Year: 2016

  • I Used to Grunt: Life in the Armory

    I Used to Grunt: Life in the Armory

    It is a quiet Saturday morning in the armory cage with an analog Skillcraft clock on the wall, the face of it saying 5 AM. I can hear it ticking away as I brew up a pot of coffee because I’m planning on driving the fuck out of Jacksonville as soon as this platoon turns in their weapons. I take a warm slow sip and I remember that it didn’t used to be like this. I remember the days when the only time I needed to count in the Marine Corps was when I was having to do some super-motivated course of fire under a Lieutenant’s supervision or when I was trying to awkwardly explain my sexual exploits to my platoon. Now I count what feels like thousands of black-matte objects twice a day, the monotony of the experience leaving me with a bitter taste in my mouth to accompany the coffee.

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    Before I was put into the armory cage with the motivational billet title of Armory Custodian, I was an 0311 – Infantry Rifleman. There’s not much to brag about in this because it was during peace-time and all I really ended up doing on my first deployment was a trip into the Heart of Darkness (Africa) where I stood post for hours on end and then bitched about it on the wi-fi in true Marine Corps fashion. Still, I was motivated about the whole experience and when we came back I was made a team leader for a few months. I saw a few because the armory had an opening and the company needed a human sacrifice. My name popped up, and when I was told by my Staff Sergeant at the time that I was up for being the new custodian, my heart sunk.

    I begged and pleaded with every NCO, SNCO, and officer possible to let me keep my team leader billet or at the least keep me in a line platoon. There was no worse fate than being stripped of a title that I wore so proudly then to be promptly forced into a desk job. Sensing that I was desperate to avoid the fate of being stuck in the armory for the rest of my four-year career, the XO (my former platoon commander) himself tried to ease my fears. “Don’t worry,” he said. “This doesn’t mean you’re a bad Marine. We’re actually choosing you because so many people fought to keep you in their platoon.” If his words ring true, then I would have been better served if I had just picked up an extensive drinking habit and let my work performance suffer until they’d chosen another Marine. Nope, instead they stuck my ass in the armory.

    You see, when I bitch about being in the armory, understand that there are a lot of super chill things about it. Sometimes I’ll bring in my laptop and literally just play video games while people are sweating their ass off of in hundred degree weather with a ninety-percent humidity rating. I’ve also snuck in a cot one day so that I could sleep in any clime or place, but when you wake up from your armory naps, you usually end up sitting there with this lingering sense of guilt that you’re skating while everyone is suffering constantly. I didn’t sign up to do a POG job, I didn’t want the skate life. I had a 98 ASVAB score, a 136 GT score, and an average size penis which meant that I could have had any job in the military and not feel like any less of a man. Most combat-arms Marines will understand though that you’d rather do it the 03XX way instead of the POG way. I wanted to be in the infantry more than anything, and when I was taken out of it and put in a desk job, my morale sunk.

    What really bummed me out for a while is that I have a completely sober idea of what it is like out there in the field. You don’t have this idea of some super radical camping trip where you all get to shoot guns and then go sleep in your sick-ass tent. You know that your friend is going to be sitting there in the cold, soaking wet, waiting for a notional enemy to walk by so he can yell “bang bang”. It’s one thing to go through that with your guys that you’ve been with since you first hit the fleet, it another thing entirely to wake up and be the asshole that turns away your weapon because it has rust on it. You know why its rusty after a five day field op, you know that it makes sense to turn the weapon in and come clean the day after, but you’re also being told that the CO is coming by in the afternoon and that if he finds a single dirty weapon, the whole company will be drawing and won’t get to leave early for the upcoming 96. Sorry bro, you’re weapon is dirty.

    The thrilling sensation of regularly being an asshole to people, coupled with the constant counting of similar objects and readings of serial numbers has resulted in what I’ve taken to calling “POG Fatigue”. Your brain starts to get fried from all the mountain of paperwork that you grind through, you can’t wash the smell of carbon off of your hands for some reason, and you’re having to come in on the weekend for the third time in a row because a lone squad of Marines was out in the field. It seemed to confirm my theory that no job in the Marine Corps is truly skate. Everyone thinks that some super POG MOS is going to be the chillest thing ever, but whenever I’ve talked to a POG I always make a point to ask them what sucks about their job and they find plenty of things to bitch about. It’s gay all over, it seems.

