Why The Army Is Changing How Drill Sergeants Are Trained | Boot Camp | Business Insider

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  • Опубликовано: 30 ноя 2022
  • Before they train Army recruits at basic training, drill sergeants must graduate from the nine-week United States Army Drill Sergeant Academy. Insider spent a week at Fort Jackson in Columbia, South Carolina, to see what it takes to become a drill sergeant.
    The Drill Sergeant Academy has adopted a new strategy where the old days of breaking down recruits with yelling and push-ups have been replaced with a more collaborative and respectful tone. Drill sergeant candidates are taught how to effectively lead recruits through physical readiness training, teach basic rifle management, and organize a culminating event that tests students on all of the skills they gained during the training.
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    Why The Army Is Changing How Drill Sergeants Are Trained | Boot Camp | Business Insider

Комментарии • 10 тыс.

  • @Jake-zk3eb
    @Jake-zk3eb Год назад +20377

    People dont leave because of how their drill sergeants treat them. They leave because of how the whole organization treats them.

    • @naughtyheathen
      @naughtyheathen Год назад +956

      @@thatboyrickkk nobody signs up for toxic leadership 😂

    • @naughtyheathen
      @naughtyheathen Год назад +220

      @@thatboyrickkk You don't have a clue 😂

    • @fccream3301
      @fccream3301 Год назад +39

      @@thatboyrickkk May I ask you a simple question?

    • @jam7547
      @jam7547 Год назад +73

      @@naughtyheathen I have a. Clue 3 zones. ... War is stressful

    • @_Moses_The_Servant
      @_Moses_The_Servant Год назад

      @@thatboyrickkk you're ignorant. . . .

  • @rmdashrfv
    @rmdashrfv 10 месяцев назад +2552

    As a soldier of 6 years, it was very validating to read these comments. My leaving the military didn't have shit to do with my drill sergeants or whatever happened in BASIC. It was because of the shit leadership in my actual assigned unit. You may not like them yelling at you in BASIC, but I literally do not see how anyone can ever feel singled out when they are nonstop yelling at every single person there. It's very obvious that it's not personal lol

    • @area51junkyard
      @area51junkyard 10 месяцев назад +11

      What was your mos

    • @rmdashrfv
      @rmdashrfv 10 месяцев назад +23

      @@area51junkyard 12b

    • @Svensk7119
      @Svensk7119 10 месяцев назад +7

      11m for me. They made it 11b again sometime in the early aughts.

    • @ShuRugal
      @ShuRugal 10 месяцев назад +34

      former 35T checking in. My view on the matter is that how people are introduced to the Army in BCT shapes how they approach the Army going forward. The toxic leadership atitudes everyone brings up as their biggest reasons for GTFOing the Army are partially rooted in BCT.
      First impressions matter, and that goes for more than just meeting new people. Starting BCT with a hostile and aggressive environment sends two messages to two different types of people. The message it sends to toxic and abusive people is that the Army is a place where they can allow that attitude out to flourish. The message it sends to people who do not appreciate that style of "leadership" is that the Army is a place they are going to have to put up with it.
      Change has to start somewhere, and starting the change by changing how you introduce new recruits to Army life is as good a place as any, and a better place than many.

    • @captain_context9991
      @captain_context9991 10 месяцев назад +22

      American military training is such an international joke. All that shouting, all that childishness. I mean I dont need to be talked to like a child. But the US has no social system catching people from falling through society. Its the military. And if you cant fit in there, then there is always life in prison... They break people down and build them up. At least thats the theory. But Im far too educated and smart to be talked to like this. And this is not a thing outside of the US. You deserve respect from day 1 if you showed up and want to serve.

  • @doc.rankin577
    @doc.rankin577 10 месяцев назад +405

    Best Drill I ever served under rarely cursed people out or did anything you'd see of a stereotypical drill. This guy was about character building, motivation, training, and education. Drill Sgt. Stancel. Will always remember that man. He learned everything about each troop and worked to develop their short comings. The man motivated everyone to be better.

    • @christianweatherbroadcasting
      @christianweatherbroadcasting 9 месяцев назад +9

      Repent and trust in Jesus. We deserve Hell for our sin. Lying, lusting, etc, but God sent his son Jesus to die on the cross and ride from the grave to free us from sin. If you repent and trust in him youll be saved.
      Romans 3:23
      John 3:16❤❤❤😊

    • @matthewjones39
      @matthewjones39 8 месяцев назад

      @@christianweatherbroadcastingAs a Christian, you are actively making me want to stop being Christian

    • @lozinja
      @lozinja 7 месяцев назад +28

      @@christianweatherbroadcasting No, he said Drill Sgt. Stancel, not Drill Sgt. Jesus.

    • @hexagon2178
      @hexagon2178 6 месяцев назад +15

      @@lozinjathese religious bots are getting annoying

    • @lozinja
      @lozinja 6 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@hexagon2178yeah I guess I've noticed them more recently.

  • @hinefamily7565
    @hinefamily7565 10 месяцев назад +898

    I served 30 years in an allied nation, belittling or verbally abusing an individual does not make a better servicemen. Making them feel that they are special, needed, important and providing them the tools to become better will produce a better serviceman. My mother was dying of cancer so my service temporary posted me to a post near where she lived and my immediate superior allowed me to take early knock offs so I could spend time with her. My pay was not great but when the service gave me this I felt I owed the service everything I had left.

    • @softdrink-0
      @softdrink-0 10 месяцев назад +46

      Soldiers are not individually special, they work together like a well oiled machine. If a soldier thinks they’re special, then they will act like they’re better than everyone else.

    • @addictedtochocolate920
      @addictedtochocolate920 10 месяцев назад +140

      ​​@@softdrink-0 Each part of a well oiled machine must be perfect. They didn't mean special as in "they deserve more than everyone else"; they meant special as in being appreciated as an individual, with a life and family, who is giving their hands, their time and their effort to be a part of a system that needs them.
      Treat your soldiers like expendable trash, and you'll get yourself a dehumanized force who has no reason to serve a country that doesn't respect them. That's actually what's happening to the US.

    • @SKarninke
      @SKarninke 10 месяцев назад +12

      Nop. It make it spoiled and soft. Military are made of groups, not a single individual, we don't need any brat with attitude...

    • @evolatile3871
      @evolatile3871 10 месяцев назад +63

      You get back out what you put in. You want recruits that give respect, you have to give respect.
      You treat recruits like garbage, you get garbage recruits

    • @rhuttrho88
      @rhuttrho88 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@evolatile3871Bullshit. Don't speak about what you don't know.

  • @bateman2112
    @bateman2112 10 месяцев назад +1175

    I had an ex drill instructor as a teacher in high school. I forget what his rank was when he retired but he'd retired an officer of some rank. We all called him Colonel. He could effortlessly control a room full of high school idiots without raising his voice. He just exuded authority. He gave respect and got it in return from every student. I asked him after class one day if he was like that in the service. He looked confused. I explained that everyone was waiting for the classic drill Sargent, screaming lunatic to pop out. He laughed and said he was that way as a young man but discovered that treating recruits like human beings locked into a situation they had no control over and no real way to know what was coming got better results than the stereotypical completely breaking down and rebuilding approach.
    I learned more about being a leader in the year he was one of my teachers than I have anywhere else. He was a good man and the world is a lesser place without him.

    • @christianweatherbroadcasting
      @christianweatherbroadcasting 9 месяцев назад +7

      Repent and trust in Jesus. Hes the only way. We deserve Hell because weve sinned. Lied, lusted stolen, etc. But God sent his son to die on the cross and rise out of the grave. We can receive forgiveness from Jesus. Repent and put your trust in him.
      John 3:16
      Romans 3:23❤😊❤

    • @bateman2112
      @bateman2112 9 месяцев назад +35

      @christianweatherbroadcasti3491 that's cool and all but have you considered that Odin told Thor to keep Jotunns off Midgard and there's no Jotunns here while Yahweh promised an end to sin and there's just loads and loads of it?
      Looks like Odin's the better bet.

    • @afrog2666
      @afrog2666 9 месяцев назад +2

      Bruh you can`t even spell "sergeant"..

    • @bateman2112
      @bateman2112 9 месяцев назад +31

      @@afrog2666 a spelling mistake?! Oh no! Whatever will I do? My whole world is shattered! Woe is me!

    • @ace74909
      @ace74909 9 месяцев назад +17

      ​@@christianweatherbroadcastingI'm religious but this isn't a place to discuss Jesus

  • @kirkblocker
    @kirkblocker Год назад +4595

    Thank God combat has always been a gentle, no stress, low stakes endeavor.

    • @MrSggurcs
      @MrSggurcs Год назад +153

      Maybe this is why we just convince proxies like the Ukraine to die for our geopolitical goals...

    • @Lulu_Lime
      @Lulu_Lime Год назад +274

      @@fluffybunny1200 you don't learn how to deal with stress by being stressed all the time. You're just compounding stress on top of stress.

    • @gayman7652
      @gayman7652 Год назад +137

      @@Lulu_Lime Humans are top of food chain because we are the best problem solvers. If we are under stress, we learn to adapt or eliminate it.

    • @ColocasiaCorm
      @ColocasiaCorm Год назад +124

      Nothing like stress to prepare you for more stress. Thats why ptsd is such a blessing.

    • @steveb796
      @steveb796 Год назад

      I’ll put any American “woke” soldier up against anyone. Woke or asleep.

