And they sure as hell don't want fucks like yourself!!!S7cc7r wrote:they especially did not want any more 11B.

Sounds like his head is on pretty well. Thanks for raising your son to have a warrior's attitude. My standard advise to the new ones is: "Do your very best every minute of every day and only associate with those who do the same." And of course, NEVER QUIT!psouper wrote:This is an old thread, but certainly an educational one. Before my son started RIP I had the feeling ( from lurking at ArmyRanger.com) that "they don't kick you out, you take yourself out."
Last weekend via phone call, he told me that the cadre do everything they can to "gently encourage" people to quit. His theory is that people drop because they can't stand being outside their comfort zone. They get mad in a "I don't have to put up with this crap" way.
If my son is going into harm's way, I want him to go with the best.
p.s. He's at Cole Range this week. Hope to do some fist pumping and booty shaking myself in a couple weeks.
doubt he got dropped for being "fat" more like he quit because he "felt" fat....or some harsh words were used to that effect by an insensitive RIP Cadre....because you know, in combat, sensitivity is what wins a firefight!LastHardSapper wrote:Unless that guy was about 4'3" and shaped like a hardboiled egg I find it hard to believe that someone would've told him he was too heavy at 180 lbs. My son weighed 250 when he went thru RIP and nobody messed with him about being too heavy. He's only slightly lighter than that now. He's about 30 lbs over his screening weight but is more than good on bodyfat. I asked him just recently if his NCOs ever screw with him on his weight and he said nobody gives a fuck as long as you can hang.
JLTW!!! wrote:panthersix wrote:....because you know, in combat, sensitivity is what wins a firefight!
Is that why I had to hand out chocolate and "footballs" a couple of times?