Veteran of four wars, four enlistments, four branches: Air Force, Army, Army Reserve, Army National Guard. I am both an AF (Air Force) veteran and as Veteran AF (As Fuck)
Saturday, December 3, 2016
Does the Economy Suck? My Army/Civilian Pay Comparison Says YES!
In the early 1983, I was a 30-year-old Army Reserve tank commander and a dock worker at Yellow Freight Systems in Lancaster, Pa. For a drill weekend, I earned $180. At Yellow Freight I earned $12/hour with full medical, dental and even retirement if I had stayed longer.
Thirty years later in 2013, I was an Army National Guard sergeant and earned $360 for a drill weekend. My Army pay had doubled. Yellow Freight's Lancaster terminal closed years ago. But similar work in the Lancaster area pays $12/hour with fewer or no benefits.
In the 1980s, major trucking companies employed thousands of workers to transfer freight from one truck to another. Computers now consolidate freight in a way that needs far less handling and far fewer workers.
Most of the soldiers I served with in the 68th Armor in 1983 had blue collar jobs and earned a decent living, as I did, with their hands and backs.
Many of the soldiers I served with in the Army National Guard 30 years later were unemployed or underemployed. Some had volunteered for multiple deployments to get a year of full-time benefits and full-time pay.
By 1985, I had finished college and had a white collar job at Godfrey Advertising. I think the economy has been nothing but wonderful all of my life. I made a $1.60/hour for my first full-time job selling toys at Sears in Burlington, Mass. When I enlisted in the Army, I earned $283/month. By the time I left active duty in 1979 as a sergeant, my base pay was $5,000/year. When I was in Iraq in 2009 my pay at the same rank had almost quadrupled.
When I started at Godfrey Advertising I was making just under $20,000/year. Twenty years later I was a consultant with a six-figure income.
But the blue collar workers I worked with before I entered the professional world are making the same or less now than they did in the 80s, and with less job security. In the middle of the 20th century into the 80s, the American economy allowed almost everybody to make a living. Today's economy is skewed to the educated.
When I got back from Iraq in 2010, the state of Pennsylvania gave every returning soldier six months of medical care. They did it because half the soldiers returning from deployment had no medical coverage when they left active duty.
Capitalism pays for what it values. It is clear that 21st century America does not value blue collar workers.
Friday, December 2, 2016
Deer Pays Tuition for a Semester at Penn State
1976 Chrysler Newport, 2-door with 400 CI V8 engine.
The first deer I killed in Pennsylvania payed a full semester's tuition for me at Penn State Harrisburg.
When I left the Army in 1979, I needed a car. High gas prices made gas guzzler used cars ridiculously cheap. So I bought the car in the picture above for $800. This 22-foot-long, six-passenger car got 9 milers per gallon in town, maybe 17 on the highway at 55mph on cruise control.
A year after I bought it, I was driving north on PA Route 230 at night when a deer jumped from the side of the road into the path of my two-ton car. The white-tailed doe flipped into the air.
I stopped as fast as I could and walked back to the carcass. Within a minute, a blue pickup truck pulled of the road and stopped ten feet from the deer and I. Two big guys in coveralls got out. They looked at the deer, looked at me and said, "You want that?"
"No," I said.
The one on the right picked up the deer, carried it to the bed of the truck and tossed it in. The guy on the left nodded, walked back to the truck, climbed in, and they drove away.
The next morning I took the car to the local Chrysler dealer. They gave me an estimate for $710 for cracked plastic and chrome on the right side, plus a damaged headlight mount. Insurance pays in full for collisions with deer. I replaced and aimed the headlight, used duct tape to repair the body damage, and used the insurance money to pay for most of my $850 tuition the following trimester.
You could say I paid deerly.......
Tuesday, November 29, 2016
Oh Deer! Another Hunting Season Story: Skinning a Deer in Missile Test Bay
Sometimes the best tool for a job is a tool that is not
yours. So you borrow it. That’s why the first time I skinned a deer
was in a U.S. Air Force missile test bay on Hill Air Force Base in Ogden,
Utah.
Four miles north of the main area of the base was the
missile test facility on Hill. We had
equipment to shake, bake, heat, freeze, and simulate high altitude. We stressed missile engines (not warheads)
then test fired the engine bolted to racks.
The smaller missiles, like the Sidewinder, we fired right on post. When we fired one of the three engines of the
three-stage Minuteman missile, we fired on a range on the west side of the
Great Sale Lake.
To shake, we called it vibration test, the missile engines
we used a 300,000-watt electro magnet—essentially a really big speaker driver. Bolt an engine to this vibration machine and
it could be shaken back and forth, up and down, left to right fast or slow,
soft or hard, smoothly or with jerks.
Then we fired the missile on a test pad to see if the vibration broke
it.
To hook the missiles to the electromagnet we used a crane on
a beam running the length of the test bay.
One Monday morning we were waiting to see the week’s tests
when Sgt. Robert Reineccius whispered for two of us to give him a hand. We went outside and followed the sergeant
across the sand to the vibration test building.
