So, did Laundry Number Fuckup (the guy you killed) do anything to you later for showing him to be "so useless his own guy kills him"?
I ask because I'm wondering whether you'd be okay with using this example of yours later this term when I teach the "iterated prisoner's dilemma." Of course I'd have to make the Marine language a bit more, er, politically correct. LOL :)
Added by edit: er, this was in response to a post by foster...which I can't find now...where'd it go?
"dfosterf" wrote:
I got rid of it because it wasn't really a goosebump moment. It was more along the lines of a "I wonder what the ramifications of what I just did will be?" moment...
It could have gone either way, but since there was (scotch? bourbon?) heading my DI's way as a result, I really shouldn't have been fretting all that much, but that is hindsight.
As to the guy I "killed". He couldn't march. He was always fucking up. Everyone always paid for his failures. He had a lot more to worry about from the rest of us than the other way around.
I'll call him laundry number 37.
Close order drill. 87 guys in perfect precision. Laundry number 37 out of step.
Drill Instructor (on parade ground):
"HIPPITY HOP, MOB STOP" [insert 10 minute tirade]
"BENDS AND THRUSTS...BEGIN- MOTHERFUCKERS"
"THANK YOU LAUNDRY NUMBER 37!"
Platoon (in unison, repeating drill instructor, per established protocols, while doing aforementioned bends and thrusts):
"SIR, THANK YOU LAUNDRY NUMBER 37!"
I believe that captures the sentiment. There is always one in every platoon...Think "full metal jacket" movie for how that works, and don't think for a moment that the other DI couldn't pick his ass out of our crowd with absolute precision.
"Wade" wrote: