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I’m just hoping he wasn’t the guy that drove into the tv station?!!!! Kidding!!!Sounds like a Gary Johnson/Bill weld man.
I said many are making north of $200k. Of course those under 10 years FSO service aren't in that category, but a 22 y/o new hire with a bachelor's degree in Kabul is making over $100k, that's a fact. Many only quote their base pay, their actual pay is much higher.Lol tracking I was heart in throat in 2012 when I heard the GRS guys got hit till I heard. My buddies were ok
I still don’t think a FSO is making 200k and when she is home she is making 70 in dc. I know this because I used to date a two tour PO. she didn’t make close to what you are saying. The old wood you want to chop off did and helped get good people in bad places
But to where? I’m not gonna name places in country but Qatar doesn’t count, so there goes most of your usaf deployed. Maybe 15% of the army but I don’t count routine stuff as “at war”. Last thing I read was 8800 in af and less than 1000 in OIR. Counting the SMU... well that’s a different animal
So no I don’t count dudes sitting on an island flying training stuff or floating on a boat.
My point is someone comes in here acting like the military is the end all when most of the mil is barely working 9-5 with Friday the base is a ghost town while there are civilians and contractors getting shit on. Then most of those mil are not in combat arms. Like 99% of the usaf minus flyers and sof and some sf(cops) Everyone thinks all civilians sit and collect a check and all mil are getting shelled every day. It’s not the case. In fact the biggest drains on our system are the peacetime vets.
That’s where I’m going the fake ratings... you hurt an ankle in basic and end up with a 100%. I disagree with they kept the peace for all those years but will agree to disagree on that
I just don’t like generalizations. Not everyone is making 200k. Just like not every contractor is making 300k. Most barely break 100
I’m not knocking you guys... I spent six months in the va system. Im knocking the people abusing the system after 2 weeks in service. They are dragging the system and you will find in most gov jobs. One girl medically retired from the army after 2 weeks of service and then 3 months at the VA. How is that even legal? But the admin guy that admitted me had to fight for his combat designation after getting blown up......I’m knocking the guy that fought for 15 years for 100% after hurting his knee and getting retired, in AIT while a marine missing his leg tried to stay in..... meanwhile those guys with bad backs from 1000s of peacetime jumps complete with broken legs and ankles get nothing. Not even a second look for a gov job.Going to have to side with Redmanss on this one Squat. Many of us from the cold war, post cold war, post Desert Storm timeframe did a lot to maintain the peace (hence the nickname "America's 911"). Grenada, Panama, Liberia (how many times now?), Somalia, Northern Iraq, Haiti, PI, to name just a few places, were places we were sent into to maintain order (or re-establish it). Combat pay was $60 whole dollars extra back inthe day, until it finally got bumped to $120. And that is only AFTER 30 continuous days (unlike other services where you just had to spend one day a month to get it; and yes, I saw quite a few 0-5/6's fly into country once a month during OIF, just so they could get their tax free status and hazardous duty pay...but I digress). Add to that, up until Somalia, we didn't even rate CARs if it was a "humanitarian" mission. It didn't matter if you were mixing it up or not, a humanitarian operation negated a CAR, since it wasn't (politically) a combat operation. IT wasn't until the whole shitstorm of Somalia, that they finally changed the regulations. Irony of ironies; getting shot at or shelled with RPG's, in woodland camo utilities that were literally falling apart on us after three months deployed in the field, while the entire KTO (Kuwaiti Theater of Operations), REMFs and all, had new desert utilities and were sleeping in hard backed tents or buildings, getting three hot squares a day and working in fairly safe conditions. (We ended up finally being allowed to "survey" (trade in) our trashed out uniforms for new ones from supply, but it took an act of Congress to allow it. This was pre "Nametape" days, where a stenciled name across your back and on the right cargo pocket and a "club patch" were it. It did however, show you had some salt, and were a Marine with some deployment experience).
At any rate, there were a lot of folks that paid a lot in blood, sweat and tears to "maintain the peace". Just because it never hit the press, or was celebrated by the media doesn't change that.
That’s where I’m going the fake ratings... you hurt an ankle in basic and end up with a 100%. I disagree with they kept the peace for all those years but will agree to disagree on that
I just don’t like generalizations. Not everyone is making 200k. Just like not every contractor is making 300k. Most barely break 100