and 60 percent O ranks, you will salute a lot.
    Thank you for listening.

    • @williamshaw8106
      @williamshaw8106 Год назад +1

      Cold Warrior here. Ranger qualified 83..MOUT qualified in Europe 85..level 1 CT 84-86 (ojt)...?????

  • @erichadair3244
    @erichadair3244 2 года назад +9

    I went through BMT in 1979. 6 weeks and very easy. Good enough for most jobs in the air force. FAC, PJ, Security, etc got the combat related training which may include other military branch schools. In BMT, we only had a rudimentary familiarization with the M-16 rifle. Good to see that the air force has now improved on that. I suppose they learned something from the Iraq and Afghanistan deployments.

    • @blueduck9409
      @blueduck9409 10 месяцев назад

      Looks like the air force may not always be able to depend on the army or marines for base defense / security. Its good they are now training everybody in basic rifle use.

    • @toddforbes2079
      @toddforbes2079 9 месяцев назад

      @@blueduck9409- The Air Force has Security Forces that guard the planes & bases, they receive a lot more combat & weapons training than most of the Air Force.

    • @harthart7529
      @harthart7529 6 месяцев назад

      @@blueduck9409 The Air Force does not rely on the Army or the Marines for base security...

  • @Walk4274
    @Walk4274 2 года назад

    I love your videos ooh rah. 78-82 2nd MAW VMFA 115,
    My brother is a retired combat arms instructor at lackland, he retained his position and now works the same job , civil service type. Most of those guys are retired instructors. Carry on.

  • @anchor2651
    @anchor2651 2 года назад

    Best comedy I’ve seen in a long time !

  • @vlogmoor4992
    @vlogmoor4992 2 года назад +16

    I notice that everyone who never served in the air force are incredibly ignorant to what we actually do. It’s so frustrating.

    • @the_viper1644
      @the_viper1644 2 года назад +9

      People need to realize all of the branches have their flaws and differences, but when all of our branches work together we have the best military in the world, and that’s not something you can deny. The Airforce has plenty of physically grueling jobs, not as much as other branches per say, but what they do still plays an extremely important roll.

    • @user-pf6wl4hv5j
      @user-pf6wl4hv5j 2 года назад +6

      Ya you know why the us navy is so powerful? Is it because of the seals? no it’s because they’re the 2nd biggest Air Force in the world

    • @jackwertz8301
      @jackwertz8301 2 года назад

      Avg squid looks about the same as the avg CG, Soldier, or Airman. Only special ops stands out

    • @charliechurch5004
      @charliechurch5004 2 года назад

      U know what frustrates me......GIRLS in combat it's embarrassing

    • @watchgoose
      @watchgoose 2 года назад

      @@charliechurch5004 your education is lacking. Women served in combat roles in the Revolutionary War and the War Between The States. THey had to disguise themselves as men to do it, but THEY DID IT.

  • @EssentialEvil98
    @EssentialEvil98 2 года назад +6

    Interesting to see them holding weapons for training. All my AF buddies said they only held real weapons for a single day during their basic and the rest were rubber dummies.

    • @Khemtime
      @Khemtime 2 года назад +4

      We still only hold actual weapons a single day. The rest of the time we use M4s that are incapable of firing. The uppers have no gas tube, the front sight post is installed with roll pins instead of proper pins, and some of them have a block welded into the chamber so there’s no way a round could be chambered. The lowers are also made so that there’s no way they could actually function. There’s no hammer because where the trigger group would be it’s not completely milled out.

    • @ryanm7832
      @ryanm7832 2 года назад

      I heard that too from some AF kids training at Leonardwood

  • @marksheen4873
    @marksheen4873 Месяц назад

    Man id love to grab beers with Jameson

  • @teanistillmon3341
    @teanistillmon3341 2 года назад

    I saw this one already. But, what I like now it is being narrated.

  • @pelosishammer
    @pelosishammer 2 года назад +9

    I remember Romper Room. That was filmed in Toronto. Early reefer messaging with DooBee. LOL!!