  • @connorheather3807
    @connorheather3807 10 месяцев назад +85

    The guy who said “That shrapnel can’t yank it like that” was my DS in AIT. DS Berry. He was by far one of the greatest Drill Sergeants anyone could have. He was stern and disciplined but there was no doubt in anyone’s mind he wanted to make all of us the best soldiers we could be.

  • @Corsuwey
    @Corsuwey 9 месяцев назад +66

    My father retired as a Sergeant Major. He was an instructor and was stationed in Texas during the Vietnam Police Action. Obviously, he was one of the lucky ones at that time. One of the things that he took notice of and never pushed on to his children, was the verbal abuse. However, the white glove did come out every once in a while after we cleaned.

    • @dw7094
      @dw7094 18 дней назад +1

      Police Action?

  • @Valpo2004
    @Valpo2004 Год назад +3632

    Just an outside perspective, never served but I would guess the biggest reason for recruitment shortfall would be that Gen Z watched us fight 2 wars that extended through 4 presidencies that we more or less later decided were not worth it. I think most people if they are going to join the military want to know that if the POTUS is going to send them into war that it will be for a winnable cause that is worth risking their lives for. And historically that just has not been true.

    • @gorkyd7912
      @gorkyd7912 Год назад

      Exactly. 50 years of foreign policy failure. 50 years of the word's premier democracy supporting the world's sympathetic dictatorships in their squabbles on year and then fighting for a regime change the next year. The failure comes from the top. There was a massive jump in recruitment after 9/11 because people thought we now had something worth fighting for, but that faded pretty quick when we spent billions enriching a few corporations and foreign governments while our own vets end up homeless and the actual countries we fought to win over collapsed anyway.

    • @kimjongmill4445
      @kimjongmill4445 Год назад +316

      Hit the nail on the head. This comment needs more attention

    • @MarkSmithhhh
      @MarkSmithhhh Год назад +92

      100% nailed it

    • @gussampson5029
      @gussampson5029 Год назад +347

      Plus there's little honor in it anymore. You're more likely to be considered a murderer than a hero. Why throw away years of your life (and potentially your life itself) when that's your reward?

    • @amkrause2004
      @amkrause2004 Год назад +140

      It was like that after Vietnam. In the 70s to early 80s. people didn't want to join because of like you said.

  • @nilebrixton8436
    @nilebrixton8436 Год назад +2730

    Prior service in the Army here. I'll say this: I didn't stay in not because I don't like the way Army conduct itself. I actually enjoyed my almost 10 years of service a lot. The structure, the endless opportunities, and the comradery are superior to the civilian world. I didn't re-up because I'm tired of the BS wars our politicians keep sending us in. I'm tired of being an expendable piece destroying innocent lives just so some 1% wealthy elites can sell more missiles and war machines to make even more money.

    • @mainely8007
      @mainely8007 Год назад

      War is a racket brother. The 1% make money coming and going, some of them are getting money from both sides in any conflict. I'm retired now and got sick of seeing flag draped coffins, of body bags with good kids in them. All while rich elitists play tennis and 3rd generation trust fund babies casually follow in their parents footsteps to perpetuate the machine.
      If we made a law that forced the military age family members of every politician and wealthy person into front line units, they'd be less likely to make money off our blood; not saying they'd try to be humane or earn it but it might slow their roll about wars for profit and fun.

    • @Mortablunt
      @Mortablunt Год назад +31

      You should’ve stayed in the least got the message about The truth not liking being sent on fools errand so now they contract poor countries to fight our battles for us like Ukraine and Sudan.

    • @cckenforcer
      @cckenforcer Год назад

      ​@@Mortablunt Yes, because ukraine wants to be at war with Russia.

    • @konstantinkrastev4478
      @konstantinkrastev4478 Год назад

      You are a soldier, how do you not understand that historically 99. 9999999% of wars are BS.
      You are there to steal oil from other countries by brute force, to allow for drug dealers to grow poppy, to do coups for for lithium and so on.
      Name one just war the USA has participated in the last 100 years, even world war 2 was about American global hegemonic interest

    • @lilgingy75
      @lilgingy75 Год назад

      @@Mortablunt we didn't ask Russia to invade Ukraine did we? no it's Russia fault they want a war. Ukraine is not our problem as they are not in NATO and we are helping them by giving them supplies our time will come when it does so i'd stfu if i were you. and most of the time it's us fighting Europe's battles you know how many times we've had to save Europe's ass?

  • @tfox1231
    @tfox1231 10 месяцев назад +47

    I recently graduated from USMC OCS and I got to say the drill instructors were hard on all of us. Some of us even felt targeted at times. What can I say, it's an uncompromising forge? It made me, me again. I owe a lot to those Marines.

    • @tiagodagostini
      @tiagodagostini 10 месяцев назад +1

      I do not think being hard is what people complain. But there are ways of being hard that convey the message and the teaching better than others. You can be demanding, and do it in a form that the recruit can focus on what he needs to learn not on your PERSON as a sergeant.

    • @CubeInspector
      @CubeInspector 3 месяца назад

      ​@@tiagodagostini it's called Basic COMBAT Training. Not Basic Daycare. Combat is loud, people use naughty words, an enemy is trying to kill you, it's extremely stressful.
      I was prepared by my Drill Sergeant in 2005 to go into combat in 2006 because I had learned how to think when in a high stress environment. I learned how to filter out the noise when everything is loud to hear my team leader.
      War is hard. Basic training should be too.
      It's really only red phase that they're yelling all the time because that's the point of red phase, to break you down and rebuild you. You don't really learn anything until the end of red phase. And they're not yelling during the actual instruction.
      You 100% have never served in a military branch in the US or you'd know it isn't all the time and that yelling is used during certain parts, not the blocks of instruction where they're explaining what to do and how to do it.

    • @tiagodagostini
      @tiagodagostini 3 месяца назад

      @@CubeInspector THat is NOT the point. Way to miss what I said. My point is that when the sargent tries to force the voice so loud that it FAILS, squaerks, or is clearly harming the sargent, that is detrimental to his image. BEign loud and clear only helps up to a point, anythign above that and you look cartoonish.

    • @POTATOSOOPS
      @POTATOSOOPS 2 месяца назад

      It's ok to be under pressure. It made me stronger as a sailor.

  • @vincentantonuccio4941
    @vincentantonuccio4941 9 месяцев назад +16

    Wow. I volunteered and completed DS school in 1992. This is way different. I like it. I was always focused on getting the soldier the proper training while ensuring they were well cared for mentally, physically and spiritually if desired. There were many DS who were just aggressive, I usually found that they were the least competent and that false bravado was just trying to hide it, whether they knew it or not.
    If you are a competent leader, there is no need to humiliate anyone. You can be tough without being an jerk.
    I enjoyed those 2 years. It was grueling but the reward was great.

    • @ekhozo6850
      @ekhozo6850 3 месяца назад +1

      "Mentally, physically, and spiritually". I'm very glad you brought that last point up, because spiritual health is very often overlooked by many.
      In the Mexican Military, for example, we do not have chaplains, which I find outrageous. Not only are the majority of the personnel religious believers, but a military chaplaincy service is something basic in most militaries around the world.

  • @koshertattoo
    @koshertattoo Год назад +2681

    Went to infantry basic training 2011. My SDS put the fear of God into me. I gained so much discipline because I was that clown who got his platoon smoked because I had no discipline before entering. He would cuss us out, smoke us for hours and made sure we were motivated daily. We won Platoon of the cycle. He won DS of the cycle. We won almost every event.

    • @mrorange3490
      @mrorange3490 Год назад +11

      Who was your DS? I was there in ‘96 C-1/19

    • @ronburke
      @ronburke Год назад +81

      Fuckin Noah man he got us all smoked!!! Hahahaha right on brother! We got our asses handed to us in the pouring rain at victory pond right after our lunch of the b-unit c-rats because of a dude lacking in discipline that dude made it but he didnt change much he was a problem child all the way thru the cycle

    • @kyransamuel8055
      @kyransamuel8055 Год назад +7

      @@bobbya8628Reserves, National Guard, and Active Duty are mixed together at BCT

    • @mynameisinigomontoya8179
      @mynameisinigomontoya8179 Год назад +5

      I was at Sand Hill in 2011 as well. C company 2-47

    • @mynameisinigomontoya8179
      @mynameisinigomontoya8179 Год назад +42

      @@bobbya8628 before the army became pussified, and "woke" benning was the home of the most jarring basic/osut training the army offered. Nothing like relaxing Jackson or ft sill. They created lean mean soldiers at Benning. But I'm also totally biased because I'm a Benning boy myself hehe

  • @johny_bravo9970
    @johny_bravo9970 Год назад +421

    I left because how the whole organization functions as a whole not because of my drill Sgt actually I love how hard they were on me it showed me they cared

    • @jonathanshaw7355
      @jonathanshaw7355 Год назад +4

      What happened?

    • @Unanimouslyanonymous1234
      @Unanimouslyanonymous1234 Год назад +16

      Same! I was in the air guard for 12 years. I LOVED boot camp. I was a very soft kid and it helped toughen me up and to no longer care about someone screaming in my face. It was the Air Force as a whole. People being in leadership role that they had no business being. It kind of seemed like the shit rose to the top. I could not respect is anymore. I am glad I served but so glad I am out. The military culture can be an extremely toxic one.

