CAP Oath v Air Force Oath

Started by Smithsonia, July 21, 2009, 07:21:19 PM

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Major Carrales

Quote from: Rotorhead on July 21, 2009, 09:22:11 PM
Quote from: Major Carrales on July 21, 2009, 09:17:13 PM
Quote from: heliodoc on July 21, 2009, 09:00:24 PM
^^^

Sorry about that, Sir

But again after 65 years of existence, this is one thing CAP would TRY to get right EVEN if 2 years old

I do not recall an Oath back in the 1970's as a cadet, so to speak but there was one. so what's all the excitement about Oaths now being CAP Senior Officers?" 

Been in 4 yrs now as a SM and did not need one in 2005?

Been in the field too much these last 2 years as a forester and wildland fire type that I personally did not pay too much attention.  But I will still reiterate, what is all the excitement about reading an Oath after promos?

Seems like a LITTLE too much pomp and circumstance for so little.....

Sooooo for two years.......... well

I agree with the idea that we should have a correct oath.  I know the Cadet oath by heart, although I was never a cadet.  It outlines what they are to do. 

Most promotion ceremonies in our unit are somber affairs, a person is recognized and given the "emblem" of their rank and office. 

Anyone who envisions that the whole of the unit gathers in a formation, dresses the rows and columns and then awaits the necessary bugle call to call the formation to attention lives in a realm of fantasy. 

Ours is very much a frontier post.
If that defines "frontier," then I'd wager that most CAP units are "frontier" posts.

I am six hours away from Wing Headquarters, three hours away from Group head quarters and National Headquarters. We are seldom visited by anyone over the rank of Major who holds a post at Group.

We have been as resourceful in getting what we have as people were at Fort Laramie back before the true frontier closed in 1890.  Our position from our various HQs are metaphorically as distant as Dodge City would have been from Washington City in frontier times.

Brownsville is more isolated.

The atmosphere is serious and mission centered, however, I think it more a kin to a frontier post than to anything close to the source of command.

There is a good chance that most CAP units share that "frontier" sentiment.  Is that a good or bad thing?  Good if local units have latitude (with in regulations) to operate, bad if a Wing wants to micromanage resources.
"We have been given the power to change CAP, let's keep the momentum going!"

Major Joe Ely "Sparky" Carrales, CAP
Commander
Coastal Bend Cadet Squadron
SWR-TX-454

PHall

Quote from: Smithsonia on July 21, 2009, 07:21:19 PM
Does this bother any one else, because it bothers me. The Civil Air Patrol Promotion
Oath is below. Below that is the Air Force Officers Oath.

My problem is that we are required by Oath to Obey the Orders Of Officers appointed over us.
Not obey "Lawful Orders." Not Obey Orders that are "right", "correct", "principled"... obey all orders, period.

However, Air Force Officers, on the other hand, "will faithfully discharge the duties of the Office." Leaving room for Lawful, or Correct because faithful is less that "Obey."

To me this is a rather large hole in somebody's head, possibly mine. SO if ordered I can be made to
water board? AND, give the excuse - "Just following Orders." I like the Air Force Oath. I do not like the
CAP Oath. Don't forget their are officers appointed over us who are - Project Officers and people with modest
skills, experience, and/or ability to reason through a particular issue/problem.

CAP Oath

I, (full name), having been promoted to the grade of __________ in the Civil Air Patrol, do
solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support and comply with the Constitution, Bylaws and
regulations of the Civil Air Patrol; that I take this obligation freely, without any mental
reservation or purpose of evasion; and that I will well and faithfully discharge all duties and
responsibilities as well as obey the orders of the officers appointed over me according to
regulations, so help me God.

Air Force Officer's Oath
I, (state your full name) /// having been appointed a Captain in the United States Air Force /// do solemnly swear /// that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States /// against all enemies, foreign and domestic /// that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same /// that I take this obligation freely /// without any mental reservation or purpose of evasion /// and that I will well and faithfully discharge /// the duties of the office which I am about to enter /// so help me God.

Okay, just one short question. Why is this an issue?

heliodoc

Frontier post? 