    • @johnnywishbone932
      @johnnywishbone932 2 года назад +2

      Bomptity bompity Romper Room and Friends!

    • @lexidecimal9941
      @lexidecimal9941 2 года назад +2

      I remember it too. Ain't heard that name in 40 years.

    • @rocnoir4233
      @rocnoir4233 2 года назад +1

      I got a doobee plush in my garage that used to dangle over me in the cot.

  • @ralphemerson497
    @ralphemerson497 2 года назад +3

    When I was in the Marine Corps back in the early 80s in Okinawa Japan. Lived in open barracks, two man bunk beds, wooden box lockers and one washing machine for 30 people. A high school friend station at Kadena Air Force base about 60 miles way. Had a one person apartment room, free laundry service, a la cart dining. We teased him but envied the hell out of him. The Air Force does provide the most realistic, life long, realistic job training and MOSs than any other branch. If I had to do it again, being smarter and wiser, definitely would go Air Force.

    • @GradyPhilpott
      @GradyPhilpott 2 года назад +1

      There's no way in hell, I'd join any other branch of the military than the Marine Corps, if I had it all to do over again. I can't even imagine my life without the Marine Corps. USMC '67-'71 RVN '68-'69. WIA 23Feb69.

    • @steveboysen7870
      @steveboysen7870 2 года назад

      I was at Camp Hansen in 76-77. Whenever we got to the south end of the island, we would hit Kadena for chow. Salad and dessert bars, china and linen with people busing the tables! Short lived once our unit got the bill from the Air Force!

  • @joshturner4741
    @joshturner4741 2 года назад

    The previous softer video was basic training for the space force. As an AF vet I really enjoyed basic personally and the yelling was amazing. How those guys would rip you apart in the most hilarious ways.

  • @louvin44
    @louvin44 2 года назад

    Well stated!

  • @Brooknomsworld
    @Brooknomsworld 2 года назад +4

    I can say as an Air Force vet now I’m going to date myself but i went through basic in 1998 it’s not as intense as other branches by far but when the camera is off it’s definitely more intense than this or was when i was in. I appreciate all your videos been watching for a few months now, great content

    • @sicknasty3565
      @sicknasty3565 2 года назад +2

      My dad went through BMT in 1998 as well. Said it was really easy. He was a little disappointed when I joined the marine corps instead of the air force

    • @bobpadget5106
      @bobpadget5106 2 года назад

      I went through basic in 98 myself June 3 to July 17th I was in the 322 flt 430/429.

    • @lawv804
      @lawv804 2 года назад +1

      The general tasks are less intense. But behind closed doors, the TIs were just as mean and sadistic as what I've seen from any of the other services. I went through in 2000.

    • @riteousrighthand6144
      @riteousrighthand6144 2 года назад +1

      Also went in in 1998. 321st. Sgt Surgeon was our TI.

    • @martydagreat7661
      @martydagreat7661 2 года назад +1

      I was basic Jun - Jul 1998 , I was in Flt 460 .

  • @MetalHead503018
    @MetalHead503018 2 года назад +12

    Went through bmt a year ago and it was basically like summer camp. There were people in my flight that said it was tough, but maybe being in my mid twenties it made it easier🤷‍♂️.

    • @dixonbuttes
      @dixonbuttes 2 года назад

      I’ve heard so many people say this, they get cocky right afterwards. Like who enjoys getting 3 hours of sleep and then waking up to PT and shouting, getting called a f$$got with spit on your face while you’re doing push-ups. Like I’m not saying it was Vietnam, but it was a bad fucking time lol

  • @jroc5438
    @jroc5438 2 года назад +1

    At 4:11 was TSGT Hasty-Milton. I remember him when I was in when I joined last year in March. Had a dude in my flight that had to come to the Air Force to get out of some illegal stuff he did and he ruined it for himself when he threatened to fight TSGT Hasty-Milton in front of everyone during morning PT. I will never forget that.