    I knew it was starting to be too late for me when I was seeing a transformation brought on by the armory cage. Besides a more pale complexion from the lack of sunlight you’re getting, you also will regularly compare the quality of pens and develop a strong opinion on certain brands. G-2 Pens are pretty solid but will bleed easily, so don’t take them out in the rain on your brief hike to the chow hall and back. Zebra pens are the poor-man’s G-2 and should be used sparingly. Skillcraft are okay, mainly because their free and you can hoard twenty of them in your desk. Space pens are just an expensive way of throwing your money in the garbage because they seem to break really easily halfway along the middle. There’s a commercial that sometimes pops up in the on-base theater, where what seems to be a rifle is being assembled in a really close-up view while the Rifleman’s Creed is being spoken. At the end, it’s revealed that it is a pen and that your weapon is actually your vote so you should go register right now. Before I was in the armory, I always laughed at that commercial and joked around that it was a POG weapon alright. Now I can tell you that it is a thinly disguised Zebra Pen, stainless steel, with a 0.7mm tip.

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    You know that moment of panic you get when you realize you’ve lost something really expensive? That can happen to you any day in the armory cage. I’ll be counting everything for my closing counts, and realize that I’m coming up short one pistol. Okay, no big deal. I’ll recount maybe two, three, four times until everyone in there agrees that “holy shit, we’re missing a pistol”. Keep it on the down low and then start the frantic search for answers. Sherlock Holmes levels of detective work are sometimes necessary to find out that a weapons card was blown under a cage, or that a broken weapon was taken out today and the armorer’s forgot to give you the paperwork saying “Don’t freak out, we took that shit.” While I’m searching through all the hastily organized paperwork in the cage, flashes of horrors come before my eyes: vehicles being searched by MPs, rooms being thrashed apart fruitlessly, bases on complete shutdown an hour before leave block starts. NCIS will probably rape me in both a literal and a metaphorical sense of the meaning. One small serialized piece of metal can result in so many ruined plans.

    It honestly isn’t all that bad though. Since I went in, I’ve been able to work out regularly and get to a better level of physical fitness than when I was in the infantry, which is depressing to think about. With all the excess amount of time that I spend not going in the field, I’ve managed to work on a lot of my hobbies so I can continue to be an eccentric weird guy that sits in his room most of the time, but does it productively! And the chief thing that we all know in our hearts, is that when my roommate goes out to the field, I can strip naked and dick around in that small abode with no worries that the door will swing open and I’ll have to explain to my squad why I’m trying to play the recorder. Plus, that Skillcraft clock keeps steadily ticking on, counting down the days until I EAS.

  • The Lance Corporal Underground

    The Lance Corporal Underground

    Don’t tell anyone this, but I heard Stephens and Nash told everyone they were getting married for the BAH and to move out of the barracks… But they’re actually gay and in love.

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    I got a buddy in Quantico that told me the Commandant is actually a computer animated hologram like Tupac.

     


    I heard that President Obama wanted to reenlist for another 4 years, but the cutting score was too high.

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    I heard your name came up in the staff meeting yesterday. I dunno, man. Probably nothing to worry about.

     


    I heard the armory actually has a ton of firing pins laying around.

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    Samson told me he slept with one of the chow hall ladies, and now he gets double dessert every day.

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    Doc is gay.


    My buddy at IPAC told me that we already have a woman in our platoon. It’s Browns, she just gets a medium-reg and uses a she-wee so no one notices.

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    I read in the Marine Corps Times that we’re getting a new rifle any day now.

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    Chuck over at the company office told me Gunny switched from coffee spiked with Bailey’s to just Bailey’s now.

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  • Terminal Lance #444 “Drill Foot”

    Terminal Lance #444 “Drill Foot”

    In a line company, Platoon Sergeants and Commanders come and go. Unfortunately this means that you never really know where your next one is going to come from. Often times, you get stuck with some Staff Sergeant returning to the fleet after yelling at or lying to children for three years. (Drill Instructors and recruiters, respectively)

    For what it’s worth, recruiters are usually the better option as far as your personal quality of life is concerned, they’re generally laid back and don’t give a shit about anything outside of running into one of their prior-recruitees.

    As a Hawaii Marine, I was often told that Staff NCO’s that selected Hawaii as their permanent duty station were some of the worst, since it was generally seen as a relaxing holiday to be stationed there. Of course, worst is a general term, since it means the Staff NCO’s were relatively unmotivated compared to their peers. This was great for the lower enlisted, because it meant that for the few hours that they were around, they didn’t give a shit any more than we did.

    When they weren’t around, they were probably surfing.