    • @micperez819
      @micperez819 9 месяцев назад +1

      You hit the nail on the head

  • @joelmueller7132
    @joelmueller7132 10 месяцев назад +42

    I can't speak for others, but for me in basic training in 1996, I liked that the drill instructors were rough and tough on us. That was always the point of it. To see if you could function in a stressful environment and still think. They are there to prepare future soldiers for war. Now, as far as leaving early, I left after eight years because two contracts and 5 deployment were enough for me. It's hard to make the military a lifelong career and live a normal life. As a single soldier, I had no problems, but those with families I could see how stressful it was on them.

  • @jamesnieves5673
    @jamesnieves5673 10 месяцев назад +10

    When I did American Legion Boy’s State, I had a Marines Drill Srg who pushed me to do my best but understood me at my worst. That’s a good leader.

  • @WillardHewing
    @WillardHewing Год назад +387

    I joined the Navy right before 9-11 and bootcamp was so much fun to me. It was challenging but I had fun in basic training. I learned to not take "drill sergeant talk" to seriously and just keep pushing forward.

    • @Airland_combat
      @Airland_combat Год назад +12

      Well, I know I'm just stating the obvious. But, when they call you names or cuss you out, basically haze you. It's to push you to your limits and use anger to motivate you further to complete a course or just flat out get through basic.

    • @WillardHewing
      @WillardHewing Год назад +7

      @@Airland_combat Facts, I loved it. I had my mind made up that I was not going to retreat no matter how tough it gets. Sometimes in life I have to reach back and channel that "No Retreat" energy to get me through challenging times. I'm actually going through challenges now.

  • @altimate19
    @altimate19 10 месяцев назад +1253

    As someone who went through the Vietnam era training (which was still in effect when I joined in 2001 - yes I was in basic training when 9/11 happened), I think this is a good step to improve the culture. That being said, I didn't leave the army because of basic. I left because of how poor my leadership was, how they made life miserable, and because I vowed not to let anyone have that kind of control over my life ever again. I hope this truly turns a new leaf for the Army.

    • @infirite72
      @infirite72 10 месяцев назад +32

      No offence but your profile picture looks like a discord moderator

    • @RDKirbyN
      @RDKirbyN 10 месяцев назад +19

      Considering what the US Military does and has to do abroad, it likely can never change. What they put young men and women through, to subjugate abroad cannot be done in a healthy way. The US hasn't fought a war for "good" in a century.

    • @altimate19
      @altimate19 10 месяцев назад +49

      @@infirite72 haha, that pic is probably 12 years old. Was discord even a thing then?

    • @gyozanomics
      @gyozanomics 10 месяцев назад +6

      I bet you vote democrat

    • @kicnbac
      @kicnbac 10 месяцев назад +15

      The military is so woke, I would never do it again. I talked my son out of joining,

  • @definitelynotsnake
    @definitelynotsnake 10 месяцев назад +4

    this is the most genuine and insightful comment section in all of youtube. Very interesting to read soldiers experiences within BASIC and beyond. If I can extended an olive branch I'll say that whether civilian or soldier we can all relate to absolutely abysmal leadership and the feeling that brings

  • @chrissmith7669
    @chrissmith7669 2 месяца назад +5

    As a veteran of those days in the army I say „What a crock of crap!“. The yelling is to train you to react under pressure without hesitation. If you can’t adapt and deal with doing your job while someone is deliberately trying to sabotage you you won’t be able to when everything goes pear shaped

  • @michaelstagar4254
    @michaelstagar4254 Год назад +1679

    I came up in the old system but my own leadership style is far less fear oriented. Both approaches have value but knowing when to implement them is the key to efficiency and retaining high performers. If you only solve things with a hammer all problems will become nails.

    • @wazapawaable
      @wazapawaable Год назад +79

      Regard your soldiers as your children, and they will follow you into the deepest valleys; look upon them as your own beloved sons, and they will stand by you even unto death. If, however, you are indulgent, but unable to make your authority felt; kind-hearted, but unable to enforce your commands; and incapable, moreover, of quelling disorder: then your soldiers must be likened to spoilt children; they are useless for any practical purpose.
      Sun Tzu, The Art of War

    • @thatoutlawed_7.3l89
      @thatoutlawed_7.3l89 Год назад +7

      @@wazapawaable buddy. I’m sitting here enjoying a beer. Got out of court today. Have a $1400 restitution and order to go to the army within 8 weeks ,, 6 to pay of fines and total of 8 to work out enlistment. No proper ID. Watching these videos finally about to fulfill a dream I’ve always had. Back to the point sir. That sounds like a Bible quote

    • @vince11harris
      @vince11harris Год назад +3

      @@thatoutlawed_7.3l89 courts can still order you to serve in the army ?

    • @americanandpinay
      @americanandpinay Год назад +6

      @@vince11harris Yeah, but I never heard of it actually happening in 24 years of service. Maybe if he's young and recruitment is down judges are giving the option. I'll give the benefit of doubt, though it sounds strange.

    • @americanandpinay
      @americanandpinay Год назад +3

      It sounds like y'all were doing what we were doing. We never yelled really after we got them to phase 2, unless it was deserving, to make a point, or to increase the stress factor. I don't think what they are doing now is completely a good thing. BCT is supposed to train you to work under extreme and difficult pressure by simulated situations that mimic the types of scenerios a soldier may find themselves in one day. The pressure part. It is supposed to show a couple of weeds who would never cut it and risk death or be a risk of death in the future. I am wondering how many of these new DIs have any real combat experiences giving that most lifers in the 2001-2008 groups should be retiring age. The only scenerio I know that the military has had since 2014 battle against ISIS...is the Afghanistan withdrawal and Afghanistan was a real shitshow the last time I was there trying to train those guys*. Not to say individual pockets of infantry aren't out there fanning the flames on good days to die.
      *The day before I left we found a squad of Afghan soldiers who were putting the live IEDs, mortars, and mines they were finding under their beds instead of turning them in. All to protect their opiate supplies from being stolen. About as much information as I was ever forwarded on the subject.

  • @rednecked5825
    @rednecked5825 Год назад +274

    My drills were tough and mean as hell and I still remember their names , they made me be able to handle all situations and never say I can't. I went in 1989

    • @Shadow_Banned_Conservative
      @Shadow_Banned_Conservative Год назад +13

      I was the same era as you, 1990 here. I've got to wonder how soldiers in today's military are going to function under stress in such a kinder and gentler military.

    • @ejcoldwell
      @ejcoldwell Год назад

      @@Shadow_Banned_Conservative They won't. People think it's just a crazy conspiracy theory, but this is all part of the plan to make our country vulnerable.

    • @ejcoldwell
      @ejcoldwell Год назад

      @Joe Shmoe You're welcome for my cervix

    • @jessdelacruz5157
      @jessdelacruz5157 Год назад +1

      Went to fort Dix 1989 I won't ever forget or regret it Go Army!

    • @deathkillshoot
      @deathkillshoot Год назад +1

      @@Shadow_Banned_Conservative they'll be runnin back to the apc and when their commander asks them what happened they go
      'Sir, the sniper hurt my feeling'

  • @chucksouth4258
    @chucksouth4258 10 месяцев назад +6

    A great advance in thinking to restrict negative reinforcement and embrace positive reinforcement. Went thru Ft. Jackson, SC in 1984. Drill Sgt. Wooten already was grasping this technique...ahead of his time...one fine D.I.!

  • @samuelgann1298
    @samuelgann1298 Месяц назад +1

    We passed a drill ruck march during our own Anvil ruck and they were tacking it up as they passed with their good pace

  • @Domogirl506
    @Domogirl506 Год назад +1171

    You can be hard on trainees as long as you actually gaf about them. I can't stand leadership who thinks their hot shit and hard but don't care about the guys under them. You can be an awesome nco and not act like you're untouchable. Everyone makes mistakes while learning and it's normal to ask questions. I don't think the problem is that DS are too hard on trainees its the fact some of them think they can get away with slick shit. Leadership is literally what gets people to either leave or stay in the military, aside from other things.

    • @orangepeel1073
      @orangepeel1073 Год назад +49

      the whole culture of being harsh started in ww2 because the army was DESPERATE to get trained men FAST. it forced them to use what we now see has harsh tacticts, to get people trained as fast as possible

    • @Adrenaline_Rushh22
      @Adrenaline_Rushh22 Год назад +43

      @@orangepeel1073similar to parents who belt their kids to teach them swifter and in a less stable way than healthy reprimanding.

    • @SIRslipperyasp91
      @SIRslipperyasp91 Год назад +22

      The big thing in my mind is that DS are the future leaders of the army, they're (supposedly) picked from only the top NCOs in their field, and NCOs who've done Drill broadening assignments are looked at most favorably for promotions.
      How we train our DS will color the views and culture of the army 10 years from now. They need to be shown you don't have to yell, demean, and abuse your subordinates to be an effective leader. How the system has been is why so much toxic leadership is tolerated.

    • @Native5
      @Native5 Год назад

      The Navy is the worst

    • @rogerbrandt6678
      @rogerbrandt6678 Год назад

      Pansy

  • @hinoname52
    @hinoname52 Год назад +1126

    I joined the Air Force but my basic similarly had notably less yelling and less arbitrary stress. I actually liked my drill instructors in basic, they were stern and strict but it was clear that they only wanted the best for us and they were completely fair. I feel like we actually put even more effort in because we respected and appreciated our drill instructors than another flight that had your classic drill instructors who would yell and create problems out of literally anything.

