Anonymous wrote:Korean and tax law
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Make sure your kid isn’t experimenting with drugs, including weed. Check out the websites. They have a lot of information on different job types. Apply for the internships they are a foot in the door.
Weed has been our biggest disqualifier.
EVER used or positive test?
Anonymous wrote:The idea that all FBI employees have to endure FBI academy training is laughable. Special agents, absolutely, but no one else at the FBI is going through the academy in the same way agents do. I work in a related agency (and have spent time at the FBI academy), know many FBI employees, including attorneys, and not a one of them has been through the academy.
A lot of suspect info in this whole thread.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Make sure your kid isn’t experimenting with drugs, including weed. Check out the websites. They have a lot of information on different job types. Apply for the internships they are a foot in the door.
Weed has been our biggest disqualifier.
Anonymous wrote:Accounting, forensic accounting. I’ve heard the same as your #4, OP.
Anonymous wrote:Make sure your kid isn’t experimenting with drugs, including weed. Check out the websites. They have a lot of information on different job types. Apply for the internships they are a foot in the door.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can anyone recommend an accessible book or two that would help someone in their late teens / early 20s understand the modern CIA and/or NSA and the range of roles and groups within these agencies?
Not looking for a history of the CIA or NSA or a moment of time / incident in the past, but rather something more current but still broad enough to get a sense of the range of these agencies. (Obv they’re not all spies trying to recruit assets in foreign countries …. )
Fiction would work, assuming it’s not grounded in reality rather than speculative trash. Thx.
I don't know that I can. Anything written by someone that left just a few years in isn't going to tell you much, and modern is what's going on as we speak and not 5, 10, or even 1 year ago.
Start with the public websites. Then branch out into current interviews with the principal and public senior officials. That ought to tell you a lot about what priorities are and what skills are currently valued. Paul Nakasone just gave exit interviews to several news outlets.
My kid said that CIA came to their high school to talk about careers. If you're in the area ask your HS. And all of these agencies have college programs, which is probably the best way to get a foot in the door and allow you child to gauge whether it's really a career they want to pursue. If an IC career is a priority for your child then they should ask their chosen schools if the IC recruits there and how many grads go into the IC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a close friend who was a CIA agent briefly (she learned quickly that the job was not for her). She was a history major.
One of my friends in law school applied to the agency. She comes from a semi-famous family and there’s tons of info on them if you do a google search. I could see why the CIA would not want to hire someone with this profile.
FBI is in the business of law enforcement. They need to be law abiding citizens. CIA on the other hand, is beyond this level. They are the type that goes overseas to "take out" enemies. No sense in talking about law and order here.
The CIA is filled with lawyers. Every agency, including IC agencies, produces memos to justify actions. In the case of most agencies, lawyers actually try to make sure agency action is lawful. In the case of the IC, they just pretend knowing their assessments will likely never be released.
The CIA is lawless. No point in arguing. They have conducted sickening experiments on US citizens. They also knew of and/or assisted in the assassination of JFK.
Anonymous wrote:Can anyone recommend an accessible book or two that would help someone in their late teens / early 20s understand the modern CIA and/or NSA and the range of roles and groups within these agencies?
Not looking for a history of the CIA or NSA or a moment of time / incident in the past, but rather something more current but still broad enough to get a sense of the range of these agencies. (Obv they’re not all spies trying to recruit assets in foreign countries …. )
Fiction would work, assuming it’s not grounded in reality rather than speculative trash. Thx.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s odd you would group these together. The FBI is about policing. The CIA is intelligence gathering. CIA is not what I think about when I think of law and order.
They're both about public service and protecting the country. Both in different ways, but still with a purpose.