Doesn't matter now does it?
(Givati you made it personal, take it to IM though)
Most military forces worldwide have regulations and for good reason,
most military forces have their fair share of punks who think they are above
and beyond the regulations as well.
There are some "rules and regulations" on this forum too kid,
so be careful to whom you apply the term "yellow"
which is another insult / expression for coward.
Connaught Ranger.
Doesn't matter now does it?
(Givati you made it personal, take it to IM though)
Last edited by CombatBoots; 05-06-2009 at 06:25 AM. Reason: I'm taking it easy...
It all your fault for living down there.
Anyway, How I hated this when I lived in the middle of the Negev. Sometimes I preferred to go to a youth hostel in Tel Aviv and spend the Shabbat there and not being all the time riding Egged buses.
I know....
Don't be so hard on this, the IDF is a popular army and a lot of things works bad, one of them is what Givati is saying.
I think that hitch hiking regulations are ok, but the tzavá should find a way to help soldiers, more when they are lone soldiers, the get to their homes.
Once I was stranded in the middle of nowhere, next to the green line, and I could have spent the whole night there alone if I didn't asked for a ride. And in my time, cell phones were sci fi stuff.
IDF boots are horrible.
Some units can use their owns, and in reserve duty I used also my owns. I don't know how it is for the regular guys, because in my time, I was too green and inexperienced to even think about the boots.
Please, take it easy with this.
As I said, travelling inside Israel is a pain in the a** when Shabbat is coming.
Regulations are important, but getting to home, and be rested and with your friends is also important.
Givati have a point, I felt the same in my time about being stranded and nobody caring.
Yellow means something like Newbie and not coward.
There was a valid point to what Pretorian669 said; He could have been snatched and
then it would not only be his problem, but also Israel freeing terrorists or launching an operation to get him out, and heck, somebody might have to lay his life down over this... Over that he wanted to come home quick and have a beer.
But hey, sure I'll take it easy with this givati575...
Last edited by CombatBoots; 05-06-2009 at 06:26 AM. Reason: For taking it easy with givati575...
There's a reason why hitchhiking is forbidden.. and I'm pretty sure they told you why.
It might look 'geeky' to you, but better be safe than sorry.
Thanks for an explanation, we use the colour "Green" in that context.
But a certain poster here has displayed a marked lack of respect for any form of military authority, and boasted about his getting away with it on many occasions, as he seems to think its a great achievement.
Any soldier, in any military, soon learns that its a team effort, there is no place for a loose cannon or a wise-guy.
Connaught Ranger.![]()
I think "yellow" in this context is originated in the skin color, I'm afraid. Yellow as skin color of the Ashkenazi Jews, which are supposedly the "good" normative boys, unlike cooler and more freely spirited Sephardic(Mizrahi) Jews.
We were vuz-vuzim then. It's the difference between Nahal and Golani.
On paper lots of things are supposed to be. In all fairness, in basic training they accomodated us (the guys living near Eilat in the far south) more often than not, but that was still the beginning of a 4-5 hour trip. Getting out of camp was like the intro to a book. Getting a bus or other ride home was a whole other chapter.
Other times we'd give up 30 minutes or an hour on getting out so the observant guys could leave first and really be home before Shabbat. It's not that we were just being nice; it's they were good blokes. The rules for those things may have been applicable in basic which is a more controlled environment, but all bets are off once your done and in an operational unit. As Seren Jack Sparrow says "they're more like guidelines."
not that i really care because i think they are useless, but what is the reason the IDF doesnt really have military parades anymore?
well yoni im taking it your israeli you most likely have no knowledge of the irish army if any irish ppl want proof please pm coz i dont need anoher infraction
how accurate was the movie bout entebbe?
You mean like on Independence Day? If that's what you're asking then it's largely because they were once seen as provocative and expensive. The last real parade with columns of soldiers and armour was, ironically, in 1973 for the 25th Independence Day.
This from Wikipedia.
The Israel Defense Forces parade was an event during the first 25 years of the State of Israel's existence to celebrate its military might. It was cancelled after 1973 due to financial concerns.
The first IDF parade took place during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, on July 27, 1948, on Allenby Street and Ben Yehuda Street in Tel Aviv.[1]
The second parade took place in 1949, on Israel's first independence day, in Tel Aviv. It failed in the process because the overenthusiastic crowd burst into the parade ground. It was nicknamed "The parade that did not march".
Starting with the third parade in 1950, annual parades were held on the country's independence day, ending in 1968. Citing financial concerns, it was then decided that the parade should only be held on special occasions. The last IDF parade thus took place in 1973, on Israel's 25th birthday.
The Israel Defense Forces still has weapon exhibitions country-wide on Independence Day, but they are stationary and have a limited scale.
Year Location
1948 Tel Aviv
1949 Tel Aviv
1950 Jerusalem
1951 Jerusalem
1952 Tel Aviv
1953 Haifa
1954 Ramla (per personal request of Ben-Gurion that it be in an immigrant location.)
1955 Tel Aviv, Beersheba, Afula
1956 Haifa
1957 Tel Aviv
1958 Jerusalem
1959 Tel Aviv
1960 Haifa
1961 Jerusalem
1962 Tel Aviv
1963 Haifa
1964 Beersheba (intended for Jerusalem but moved to avoid issues w/ Jordan)
1965 Tel Aviv
1966 Haifa
1967 Jerusalem
1968 Jerusalem
1973 Jerusalem