Before sun up, Reineccius had backed his pickup truck into the bay,
hooked the deer he bagged that weekend to the crane and pulled the carcass all
the way up. Our job was to skin the
huge, stinking carcass before work started so he could drop the deer carcass
back and the truck and cover it with a tarp.
He really wanted that skin in one piece. So we climbed up on the test bed and started
pulling from the inside of the thighs where Reineccius had already slit the
skin. We pulled and twisted and pulled
some more. After twenty tiring minutes, the skin was on the test bay floor and
the sergeant was lowering the deer back into his Chevy pickup.
Reineccius covered the animal with a tarp. He would drive to the butcher at lunchtime,
but he had the skin now. Back in the 70s military, enlisted men did whatever
sergeants told them, even skinning a deer first thing Monday morning.
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Monday, November 28, 2016
Gutting a Deer in the Driveway in 1980
Today, my kids are home from school because in Pennsylvania,
school is closed on the first day of deer season. I grew up in Boston and spent most of my
seven years on active duty in the western United States or in West
Germany. In those places, deer hunting
was something you did away from towns and cities, often quite far away because
the deer were up in the mountains. Or you just could not hunt close to
populated areas.
In Pennsylvania, the city and borough lines are sometimes
where the hunting begins.
After I left active duty in November 1979, I lived in
Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania. My
apartment was two blocks from the eastern edge of the E-town marked by the PA
Route 743 South.
One day, I got home from work at noon. As I went up the outside stairs, my neighbor
across the alley, Jimmy, drove into his driveway with hooves sticking out of
the trunk of his Ford Falcon. I stopped
and looked.
He jumped from the car and yelled, “Gimme a hand, Guss. I have to gut this thing.” He pulled a big blue plastic sheet from his
garage. The sheet had brass eyelets so I
assumed it was some kind of shelter.
Jimmy spreads out the sheet, then pulled the deer from the
trunk. Jimmy dropped the six-point buck
with a headshot, so the body was intact.
Jimmy slit open the deer’s abdomen and we started pulling out
entrails. We shoved the organs and
entrails into a plastic bag then put the deer and the bag back in the trunk of
the Falcon. Jimmy sprayed the blood off
the plastic sheet with a hose then hung it over his fence to dry.
While we cleaned up, Jimmy said he saw the deer in a field
south of route 743 about 100 yards from the road. He pulled off the road onto
the edge of the road. The deer was in
West Donegal Township, so he could shoot.
He leaned on the roof of the Falcon and dropped the deer with one
round. Then he dragged the deer across
the field and drove straight home.
The whole job took about ten minutes, then Jimmy was off to
the butcher. I started back up the stairs. Jimmy had hosed off my hands and wrists, but
I need to take a shower and get the blood off my shirt in cold water. Then I needed to do my homework for the next
day’s class.
Being a good neighbor in Pennsylvania was different than in
Boston.
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Tuesday, November 22, 2016
Sergeant Bambi Killer: Nicknames Happen as Fast as Machine Gun Fire
From 1982 to 1984 I was a Staff Sergeant and tank section leader in Alpha Company, 6th Battalion, 68th Armor. For the last few months I was in that unit, I was "Sergeant Bambi Killer."
In the 80s, Army Reserve tank units fired twice a year. We had a full tank gunnery at Annual Training and a three-day weekend tank gunnery at Fort Indiantown Gap, Pa., in the fall.
We fired both day and night on these ranges. In 1983, I was the NCOIC (Non-Commissioned Officer In Charge) of the range for night fire. At dusk on that October evening, I was in the tower above the range. Below the tower, our 17 tanks were lined up fender to fender waiting to test fire their machine guns before night fire. The crews got to check their guns in the fading light before firing at night with searchlights, both white light and infrared.
Each of the 17 tanks had 50 rounds for the M-85, .50-caliber machine gun and 50 rounds for the M240 coaxial "coax" machine gun next to the main gun.
As the light faded I gave the command from the tower to lock and load one 50-round belt of ammo for each gun. The targets were between 500 and 1200 meters away, clusters of olive-drab panels on stakes driven into the muddy ground.
I checked the range, picked up the loudspeaker microphone and said, "Ready on the right. Ready on the left. The range is ready. You may fire when ready." As I said the last words, a white-tailed doe jumped out of the woods and hopped into the middle of the 500-meter targets.
It seemed that all of the 340 tracers in 1,700 rounds of ammo converged on the spot where the white-tailed deer hopped into the middle of the targets.
I called "Cease Fire" less than a minute later, but there was no need. Each of the machine guns on an M60A1 tank can fire 50 rounds in 5 seconds. Everyone had expended ammo. The deer disappeared and I was Sergeant Bambi Killer for the rest of my time in 68th Armor. In the Army, nicknames can happen as fast as machine gun fire.
In the 80s, Army Reserve tank units fired twice a year. We had a full tank gunnery at Annual Training and a three-day weekend tank gunnery at Fort Indiantown Gap, Pa., in the fall.