    In other news, I happen to be on holiday in London at the moment. After much begging and haggling and oral sex, we were able to arrange a book signing tomorrow at Orbital Comics near Leicester Square!

    If you’re around, come say what’s up. If you’re American, you’re legally required to be there. We’ll have books for sale at the event, but I’ll sign basically anything you put in front of me.

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  • Terminal Lance #443 “Connection Problems”

    Terminal Lance #443 “Connection Problems”

    There exists in the Marine Corps a supernatural force, a spiritual bond that defies all known science. Officers, NCO’s and Staff NCO’s do not possess this power, for it is gifted only to the Lance Corporals of the Corps. Some say it was passed down as far back as the Lance Corporals that built the pyramids of ancient Egypt, but no one truly knows. What we do know is that once you lose the rank, you lose the power.

    Corporals are often the worst victims of the condition, as it strikes them by surprise after sometimes years of access to unfiltered and instant access. They’re left in the dark, coldly and suddenly, leaving many of them to transform into giant douchebags.

    These sad NCO’s go on to reenlist and pick up rank, but never really know what’s going on. They never gain this power again. The only other rank that has the supernatural ability to cross realms is the Chief Warrant Officer, but that’s because they don’t exist in a human state.

    I should really write some kind of bestiary for the Marine Corps.

    On a side note, I’ll be traveling around this month, but expect me to be in Portland and Austin in early November. I also heard from the Underground that I might make an appearance at Camp Pendleton next month… Stay tuned.

  • Terminal Lance #442 “Bootcamp: The Care Package”

    Terminal Lance #442 “Bootcamp: The Care Package”

    Bootcamp is a shitty 3 months.

    As if you don’t have enough to worry about with sweaty, angry men yelling at you 24 hours a day, you never know what might be lurking in a box some good-intentioned family member or friend sent your way.

    Comedian Sarah Silverman panicked yesterday after realizing she may have made a grave mistake for her recruit nephew.

    Of course, in reality he will most likely be fine, assuming she didn’t send a box of dildos (possible, being familiar with her comedy). Sadly though, her sudden panic is actually a result of reading headlines surrounding the abuse scandals apparent to Parris Island Recruit Depot. I’ve stayed away from the subject on Terminal Lance, for the most part because I hate reading the comments. Hard-charging keyboard warriors act as if being thrown into a dryer is a regular occurrence that all recruits must suffer (it’s not).

    Even without such flagrant abuse, boot camp is arduous and mostly awful. I’ve said it before, but I would much rather go back to Iraq than do another 3 months at MCRD being treated like a recruit. I feel the worst for those poor kids that spend months in medical recovery, being treated like recruits for much longer than originally intended.

    On a side note, Recruit Toms might become my goto recurring character for all matters pertaining to boot camp. After I finished drawing this strip, I realized the poolee in the third panel looked a lot like my rendition of Jodie. I wonder if perhaps this is his origin story–a failed recruit–a fallen angel of sorts.

    Only time will tell, but in the meantime, don’t be a dick with your care packages (literally and figuratively).

    On a sidenote, I’m still looking for content and creators! Email me at maximilian.uriarte@terminallance.com with something funny. Preference goes to Active Duty, but I’m open to anyone that is good.

    I’m super happy to have the new site up and running! We’re still working out some kinks with the functionality on this end, but should be straightened out soon enough. Check out the new Opinions section by using the menu at the top of the page.

  • Terminal Lance 3.0

    Terminal Lance 3.0

     

    After many months of concept and development, I’m ridiculously excited to finally unveil the new Terminal Lance!

    You’ll notice that this site not only features a brand new design, but also a brand new section dedicated to featured Opinion pieces. This is a small, but important shift in the way Terminal Lance will be operating from here on. My goal with the new Terminal Lance is to offer, in addition to the comic strip, original features from voices all over the Marine Corps.

    Terminal Lance, since its inception in 2010, has always stood as a voice of the junior enlisted Marine. The three panel strips I put out twice a week here on this site have stood the test of time to become one of the most iconic, trendsetting brands in the military community.

    Since I have no intention of contacting a prior-enlistment recruiter any time soon, I wanted to continue the tradition of being an insider glimpse of the Active Duty Marine Corps lifestyle. Terminal Lance is essentially expanding, to include views, opinions and insight from Marines and Sailors across the globe. This new site allows that to be possible.

    Before any of that begins though, I wanted to give you guys a brief history of the design of Terminal Lance since its creation in 2010.

