I think we might have lower conscript standards than Finland.Smitty-48 wrote:How much peer pressure was there in the ranks when you guy's were conscripts? Was everybody keen to do well, or were you stuck with a lot of "I'm just here because this is slightly better than jail" types?
What is defaulters like for those who won't get with the program? Do they pack drill them in the sun until they collapse or just stamp no desserts on their meal card?
It felt more like the compulsion to go to school, as I recall. You may not want to, but since you have to, might as well just do as best as you can or will it turn sour for both yourself and your mates in the long run. On my howitzer crew of eight guys, the mood was in one sense toward "this BS conscription thing we have to do can't be over too soon", but at the same time we were the gun with the highest firing rate, fastest at deployment and redeployment and while our sergeant got a lot of attitude from some of my fellow crew especially in between waits, he didn't need to constantly hover over us to make sure we acted unprofessional. We sorta channelled the "duty sucks" attitude into an increased productivity. It's ok to complain, but cross the threshold unto sitting on your ass, crossing your arms and crying "I don't wanna!", that would have been considered pathetic, childish and nothing anyone would respect.
We did get people who got high on duty. While our regiment achieved some national fame that year after an MP drug bust, there was no tolerance for getting or being high if we were going to the shooting range or live fire excersices. You don't wanna fuck around with that live ammo, much less artillery shells. So, if we knew one of us showed up high in a position that could hurt the rest of us, peer pressure exerted itself and almost always led to the doped up recruit turning himself in to a sergeant or officer. Only time peer pressure didn't work for that, was with a friendless provincial drug dealer/thief. He got reported by the troops instead, and got a mass beating later on - for the stealing, not the getting high part.
We also had some guys, especially in the first two months of recruit training who didn't return to barracks from weekend leave. They got picked up by MP's, put in jail for a day and their service time extended for each day they skipped out. We had three guys who got sent to jail for frequently absconding or commiting crimes on base, and a slightly mentally disabled kid that probably should never have gotten the pass who got sent home. Those who could not keep up with training, of whatever kind, were often set to clean the base for weeds and/or got assigned to driving and handing out supplies. They weren't ordered to march extra, or do more PT. If they were too slow in PT, they simply missed out on lunch. And the completely useless ones got that base gardening gig.
Conscription in Denmark has changed quite a lot since I was a conscript, though. It's reduced just four months of compulsory basic recruit training, followed by voluntary specialist training, and nearly two decades of a high rate of volunteers for the military has meant that almost an entire generation haven't served because they had to.