War Room Awards 2016

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Any meet up would need to be mma related to be successful. A big ufc event.

Like where Artoffighting grappled with Wamrage in the hotel room at Pride 32?. Wam said that Arts judo grip was strong.
 
Answer this directly please: Did you write on an E-6 while you were an E-5?

You mean like evaluations? Nope. Just supervised, trained, and directed work.

And false claims of being a doctor are practically part of Sherdog's fabric. I am skeptical.

Fair enough. I'm not sure how to validate this other than taking a pic of my diploma, which you could easily say I found online or something, or being tested by another physician on Sherdog.
 
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Yup.

I bet you're single too. Lol

Is that supposed to be a joke? I don't get it.

BTW, since you're coming out of your shell a little, want to explain why you had a change of heart politically and have become a standard Limbaugh clone?
 
You mean like evaluations? Nope. Just supervised, trained, and directed work.

Probably true, but I think most old posters know what I did in the military, and I think I've done enough to substantiate these claims in the past.

Fair enough. I'm not sure how to validate this other than taking a pic of my diploma, which you could easily say I found online or something, or being tested by another physician on Sherdog.
If you didn't write on an E-6 you didn't supervise an E-6. Bottom line. We've all been in shops where an E-5 was the go-to guy over the crusty Tech. Or when the junior guys have to train the senior guys. Common stuff. It's okay to call it what it is instead of trying to inflate the claim. You're obviously smart and probably made staff your first go. Maybe even E-4 BTZ.

I'm glad you understand my skepticism that you all of a sudden show back up under your old account as a successful doctor making the same kinds of dubious borderline claims. That's what doctors are known for.
 


More like this is how I have you pictured.


sytycd-8-jess-leprotto.jpg
 
You mean like evaluations? Nope. Just supervised, trained, and directed work.

Actually, I was a tester for the certification process, but that might be the only evaluation type stuff I would do. It's all work related. Nothing to do with military stuff.
 
If you didn't write on an E-6 you didn't supervise an E-6. Bottom line. We've all been in shops where an E-5 was the go-to guy over the crusty Tech. Or when the junior guys have to train the senior guys. Common stuff. It's okay to call it what it is instead of trying to inflate the claim. You're obviously smart and probably made staff your first go. Maybe even E-4 BTZ.
Never BTZ. That went to those red rope brown nosers.
 
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Actually, I was a tester for the certification process, but that might be the only evaluation type stuff I would do. It's all work related. Nothing to do with military stuff.
What do you mean by a "tester for the certification process"? The certification process for AF techniques and knowledge is laid out in operating instructions that are produced by command, to my knowledge. What about a certification process would have required testing at the shop level?
 
Never BTZ. That went to those red rope brown nosers. I wasn't only the go-to guy. I was the mission supervisor, a supervisory position overseeing 70+ workers. Mostly E-5 and below, occasionally some E-6s, but they usually eventually got moved to a non-shift work job once they got some sort of initial certification.
I'm not intimately familiar with what a "mission supervisor" is. I know that's a term more commonly used by the Intel guys, but I don't recall it ever involving overseeing 70+ workers in that context. That's getting close to squadron-level oversight.

It's a little surprising that a man of your talents didn't make BTZ, considering it's just a 90th percentile target. Your supervisor must not have liked you.
 
I'm not talking about whatever tests you take for the WAPS system or skills training tests or whatever. I don't even remember what they are called now. Also not talking about tech school. Where I worked, after you got to your duty station, there were many different sections/shops you could potentially be assigned to. Some were easier than others. Some took 3 months to certify in, some took 9 months minimum. It was a work certification basically that said you were competent at that position. It's not an AF certification. Remember, I said I worked in a joint service environment with military people and civilians.
The jargon for that is "trainer" if you'll recall. I know exactly what you mean- various people in each shop could sign off on that damn checklist (I forget the name too) to certify people in those tasks/knowledge/equipment use. So you were a trainer for ___X___, with X being whichever various aspects of the shop you could certify on. Pretty common for an E-5 level of responsibility.
 
IIt's a little surprising that a man of your talents didn't make BTZ, considering it's just a 90th percentile target. Your supervisor must not have liked you.

I worked with mostly nerdy people. I dont remember exactly the timeline for BTZ, but it seems like this might have been while we were still in training. Our training was very long. The people who got BTZ were all red ropes suck ups, hardly merit based.
 
The jargon for that is "trainer" if you'll recall. I know exactly what you mean- various people in each shop could sign off on that damn checklist (I forget the name too) to certify people in those tasks/knowledge/equipment use. So you were a trainer for ___X___, with X being whichever various aspects of the shop you could certify on. Pretty common for an E-5 level of responsibility.
The tester thing was a separate activity I volunteered for as the SME for the job. There were only 3 of us. You just had to be certified at the job, a bad ass, and approved by other testers. I'm sure there are probably similar jobs in other fields, sure.
 
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