    Terminal Lance 1.0

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    Launched in January 2010

    Terminal Lance 1.0 was an exercise in internet learning for me. Back in December of 2010, I was still active duty aboard Marine Corps Base Hawaii, Kaneohe Bay. I had never built a website before, and with my Lance Corporal paycheck, there’s no way I could have hired someone to do it for me.

    Even so, I knew I wanted to build a webcomic about the Marine Corps and I knew that no one was going to help me do it. I stayed up late and Googled my way through WordPress enough to piece this original site together. I didn’t really know what I was doing, but it worked well enough for Marines to enjoy it and that’s all that really mattered anyway. This was based on an old theme called Comic Press, which was sort of ready-built for webcomics and you see it often around the internet if you know it.

    Terminal Lance 1.1

     

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    Terminal Lance 1.1

    Terminal Lance 1.1 was really just a refinement on the original, with some fancy LCPL chevrons added to the top menubar to give it some graphic variety. My stepfather, a programmer, helped me get those in there. This look stayed all the way up until 2013…

    Terminal Lance 2.0

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    Terminal Lance 2.0

    Terminal Lance 2.0 was a brand new redesign done professionally by the folks over at Usability Dynamics. I designed it myself and was able to use funds from the vastly successful Kickstarter campaign for The White Donkey to get it done. It was a huge upgrade at the time simply because it was responsive and adapted to the size of smartphones dynamically. Of course, this is obvious in 2016, but back then it was still a pretty new concept. It also had a pretty neat custom Twitter feed featuring one of the “POST” characters.

    This theme was still based on the more or less outdated “Comic Press” theme I was using since day 1.

    Terminal Lance 2.1

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    Previous Design

    This is the most recent design, which was simply a refinement to the 2013 design. It got rid of the textured background and added some room for ads. This design was what was on Terminal Lance for the last two years. It served its purpose well enough, but problems mostly arose from it being based on a very old WordPress build and the old Comic Press theme. It simply wasn’t designed for many of the modern (standard) features of WordPress at this point, and it was extremely inflexible to add new features to it without extensive programming involved.

    Terminal Lance 3.0

    Terminal Lance 3.0
    Terminal Lance 3.0

    You’re looking at it.

    This new Terminal Lance is built from the ground up around a completely new core (pun intended), and is faster, more flexible, and allows for featured articles in a way that the previous theme could never do.

    Huge thank you to Alexander Orr, a Marine and Afghanistan veteran, for developing this new site.

    For the most part, the design is more or less a combination of Terminal Lance 1 and 2, but with new framework and modern design elements. However, the biggest addition is the Opinion section, which will feature new pieces such as this throughout the week.

    I’m thrilled to finally arrive here!

    As a Marine with 3rd Battalion, 3rd Marines… 3 tends to be my lucky number.

    Stay tuned.

  • Terminal Lance “Post POTUS”

    Terminal Lance “Post POTUS”

    I mean what else is he going to do?

    The post 9/11 generation of veterans is a truly interesting one, different than any others in American history. More than ever, veterans are returning to the civilian world to do absolutely anything they can to avoid truly integrating back into the culture they left behind. Instead, they start their own veteran-centric brands and sell copious amounts of tee shirts with distressed lettering and moto designs while reveling in the expansive veteran social media community. I don’t necessarily exclude myself from this generalization, as I write my comic strip about the military I left years ago.

    Still, I think about this a lot. I wasn’t alive for the wars of the past, but I think about the lifestyles of the veterans of old. The guys that fought in WWII, Korea and Vietnam, didn’t have the echo chamber of social media to get lost in. I like to think that veterans before us had an easier time, but then I look at the tribulations of returning Vietnam veterans and their shameful mistreatment by American society upon their return home.

    My stepfather was one of them, who died of a heroin overdose when I was 13 years old. I suppose at the time I didn’t fully understand the concept of his veteran status in relation to his drug addiction. As I got older and obviously involved in the military space, it gave me a chance to reflect on this, which honestly just brought me more sorrow than anything. This is the man that taught me how to tie my shoes and ride a bike, and was sadly left behind in the end to succumb to his own demons.

    I often wonder how healthy all of these “veteranisms” are. To be prescribed to a set of definitions based on your veteran status is a reality of today, and it is not perpetuated by the civilian world as much as reinforced by its own members. To be a veteran is to be understood as I have illustrated it in this caricature. One look at my third panel “President Obama” and you immediately recognize him. This is a fun punchline, but underscores what I believe to be potentially a serious problem in the veteran community.