    • @Joemama-km9np
      @Joemama-km9np Год назад +74

      Did you have pillow fights in basic? LoL!

    • @patriotsedge6730
      @patriotsedge6730 Год назад +20

      Good grief….

    • @dramir5953
      @dramir5953 Год назад +16

      Nerd

    • @hinoname52
      @hinoname52 Год назад +83

      @@Joemama-km9np Fair drill instructors = no rules? Are you delusional lmao

    • @hinoname52
      @hinoname52 Год назад +64

      @@patriotsedge6730 I know, drill instructors will create a problem out of literally nothing sometimes, it's crazy isn't it? I'm so glad I had drill instructors who treated me like an adult instead of a stupid, petulant child and rightfully yelled and punished us when we did something genuinely and understandably wrong.
      Or did you mean something else by "good grief"?

  • @larryboatwright1660
    @larryboatwright1660 Месяц назад +1

    I was in basic training in 1966. Our drill Sargent was tough and we all had respect for him. He cussed and yelled at us but it was to make us learn when we screwed up. It didn't hurt me in learning about life and helped me in Viet Nam I understand today's youths are all a bunch that get their feelings hurt.

  • @retiredarmyvet2018
    @retiredarmyvet2018 Год назад +607

    I was a Drill Sergeant and we had CSM King at the school house. I'll never forget what she said. "Your combat experience means nothing when it comes to training soldiers!" At the end of her speech she asked if we had any questions. I raised my hand and was called on. I said "If our combat experience means nothing when it comes to training soldiers, then why is it called Basic Combat Training?" She was not happy and told me to sit down. She had been in the military for over 20 years at the time and never served in combat. Not in the first gulf war, not in the Stan or Iraq. She kept dodging those deployments. She got suspended two or three classes later so its all good.

    • @robertisham5279
      @robertisham5279 11 месяцев назад +7

      She?

    • @retiredarmyvet2018
      @retiredarmyvet2018 11 месяцев назад +25

      @@robertisham5279 CSM King was a she.

    • @mrc4912
      @mrc4912 10 месяцев назад +15

      Was she the 'in the rear with gear' type or did she just have a big rear?

    • @rh81454
      @rh81454 10 месяцев назад

      She was a total hack of an NCO. She got paid tho. Pays to play victim in the Army.

    • @verticle2612
      @verticle2612 10 месяцев назад +10

      She said that because her lack of a left patch made her insecure.

  • @adityapraveen9342
    @adityapraveen9342 Год назад +283

    Being a drill sergeant to drill seargent must have you feeling like the final boss

  • @easyrider3112
    @easyrider3112 10 месяцев назад +16

    There needs to be high stress experience during basic training. I've seen a few people crumble under pressure and stress in the field because they haven't really experienced it before. It can come in the later stages and should be from an outside source and not the MTIs, but having people break down from stress in a controlled environment where help and treatment is close, specialized, and plentiful is and invaluable experience for all military members. Maybe something akin to very basic POW training would be ideal.
    Exposing them to that level of stress early shows people areas for improvement and that assistance is available to deal with the fallout after it happens. This trains them to seek proper help and how to identify when help is needed.

    • @ecclairmayo4153
      @ecclairmayo4153 10 месяцев назад +3

      That's why it makes no sense to remove shark week. It served as a shock and awe and got that freeze response out of them.

  • @swaydaygaming7571
    @swaydaygaming7571 10 месяцев назад +2

    I remember Ft. Jackson Basic Training we didn’t say Yes, we responded to everything with “Black Lions” Drill sarn’t lol crazy but good times

  • @tophsoutdoors
    @tophsoutdoors Год назад +2001

    I feel bad for the new Soldiers. Drill sergeants yelling and cursing at my buddies and i were some of the best memories I have during basic. They say some pretty funny stuff and when you're away from friends, family and technology you actually enjoy the comedy of it.

    • @jayhawkins9459
      @jayhawkins9459 Год назад +85

      I graduated a year ago, had plenty of the swearing and yelling, still wasn't as much as back home though

    • @stevenwright1829
      @stevenwright1829 Год назад +158

      My drills never cared about that. They joked about hoping a trainee who had a heat stroke died and called him a weak b**ch but then again I was at fort Benning so 🤷🏼‍♂️

    • @boydscanlan9152
      @boydscanlan9152 Год назад +38

      I just recently graduated Basic and there was some pretty funny moments. Mainly people being unable to count but it was still fun.

    • @ch33zybreadtrellie4
      @ch33zybreadtrellie4 Год назад +28

      The enemy thinks much much worse…. So it’s only right to get used to it,

    • @stevenwright1829
      @stevenwright1829 Год назад +1

      @@boydscanlan9152 where you getting stationed?

  • @Timmy-qc1ss
    @Timmy-qc1ss Год назад +304

    So proud of the cameraman now he has become a drill sergeant.

  • @Ch12JS
    @Ch12JS 10 месяцев назад +2

    I still miss the day of my days at Fort Jackson. I have nothing but respect for the drill sergeant of my former training unit.

    • @618chevyguy5
      @618chevyguy5 2 месяца назад

      I was in 1st battalion 13th infantry regiment for my BCT at Fort Jackson my drills were cool and I have nothing but respect for them

  • @413smr
    @413smr 12 дней назад

    IDK why all these videos keep showing up in my feed but I do watch them and when I do, I sit at attention. LOL

  • @carsonmoon8934
    @carsonmoon8934 Год назад +203

    The drill sergeant in the thumbnail, SFC Walker, was my drill sergeant in basic training in 2019. He taught us a lot in those 14 weeks. Crazy to see that he’s at the drill school now.

    • @mannkinnd007
      @mannkinnd007 Год назад

      If you don't get you're simping ass out here 🤣🤣. PANDA BAY 4LIFE

    • @mohwe1007
      @mohwe1007 Год назад

      damn

    • @WRGrind
      @WRGrind Год назад

      I just got through Basic a month ago and my names Walker 🤣🤣

    • @lukeolson2382
      @lukeolson2382 Год назад +2

      @The Fires of Mount Doom That's why nobody is joining

    • @jolanderphilip
      @jolanderphilip Год назад

      That dude has the most infantry jawline ever and I’m hard for it

  • @babyd12216
    @babyd12216 Год назад +532

    This is for bootcamp, the real problem in the military is after bootcamp. Lack of leadership training, holding people accountable, and taking away those weird gray areas. These bootcamp changes CAN lead to people in their first enlistment thinking they’re equal to senior ranking members.
    I’m curious to see the actual Recruit training videos.

    • @GintaPPE1000
      @GintaPPE1000 Год назад

      Isn't the giving the lowest ranks a say one of the things the US military prides itself most on? First enlistment soldiers should be equal to senior ranking members - the problems start when they think they're better than them.

    • @remessinger
      @remessinger Год назад +14

      It looks a little like boy scouts. They are asking for values. Wow,they soft now. I was trained in '79 to breath as one. Everyone thought the same way after training.

    • @skipbaymore4418
      @skipbaymore4418 Год назад +5

      The mil is pretty cute these days..show the high heel clip

    • @KB-hb1ub
      @KB-hb1ub Год назад +1

      They treat the enlisted like absolute dog shit and then wonder why they can’t retain anybody. In the Corps, everybody with a brain got out as soon as they could. That leaves the people who like the power and the glory to stay in. Cycle continues. Until they get rid of the shitheads who get off on berating 19 year olds, it’ll keep getting worse. You know how your military ends up like Russia’s? That’s how. Nobody who can think for themselves.

    • @amberharmsen2497
      @amberharmsen2497 Год назад +8

      All in the correct effort to lower risk of ptsd

  • @WatchingLakersBasketball
    @WatchingLakersBasketball 6 месяцев назад +2

    As someone who never wanted to join the army because of what i saw before and after what happened to my relatives, being excited to join, happy filled with joy about life and thinking about the future to coming out and the police treat them like their time in the military didn't matter, to having to go to the VA, to ptsd to not knowing which way to turn for years to the great benefits and having ppl care about you. It was very up and down, i thought about it several times to thinking about not scoring high enough on the asvab to being to old now and my time passing by to having a family. So much made me not want to join but its good to see they are changing their ways to training. Hopefully the new generation wants to give it a go. 18-39

  • @blobnation8457
    @blobnation8457 10 месяцев назад +3

    When shit hits the fan, these new recruits are gonna crumble under fire because they were not broke of that opossum reaction that comes with fear. DI’s and DS’s screaming in your face breaks that habit of freezing when stressed. I’m not even in the military and I know that these new recruits will freeze up, they will get hurt, and they will die if DI’s and DS’s keep going softer

  • @ernesthromada3994
    @ernesthromada3994 Год назад +234

    I went through BCT over 20 years ago and I'll never forget my Drills. It's far from an easy life for them on the trail.

    • @chico8738
      @chico8738 Год назад +3

      POGS though My 11B built different

    • @scarzandy436
      @scarzandy436 Год назад +1

      @@chico8738 11 Charlie bct and ait yessir

    • @thebighousencaaattendancer478
      @thebighousencaaattendancer478 Год назад +2

      92Y Unit Supply Specialist here. Most hardcore MOS in the Army. Represent yeah!