  • @fraydnot
    @fraydnot Год назад +1

    My TI back in the 80's was a former Marine DI, he was the real deal! Probably having contractors (more than likely prior combat arms instructors) so the other military personnel can be deployed, SF has a low retention rate also.

  • @alonzoevans5181
    @alonzoevans5181 2 года назад +3

    I was an Air Force Aircraft Weapons Troop, and we were in the top of the food chain when it came to being Physically fit.I trained with a group of Marines who were stationed on my base,after of course after proving i had the grit.... people wo havent served in the USAF think its an easy branch, but those of us who've served know that its much more invovled.

    • @thomashelm6931
      @thomashelm6931 9 месяцев назад +1

      AMMO! Order of the flaming piss pot!
      Proud of being a former member, Vietnam.

    • @toddforbes2079
      @toddforbes2079 9 месяцев назад +1

      No not really, a friend of mine went to Air Force basic and he was in better shape when he went in then when he came out, a whole 6 weeks later. There are athletes in the Air Force just like any other branch but the Air Force didn’t make them that way, they did it on their own time.

  • @ExplosiveQuarry
    @ExplosiveQuarry 2 года назад +10

    I just went through air force bmt... so imma laugh at this

    • @xxsilver_gamingxx389
      @xxsilver_gamingxx389 2 года назад +1

      How was it

    • @fallenwolf3368
      @fallenwolf3368 2 года назад +2

      You didn't get dishonored did you?

    • @xxsilver_gamingxx389
      @xxsilver_gamingxx389 2 года назад +1

      @@fallenwolf3368 why would he

    • @ExplosiveQuarry
      @ExplosiveQuarry 2 года назад

      @@fallenwolf3368 nah I passed... I'm in tech school now...

    • @ExplosiveQuarry
      @ExplosiveQuarry 2 года назад +1

      @@xxsilver_gamingxx389 it was actually easy... my squadron wasnt in this video sadly but whatever... I think i was the cycle after this video...

  • @johndotter351
    @johndotter351 11 месяцев назад +1

    Went through USAF BMT in 1979, thought it was more of a boys camp! Go yelled at laughed to myself cause my dad yelled at me more effectively. Served 6.5 years on active duty, after joined the Army Reserve for the next 20 years two of them active duty deployments. Pretty much enjoyed my whole military career!

  • @afjfcalhoun1
    @afjfcalhoun1 2 года назад +1

    Our CATM guys were all military. I can't believe they're contracted out now and the military bearing has been lost there. But even back in '07 we had Blackwater instructors. Us PJs and SF stay and train at Lackland and other nearby bases for several months before earning our berets.

  • @joelpierce3940
    @joelpierce3940 2 года назад +4

    I live here and they are pud knockers, except for J-Tac. Most join because they know it’s safe and get benefits.

  • @JaydexMW
    @JaydexMW 2 года назад +4

    Also, I believe the reason the Air Force doesn't train Trainees on tactical movement and basic combat is due to pre-deployment training, it's like setting a base foundation to build upon in the future.

    • @BBouncer
      @BBouncer 2 года назад +1

      Justin,, you are correct in a sense...why would a services, MNX, finance etc troop need to be trained on a combat or recon patrol or a raid? It would be a waste of resources... I do believe thought that they train all troops on high crawl, low crawl, spider crawl, etc as it could save their lives during an attack on the base.

    • @JaydexMW
      @JaydexMW 2 года назад

      ​@@BBouncer Agreed

  • @Zinnshady
    @Zinnshady Год назад +1

    I just got out of AF BMT as JBSA Lackland two weeks ago! Currently in tech school, it’s wild seeing the same places I just trained at in this video!! Our BEAST was only two days and we still didn’t do the gas chamber.

  • @Mike-lh4wn
    @Mike-lh4wn Год назад +2

    This training looks way better than I expected for the air force.
    My son went through a few years ago, and it sounded pretty soft. But they seem to be giving a good set of skills here.

