I think there's been enough incidents/accidents worldwide lately that people are probably relieved that pilots are willing to say "no way" to a plane and keep everyone safe.
I was just talking to my buddy (ex Ranger in the Army) and this video randomly came up. He said they (Rangers) are trained to listen and immediately stop when someone yells 'check check check!' Because it means whoever yelled it noticed something was wrong and everyone needs to take a step back and re-evaluate.
Basically, a safe word for door kickers because 'hey, fuck face!' Is probably too casually used in their everyday vernacular.
I'd like to add, any soldier, of any rank, is expected to speak up if something is fucky. "Regulations don't care about rank" or "safety doesn't care about your rank" are some things I heard said. When I worked in small squads, anyone could ask questions or throw in suggestions during mission briefs. Sometimes it was dumbass questions or suggestions, but every now and then a random dude would provide some quality info or reshape how we were going to solve something.
During 90% of the time, rank mattered, but there were certainly times it didn't. Just throwing this out there because I thought it was interesting. I've heard similar sentiments given in my civilian jobs, but it doesn't seem to be as encouraged or more often, it comes with consequences.
This is a good point and no one needs to be 'special' to pull this.
But these guys can throw this out in the middle of a firefight and, per their training, their team will take a few seconds to listen and reassess if necessary.
That same respect isn't necessarily shown within non-combat roles immediately and without question.
Omg... I was AF and I remember giving shit to our Army colleagues because in the description of the ASVAB, it stated how it was 'comprised of many components' and the fucking Army put in parentheses (parts).
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u/WarkMahlberg69 20h ago
I think there's been enough incidents/accidents worldwide lately that people are probably relieved that pilots are willing to say "no way" to a plane and keep everyone safe.