What about all the non-people that might be joining the Space Force? "Space Person" isn't very inclusive.
What will the USSF Academy students be called? Space Cadets?
Wonder if the Air Force Academy will produce USAF and USSF officers the same way Annapolis produces officers for both the USN and the USMC, eliminating any need for a separate officer academy?
Wonder if the Air Force Academy will produce USAF and USSF officers the same way Annapolis produces officers for both the USN and the USMC, eliminating any need for a separate officer academy?
Most airmen never feel more air than the stuff coming out of the air conditioner.
Regardless, it looks like the US Space Force is going to leave it up to its members and the members of the other branches.
You are correct in that Marines can trace their roots to the "Act to Provide a Naval Armament of 1794". However, those Marines were inserted directly into the US Navy's Chain of Command. It wasn't until the "Act for Establishing and Organizing a Marine Corps of 1798" that the US Marine Corps was officially established and the previous Marines were integrated into their ranks. This doesn't change the fact that the Marines still fall under the Department of the Navy and always have.
The Air Force was born from the Air Service of the US Army. When they branched off they never changed their land-based militia, Commissioned Officer ranking structure. That is why they have the same ranks as the Army and the Marines. At least, their Commissioned Officers do. They never took the opportunity to establish their own identity by developing their own Officer ranks like the British did.
Look at our existing military organizations. Were not talking about the span of a human lifetime. As you pointed out, the Navy was established in 1794. Last I checked, that was over 225 years ago. I would hope that extended space travel would become quite common in the next 2 centuries. Also, it looks like the first big adventure we will be embarking on in space is the colonization of Mars. How do you think we'll get there? How do you think the people who do go will get their supplies? Extended voyages of more than a few months will happen and probably before I'm dead.
Maybe this next analogy is unfair but here it is. Aviation events are usually short compared to Naval events. They rarely last more than several hours and hardly ever more than a half a day. Naval events quite frequently last several months. How long will a trip to Mars take? Google says the shortest time it will take is 150 days. Right around 5 months. Nothing new to a sailor.
To be fair, I am a veteran of the US Navy, so I am pretty biased.
So is J.T.B. (who is an extremely knowledgeable Navy veteran) and incidentally, so I am I.
@Chaos Descending and @J.T.B. Hello Shipmates! Thank you both for your service.
What will the USSF Academy students be called? Space Cadets?
Look at our existing military organizations. Were not talking about the span of a human lifetime. As you pointed out, the Navy was established in 1794. Last I checked, that was over 225 years ago. I would hope that extended space travel would become quite common in the next 2 centuries.
I think with the constant expansion of space level tech (i.e. more assets, more civilian involvement) that Space Force is absolutely a necessity. One thing that I appreciate is that Space Force has its own specified mission parameters. It lets Air Force assets be dedicated to their mission, rather than having the mission creep that has occurred over time.I will preface this by saying I have never been involved in the military, nor am I even American. I do not mean any disrespect with this question; I am just genuinely curious.
As an outsider, most of the coverage I've seen/read regarding Space Force has painted it, to put it charitably, as a Trump vanity project that does not really have a reason to exist as a separate branch. Do you (the general you, not just specifically the poster I quoted) think it will still be around two centuries from now? Is it something that the next Democrat to end up in the White House will end up moving back to a command within the Air Force, rather than a separate service branch, for efficiencies or whatever? Or once it is actually in place, will inertia just carry it forward, and no one will attempt to roll it back in to the original structure?
I highly doubt that they'll retain the "Airman" paradigm for the lowest ranks.
I think "Spacer" wouldn't be too bad, but I think a lot of people might find that silly as well.
..got me thinking. will space force even have ranks lower than noncom?
..got me thinking. will space force even have ranks lower than noncom?
will space force even have ranks lower than noncom?
I figured I'd try and make the stripes look like rocket exhaust coming from the arrowhead:I'm assuming you mean they will be so technically skilled that the lower grades won't really apply? There's something to that, and it's happening in all the forces. But it takes a year or so just to learn how to fit in, function and be part of a military organization, so the lower grades will probably always be useful for basic training.
Just an idea for enlisted stripes, in gold-on-black and silver-on-black:
View attachment 13786
Well the Army has 4 grades of Warrant officers for skilled positions. That might be a good fit.
I figured I'd try and make the stripes look like rocket exhaust coming from the arrowhead:
If Gunnery Sergeants are called "Gunny," would Rocketry Sergeants be call "Rocky?"Marines have a Gunnery Sergeant, why not a Rocketry Sergeant?!
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