    On a lighter note, I love this joke, it’s unfortunate that the comments on Facebook for this post are going to be a bunch of idiotic rants about him being a Muslim or something. Unfortunately when it comes to political figures, people are largely incapable of being impartial. Terminal Lance is apolitical, and this comic is no different. Simply making a joke about or mentioning the literal President of the United States does not constitute political favoritism or entering the ring of political commentary.

    I also want to remind you all that I’m still looking for writers! Email me at maximilian.uriarte@terminallance.com if you’re an active duty Marine that wants to tell some funny shit. Stay tuned…

  • Terminal Lance #441 “Relativity”

    Terminal Lance #441 “Relativity”

    A lot of things in the Marine Corps are relative. For instance, “Quality of Life” is extremely relative, as most daily lives of Lance Corporals have very little quality.

    “Nothing unusual to report at this time” is a common phrase used to report to the Officer of the Day or the Staff Duty regarding the state of affairs relative to your post. Generally speaking, unless someone has literally died, there’s not much that constitutes an unusual night in the barracks. When everything is fucked up, it’s hard to distinguish between the extraordinary and the benign.

    Einstein predicted that as objects approach the speed of light, time would pass relatively slowly to the outside observer. A journey that would take a few years at the speed of light would be observed to have taken many more by those back on the ground. This theory applies to Marines standing duty, as time on duty seems to dilate exponentially. Minutes pass normally to the outside observer while those stuck in the black hole of duty see minutes pass as hours.

    On a side note, if you follow Terminal Lance on Instagram you probably saw that we have a brand new website in the works. Look forward to that launching relatively soon.

    To that note, I want to add that I am (for real) looking for some new writers in the Active Duty side to be featured in the new site. I’m looking for funny and insightful material from active duty Marines to be featured on Terminal Lance. If you think you’re interested, email me at maximilian.uriarte@terminallance.com and send me something funny. I know I’ve said this a few times before, but this is actually happening this time! I’m excited to see Terminal Lance go through some changes in the near future, and I think it’ll be something really different.

    Stay tuned.

    In other news, how about that debate last night?

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    OTP I ship them so much

     

  • Terminal Lance “Dog House”

    Terminal Lance “Dog House”

    This is why we can’t have nice things.

    Well, more specifically, Marines are why we can’t have nice things. They let devil dogs in the barracks, why not dog dogs? hahahahahahahahahahahahaha

    This is actually a problem I’ve run into a lot in the civilian world as well, as I’ve bounced around over the years since I left Hawaii. I have a dog, a real dog, and it’s always a hassle to find a place that allows pets his size. Ironically, there’s usually no restriction on children and babies, which are going to destroy a place worse than even the drunkest of Marines on a Friday night. But alas, it is the burden I carry for living with my furry friend.

    Anyway, I don’t have anything too important to add here. Today has just been one of those days and some things that were planned for TL fell through and left me saying fuck.

    This strip was previously published in the Marine Corps Times newspaper, don’t forget you can catch new Terminal Lance comics in every issue! As well, keep up with TL on Facebook and Instagram for funny shit from around the Corps daily.

  • Terminal Lance “The New Guy”

    Terminal Lance “The New Guy”

    New Lieutenants are great. They’re basically exactly like the boots you get straight from SOI, except you have to respect them. I’m pretty sure that, going in, each one of them thinks they’re going to be the one that changes the Corps and brings high and tights and EGA tattoos on every chest back. They’re bright-eyed and come full of brand new moto cadences that they picked up at TBS, and they’re extremely eager to pass on what little knowledge they have onto you.

    Of course, like all boots, they love it because they haven’t been around long enough to hate it. Eventually it wears on them, and by the time they reach 1st Lieutenant, they’ll certainly know better.

    Still, Lieutenants are great once they get broken in. When they first show up they’re annoying as hell, but give him a few months and a deployment and he could end up being a real friend in the future once he’s calmed down a bit. Until then, just try not to be too hard on him, please.

    Late post today, just flew in from NYC last night and am still just overall messed up from the travel.

    On a side note, I want to thank the Brooklyn Book Festival for inviting me out! I got to see New York for the first time and it was really a lot of fun. I also want to thank all the supporters that came out to see my dumb ass speak on a panel and let me sign their books. We’re currently working on some more events, the next one potentially in London! I’ll keep you posted as they come up and hopefully I’ll get to meet a lot more of you.

    On that note, you should totally buy my book. It’s a New York Times best seller and I heard it’s pretty good.

    Got some new newness coming up pretty soon being worked on this week, so stay tuned!