  • @devynfranklin9356
    @devynfranklin9356 2 года назад +5

    You had 25 shots when actually qualifying. You had the hit at least 12 to pass and hit 22 to obtain marksman

    • @robjones1943
      @robjones1943 2 года назад +1

      Now they have 76 shots with a scope; what a joke.

    • @skyhawk_4526
      @skyhawk_4526 2 года назад +1

      When I was in in the 90s, the AFQC was a 40 round course. In basic, you needed something like 28 out of 40 to pass and 36 out of 40 for the marksmanship ribbon. Minimum passing for security forces was 32 out of 40 and I believe CATM were required to consistently shoot 36 out of 40 or better.
      I think it's completely ridiculous that you can now "pass" the qualification course by getting almost as many misses as hits!

  • @virgilpalmer2427
    @virgilpalmer2427 2 года назад +3

    Just depends on which job you are accepted into to..
    I spent 1 year in training thru military school.. admin may only do 6 weeks.. every job is important to the mission.. you dont put an admin or clerk thru a years training to push papers, it is just common sense.. and money management..

  • @AtomicElectronCo
    @AtomicElectronCo 2 года назад +1

    I did US Army basic shortly after High School at Ft.Bliss TX. It was for the most part what I expected. Physically intense (but easily doable for a 19 year old who didn't smoke) and a learning experience. By the end, I had a lot of respect and admiration for my Drill instructors. I didn't hate anyone or really have a hard time. You learn to react and move as a team w/o question. I got insulted and sworn at a lot but came to understand it was part of the game. To this day, I wish I could track down some of those Drill Sergeants if they're still around. If any one of them showed up at my door, I'd give them anything they asked for. I knew what I was signing up for and I did as I was told. I couldn't throw a grenade very well....but I learned fast!

  • @ajk9420
    @ajk9420 2 года назад +2

    11:10 wow hearing him say “I want ur feet to hurt so it shows u how be the agile solider” I definitely feel after going to the range and having to do cft next day

    • @robbbanks8905
      @robbbanks8905 2 года назад +1

      Try a 16 click movement under nods in the swamps of lousiana lmao

  • @TheLordZoka
    @TheLordZoka 2 года назад +19

    Some clarification on the range portion of training (CATM); The 76 rounds is just what is required for the qualifications part of the course. You are tested on 24 of those shots, the remaining 52 are just practice shots. If you fail that qualification you will get recycled and do it again. For a minimum passing score you must hit 12 out of 24 shots. To get marksmen you must hit 22 out of 24 shots. After basic and tech school, if you are preparing to deploy you will go back to the range for much more weapons training.
    As for the contractor CATM instructors, I don't remember seeing any of them, all the instructors I encountered were active duty Air Force weapons instructors. They might have introduced a trial run of contractors within the last year, but otherwise they use AF personnel as weapons instructors.

    • @sharpemang
      @sharpemang 2 года назад +1

      I did notice a few contractors there, I graduated in October 2021. In Tech School at Sheppard, the majority of my Ammo instructors were contractors too.

    • @brianharris4275
      @brianharris4275 Год назад

      @@sharpemang not right civilians teaching military. WOKE BS!

    • @brianharris4275
      @brianharris4275 Год назад

      Austin,Kirby,McKenzie, Karen!

  • @angrymonkey78
    @angrymonkey78 2 года назад +3

    I think every branch should go through the same type of Recruit Training as the Marine Corps. Our boot camp is designed to push recruits to their absolute limits. It makes you stronger than you were.

    • @BBouncer
      @BBouncer 2 года назад +2

      AF basic is just that, basic military training. Once you get thru it, you move into your career field specific training. SF/PJ/Combat Control training is every bit as demanding as USMC training.

    • @angrymonkey78
      @angrymonkey78 2 года назад +1

      @@BBouncer 7 1/2 weeks is more like a summer camp and they aren’t pushed to their mental and physical limits. Regardless of MOS the Marine Corps trains everyone the same way.