Is that like leading edge technology  or "git along little dogeys?"

"Cuz some things in CAP still move along like a Conestoga wagon......... without the the team of horses

And as Bill Murray once put it...... "That the facts, Jack!!"

Major Carrales

Quote from: PHall on July 21, 2009, 09:46:02 PM
Okay, just one short question. Why is this an issue?

My speculation would be that my dear friend wanted to point it out because it caused him a bit of internal questioning when he came across it and was soliciting our opinions. 
"We have been given the power to change CAP, let's keep the momentum going!"

Major Joe Ely "Sparky" Carrales, CAP
Commander
Coastal Bend Cadet Squadron
SWR-TX-454

O-Rex

I know for a fact that the intent of the oath was to lend a bit more "umph" to CAP senior officer promotions, which often consists of checking e-services, ordering from VG, and showing up to your next unit meeting with the new tinsel. 

Not to mention that the oath of application on the back of the for 12 reads like an extended warranty agreement.

I wouldn't get wrapped around the axle with the verbage.....

MSG Mac

#25
Quote from: Rotorhead on July 21, 2009, 08:13:57 PM
Quote from: D2SK on July 21, 2009, 08:00:38 PM
Although Smithsonia is a friend of mine, I have to agree that, overall, you are correct.

While we're on the subject, though....why is it that that Oath of Office for Commander in Chief--the guy with more responsibility--is substantially shorter than CAP's version of an oath?

"I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully execute the office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my ability, preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States."

vs.

"I, (full name), having been promoted to the grade of __________ in the Civil Air Patrol, do
solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support and comply with the Constitution, Bylaws and
regulations of the Civil Air Patrol; that I take this obligation freely, without any mental
reservation or purpose of evasion; and that I will well and faithfully discharge all duties and
responsibilities as well as obey the orders of the officers appointed over me according to
regulations, so help me God."

The President's oath is shorter because he is not required to obey anybody's orders. Only to execute his duties in accordance to the Constitution. Big difference when you don't have to answer to anybody.
Michael P. McEleney
Lt Col CAP
MSG USA (Retired)
50 Year Member

Rotorhead

Quote from: MSG Mac on July 22, 2009, 04:33:31 PM

The President's oath is shorter because he is not required to obey anybody's orders. Only to execute his duties in accordance to the Constitution. Big difference when you don't have to answer to anybody.

Dick Nixon?

Is that you?
Capt. Scott Orr, CAP
Deputy Commander/Cadets
Prescott Composite Sqdn. 206
Prescott, AZ

Smithsonia

#27
What I am trying to point out is:
1. Oaths mean what they say, or they don't. Intent is not the issue. I am (you are too) swearing before God and your Squadron Mates that you believe this Oath. If I have a problem with meaning, then don't care about intent because intent is not expressed in the Oath... Meaning is.

2. I don't have any nefarious purpose pointing this out. I am not trying to change CAP. However, Obey means obey and interpret for meaning and intention does not mean the same as obey. As far as I can tell CAP is; unlike the Oath given to military officers, FBI agents, the President of the United States, Secretary of Defense, Naval Academy Cadets, and the Department of Defense Civilian Employees - the only one required to plainly and simply Obey.

3. If it makes no difference to you, then it is OK with you. I asked if this Oath bothers you? - Mostly the response seems to be "I don't care." If it means nothing, then why have this oath, at all? Why have any oath that means nothing or about which people do not care?

Of course it is not REQUIRED that the Commander administer this Oath. Instead, the Commander is "encouraged" to administer the Oath. There is also no requirement that I could find that the Promoted Member repeat or swear to this Oath. So again, why is there an Oath? In this I wouldn't say that it is Mickey Mouse... but more like Minnie Mouse. I've asked my commander to forgo my promotion ceremony, so to avoid my repeating this oath. If no one cares but me... It should not be an issue.

If you don't mean it - then don't swear it and don't "Oath" it. If CAP can't say what it means then don't say anything. In this matter, I have said precisely what I mean and what I intend.
With regards;
ED OBRIEN

RiverAux

I still don't see what the problem is with swearing that you will follow orders that are in accordance with CAP regulations.  How is that putting anyone in a bad situation? 

