Merriam-Webster defines hazing as: an initiation process involving harassment; to harass by banter, ridicule, or criticism, or by exacting unnecessary or disagreeable work (Merriam-Webster, 2012). The United States Military has had a zero-tolerance policy on hazing ever since then Defense Secretary William Cohen tasked each service with developing guidance. Secretary Cohen was reacting to the outrage following NBC’s Dateline documentary on the Marine Corps’ blood pinning ceremony for jump-qualified Marines (Leppo, 2003). Blood-pinning involves newly qualified service-members having pins or medals, with the back clasps missing, punched into their skin by numerous senior personnel (Landay, 1997).
But, hazing is not something new to the military. Highly publicized cases of hazing date back to 1899, when General Douglas MacAurthur, one of the most decorated soldiers in U.S. history, refused to submit the names of cadets accused of hazing him during a West Point hazing scandal (Pershing, 2006). Other military customs with hazing aspects date back even further. The “Crossing the Line” ceremony, which celebrates a Sailor’s crossing of the equator, dates back to the Vikings and 800 A.D. Crossing the Line ceremonies of the past have included activities such as; being forced to crawl through trash, being dunked
Cited: Carroll, W. (2011). The Bond Outlives the Scandal. U.S. Naval Institute Proceedings, 137(9), 43-46. Dela Cruz, R. (2010, January 23). Sailors crow over revived tradition. Retrieved from http://www.navy.mil/search/display.asp?story_id=50627 Department of Defense. (2011, December 23). Dempsey: Hazing, Bullying `Intolerable ' In Military. FDCH Regulatory Intelligence Database. Landay, J. (1997, February 10). Hazing rituals in military are common - and abusive. Las Vegas Sun. Retrieved from http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/1997/feb/10/hazing-rituals-in-military-are- common---and-abusiv/ Leppo, D. (2003). Crossing the Line Is as Eternal as the Sea. U.S. Naval Institute Proceedings, 129(7), 78. Merriam-Webster. (2012). Hazing. Retrieved from http://www.merriam- webster.com/dictionary/hazing Pershing, J. L. (2006). Men and Women 's Experiences with Hazing in a Male- Dominated Elite Military Institution. Men & Masculinities, 8(4), 470-492. Rosenberg, M. (2011, August 26). Hazing led to Marine 's suicide, military report says. San Jose Mercury News (CA). Trevino, L., & Nelson, K. (2011). Managing business ethics - straight talk about how to do it right. (5 ed, pp. 1-148). Danvers, MA: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.