    • @BBouncer
      @BBouncer 2 года назад +2

      @@angrymonkey78 7 1/2 weeks is hardly a summer camp and right or wrong, the USAF approaches training differently then our sister services. Our combat specific training begins after basic when we go to our technical training and follow on training. When I went thru in the late 80's
      our training began with security/law enforcement training and then we shipped off to Ft Dix NJ where were were trained on infantry tasks tailored to our defensive mission. I can't speak to current Security Forces troops as I have been retired for nearly 10 years, but I can say that my NCO's/troops could integrate with an Army/Marine infantry unit and be effective. It seems as if a lot of people posting to this video judge the entire USAF based off of this singe BMTS video which is not indicative of our ground combat capability.

    • @angrymonkey78
      @angrymonkey78 2 года назад

      @@BBouncer I’m not judging anyone I’m just saying the stress level is what I am talking about.

  • @Moneymagi
    @Moneymagi 7 месяцев назад +1

    Kids or young people really look up to people. Even though they may realise they can do it, they forget they played tag or anything because they are nervous. They litterally need to be reminded by stern support from the chain.

  • @Khemtime
    @Khemtime 2 года назад

    Graduated in September. The shooting qual is definitely just to get people comfortable around weapons and build confidence. I would say that it accomplishes it’s purpose.
    As for “I’m glad it’s not just power point”, right after we learned how to put on the CBRN gear we had a couple hours of power point class.

  • @zaynevanday142
    @zaynevanday142 2 года назад +28

    Contractors should not be teaching weapons drills

    • @majorchungus
      @majorchungus 2 года назад +3

      They didn't when I went through in 2006.

    • @lawv804
      @lawv804 2 года назад +1

      Yeah I was surprised to see that. But I'm sure they're qualified. Some of the best tactical training I got while I was in was tought by contractors. But sure didn't have contractors in basic.

    • @zaynevanday142
      @zaynevanday142 2 года назад

      @@lawv804 what a complete waste of not only money but experience in the ranks

    • @lawv804
      @lawv804 2 года назад

      @@zaynevanday142 Air Force has contracted out alot in the last 20 years depending on the base. Civil engineer units used to have plumbers, electricians, carpenters, heavy equipment operators, exterminators, fire department, eod, pest control, and everything else you need to build and maintain a base. The last squadron I was in was all contracted out except eod and fire dept.

    • @skyhawk_4526
      @skyhawk_4526 2 года назад

      I never saw a contracted CATM instructor in my days in the USAF, but I'm not sure I totally agree with you. I suspect these contract employees are highly skilled and experienced, and probably very long term former military and law enforcement firearms instructors with 20 or 30 years of experience. I thought it was weird when I saw it too, but as a former USAF Security Forces guy and someone who's been in LE for around 20 years, I can say I've been taught various firearms techniques by many different instructors from many different agencies over the years, and many of the civilian (LE) instructors were far more experienced and refined in their knowledge and techniques than any average 19 or 20 year old E-3 or E-4 teaching range instruction at the various USAF ranges I've shot at.

  • @thomasparkin4183
    @thomasparkin4183 2 года назад +8

    Not everyone can become MARINES. One has to be half crazy and half nuts to be a MARINE.
    Ooooraghh !

    • @bryantaguilar7573
      @bryantaguilar7573 2 года назад +7

      Not everyone wants to be a marine. Some people actually want a career and education so they join the Air Force lol

    • @spencerfoote6977
      @spencerfoote6977 2 года назад +1

      @@bryantaguilar7573 💀 dang

    • @ruberami1359
      @ruberami1359 2 года назад +1

      The only reason the marine is small is because of their budget. If Marine wasn't under the Department of the navy , they would probably have more recruits yearly.

    • @thomasparkin4183
      @thomasparkin4183 2 года назад

      @@ruberami1359 I served USMC, 78-84, we had no budget back then. We had to buy our own uniforms and fix and repair our own heat with our own money. Not to mention, small units in the FMF were more efficient and effective.
      We had an Air Force Search and Rescue team assigned to our company/platoon while at NTA Okinawa, in the field for a month. I thought these guys were going to die from fear and exhaustion. They could not keep up with is Grunts. Was a fun experience.
      Semper Fi !

