Sere

<p>AC says… "When you write that you are trivializing the abuse that these people went through. "</p>

<p>The only problem is that fleiger never wrote what you assert. “Trivializing” and “abuse” of what? You’ve cited nothing but a hearing transcript. The topic had to do with training for cadets in survival, escape and evasion. All training evolves, gets revised and has a purpose. Focus on the fly specs in the pepper if you want but don’t hijack the thread.</p>

<p>Ok, enough is enough. We don’t need to be discussing irrelevent details on this forum. Did it happen, yes. is it in the past and the academy has moved on, yes.</p>

<p>please leave this forum for discussion about the academy currently and questions prospects and their parents may have. i hope everyone can move on.</p>

<p>on that note, it’s going to be phased in over time, and the academy is very lucky to be able to offer such a program</p>

<p>I fully concur! :-)</p>

<p>Just to add my two cents, my wife is a proud USAFA grad, class of 89. She told me that the academy version of SERE was very tough but she would not trade the experience for anything. While it did not sound quiet as harsh as the USMC/Navy version it provided many challenges and was true no BS military training and not just another haze for the underclass.
She is glad they are finally bringing it back and feels the cadets that did not get the opportunity to go through SERE missed out on a very important component of the academy experience.</p>

<p>To lighten up the mood a little…beware the undercooked rabbit!!</p>

<p>Rabbit EYES!</p>

<p>I’ll bet they’re good on pizza if you can get one delivered.</p>