Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Disappointed. I didn’t pay for college for a military career. He could have done rotc or a service academy if that were the goal and saved me thousands.
HIghly unlikely he would have gotten into a Service Academy. Don't kid yourself.
Many kids go in post college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think people are forgetting the military is to kill people. They do provide great side benefits, if that’s what’s important.
You understand there are doctors, nurses, lawyers, etc in the military, right?
Anonymous wrote:I think people are forgetting the military is to kill people. They do provide great side benefits, if that’s what’s important.
Anonymous wrote:I think people are forgetting the military is to kill people. They do provide great side benefits, if that’s what’s important.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My oldest (DS30) is a Captain. His college and his masters degree were paid 100% by the military. Tuition, food, books/fees, housing, ...everything. He is now in the National Guard and teaches Military Science (ROTC) at a large SEC university. He makes about $92,000 a year in a low cost of living town. More when he is on active duty. He loves that he still gets to train with his Infantry unit on weekends while teaching full time during the school year. He has been deployed to the Middle East in a combat role twice. He was wounded the second time. It’s not for everyone. It wouldn’t have been my choice. No mom wants to send her child into combat. But it was something he wanted. And I’m really, really proud of him.
Sounds as if he joined the military for all the side benefits.
For that, the military owned him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Disappointed. I didn’t pay for college for a military career. He could have done rotc or a service academy if that were the goal and saved me thousands.
HIghly unlikely he would have gotten into a Service Academy. Don't kid yourself.
Anonymous wrote:My oldest (DS30) is a Captain. His college and his masters degree were paid 100% by the military. Tuition, food, books/fees, housing, ...everything. He is now in the National Guard and teaches Military Science (ROTC) at a large SEC university. He makes about $92,000 a year in a low cost of living town. More when he is on active duty. He loves that he still gets to train with his Infantry unit on weekends while teaching full time during the school year. He has been deployed to the Middle East in a combat role twice. He was wounded the second time. It’s not for everyone. It wouldn’t have been my choice. No mom wants to send her child into combat. But it was something he wanted. And I’m really, really proud of him.