Eturnalshift wrote:
I may have misunderstood because I just skimmed the dick slapping between you and Azelma,
but weren't you saying how politicians were paid appropriately because of all the off-hour work they do, the stress involved, etc? Members of the military have just as stressful of a job, if not more, and
unless you're a life-long member of the services you're making considerably less than the politicians you were defending in another thread. Considering that, why would you want to remove the military? They're hard working people who earn a modest living...
Stressful in what way?
See, Eturnalshift proves my argument. This is the spiritual power of the military. Only priests can understand what God wants, and only people on the take can understand how impossibly, unfathomably hard it is to take potshots at a dummy or sit on a base.
Eturnalshift wrote:
First, to join the military you need to have either a GED or a High School diploma, as the services almost never join anyone without either of those two. They have three tiers of enlistment, where Tier 3 is the 'high school dropout' I think you're referencing. They're incredibly rare, if existent at all.
A GED is (literally) stupid easy to get (I have one, as a matter of fact).
It's interesting that your strongest argument for the substance of the job is that it requires a qualification that takes functional literacy, an IQ or about 85, and three hours of a single day to obtain.
Eturnalshift wrote:
In all cases, the candidate joins the military as an E1, making (according to the pay scales) almost 18K/yr. That is excluding health benefits and the other allowances.
If you're a professional with a college degree and you can't land a job making more than 18K/yr with benefits then you need to really look at yourself and question why you're so bad. I started, professionally, making 38K/yr as my base salary, excluding benefits. For an NCO to pull that kind of pay they'd need to have around a decade of time in the service with the rank of E6 or so.
"...cogent only when the facts contradicting it are excluded..."
Eturnalshift wrote:
When the students graduate, they get a BS and they enter the military as an O1, making around 40K/yr. How you say they get some six-digit salary at graduation is probably you talking out your ass again.
You already provided the answer yourself.
Lunch...and housing...and medical care...and insurance...and pension...aren't free just because the taxpayers pay for it.
Man, it's "sickening" how some ingrates live off taxpayers. Sickening!
Eturnalshift wrote:
Members of military academies are some of the hardest working high school students. Using West Point, as an example... they need to have incredibly high SAT/ACT scores, they need to have high GPAs, be very physically fit, be involved in numerous extra-curricular activities and even get congressional approval for candidacy... and after all that, there's no guarantee that they could be selected to the school. Only about 1200 students get into West Point, and about 1000 of them will graduate. While at the school, the students attend classes year-round (since sometimes they have to work and study over the summer), have long days (waking early in the morning for PT), harsh punishments (because the military doesn't put up with Aestu's quite like the university Aestu's parents pay for), and little time to study as their days are filled with other activities.
I won't disagree with that. The point stands. The net effect is that they pump up the statistic.