  • @richardperritti5916
    @richardperritti5916 Год назад +1

    I was in Personnel (Human Resource Management) in the Air Force during the early 80s. Did not think much about combat, however a Senior NCO informed me that he fought for his life during Tet, and he was in Personnel at the time. The good thing is we trained with the M16 once a quarter back then. Mostly because many of the senior Air Force Officers and NCOs had experienced during Tet.

    • @patrickriley2928
      @patrickriley2928 10 месяцев назад

      My cousin received a DFC in Vietnam. He was a loadmaster, and they got into a serious gunbattle on the ground with the enemy. You need to know how to use those weapons.

  • @navinrjohnson5047
    @navinrjohnson5047 Год назад

    I went through in 86, handled an M16 once. Deployed to Oman for Desert Shield and was damn lucky we were in the rear. Our Chief didn’t know how to set up a field kitchen. Navy to the rescue!

  • @250sabre
    @250sabre 2 года назад +3

    90 % of these woman would never be able to drag a wounded 200 lb man out of the
    Line of fire !! I had them let
    Me down before In another first line job , I was left to fight for myself , because she ran away scared ! Never again , glad I am retired !!

  • @ethanmyers2519
    @ethanmyers2519 2 года назад +15

    I was in basic 2 years ago, and it was honestly a joke in a lot of aspects, but wasn’t a joke in a lot more aspects. I definitely enjoyed PT. It did make all of us more fit, even the people who went to the gym before coming. The gas chamber was actually still implemented and we went through. BEAST week sucked because it did somewhat mimic the heat in the desert (still brighter in the desert). All in all, it was definitely something good. I personally thought the last video was just a horrible flight and a terrible video. We had more 2 years ago than what they have now. These new airmen, we call them Covid airmen because of how much easier their BMT is compared to people 2 years ago with a full 8.5 week, they honestly just seemed like a good group of airmen, which is good. There’s some flights that are terrible, and by that I mean don’t know team work, don’t know how to shut the hell up and listen, who has attitudes and feel entitled. But some are the literal complete opposite. Sometimes the people who care out weight the ones who don’t so they motivate the ones who don’t. Sometimes you get the ones who are their just for college and don’t care at all so it seems like the whole flight doesn’t care because “there’s no I in team.” This showed a lot about our BMT, but definitely not all of it.

    • @bloodyscab99
      @bloodyscab99 2 года назад

      I went through basic in 2020, and the only thing we didnt do was the gas chamber and pugil sticks

  • @kferg2003
    @kferg2003 2 года назад +1

    I went through this cycle. Some of the videos shown are from my brother and sister flights. I can confirm it is not a grueling experience. But you won’t get through it without effort! We also did not go through the gas chamber or “the raid” as of June-Sep 2021

  • @elifoust7664
    @elifoust7664 10 месяцев назад

    1974 Basic Combat Training,Fort Jackson, Drill instructors were Vietnam Korea veterans,mean as hell,training new Army.Great fun

  • @MJA5
    @MJA5 2 года назад +5

    Oh man...come on...let's beat up on Space Force. USAF BMT is so 1986 (the year I did it). Hey, I stayed for 20 🤣🤣

    • @xxsilver_gamingxx389
      @xxsilver_gamingxx389 2 года назад

      Is it really that easy

    • @MJA5
      @MJA5 2 года назад +1

      @@xxsilver_gamingxx389 go try it. I participated in 550 aerial flights, 4000 flight hours in a few war zones. Some of our survival training was cool. My ribbon rack looks like a Russian admiral's.

    • @xxsilver_gamingxx389
      @xxsilver_gamingxx389 2 года назад

      @@MJA5 Um sir, I have to wait 2 years because I’m only a junior 😔 but I’ll be talking to a recruiter soon about the soft book program

  • @brianpartlow5530
    @brianpartlow5530 2 года назад +6

    I heard their para-rescue guys go through good, tough training.

