Good question Snafu, I wonder as well.
Sean, that sucks what you have going on, but won't they also pay for living expenses too, Ya gotta factor that in. Still definitely underpaid for the amount of time you say you have to work.
I factor it in the living expenses, but it's hard to say well at least they put a roof over my head when I'm sleeping out in the forest all the time. Ya know what I'm saying, actually I love it, looking back, but I hate it when I'm out doing it, if ya get my meaning. Honestly we aren't in it for the money anyways, but I can't help but find it funny that the guy flipping burgers at mcdonalds makes more money than me.
As for mandatory 2 years service, I would go for that, I just wouldn't want to give up 4 years of my life and then be on a short leash for another 4. I also see the point that you don't want people who don't want to be in the service fighting wars.
Hey the military isn't for everyone. I can't say joining the Marines helps the education process any, but they do pay for college. But there's always the reserves, even though you'd probably get activated now, but it's not a bad experience. Nothing wrong with looking out for yourself, I just wanted to be part of something a little bigger than me for once. I don't look at anybody who hasn't served as being any less a man or woman.
I think any person who has ever seen action in a war should be set for life money-wise. As for the people who never see combat, are they not just basically working civilian type j...obs for themilitary? This is what I would take issue with and what I think OD is. So I go in as an Aerospace Engineer, get my school paid for, never see a second of combat time, then get out, collect a huge pension, and then make 6 figures at NASA. I can see how that would eat at someone.
No when you're not in combat, you're off pretending you're in combat as far as I know. It seems like we are always out in the field running around. Some guys you'll see sitting on they're asses, that's how it is. Here's a scenario you might see, about thirty guys lying down on their packs sleeping, well they might be waiting to go on a 15 mile hump, you'd see that all the time. It's the whole hurry up and wait thing the entire military believes in. But everything is done for a reason, one second you could be standing around the next all hell breaks loose. Everything we do seems like a combat simulation, but then I'm attached to an infantry unit, I'm sure it's different for our combat secretaries, they usually do get to sit on their asses.