So you ARE okay with it. Cool bro.
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I'm sorry your brain is this slow and stupid. I don't know what else to tell you. Your gotchas sound like they were concocted by a slow third grader. |
Bro, I think you have reading comprehension issues. No one is "ok" with this. |
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I hear they run in families. Just like SC clerkships. |
+1 Does the army usually let people fulfill ROTC commitments “at some point”? |
Yep. It does. That kid should be guarding the border against illegals. Right? |
No silly, that’s why you have a border patrol. |
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This would be deferral number three, right? One for grad school, one for her first clerkship, now this. And many SCOTUS clerkship are two years. That’s 5-6 years post graduation. Or age 28. Tiger chick really knows how to work the Cadet Bone Spurs angle.
They do a pretty comprehensive background check for clerkships. BTDT. Getting a $300,000 education in our dine and refusing to pay it back ought to be an automatic DQ. But maybe not if I Like Beer!! Is pulling strings. |
Where did you get that she is getting out of her ROTC obligation? Unless you have real evidence, again you are spreading rumors. She can fulfill her obligation part time or full time after she is done with this 1 year clerkship. She doesn't have to join the military immediately upon graduation. |
Then why is Trump posting increasingly large numbers of service men and women to the border? And extending the tours of duty for those already there? |
Grift. |
This. In fact, sometimes a new grad going in the Reserves may have to wait over a year for training. It doesn't cut short the obligation. It just extends it. |
But it isn’t this one year clerkship. She deferred for law school. Then deferred for her first clerkship. This is her third deferral. Starting to look like it will never happen. |
Maybe, she did it this last year. If going in the Reserves, it means she has to do @ 5-6 months active duty training and then one weekend a month. She will have to accumulate a certain number of "points" per year. "Citizen soldiers." |