Strick

So  should I use the oath when promting people?
[darn]atio memoriae

Smithsonia

RiverAux;
I got an Alert for a SAReval today. It stated the following. FOLLOW DIRECTIONS PRECISELY AND SEND THE FOLLOWING: NAME, ADDRESS, PHONE, CAP ID, SAR assignment, 101 CARD. to ( an email address.)

So if you look at this it reads one way only. It doesn't say answer the following questions, or send the following information to... it says what it says. So, and I am not being a wise acre about this - It says send the following:
Followed by the words NAME, ADDRESS, ETC. TO obey I would have simply copied this message and sent it on without adding anything, as in my information.

My issue is obey and "you get my meaning so help me and interpret what I mean" are not compatible. We all are faithful to orders, or at least try to be. Many times that is different than obey. Today I chose to interpret for meaning and reply in a timely manner. BUT, I never know if that is being compliant. Ambiguity? This comes up all the time... it is just most don't take notice. Today, there was no human being to ask so I had to interpret and manage.
With regards;
ED OBRIEN

RiverAux

Okay, I fully understand that I can be very nitpicky about stuff, but that is just ridiculous. 

Say we used the AF Oath instead as you suggested, then that wouldn't solve your problem as it would have been a lawful order to reply with NAME, ADDRESS, ETC.

Smithsonia

#32
RiverAux;
Well you can see the issue, sloppy text, bad writing, illogical application, poor editing, incorrect word choice.
As it came from the NOC and was contained in an alert... I can't tell you what they actually meant, just what I did. In this example, I didn't obey - I faithfully discharged.

Since it comes up all the time... you'll have to fathom the depths of compliance, understanding, obedience, interpretation, and when and when NOT (or how and how not) to resolve the issues - on your own. I was pointing it to your attention, not resolving it for you. I said that it bothered me. I gave examples. I said what I will do or have done, etc. I can't answer for anyone else. This isn't a test of the emergency mutiny system.

I think that you should do what you think best about taking or giving the Oath. For me --

I have "mental reservations" about the Oath. But, I have no "purpose of evasion". I have been above-board and straight about both. Faithfully Execute or Discharge IS DIFFERENT than Obey. One speaks to the spirit (faithfully discharge) of an order and the other speaks to the letter of a command (obey). If the Air Force trusts 19 year olds with faithfully discharge... we shouldn't have to live with obey.

So, I can state this again for you, but this should do. AND if you are still confused? Oh, let me make that an order - "RiverAux, You Will Understand Immediately!". That'll clear it all up for you. 

Afterall - "eats, shoots, and leaves," is completely different than "eats shoots and leaves." SO it is important to retain some ability for interpretation and thereby faithfully discharging... without perverting or corrupting an order or command.
With regards;
ED OBRIEN

aveighter

We are doomed.  Doomed as an organization, a nation, a society, a culture........

Absolutely screwed.

swamprat86

You can and should submit your recommendations of changes to the oath if you have such reservations about it and push to replace the current one.  Otherwise, we are just spinning wheels

ZigZag911

Am I correct in my belief that this debate is about an "oath":

1) composed by or at the direction of the former Nat'l CC
2) is not official
3) is not required by CAP regulation
4) differs from the written oath on senior member application
    for membership
5) never needs to be sworn, used or administered?

Grumpy

Grrrr.... some people just have too much time on their hands.  I fall into that catigory too.

Larry Mangum

As a point of interest, the oath is in CAPR 35-5, paragraph 1.7.b.  But as stated above it simply states "that Commanders are encouraged". 

From my viewpoint, this is not an issue worth spending a lot of effort on, when a person joins CAP; they have already agreed to follow the members appointed above them. If this is an issue then they never should have joined. 

I will say though, that I am also in agreement with Ed, that words mean something and that when we are not careful with what we say or write, we open ourselves up for misinterpretation.
Larry Mangum, Lt Col CAP
DCS, Operations
SWR-SWR-001