We fired both day and night on these ranges. In 1983, I was the NCOIC (Non-Commissioned Officer In Charge) of the range for night fire. At dusk on that October evening, I was in the tower above the range. Below the tower, our 17 tanks were lined up fender to fender waiting to test fire their machine guns before night fire. The crews got to check their guns in the fading light before firing at night with searchlights, both white light and infrared.
Each of the 17 tanks had 50 rounds for the M-85, .50-caliber machine gun and 50 rounds for the M240 coaxial "coax" machine gun next to the main gun.
As the light faded I gave the command from the tower to lock and load one 50-round belt of ammo for each gun. The targets were between 500 and 1200 meters away, clusters of olive-drab panels on stakes driven into the muddy ground.
I checked the range, picked up the loudspeaker microphone and said, "Ready on the right. Ready on the left. The range is ready. You may fire when ready." As I said the last words, a white-tailed doe jumped out of the woods and hopped into the middle of the 500-meter targets.
It seemed that all of the 340 tracers in 1,700 rounds of ammo converged on the spot where the white-tailed deer hopped into the middle of the targets.
I called "Cease Fire" less than a minute later, but there was no need. Each of the machine guns on an M60A1 tank can fire 50 rounds in 5 seconds. Everyone had expended ammo. The deer disappeared and I was Sergeant Bambi Killer for the rest of my time in 68th Armor. In the Army, nicknames can happen as fast as machine gun fire.
Monday, November 21, 2016
Movie Review: "Prisoner of the Mountains" "Кавказский пленник"
Last night I watched the 1996 movie "Prisoner of the Mountains" loosely based on a short story by Leo Tolstoy called "Prisoner of the Caucuses." We read an abridged version of the story in Russian for the Russian class I am taking and watched the movie for the class.
The movie is set during the bloody Chechen War of the mid 1990s shortly after the Soviet Union had collapsed. This is not an action movie in the American mold: no special effects, no big explosions. But the relationship between the main characters is as good as I have seen in a war movie. The captured career sergeant and draftee private are the center of the film. Sasha, the sergeant, maintains his authority throughout their capture. Even when they are chained together and facing death, Sasha lies to the young recruit Vanya in a way that made me laugh out loud.
The movie also gets right the experience of an Army made up of draftee soldiers led by career soldiers. The tension between those who love the Army and those who hate the Army never goes away, but both soldiers can be equally brave facing death. Near the end of the movie, Sasha and Vanya escape. Sasha kills a shepherd to get his gun. Shortly after they are recaptured because of a mistake by Vanya. Sasha admits killing the shepherd and walks to his death, allowing Vanya to live. Later Vanya has a chance to escape again, but refuses when it would risk the life of a Chechen girl.
The relationship between Sasha and Vanya makes this movie well worth watching.
Wednesday, November 16, 2016
This is My Shit: Why Army Language Makes Sense
While I was in Iraq, I wrote about the word Shit as a pronoun. The post is here. Earlier today I was reading a book called The Zone by Sergei Dovlatov about life in Russian prison camps. Dovlatov wrote about a prisoner correcting a new camp guard about the guard's improper use of the word fuck.
When I wrote in 2009, it was about the difference in how soldiers use shit and bitch as a pronoun. In that post, I noted that anything that will fit on a bunk is shit. Anything larger is a bitch.
But I neglected the reason for the use of these pronouns. From the moment a young soldier begins the process of enlisting, he is showered with acronyms and awash in the Latin-derived words of government bureaucracy. Normal human beings cannot hear and retain hundreds of opaque new words and terms, so each soldier remembers a few new terms and for the rest says, "The sergeant told me some shit I was supposed to remember."
Then the soldier actually goes to basic training. On the first day, soldiers file through supply and receive uniforms, boots, underwear, belts, packs, duffel bags, insignia, name tags, a helmet, and hundreds more bits of gear, large and small. These items could be identified by the nouns in the last sentence, but they are not. The camouflage uniform is ACU: Army Combat Uniform. The helmet is ACH: Advanced Combat Helmet. The belt and pouches for ammo and other equipment is our LBE: Load Bearing Equipment. Our dress uniform is the ASU: Army Service Uniform.
When we were training for Iraq, our first sergeant would yell, "Line up outside in five minutes! ACH, LBE and weapon! Move!" My sleep-fogged brain would rebel and I would think as I pulled on my ACU pants, 'Why not call it a fucking helmet!'
The 18-year-old I was when I first enlisted and the 56-year-old I was when I deployed to Iraq was hit with a blizzard of opaque terms. My response to this brain storm was to identify ownership first. So I pointed to a pile of gear and said, "This is my shit." or "That's your shit."
Later when the soldier is assigned a vehicle, a large-caliber weapon, or other piece of equipment that won't fit on a bunk or in a duffel bag, he will say, "That bitch is mine."
I said that of my first Jeep in the Cold War Army. A Jeep in the army could not be just a Jeep. It was a Truck, 1/4th Ton, Cargo, M151A1, a number and nomenclature I can still recite from memory. Four decades later the Jeep's replacement was a Humvee or High Mobility, Multipurpose, Wheeled Vehicle, M998.
Either way, when I had a vehicle I could say, "That bitch is mine, I'm throwing my shit in it.
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