Robbie Roberts wrote:
I am sorta a CAP member, but haven't made a meeting in over a year... The kids are trying to do good usually- but I can think on one older(like 17 year old) senior CAP NCO who was planning to go into the Navy Seals(he did, too) who told an Active Duty USAF Lt. Col. that the USAF was a bunch of pu--ies!(and NOT puppies!) I heard the recording of the conversation- and that kid found himself on the outside looking in REAL QUICK!It was almost funny- and that Col. had great self control for not disassembling the tyro seal piece by piece... You just don't say that s--t to a Lt. Col!
That kind of junk is not just limited to the cadets...when I was a Captain at the Seymour Johnson airshow standing in front of the T-38 I'd brought to the show, I had a CAP "Lt Col" get into it with me about why I didn't
salute him.
#1 - We don't salute on the flightline when we're not wearing hats.
#2 - No matter how much he wanted to be, a CAP officer is not a US military commissioned officer.
I was a CAP cadet back in the day, and I thought it was a great organiztion. I learned a lot and had some fun, too. I simply could not stand the "gonnabes" -- the cadets who had it in their mind that because they were
going to enlist in the future (and convinced they were going to have one particular job they wanted), that it somehow gave them some kind of authority or legitimacy currently.
I've spoken to some CAP cadets who were on base tours where I've been stationed, and they would talk crap about the jet I flew. "Yeah, the F-15Es not nearly as cool as the F-16!" One kid said, "Twice the people on board, but half the capabilities of the Viper!" Ya gotta be sh*ttin me. The cadet that dropped that last little bit of knowledge on me then went on to tell me how he was "going to fly an F-16"...and he knew this even though he hadn't even gotten his high school diploma yet. Riiight.
Sort of like the "future" SEAL mentioned above. You can talk trash when that Budweiser is actually on your uniform. For the CAP kids, until you're actually wearing a set of USAF wings on your chest and have some actual fighter time in your logbok, keep your trap shut and your opinions to yourself -- or at least express them in a way that doesn't make it sound like you actually fly the jet (or are a SEAL) yourself.
Sort of like that old joke we tell around the squadron...."What do you call a Major-select?" "A Captain". Point being, it doesn't matter what you are
going to be, only what you
are.
Anyway, the CAP like any other organization has its share of good and bad people. The opportunities it offers kids is great, and I certainly have a lot of buddies, myself included, who are happy to have been part of the organization.
I think that many of the cadets who perform airshow security, though, could use just a little more mentorship on how to perform the job courteously.