    • @kylechav2008
      @kylechav2008 Год назад +2

      @@chico8738 11B grammar too

  • @williewonka2104
    @williewonka2104 10 месяцев назад +351

    Went to Basic almost 20 years ago, combat vet and I'll tell you that I got out because of toxic leadership not the way my drill treated me in basic. Good troops leave because the fastest runner with a high PT score gets promoted and then emulates what they see in the previous toxic leaders. Its leadership that makes the difference and I am willing to bet not much has changed in 20 years, all of this sounds good, and I am certain the CSM means everything he says but again it's what happens after they get in the units that drive good troops out. At the core it is explained in the video clearly, all of the soldiers have to "relearn" basic fundamentals, everyone should be proficient with a rifle and basic soldier skills. In the pre-deployment phase for combat we had to "reorient" ourselves with basic soldier skills in order to make sure we were ready. This was so eye opening to me at the time because we focused on a ton of stuff that didn't really matter..... very telling. I enjoyed my time and was proud to serve my country and will always be proud of the things I accomplished but this seems so alien to me. I will probably be dismissed as "old school" or maybe even insensitive, but we all are entitled to our views because of those that serve.

    • @romeljimenez9289
      @romeljimenez9289 10 месяцев назад +3

      Sounds about right, but I was lucky when I did basic. DS Wintersteen treated us with respect and truly cared about how we felt and made sure we never felt sore from PT.
      Benning 2001(summer) 🇺🇸🫡

    • @temich1985
      @temich1985 10 месяцев назад

      Yep, the classical favoritism towards cock sucking butt kissers or cute young female troops never went away and probably never will.

    • @cr3160
      @cr3160 10 месяцев назад

      Yeah the infantry is still like this in 2023 lol. Dogshit leadership ruining what could be a smooth operation.

    • @romeljimenez9289
      @romeljimenez9289 10 месяцев назад

      Hello jay. Do I know you?? I haven’t lived in NC since 2005.

    • @INFJ-ThaneTr
      @INFJ-ThaneTr 10 месяцев назад +2

      Most people become corrupted the moment they get a sense of power

  • @Angie12278
    @Angie12278 3 месяца назад

    I did mine at Fort lost in the Woods!!

  • @simpletrousers2769
    @simpletrousers2769 10 месяцев назад +1

    The thumbnail picture on the right doesn't look possible, hahaha. It looks like the guy's head shrinks as soon as it hits the hat. Maybe it's optical trickery, but it looks hilarious.

  • @stevenbatrez4530
    @stevenbatrez4530 Год назад +455

    I loved and embraced the way basic training was ran in 2017 when I joined. I left the army because there was a lot of illegal punishments and mistreatment and favoritism going on within my unit. My leadership failed their soldiers and younger NCOs like myself. The army needs to clean up these units. Especially in Fort Lewis. My unit had a 0% reenlist meant rate. Basic training was probably one of my favorite parts of the army.

    • @erascarecrow2541
      @erascarecrow2541 Год назад +13

      I was in 2005-2007, at the time it was considered the 'easiest basic training ever'.
      Various insisting and pushing to be 'airborne' when i got to Bragg, told by my doctor my physical pain was all 'in my head', them giving the technical jobs i would have been good at to other people and never offering it to me, the 'dog and pony show' it was in Korea. And then how the national guard got sent because they had to be doing the war in iraq/iran, a job they weren't intended for.
      No, i wouldn't recommend joining for any reason at all right now.

    • @stevenbatrez4530
      @stevenbatrez4530 Год назад +2

      @@erascarecrow2541 I can agree to that. U see how nobody is joining right now anyway 😂 but did u at least get some disability out of it?

    • @chewy3141
      @chewy3141 Год назад +13

      Yup! I was in the Air Force, they recently did a big change to basic training because they had a huge scandal with illegal punishments, near-torture (Drills putting bleach in the showers and making the trainees do pushups in there, etc), sexual harassment (taking trainees off base...). People thought it was "stupid" they're making it "too easy" when in reality it was to focus on the training part of basic training and not cruelty for the sake of cruelty.

    • @joeanrachelmiller6529
      @joeanrachelmiller6529 Год назад

      Illegal punishments... basic in 09 someone misplaced a rifle for 3 hours. The drill sergeants used the rubber bullets for the next days drills to illegally teach forced retreat for 3 hours. My hip dislocation that night was a lie and a myth because of my white skin. I'm pretty sure woke broke the military.

    • @cycloneranger7927
      @cycloneranger7927 Год назад +3

      @@erascarecrow2541
      Maybe you just weren’t qualified for the things you wanted to do?

  • @garrysimmons3457
    @garrysimmons3457 Год назад +293

    I may forget some of high school teacher names, but I'll never forget my drill sergeants

    • @AngelLopez-is12
      @AngelLopez-is12 Год назад +1

      😂

    • @garrysimmons3457
      @garrysimmons3457 Год назад

      @@AngelLopez-is12 platoon got smoked at least 2 times a day

    • @renatoreyes6583
      @renatoreyes6583 Год назад

      Bro saaame

    • @Sleptanimations
      @Sleptanimations Год назад +4

      Sarg: **sniff** I SMELL SOMETHING**KICKS DOOR** WHY IS YOUR BED NOT MADE?
      PRVT: SORRY SARGENT
      SARG: DO I LOOK LIKE A SORRY SARGENT
      PRVT: MY APOLOGIES SARGENT
      SARG: WHY ARE YOU APOLOGIZING RATHER THAN FIXING THAN YOUR BED
      PRVT:MY APOLOGIES SARGENT

    • @dexteroreo3392
      @dexteroreo3392 Год назад +11

      To be fair a lot of high school teachers are losers. My history teacher basically grew his virginity back and gave me an F 'accidentally' after he noticed I dated a student he groomed once. Shit was all kinds of wrong for him lol.

  • @h-waytwan1257
    @h-waytwan1257 9 месяцев назад +1

    I can tell the day it changed August 2006 my time in basic until I graduated in October. This was a critical moment. When certain rules have changed this was the last moment that the last of the real army existed. Alpha Company 3-13th Fort Jackson SC 2006.

  • @rocko_M
    @rocko_M 5 месяцев назад +1

    I’m glad they are approaching things different, cuz it was bad years back.

  • @kenn.alexander
    @kenn.alexander Год назад +393

    When I was in the Army, I was sent to the Navy's dive medical course with Recon Corpsmen. Coming from the Ranger Regiment & RTB, my vocabulary consisted of profanity and exclamation points. The Chief running the course stopped me in the middle of a training session to tell me that I was too intelligent to be using the F-word in every sentence. That moment stayed with me almost as much as any other lesson I've learned in my life.

    • @rommix0
      @rommix0 Год назад +16

      He's not wrong.

    • @donaldbush5404
      @donaldbush5404 Год назад +1

      Ft. Lewis ?

    • @josephlane1614
      @josephlane1614 Год назад +6

      Scientific research has shown that profanity is typically used more often from people with higher iq's, but alright.

    • @mainely8007
      @mainely8007 Год назад +27

      @@josephlane1614 And an intelligent person can also communicate without using profanity which was the point the Chief was making to the Ranger.

    • @graven2508
      @graven2508 Год назад +12

      ​@@mainely8007 we could communicate with smoke and sign language too, but nothing says you need to be here right now like "get the **** over here." This isnt high school, this is professional force that's designed to be violent.

  • @montebrown9528
    @montebrown9528 Год назад +119

    When I was in boot camp on a Sunday our DI came in drunk and we thought we were going to have an easy day. After the first 5 miles of him running backwards and us forward we changed our minds. Sgt Bell, tough as they come.

    • @timstarkes173
      @timstarkes173 Год назад +4

      yeah I've seen guys chainsmoking Export A Greens smashing back a triple triple coffee then run us into the dirt.

    • @AEIOU05
      @AEIOU05 Год назад

      When my dad did his service in the Austrian Army from ‘80 to ‘81 the NCO On-Duty was inspecting his platoons rifle cleaning progress every hour. With each passing hour he came into the barracks room increasingly drunk, until he practically stumbled into the room, barely being able to walk. When i served from ‘20 until April of '23 that wasn’t the norm anymore, but I saw a couple of sergeants with noticeable hangovers and one time a fully plastered captain who held a closing speech and led the daily push up session in the evening.

  • @victorc777
    @victorc777 10 месяцев назад +5

    So glad I went to Basic before this. The yelling and screaming was what made my day.

  • @andrewtinn7060
    @andrewtinn7060 10 месяцев назад +2

    Reinforcement, positive pressure and building on strengths rather than negatively reinforcing and berating someone leads to a better soldier… my god why didn’t I think of that?!?!?!

  • @challengeus8286
    @challengeus8286 Год назад +384

    CO once told me, idc if you have the highest pt scores or best shooter, anyone can easily replace you. You are just a NUMBER!! That opened my eyes and viewed everything differently. Glad im out but proud i served!!

    • @ssjskslurpy8790
      @ssjskslurpy8790 Год назад +65

      Lol I thought the same thing but if you can’t get people join I’m not replaceable hahah they should treat us like we not not replaceable and people would stay

    • @rex4571
      @rex4571 Год назад +11

      My CO said the same he got out after I did, now I make triple what I did then

    • @challengeus8286
      @challengeus8286 Год назад +6

      @@rex4571 same here lol

    • @DozSkills
      @DozSkills Год назад +7

      Ok they did all this work at the BCT level but like you mentioned what are they actually doing at the FORSCOM level I recently witnessed the mishandling of situations with the junior enlisted and as an NCO I had brought it up to leadership and they would just sweep it under the rug. The unit leadership made sure I knew I was replaceable but I was still there for the junior Soldiers.

