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Has anyone thought about joining the military?

edited August 2007 in General
I did a while ago because I heard they pay for your tuition and I though it would get me in some hardcore shape but I decided not to. Me and my friend just had an interesting convo about it as you can see from my sig lol what do you guys think the reserves etc?

Comments

  • edited March 2007
    SR. said:
    I did a while ago because I heard they pay for your tuition and I though it would get me in some hardcore shape but I decided not to. Me and my friend just had an interesting convo about it as you can see from my sig lol what do you guys think the reserves etc?
    I"ve always secretly wanted to join, but I never had the guts to tell my parents.
  • edited March 2007
    Bhambra said:
    I"ve always secretly wanted to join, but I never had the guts to tell my parents.
    I never had the guts to want to join but secretly told my parents :tongue:
  • edited August 2007
    Well I am in the reg force myself so I consider the weekend warriors a joke. But if you dont see the reg force as an option for you then I think that the reserves are a good way to go. I have my uni being paid for by the CF so that is why I joined. I worked at the Area Support Unit in Chilliwack this summer so I know all about the reserves around here so if you have any questions feel free to ask.
  • edited August 2007
    I've never considered it. The pay-for-your-education thing is nice but the commitment demanded in return - no thanks, I'll take the student loan debt and grad school hassles instead. :tongue:
  • edited August 2007
    Five years of commitment is nothing. Then when they see if you are interested to resign up they will offer to pay for your masters too? Wow, that deffinatly is the worse choice. Plus who would not want debt, making lots of money and an instant job upon graduation which looks awesome on a resume. Deffinatly that is the worse choice and student loan debt is a better idea.
  • edited August 2007
    done! ROTP for pilot :)
  • edited August 2007
    I don't think so, I've never seen you in the ASU or at the SEM meetings.
  • edited August 2007
    i just got accepted into it like a week ago, i was in the reserves before then i did a component transfer
  • edited August 2007
    So then when did you do ACS?
  • edited August 2007
    What a dumb thread.
  • edited August 2007
    I could totally see you in the military Baby E... with shaved head and one of those little soldier hats :P
  • edited August 2007
    :/

    Highly doubtful.
  • edited August 2007
    Don't be an idiot, girls don't shave their heads, and those hats are called helmets.

    :p
  • edited August 2007
    JayDub;15111 said:
    Five years of commitment is nothing. Then when they see if you are interested to resign up they will offer to pay for your masters too? Wow, that deffinatly is the worse choice. Plus who would not want debt, making lots of money and an instant job upon graduation which looks awesome on a resume. Deffinatly that is the worse choice and student loan debt is a better idea.
    Spare me your sarcasm.

    The military world is not the civilian one, and for the five years you say is 'nothing', you have to do what the commanding officer says, and do it yesterday. I've known ex-military people and some of the things they had to do, both during basic and out of basic, were - well, I'll just say that I wouldn't fathom being able to tolerate doing them. You think a boss who's an asshole is bad? Try an asshole commanding officer who you can't transfer out from under because you know he'll make your life an even worse hell until the transfer request gets approved - if it does. At least with the asshole boss, you can quit and find another job or go on welfare.

    Or take being in Bosnia. Knew a guy who was peacekeeping out there, and he was paid the princely sum of $12,000 a year to do it.

    No, thanks. I'll take my civilian life, where at least I'm free to walk away from something, with less repercussions to my career than a dishonorable discharge for abandoning the service - although if you picked the right hippie tree-hugging employer, you could spin-doctor that DD into a job. :tongue:
  • edited August 2007
    ^No kidding.

    My bf knows a guy who is in Afghanistan and all he did when he came home for a break or whatever was brag about how he killed civilian children there. Wow, what a great job. He should be oh so proud of himself.

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