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ThreeHoler

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Posts posted by ThreeHoler

  1. You do not need an AAD or even a BAC+ to make Maj, however it does not hurt your chances.

    Your first focus should always be your primary duty, whatever it is...then any additional duties you're assigned. If you are able to do that and still wish to do more, then by all means start on your AAD.

    As the AF doesn't give a shit about what your AAD is, you could get an MA, MBA, or MS...most flyers go the route of ERAU, TUI (which I guess has renamed themselves yet again???), or the newly created AU OLMP. None of these three are really stellar programs...they just let you get the job done.

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  2. I'd want my first operational Sq/CC out there on night one. He was credible in the jet: an IP who could fly well and teach. He was extremely credible as the Sq/CC: the Sq earned the Spaatz Trophy due to his leadership. It must have sucked royally on the paperwork side to have been one of his execs, as he pushed hard to provide all deserving Sq members with appropriate rewards...he pushed hard to get dudes their PME, promotions to include a many times passed over Maj his promotion to LtCol with just enough time before retirement that he got to keep the rank. The list goes on. The thing that really makes me proud to have been part of such a great Sq was that there are many more dudes at various levels of leadership who taught me a lot.

    I'd want my first Chief Pilot. I'll never forget being told to focus only on the jet the first six months of the assignment...and that there would be plenty of time to get the additional duty boxes checked later.

    I'd want my third Sq/CC. He was brand new to the jet when he was our DO. But he learned well after flying many different aircraft over his career. He supported dudes in the squadron 100%...he took care of the people and the people took care of the mission.

    There are a few then-Captains (now Majors and above) who I'd want out there as well. But the bottom line about each and every one of them is that they were credible pilots, good leaders, and they took care of the queep without complaint (as far as the rest of us knew).

  3. There are clearly two different methods at play here:

    Method 1 - Stand up for what you believe in at your current level and fall on your sword over any issue that goes against those beliefs. The system isn't worth supporting and should be burned down from within in order to enact radical changes.

    Method 2 - Play the game to a certain extent but don't lose who you are. Kissing ass is not necessary but job performance is, and the rewards are often greater opportunities to help improve the system from within.

    Your summations are spot on. The Rainman method of "do the queep to try to make things better for the dudes that follow" is exactly what every leader should do. In the long run, falling on your sword does nothing but give the fallee a false sense of moral superiority that he can lord over everyone else. That is not to say that at some point you may find something so morally reprehensible to yourself that the only right choice is to vote with your feet and get out.

  4. There is no limit to the partial DITY. The pay scale is all based on "saving the government money in moving costs" by moving some or all of it yourself. However, unless it has changed in the last three years, carrying 999 lbs of HHG will net you more money than carrying over 1,000 due to the way the incentives are set up.

    Edit: You'd have to look in the JFTR to see what, if any, the restrictions on multiple cars is, as I have yet to make a married move. You should also be able to get all this information from your TMO brief when you go in to set up your partial DITY.

    Man, this would have been alot easier if I would have just done it the RIGHT way, huh? :bash:

    It would have been a lot easier if your support personnel had provided the appropriate level of support. Although, it does highlight a life lesson for all of us...as much as it sucks, we need to be able to go to the source documents because the shoe clerks generally suck at their jobs. I would have been shorted over $6,000 in PCS moves so far had I not gone to the JFTR and AFIs and pointed out finance's royal ######ups with the PCS allowances.

  5. I was recently in the Philly airport and Patti LaBelle was there with all her bodyguards (before this incident took place). She was very nice and posed with tons of passengers for pictures and her "handlers" were equally nice. Who knows what really happened...

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  6. It's not the correct way to do it, but it's also the best way to un###### your prior weigh in mistake as you had already unloaded the truck. I would expect no troubles from the finance people. But now you know, and knowing is half the battle!

    Edit: the more correct way to fix your mistake would have been to pay for a new full weight of just the truck and stuff, minus the trailer and car, then unload and reweigh for the empty.

  7. Seriously 3 holer. Is your shtick just an act to push our buttons?

    Sometimes I push buttons. In this particular case, I am 100% serious as there are really ######ing stupid people who would use the excuse "but I read it on..." to justify why they defrauded the government. To me, it is worth it to make sure I have a legit weigh-in once every three or so years...to others it may not matter so much, but they should always be careful of what they imply and how the grade A morons of the world will see it.

