I would pay good money to see a private ignore a generals order; especially if the general took down his/her name and unit. Imagine the **** that would roll down that hill
Lets get further off track...
it wouldn't surprise me if a Medical Corps flag officer were to tell a very junior enlisted person to get a haircut, but it is rather unorthodox to give orders outside of your chain of command.
The proper way to approach this, is for the officer to contact someone of the same rank in the junior enlisted persons chain of command and mention that they have some troops (name and rank of offending person may or may not be inserted here) that are not within regs. It is neither appropriate, nor will it win friends or influence people to go either above or below your level in another chain of command.
as I mentioned above, though, it wouldn't surprise me for a medical corps officer to either not know or observe this protocol. I certainly wouldn't have known it when I showed up fresh out of a civilian internship.
back on track, Being a DO won't change pay or benefits in the .mil, and is unlikely to effect residency selection. The same can't be said for civilian world. Being a DO may mean that there are some dinosaurs out there that don't think your good enough for their program. But you may also find that there are some good and big name programs that are just fine with it, and all you need is one training program that fits you.
I remember seeing a statistic about 10 years ago, that compared average salary, and broke DO and MD out into seperate categorys. They suggested that the DO salary averaged about 10 grand a year more than the MD.
all things being equal, I would go to an MD program just for the benefit of not having to explain what a DO is. Otherwise, the two degrees are far to similar for there to be any discernible difference as far as I am concerned.
i want out (of IRR)