Albie, I think, for once, you missed the boat on this once. When someone is wrong, the only good response is to admit it. Regardless how you feel about the end result of this, the Major was wrong. Whether or not he was forced to apologize or not, I don't know. If he was, then a simple sorry would do. A sarcastic email about anyone's choice to go to the Academy (I did) or a normal school is a little off base in this situation. Just like some guys choose to fly for SWA, UPS, or FDX, some guys choose to go to Penn State, UVA, or Auburn. So a ROTC or OTS guy never asks for a ride? If they did, would the same email be appropriate? Better yet, would the guy have even written that email had the cadet been a ROTC guy at AU? If he had been a ROTC cadet, how would your satirical apology have sounded? Kind of takes the humor out of it, I think. There's a good possibility that had this kid been a ROTC cadet, the visibility on this would have been zero and there would've been no fallout. Still wouldn't make the major who wrote it any less of a jerk. Also, an apology designed simply to piss people off isn't a real apology. In reality, this whole thing could've been avoided had he simply done the right thing and said he couldn't have a ride but c'mon down to the squadron and hang out if you get the chance. He went on a rant instead, hit "send," and the rest is history. And now, since most fair thinking people realize that said major is a jerk and let it be known, we're supposed to feel sorry for the major? As far as the high level attention it got from USAFA officers, I think the reason they got pissed wasn't b/c they felt sorry for the cadet in question, but rather they simply saw a young guy get treated like crap by a Major with an attitude. That 19 year old cadet may not have had the avenues to bitch or complain about it, but the officers at the Academy did.