    • @megamanx466
      @megamanx466 Год назад +22

      @Yummy Spaghetti Noodles I don't think you have a clue of what they do or how a "starving homeless person" could do it. Most homeless I've seen are there because of mental illness, drug addiction, or sometimes being fresh out of jail/prison. Simply being "a body" doesn't work in skilled labor as it might in unskilled labor. 🤨

  • @Stl10699
    @Stl10699 Год назад +267

    The drill sergeant from forrest gump is the epitome of a good drill sergeant.

    • @amadeusagripino6862
      @amadeusagripino6862 Год назад +26

      GUUUUUUUMP!

    • @johncenile8044
      @johncenile8044 Год назад +26

      God damn it, Gump! You're a god damn genius! This is the most outstanding answer I have ever heard. You must have a goddamn I.Q. of 160!

    • @angelmendiola2002
      @angelmendiola2002 Год назад +3

      During Basic, he’ll teach trainees of how to play Ping Pong correctly lol

    • @internetperiodista
      @internetperiodista Год назад +5

      @@amadeusagripino6862 what is your sole purpose in the Army?

    • @amadeusagripino6862
      @amadeusagripino6862 Год назад +11

      @@internetperiodista TO DO WHATEVER YOU TELL ME DRILL SERGEANT

  • @geraldwestphipps764
    @geraldwestphipps764 6 месяцев назад +3

    I'm a Marine who earned that title in 1976, and I'm US Army Infantry and I earned that in 1982. I don't know where this is going and I hope this little experiment works IN COMBAT when all hell breaks loose and you need sheer grit, determination and intestinal fortitude to get through it instead of nice words and values. The issue is not at the Basic training level...it's at the command level. If you train better officers, you'll get a better Army. Officers decide how Senior Staff/Staff/NCO's and soldiers are trained and led. Change West Point; Change ROTC, put line units back to being led by MEN. Ever since the MILITARY started gender blending they've had horrific issues in leadership and in the ranks. We've been at War since 9/11 and it doesn't appear that this military can actually do more than hold the line. Politicians who never served are trying to tell the people who have to kill and die how it's done!!! By the way, I LITERALLY HATE the new Army uniform adopted from WW2. It looks cheap...glad I don't have to wear it.

    • @internetmeta
      @internetmeta 6 месяцев назад

      Everyone knows this shit ain't gonna work. They are trying to turn the military into some kind of state level correction officer bullshit. State Corrections is the armpit of law enforcement in the US.

  • @user-el5uu9hs1c
    @user-el5uu9hs1c 19 дней назад +1

    I was drafted in 72 and my home life was my father yelling screaming and physically abusing his eight sons and three daughters, boot camp was the best fun I had in a long time.

  • @yourhero782
    @yourhero782 Год назад +356

    One time during boot camp, I responded(out of frustration) to my sergeant with,” You a real tough guy, knowing imma get in trouble if I do something to”… This demon looked at me with most devious smile, and said, “We can go to a secluded spot and fight til the death”……..The joy in that man eyes shook me a little bit ngl…… I haven’t spoken out of frustration since😂

    • @nilebrixton8436
      @nilebrixton8436 Год назад +34

      I believe it. Had a drill sergeant I believe he's a little f-up in the head.

    • @newp0rt
      @newp0rt Год назад +19

      you know he was just waiting for SOMEONE to just say something. he couldnt wait to beat some new recruit.

    • @sjdover69
      @sjdover69 Год назад

      Then he was an idiot. Just like the Russians since WW2. Badly train on mass and make sure they fear what's behind them more than what's in front.
      Doesn't work.

    • @jesuschristlovingyou
      @jesuschristlovingyou Год назад +3

      Ah yes. The lapse of judgement.

    • @tmannintendo
      @tmannintendo Год назад +3

      I would of been like lets fuckin go!

  • @thekneebreaker4790
    @thekneebreaker4790 Год назад +506

    The British army have adopted this technique and have been doing it for some years now, getting into the British army is difficult, convoluted and incredibly drawn out, it is in itself a test of commitment, therefore by the time a recruit makes it in front of the DS, they have already proved their willingness to be there

    • @gabriellangford2730
      @gabriellangford2730 Год назад +22

      If the UK is doing this then we losing our next war for sure 😅

    • @markcopeland4344
      @markcopeland4344 Год назад +3

      Let's hope there are no more wars but if needed I will put the uniform back on God bless America!

    • @nischal711
      @nischal711 Год назад +24

      ​@@gabriellangford2730 uk army standard and train are pretty damn good.
      I mean the gurkhas training and selection is mad tho.

    • @PBMS123
      @PBMS123 Год назад +38

      @@gabriellangford2730 They've been doing it for decades mate. The English way of doing things, NEVER involved the absolute joke of the shark attack

    • @gabriellangford2730
      @gabriellangford2730 Год назад +4

      @@PBMS123 UK military isn’t quite up to par

  • @JessicaKromrey-vb9vt
    @JessicaKromrey-vb9vt 9 месяцев назад

    Grateful.

  • @1Dub79
    @1Dub79 2 месяца назад

    A LOT of changes in the Army, since I was in BCT at Ft. Sill, OK from 09JUL2002-19SEP2002.

  • @mikethemechanic7395
    @mikethemechanic7395 Год назад +570

    Was at Ft Sill in 1993. My senior Drill sgt had combat jump wings from Granada. He was the perfect example of who a soldier should be like. I served under the last of the Vietnam war guys. Got to meet a few MOH guys. A WW2 code talker and 3 Vietnam guys. I did my 4 and got out.

    • @JasonSmith-vg8ew
      @JasonSmith-vg8ew Год назад +7

      Your senior drill sergeant wasn't SFC Keeney was it? I was at Ft. Sill in 1995 and my senior drill sergeant had combat jump wings from jumping into Panama with the 82nd. Those days they didn't care about soldiers, in my opinion.

    • @mikethemechanic7395
      @mikethemechanic7395 Год назад +11

      @@JasonSmith-vg8ew It was SFC Musslewhite. Was at D company 1/33rd. You were right about caring for soldiers.

    • @dkkids
      @dkkids Год назад +7

      I had SFC Lopez. He was with the 7th ID and was in Panama for Operation Just Because back in '91

    • @mikethemechanic7395
      @mikethemechanic7395 Год назад +1

      @@dkkids . I think I remember him..

    • @myoung72207
      @myoung72207 Год назад +6

      I was there June-August 1994. DS Stasik and DS Gigliotti (sp?) made it a living hell, but I'd go back tomorrow if I were able.

  • @epa316
    @epa316 Год назад +264

    I didn't have a problem with basic training, even though I fractured my foot and got held over. What made me realize 'this ain't for me' was later on in my regular unit. Asshole NCOs, dilapidated barracks, our entire year's training budget shot by April, broken down vehicles, constant 'hurry up and wait' bullshit, 1% pay raises... this is accepted as "what do you expect, it's the Army!" Well, it's also why so many do their first enlistment then get the hell out.

    • @xigamma1457
      @xigamma1457 Год назад +4

      I'm considering leaving

    • @GankWater
      @GankWater Год назад +13

      @@xigamma1457 Speaking from experience, have a plan when you get out to use the GI bill and dont use it on underwater basket weaving, youll be fine. Civilian sector is great right now, corporations love prior service folks.

    • @-WhiskeyAndSteel-
      @-WhiskeyAndSteel- Год назад +4

      @Repent and believe in Jesus Christ you have the Bible app on your phone.

    • @alexanderdaytonrobertson4792
      @alexanderdaytonrobertson4792 Год назад +5

      @Repent and believe in Jesus Christ Hail Odin!

    • @redfaction-hc6iq
      @redfaction-hc6iq Год назад +4

      @@GankWater I think that depends on the state as well unless the manager is prior service, because some civilians don't give a shit

  • @618chevyguy5
    @618chevyguy5 2 месяца назад

    I was at Fort Jackson July-September 2018 when Hurricane Florence hit our final FTX got stopped halfway through because of the hurricane

  • @JosephPetrie-ud2wh
    @JosephPetrie-ud2wh 2 месяца назад +1

    Great respect and appreciation for my Drill Sergeants at Ft. Leonard Wood in the 70's.
    These were heroes who lived through Viet Nam and then the hell that they encountered when they came home.They helped us develop physical and mental strength, so we could meet our duties. They broke us down to build up our confidence and with it our ability to make informed decisions. They taught us how to survive. They made me a better man.

  • @heywoodjablome7834
    @heywoodjablome7834 10 месяцев назад +2

    In 1987 I was part of a platoon who were the last to go through the old WWII barracks at Ft Sill. Drills were still allowed to put their hands on you. I ETS’d after 11 years of active, honorable service not because of drill sergeants but because of injuries - I am an American Paratrooper and combat veteran

  • @harryhaley1967
    @harryhaley1967 Год назад +603

    Training must be more harsh than the situation you will encounter. We do not rise to our expectations we fall to the level of our training.

    • @Pranav_Bhamidipati
      @Pranav_Bhamidipati Год назад +73

      I don't think all soldiers need to be trained against psychological abuse.

    • @poolee77
      @poolee77 Год назад

      ​@@Pranav_Bhamidipati weak shit. Stress inoculation isn't psychological abuse

    • @chrismedina54
      @chrismedina54 Год назад +20

      Train harder than you fight.

