Anonymous wrote:
No. Former Marine or Marine veteran. He's not a Retired Marine if his last rank held was Captain (O-3). Unless he really got busted down at the end of his career.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Retired Marine, not ex-Marine.
No. Former Marine or Marine veteran. He's not a Retired Marine if his last rank held was Captain (O-3). Unless he really got busted down at the end of his career.
He could have been prior enlisted.
This is fake. He would have had to just have retired and the story keeps changing. The earliest you can retire is 38, entering as enlisted at 18. Officers are 22/23, which puts them at 42/43 for retirement except if medically retired. No way they could be a captain.
What are you talking about? I have three friends who are captains in the Navy (one is about to be an admiral), and they are 45, 46, and 48.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Retired Marine, not ex-Marine.
No. Former Marine or Marine veteran. He's not a Retired Marine if his last rank held was Captain (O-3). Unless he really got busted down at the end of his career.
He could have been prior enlisted.
This is fake. He would have had to just have retired and the story keeps changing. The earliest you can retire is 38, entering as enlisted at 18. Officers are 22/23, which puts them at 42/43 for retirement except if medically retired. No way they could be a captain.
What are you talking about? I have three friends who are captains in the Navy (one is about to be an admiral), and they are 45, 46, and 48.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Retired Marine, not ex-Marine.
No. Former Marine or Marine veteran. He's not a Retired Marine if his last rank held was Captain (O-3). Unless he really got busted down at the end of his career.
He could have been prior enlisted.
This is fake. He would have had to just have retired and the story keeps changing. The earliest you can retire is 38, entering as enlisted at 18. Officers are 22/23, which puts them at 42/43 for retirement except if medically retired. No way they could be a captain.
Anonymous wrote:He is 47, slightly overweight but so…intelligent, interesting and a gentleman.
He has been out in the world, seen and done things. There is depth to him but also a twinkle of mischief in his eyes.
Currently he works in academia.
I’m smitten. I think I want his babies.
Any downsides to this that I should consider?
Anonymous wrote:Why is there such a weird troll lurking on the relationship forum
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Retired Marine, not ex-Marine.
No. Former Marine or Marine veteran. He's not a Retired Marine if his last rank held was Captain (O-3). Unless he really got busted down at the end of his career.
He could have been prior enlisted.
Anonymous wrote:He is 47, slightly overweight but so…intelligent, interesting and a gentleman.
He has been out in the world, seen and done things. There is depth to him but also a twinkle of mischief in his eyes.
Currently he works in academia.
I’m smitten. I think I want his babies.
Any downsides to this that I should consider?
Anonymous wrote:Op here. I’m 40. And he’s retired.
I’m asking because I had all these notions about how crude and uneducated military men were. But he seems nothing like that, and it seems too good to be true!
Anonymous wrote:I'm marred to a retired marine. He's intelligent, caring, values integrity. He has some rigidity but can compromise if we really sit down and discuss options a pros and cons. He does not do spontaneous anything. And he's a great dad. But he joined as an officer after an LAC undergrad. Many of his military friends that we spend time with have the same profile. These aren't grunts, they have a strong sense of purpose and patriotism and know history and philosophy etc etc.