    • @marcosanaya9540
      @marcosanaya9540 2 года назад

      TAC-P?

    • @brianpartlow5530
      @brianpartlow5530 2 года назад

      @@marcosanaya9540 the airmen tasked with rescuing downed pilots behind enemy lines. I know they have an MOS or specialty, is it TAC-P?

    • @BigBand1942
      @BigBand1942 2 года назад

      @@brianpartlow5530 it's special forces medics that are super advanced they go to school for like 2 years also there's combat controllers they're also special forces they go to school just as long...

    • @BBouncer
      @BBouncer 2 года назад

      @@brianpartlow5530 Tac P is Tactical Control Party. They are attached to an Army infantry/SF unit and their function is to call in air strikes.

  • @bf6159
    @bf6159 2 года назад +1

    Years ago, the point was to eliminate weak links and probable liabilities during basic. The goal was to condition, unify, and prepare for Active Service as a functional component with viable capability. Today, basic seems more about ensuring those who enlist make it through, regardless, with as many considerations as possible.

  • @soctnights
    @soctnights 2 года назад +1

    I went through Navy boot in the early 70s in Orlando. It was mostly classroom training. If a black flag was flying no strenuous activity was authorized. One afternoon I got a pass to go to the commissary and was jogging over. I get stopped for running when a black flag was flying. When asked why, I responded I’m from GA and I don’t like cold weather. He gives me a puzzled look and says carry on recruit.

  • @NidgeDFX
    @NidgeDFX 2 года назад +8

    I'm curious what the pt score qualifications are now compared. Also the scores themselves.
    Edit: 4:43 1 and half mile run? It was 2 miles for me back in 00 and I ran 9:51

    • @lukesdoings7150
      @lukesdoings7150 2 года назад +2

      It is a point system goes by age. 1.5 mile run, Pushups in 1 min and Situps in 1 min. They got rid of the waste measurement. Yay for me! 9:51 2mile in 2000? You'd definitely pass now! :). You could probably moon walk it and pass.

    • @jeffshackleford3152
      @jeffshackleford3152 2 года назад +2

      Sub 10 minute 2 miles are hard to do.
      How old were you, did you play any sprts?

    • @sneezingpanda0350
      @sneezingpanda0350 2 года назад +2

      I’m sure you did run a 9:51 2 mile lol

    • @marcosanaya9540
      @marcosanaya9540 2 года назад +1

      @@sneezingpanda0350 It's not THAT hard to run a sub 10 minute 2 mile... but it does take time to train for it.

    • @lukesdoings7150
      @lukesdoings7150 2 года назад

      @@marcosanaya9540 I have 2 young airmen that can do the 1.5 mile in 9:22 and 9:10. And they don’t even run that much. Some people just got the gift. 😁. Not saying that equates. However, I was happy finishing basic with a 15:35 2mile. I think you had to pass with 18:00 or under for dudes back then.

  • @BassicAustinSludge
    @BassicAustinSludge 2 года назад +5

    Having gone through Air Force basic training this last year, I believe BEAST week should be the duration of 2 or 3 weeks.
    At CATM (shooting) the 76 rounds is for qualification. As far as contractors go, the fat guy with the mustache and sunglasses was my CATM instructor. He was still currently active military and had been SECFO for years.

  • @FreeAimDog
    @FreeAimDog 2 года назад

    i like to watch ex military or doctors react to stuff they teach me so much stuff about their career that i would have never known.

  • @lovecheese45
    @lovecheese45 2 года назад +8

    Air Force here. Our basic training is a joke.

    • @marcosanaya9540
      @marcosanaya9540 2 года назад +2

      Hey! I can make a mean bed!

    • @skyhawk_4526
      @skyhawk_4526 2 года назад

      @@marcosanaya9540 and perfectly fold a t-shirt.