    • @MrMuaythai84
      @MrMuaythai84 Год назад

      @@Pranav_Bhamidipati you think cussing ia abuse? what are you a beta? you think in war no one gonna cuss or when missile are coming at you its gonna explode into flowers? this why this country is on the down fall because weak pathetic men cant handle training and then everyone gets screwed

    • @petergriffin680
      @petergriffin680 Год назад +27

      Good luck simulating ied explosions in training

  • @eriksalusoo
    @eriksalusoo Год назад +326

    A good sergeant pushes you to be the best version of yourself. There's just a limit for how far each person can be pushed before it turns counter productive. If you take things from face value only, you will never understand how much value the work of a drill sergeant brings you.

    • @eriksalusoo
      @eriksalusoo Год назад +17

      I do believe the reasoning behind yelling is to give people the conditions of combat zone. That does include loads of yelling and nerve wrecks.

    • @peacechan4500
      @peacechan4500 Год назад +9

      @@eriksalusoo genuinely, I think that's won't work.
      Shouting and getting shot at isn't the same as shouting only. Nothing beats IRL war experience for actual war. Shouting now only hurt the whole army situation a lot more.

    • @-Bishop-
      @-Bishop- Год назад +20

      ​@@peacechan4500 The point of the shouting is to give the soldiers a little piece of the intensity and volume of war.

    • @jesusofbullets
      @jesusofbullets Год назад +25

      If you psychologically break from being shouted at, god forbid you ever go into a situation more stressful than that like combat or literally just war in general.
      The stress of basic also weeds out those who are mentally weak, because the mentally weak should not be the ones with weapons.

    • @Nyconbr
      @Nyconbr Год назад +2

      Accurate. I served in the army as a soldier, even tho it was not necessary to have a intense training, the fact that we were soldiers justified the unnecessary pressure and pointless trainings.
      But as a lieutenant once said, the troop is a direct reflection of it's commander. I've seen many sergeants and even officers with poor sensibility and respect for the values and the army's history.

  • @diamond-dog-6412
    @diamond-dog-6412 3 дня назад

    At 3:49 there’s one with the name Gipson, he was my drill sergeant

  • @justinriley9996
    @justinriley9996 9 месяцев назад

    Very educational film entertaining as well

  • @johnfitzgerald5445
    @johnfitzgerald5445 Год назад +212

    As a active duty USMC Drill Instructor and then going through the Army Reserve Drill Sergeant academy I was blown away! I had to low key myself so much. I never let the USMC side go and had a hell of a time!

    • @kishascape
      @kishascape Год назад +11

      Crayons for life!

    • @johnfitzgerald5445
      @johnfitzgerald5445 Год назад +30

      @@gilson1982 collateral damage, sorry...NOT sorry!

    • @jed-henrywitkowski6470
      @jed-henrywitkowski6470 Год назад +1

      My brother was in the Marine Corps and had luxuries (for a lack of a better word) that Marines before did not have.
      Like being able to PT in go fasters and shorts, dump the boots Uncle Sam issued for more comfortable boots etc.

    • @user-wz4eq9wd4n
      @user-wz4eq9wd4n Год назад +10

      @@johnfitzgerald5445 No better friend… No worse enemy..

    • @BeeBait
      @BeeBait Год назад +5

      @@gilson1982 Oh, yes they do...
      They still shit themselves when the loudspeakers get too loud

  • @jeffreyjackson5229
    @jeffreyjackson5229 Год назад +618

    Being a vet, I have earned the right to say this: Combat will not be gentle with the recruits.
    Boot camp must be difficult and almost harsh to weed out those individuals who will get themselves and others killed while they are performing their duty and completing a mission. That's real.

    • @afout07
      @afout07 Год назад +81

      you would think this would be obvious. A soldier should be able to deal with stress, the enemy will not be kind because your feelings are hurt.

    • @Christian-pw2xl
      @Christian-pw2xl Год назад +1

      You need conforming, non-thinking, principless, stand-for-nothing, told-what-to-think-and-believe, willingly/blindly-led, tyranny-worshipping morons to become part of an army that is a part of a totalitarian-cabal-controlled government.

    • @jeffreyjackson5229
      @jeffreyjackson5229 Год назад +4

      @@afout07 👍

    • @jeffreyjackson5229
      @jeffreyjackson5229 Год назад +3

      @Joe Shmoe 👍

    • @murdvre
      @murdvre Год назад +31

      Bit of a catch-22 isn't it? The percieved difficulty is apparently driving recruitment to record lows but an easier time in bootcamp apparently makes an incompetent recruit. From this perspective you could have a millitary with few strong recruits or a military with many weak ones.

  • @GaCracker69
    @GaCracker69 10 месяцев назад +7

    A kinder, gentler Army...thats how you make warriors. 🤣 Ft. Benning Alumni Class of '87

  • @isaiahgibson3699
    @isaiahgibson3699 11 дней назад +1

    Army: “we have a recruitment problem” ….. I wonder why💀

  • @Robzilla1950
    @Robzilla1950 Год назад +1063

    This sort of advanced training is what many professional soldiers have been calling for since before Viet Nam. It makes total sense and should be applied not only to military but law enforcement across the country. It instills pride, teamwork and strength while improving control over reactionary responses.

    • @InitialFailure
      @InitialFailure Год назад +29

      It's DS school.
      Nothing about any of this is advanced.

    • @Robzilla1950
      @Robzilla1950 Год назад +130

      @@InitialFailure moving away from emotional triggered training to logical based training is advancing. Intuitive handle

    • @InitialFailure
      @InitialFailure Год назад +12

      @Robzilla1950 Well, as we all know, war is logical and devoid of emotion.
      This is clearly training "as you fight." Or is it? Is this any more advanced than trying to replicate the chaos of war? Are you sure this is "logical" to do?

    • @Robzilla1950
      @Robzilla1950 Год назад +85

      @@InitialFailure As a veteran who spent time in recon in south Viet nam I find your comment childish and insulting. The only sector of training that applies the rant and rave piss your pants training is basic. What hardens a soldier is maturity and battle. Go away

    • @InitialFailure
      @InitialFailure Год назад +28

      @Robzilla1950 as a currently serving active Soldier myself of four combat tours in the Middle East as well as peace time missions in southeast Asia (Vietnam amongst others), I don't care about your veteran status as it's irrelevant in view of "me too" and oh yea, it has no bearing on the truth of this type of DS training being "advanced" or more "logical".
      So then, let's focus on the point you're making; "I'm right because I'm a veteran."
      Wow, it's not very convincing, as explained above. Care to elaborate, or are you content with "because you said so as a veteran" and keep going with the name calling as well? Is war chaos, or is it not? Should we train as we fight or should we not?
      It's not very, what'd you say, "logical" of you to carry-on with ad hominem attacks and arguments from authority when you clearly are not an authority.

  • @bbjumpman
    @bbjumpman Год назад +55

    I went in the ARMY in 1974 and quite frankly the drill sergeants we had were a hell of a lot easier than dealing with my polish mother, who had 6 kids. 😅

    • @surgeangeles5814
      @surgeangeles5814 10 месяцев назад +1

      In remembrance of the leather belt.

  • @TravisG-lj9dz
    @TravisG-lj9dz 24 дня назад

    I liked the drill from the recruitment preparation session, this wasn't basic training. He was very understanding, not demanding, but still a soldier could learn from him. Then I went to basic - welcome to the Jungle! Ain't no fun and games!

  • @Drazja
    @Drazja 2 месяца назад

    8 years in and i thought how early we woke up was pointless, now im on the grind by 4am

  • @verticle2612
    @verticle2612 10 месяцев назад +82

    31 years, 7 months, 8 days in the U.S. Army, I retired in 2018; I miss it every day. Well done Soldiers, well done. The best friends you’ll ever have in your life will of those you served with. You go through the suck together.

    • @jam7547
      @jam7547 10 месяцев назад +2

      I am a service connected veteran and I agree with you

    • @christianweatherbroadcasting
      @christianweatherbroadcasting 9 месяцев назад +1

      Repent and trust in Jesus. we deserve Hell for our sins. For example lying, lusing, saying God's name as a cuss word and stealing our just some examples of sin which we can all admit to doing at least one of those. For our sin we deserve death and Hell, but there is a way out. Repent anf trust in Jesus and you will be saved. Repentence is turning from sin. So repent and trust in Jesus. He will save you from Hell, and instead give you eternal life in Heaven.
      John 3:16
      Romans 3:23❤😊❤❤

  • @dustinirwin1
    @dustinirwin1 10 месяцев назад +134

    Joined 25 years ago, am a combat veteran, and one of my proudest moments in life is ultimately earning the respect of my drill sergeant who had yelled and cussed at me for 8 weeks. Drill Sgt Cantrell demanded my absolute best and showed me what I was capable of when under immense pressure and scared out of my mind.
    They're not yelling and cussing "to get someone to do something", they are yelling and cussing to train recruits how to perform under pressure, which is an essential skill for performance in combat.

    • @antdenzic7977
      @antdenzic7977 10 месяцев назад +4

      I totally agree. I've never been to war but I would bet my house that no one talks to you politely from the other side that's trying to kill you.

    • @iamjogun
      @iamjogun 10 месяцев назад +15

      @@antdenzic7977 They won't be talking at you they'll be shooting at you. Yelling doesn't really emulate that atmosphere.

    • @cowforcow
      @cowforcow 10 месяцев назад +9

      If you can’t handle a bit of yelling I doubt you will do better under worse conditions.

