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Speaking of warriors... PJ's

Re: Speaking of warriors... PJ's

"PJ's" Unsung hard charging heroes. They are some of the most humble and genuinely good people out there. They are true guardian angels that bring fight and fire power when they show up. read "That Others May Live" by Senior Master Sgt. Jack Brehm very good book with a lot of insight into what being a PJ is all about.
 
Re: Speaking of warriors... PJ's

We had one of our DOE SRT operators go through the "Pipeline" and he made it. He could order whatever gear he wanted, and his wall locker had enough gear to climb Mt. Everest.
Loves it, and went full time with them.
Great dude!
 
Re: Speaking of warriors... PJ's

A guy at our local Happy Hour asked me whose training I thought was the hardest - Marines, Special Forces, Navy SEALs. He was somewhat surprised when I told him probably the hardest course to pass was to be a P.J.

SEALs have gotten out, gone into the Air Force to go to P.J. school, and flunked out.

To be a P.J., you not only have to be hard, but smart enough to absorb complex medical training, and able to think and perform under immense pressure.

Air Force Combat Controllers are close. They are actual qualified FAA Air Traffic Controllers and Terminal Guidance Controllers who also have to do all the hard physical stuff. There are no dumbasses who qualify as Air Traffic Controllers.

It's a long-established truism that you never know what a true warrior will look like. It's also true that you never know where you will find them.
 
Re: Speaking of warriors... PJ's

There were several PJ/CCTs involved in the battle for Mogadishu. One PJ was awarded the Silver Star and another the Air Force Cross. Everybody earned their pay, that day.
 
Re: Speaking of warriors... PJ's

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Lindy</div><div class="ubbcode-body">It's a long-established truism that you never know what a true warrior will look like. It's also true that you never know where you will find them.</div></div>Well said.
 
Re: Speaking of warriors... PJ's

We have them rotate down here with us pretty regularly for experience with trauma (says bad things about NOLA). They are a very skilled group of people. One of my service rifle coaches teaches marksmanship to AF spec ops folk down at Hurlburt Field. Talk about some hard-holders. I have loved every minute with them....and the guys from Alaska are some of the finest rescue folks around.

 
Re: Speaking of warriors... PJ's

Oh, yeah. Those guys in Alaska have to deal not only with rescues in the freezing sea, but up on mountains like Denali as well. That's a <span style="font-weight: bold">hard</span> environment to work in.

The P.J.'s motto is "That others may live" - and they walk the walk.

The Coast Guard Rescue Swimmers up there are no slouches, either.

The Coasties unofficial motto is "You have to go out. You don't have to come back."

Bless them all.

 
Re: Speaking of warriors... PJ's

When I was in as a 91W (now 68W i think) with the Army, we trained with a few PJs in jump school, and at Ft Sam Houston. All "chair force"
grin.gif
jokes aside, those PJs were high speed man. I got nothing but admiration and praise for them, Combat controllers and combat weathermen as well.
 
Re: Speaking of warriors... PJ's

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Lindy</div><div class="ubbcode-body">It's a long-established truism that you never know what a true warrior will look like. It's also true that you never know where you will find them.
</div></div>

Excellent Example - Audie Murphy


USAF Special Operations has a number of what many would call hard chargers. Jumping along with the Combat Controller Teams you will likely find a Combat Weather Team ... there are the Tactical Air Control Parties, 3-man specialized teams farmed out to Army and even foreign units to provide coordinated close air support.

Remember, there are a number of cooks in all branches that have received medals for heroism in nearly all our Wars. It ain't the job... it's the man.
 
Re: Speaking of warriors... PJ's

Went through jump school with some AF guys. Don't remember if they were PJ's but alL three were great guys. Humble and willing to give of their knowledge. Wish I could say the same about the rest of the Army.
 
Re: Speaking of warriors... PJ's

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Parallax</div><div class="ubbcode-body"> It ain't the job... it's the man. </div></div>
I did not want to come right out and say it. Think of the spike in flight suits and helmets that could have come about if you had not spilled the beans...
 
Re: Speaking of warriors... PJ's

I was amused by my copy of this month's <span style="font-style: italic">Signal</span>, which featured a picture of an Air Force general officer at an official briefing wearing a flight suit, as well as several ads showing workers in command posts wearing flight suits.

I'm not really amused by all the Pentagon workers wearing utilities. It's not like service uniforms are all that hard to take care of.

Oh, well - I guess I'm just an old curmudgeon.

Correction - I'm not guessing...
 
Re: Speaking of warriors... PJ's

I was having this conversation with my son yesterday when he asked me what I thought the hardest military school was. Without hesitation I said the Air Force PJ program. I went to SERE with some PJ's in my squad. That was a vacation for them as it was an easier school out of the many they had to attend in the pipeline. Everyone I met I was very impressed with. They would always be the first to volunteer to carry extra equipment. My hats off to the PJ's. They have a long hard pipeline/training to make it through. If I remember correctly it took almost 15 months to make it through all the training.
 
Re: Speaking of warriors... PJ's

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: JSTARSZ</div><div class="ubbcode-body">I was having this conversation with my son yesterday when he asked me what I thought the hardest military school was. Without hesitation I said the Air Force PJ program. I went to SERE with some PJ's in my squad. That was a vacation for them as it was an easier school out of the many they had to attend in the pipeline. Everyone I met I was very impressed with. They would always be the first to volunteer to carry extra equipment. My hats off to the PJ's. They have a long hard pipeline/training to make it through. If I remember correctly it took almost 15 months to make it through all the training. </div></div>

The training all added up might take 15 months but a guy is lucky to get through the program in 2 years just because it is hard to line up all the schools.