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  8. There is a difference between "is it on the F" and "is the tank fully topped off." Anyone with half a brain can easily see that fully topped off is a theoretical max that you can never actually reach. However, what you were implying was completely dishonest. Am I going to stop for gas before weighing in empty if the needle is not on F? Yes. Am I going to stop for gas after driving a few miles to pick up all my stuff and driving back to weigh in full? No. Unless the needle has come off the F significantly.

    Playing the gas game for a few extra cents per pound per mile is just as retarded as the guys who try to move bricks or cinder blocks with their DITY goods. If you're "not going to suggest" but just tell people something illegal is "ok" you could screw someone over who didn't know better. Just sayin'...

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  9. Anyone know why you get for a separation (not retirement)? The move is set up, is there DLA?

    6. May I be paid a DLA when I PCS from my permanent duty station/place of active duty to my home of record or home of selection (HOR/HOS) when I leave the Service?

    No, by law there is no DLA authorized when the PCS is from your PDS to your HOR/HOS. In other words there's no DLA authority when leaving active duty.

    http://www.defensetravel.dod.mil/site/faqdla.cfm#Q6

  10. Ok, another tack:

    How do we, as a service, transition the best damn tactical mofos into the best damn field graders and best damn leaders? To provide a bit of focus to the question: first, how do we do it if we could completely revamp the entire system right now? Second, if we can't make those sweeping changes, how do we do it within our current system?

    Facts I will never disagree with: 1) we need the best damn tactical dudes we can train and mentor down in the weeds getting shit done; 2) we need some shit hot dudes in FGO-appropriate roles within our squadrons, wings, and so on; 3) we need shit hot dudes in leadership positions, all the way to the top...dudes that will make the mission happen and provide appropriate care to their people to enhance the mission.

    For what it's worth, I think our PME at the SOS and ACSC level is pretty shitty and the most of Master's degrees we do end up wasting money on do not provide any true use to the USAF. The ACSC Master's program has a lot of potential...but right now it's a bunch of circle-jerking dick/clit-sucking bullshit with, in my experience, only 1 of 4 instructors willing to tell students their answers were not up to speed. This is evident in the "with honors" criteria of >3.95 GPA...it is extremely easy to get A's in the courses.

    I think we can make it better. The new "operational warfare" focus is a step in the right direction. If you aren't aware of it, the four elective courses are credited for completion of WIC, which cuts your course count down to seven. It gives you credit for three of seven ACSC tests. But it can be better still...we can create something that does provide benefit to the member, the USAF, and allows for DG/other identifiers for "useful" OPR/PRF bullets.

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  11. And that is where you both miss the point. Did I ever say "doing queep above the minimum?"

    No.

    A dude who is in the vault, who knows his shit, can employ his weapon system, and has done the stated "minimum" of PME and Master's is not doing the minimum.

    Here is a thought...at some point your tactical focus has to shift to a broader focus...or we will fail the big picture miserably. The NFL level of war is not in the trenches.

    If we do not have dudes concerned enough to get to a point where they can make changes, nothing will change. And even then, some one will likely change it back. We need to make a cultural shift, and that will not happen with the lot of us stiff arming our way to getting kicked out.

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  12. http://www.aviationweek.com/aw/generic/story_generic.jsp?channel=aerospacedaily&id=news/asd/2011/06/29/01.xml&headline=Boeing%20Liable%20For%20KC-46%20Overage

    The U.S. Air Force is expecting to pay the largest amount allowable under the KC-46A contract with Boeing to develop a KC-135 refueler replacement, with Boeing picking up the rest of the tab.

    Two months after Boeing won the contract over rival EADS, which proposed an Airbus A330-based design, the Air Force got news that it would need to pay an additional $500 million to develop the 767-based tanker and deliver the first 18 aircraft.

    The target cost agreed upon in February for the fixed-price, incentive-fee development was $4.4 billion, according to Air Force officials. However, “Boeing revealed, post-contract award on 25 April 2011, that during source selection it proposed a ceiling price for the [engineering and manufacturing development] contract that is less than its actual projected cost to execute the contract,” says Lt. Col. Jack Miller, an Air Force spokesman, in a statement. “Boeing is liable for all cost above the $4.9 billion contract ceiling.”

    Imagine that, Boeing lied about their price to get a contract...

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