    • @snowbear163
      @snowbear163 10 месяцев назад +7

      @@antdenzic7977 94% of the Army is non-combat. There is plenty of time for screaming in other training specific to combat roles. Army has a recruitment problem and an image problem. You can adapt and update or you can wither away and bring back a draft. Choice is yours.

    • @antdenzic7977
      @antdenzic7977 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@snowbear163 Bring back the draft.

  • @timothygadsden3760
    @timothygadsden3760 4 месяца назад

    Fort Benning honor hill ceremony of 05…I got through that because of my DI’s 1/50 4th platoon horse lords delta co.

  • @philsai8756
    @philsai8756 9 месяцев назад +1

    9:19 one of the best drill sergeants i've had.

  • @thefrase7884
    @thefrase7884 Год назад +93

    Did a 3 year 0911 rotation in the USMC. God bless my brothers and sisters in the Corp, Army, Navy, Air Force, &
    Coast Guard. God bless my fellow Americans and our great country. The honor was all mine.

    • @stealthotrapo9123
      @stealthotrapo9123 Год назад +2

      What about coast guard

    • @thefrase7884
      @thefrase7884 Год назад +1

      @@stealthotrapo9123 …..My bad….you’re right. Thank you for calling me out on that. Original comment now included USCG

    • @johnnyxvii8939
      @johnnyxvii8939 Год назад +1

      How is it now? I'm going to DI school in the summer did we become woke as well?

    • @michaelcullipher38
      @michaelcullipher38 Год назад

      We like to tease each other.. but God bless all military veterans

  • @heehoopeanut420
    @heehoopeanut420 Год назад +22

    They guy at 5:50 👏👏👏 Talked about important issues without shying away from them, and gave a very inspirational speech to that group.

  • @thatsmyassbrostop29
    @thatsmyassbrostop29 5 месяцев назад +1

    My drills were everything that I WISHED my active duty NCOs were

  • @cyklondx
    @cyklondx 3 месяца назад

    holy moly - if this is our mil right now we are going to have hard times ahead of us...

  • @chrisdon8421
    @chrisdon8421 Год назад +35

    Success is about focusing Your energy on
    what creates results and using what you
    already know

  • @soulie2001
    @soulie2001 Год назад +180

    Its quite simple, treat Vets as an actual job. The problem is, since Vietnam, the problems only got worse and modern combat improves, so the conflicts will get more deadly in scale, causing more PTSD. Treat warriors like a respected job again amongst everyone, sow integrity back into your organization, and provide those benefits you do, and better. Its about incentives. People want to die when theres a bigger shiny rock on the end.

    • @ChYph3r
      @ChYph3r Год назад +3

      Respect is earned not given.

    • @vukkulvar9769
      @vukkulvar9769 Год назад +2

      Not an actual job, but provide help for reinsertion and therapy.

    • @xtrwombat4876
      @xtrwombat4876 Год назад +2

      @ChYph3r x partially true, but not all true.

    • @ihkeseteeietos5722
      @ihkeseteeietos5722 Год назад

      this is not a communism country my guy don’t use our tax to feed or cure other ppl

  • @yoi9352
    @yoi9352 6 месяцев назад

    Man its crazy to see my drill graduating right in front of my eyes now I can give him some shit for it

  • @enoix3683
    @enoix3683 8 месяцев назад

    I like the silly hat placement.

  • @matthewperry4138
    @matthewperry4138 Год назад +80

    14:07 DS Stephenson was one of my drills the final few weeks of basic in 2019. Cool to see he moved from training new soldiers to training NCOs to do what he did for us.

  • @jayr55555
    @jayr55555 Год назад +88

    I live near a military base, have lots of friends and family that served or still served. Their biggest issue with the army is leadership. It's the reason why most of my friends leave. It seems like the real issue is being swept under the rug.

    • @Live4Gunz
      @Live4Gunz Год назад +1

      I have nothing but respect for my drill sergeants. We all understood everything they put us through would make us better and that's where some of the strongest bonds outside of combat were formed. Meanwhile leadership looks for solutions to problems that don't exist to put on their resumes. If there actually is a problem they'll find the most idiotic solution possible.

    • @jam7547
      @jam7547 11 месяцев назад +2

      I respected my DS and still do 30 years later.. .. I been to two different wars.. all war are winnable once you know the goals. At 66 years old I would go back in a second.. I had no bad experience not one in 19 years.
      Yes there is crime on every base. Like there is crime in every town ,,,city ,,,or state..

    • @IL_Bgentyl
      @IL_Bgentyl 10 месяцев назад

      It’s government what else would you expect lol.

  • @sevensuniverse6386
    @sevensuniverse6386 Месяц назад

    Drill Sgt Knott she was something!

  • @vonbennett8670
    @vonbennett8670 2 месяца назад

    "Sensitive!" - Major Payne

  • @pambeforethestorm9784
    @pambeforethestorm9784 Год назад +129

    My son just sent me this, this video was actually his training team. Now I get to see how difficult it is, but am so very proud of my new "Drill Sergeant" and all the others. This is hard work! 💯💙

    • @TheUselessbuthappy
      @TheUselessbuthappy Год назад +7

      My husband is in it too! He just showed it to me. Congrats to your son!

    • @adammartinusa1
      @adammartinusa1 Год назад

      yeah this is pussifed bullshit

    • @williamcunningham1669
      @williamcunningham1669 Год назад

      Drill Sargent's before the rainbow plague could and would break your nose sideways just for looking stupid. Now they give you a participation trophy for doing absolutely nothing but wine and cry and claim your oppressed.
      Our military is a joke and not a very funny one at that.

    • @pambeforethestorm9784
      @pambeforethestorm9784 Год назад

      @@TheUselessbuthappy Thank you 😊!! And Congrats as well to your husband!!!

    • @pambeforethestorm9784
      @pambeforethestorm9784 Год назад

      @@williamcunningham1669 break your nose? Why would they even want to do that?? Wouldn't that bring an onslaught of lawsuits??? 🤔🤔

  • @ibapreppie
    @ibapreppie Год назад +22

    When I was in, 1997, Shark Attacks were fun to me. I went in knowing whatever I did is going to be wrong. Made my life a lot easier.

  • @tushkahummawatson1623
    @tushkahummawatson1623 9 месяцев назад

    0:25 yo that’s crazy he was my drill sergeant at basics

  • @vze2fnfg
    @vze2fnfg 9 месяцев назад

    we had it rougher as recruits in the USMC basic 35 yrs ago than what we just watched become drill sergeants

  • @dragonstormdipro1013
    @dragonstormdipro1013 Год назад +248

    Interesting to see this from an Indian perspective. We have the opposite problem here, too many people want to join the army. So the drill sergeants ala Ustaads are getting stricter. American way of recruitment is very different from us. It’s like a well oiled conveyor belt. Whereas ours is more personal and chilled out in a way. We don't usually let cadets drop out on the academy during basic, although our initial entry test is far tougher than US (specially the GD written is way tougher an exam than ASVAB, albeit I like how all encompassing ASVAB is). The Drill instructors here (JCO ranked personnal, equivalent to SNCOs in US military) usually don't yell, rather humiliate folks. Our officers get training through different institutions from basic, unlike US. That's I think is a big difference. We are based on British military after all.

    • @cynicalnerdycinephile
      @cynicalnerdycinephile Год назад +4

      true. We have punishments in IMA and other institutions instead of yelling. Which are quite effective

    • @yunarey
      @yunarey Год назад +2

      That’s interesting but I get it

    • @randomikey5678
      @randomikey5678 Год назад +7

      Always interesting to learn something new.

    • @thamomentum
      @thamomentum Год назад +3

      Lol stop it please.

    • @zakromero7795
      @zakromero7795 Год назад

      Cool story..

  • @arksrandom5968
    @arksrandom5968 Год назад +340

    People are already -too- really gentle, we just need people to realize that being rough isn't an insult or a threat to everyone around them

    • @arksrandom5968
      @arksrandom5968 Год назад +17

      @Lynn Xo no, but as a leader I would call you out when you are wrong, "Lynn". Demeaning people are demeaning to put others under them to inflate their ego, people that are actually tough understand the difference between being a jack-a and being tough on people to make them stronger. Ever hear the phrase "tough times make tough people"? I'm not saying there hasn't been jack-a's in leader positions, just saying you are wrong
      Background: Lynn basically said calling people out is "disrespectful" and I support demeaning people with the way I think

    • @b.b.2684
      @b.b.2684 Год назад +2

      The CCP is training its soldiers to be hyper masculine super soldiers. Being gentle means a loss.

    • @justinwoodward3413
      @justinwoodward3413 Год назад +42

      There is a huge difference between being aggressive and being demeaning and treating humans as less than gum on your shoe. There were plenty of successful leaders throughout history that rarely* raised their voice and had decades-long careers and are regarded as some of the greatest battlefield COs/NCOs in history.

    • @frivolousarguments8578
      @frivolousarguments8578 Год назад +5

      @@b.b.2684 CCP soldiers get their behind beat by Indian soldiers in fist fights 😂.

    • @musicman7297
      @musicman7297 Год назад +2

      Yes, our Military should be handing out 🌈 s and 🦄. LOL 😂

  • @user-fl9qm5yu7l
    @user-fl9qm5yu7l 5 месяцев назад

    Food for thought Josh and Andy

  • @LUCKADUCK3
    @LUCKADUCK3 8 месяцев назад

    Rogstad!
    Served at the pentagon with her! A1 Soldier