Mililtary Question
Originally Posted by A 04 GUIZE
I would love to be a marine but from what i am told it makes me kinda hesitate. Such as marines are their to die, thats what they do etc.
join which service you like the most, If you want to be a police officer, that guys advice about being an MP would benefit you more than infantry, but either one would definetely get you a slot in the academy...
take Salty's advice, DOD is hurting for recruits, you can milk them for extra **** and try to get anything you can...I don't think you'll get e-3 out of the Marines boot camp, but its very possible in the army/airforce. Yet you can get E-2 out of Marine boot camp if you work it out with your recruiter...
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being a marine is not "being a basic infantryman". A Marine is an infantryman PLUS something else. Marine basic is so long because it's basic training WITH infantry AIT (advanced initial training). If you went in to the Army as an infantryman, your basic and AIT would be combined, and would be just as long as Marine Basic. A marine ALSO has an MOS, a main specialty like commo, petroleum supply specialist, water purification, whatever. It's just that all marines are infantry as well. There may be marines that are just riflemen/infantry, but I've never met a marine that didn't have a specialty, so my experience with "just riflemen" is pretty limited.
Marines aren't just "there to die". The Marine Corps' original role was to establish a "beach head," a base of operations. Their job was to go in first, secure the immediate area, and start expanding their zone so the rest of the US military can get materiel and personnel in country. It used to be, first 30 days in, the Marines were there to hold the ground. It took that long for the Army to get their equipment and men in country. The Marines enabled the Army to land their tanks and assault vehicles and personnel. That was the original role the marines had before 9/11. Since then, the doctrine has evolved. Marines are now more RDF (rapid deployment force). Their primary job has become security, no longer establishing a base of operations so much as securing the area. Establishing a base of operations has started falling on the Army to do.
Again, the doctrine is evolving, but it would do the entire Marine Corps a disservice to say that they are just there to die, and it's what they do. The Marines have a role to play, just like every other service.
Marines aren't just "there to die". The Marine Corps' original role was to establish a "beach head," a base of operations. Their job was to go in first, secure the immediate area, and start expanding their zone so the rest of the US military can get materiel and personnel in country. It used to be, first 30 days in, the Marines were there to hold the ground. It took that long for the Army to get their equipment and men in country. The Marines enabled the Army to land their tanks and assault vehicles and personnel. That was the original role the marines had before 9/11. Since then, the doctrine has evolved. Marines are now more RDF (rapid deployment force). Their primary job has become security, no longer establishing a base of operations so much as securing the area. Establishing a base of operations has started falling on the Army to do.
Again, the doctrine is evolving, but it would do the entire Marine Corps a disservice to say that they are just there to die, and it's what they do. The Marines have a role to play, just like every other service.
Originally Posted by shadowcat
being a marine is not "being a basic infantryman". A Marine is an infantryman PLUS something else. Marine basic is so long because it's basic training WITH infantry AIT (advanced initial training). If you went in to the Army as an infantryman, your basic and AIT would be combined, and would be just as long as Marine Basic. A marine ALSO has an MOS, a main specialty like commo, petroleum supply specialist, water purification, whatever. It's just that all marines are infantry as well. There may be marines that are just riflemen/infantry, but I've never met a marine that didn't have a specialty, so my experience with "just riflemen" is pretty limited.
Marines aren't just "there to die". The Marine Corps' original role was to establish a "beach head," a base of operations. Their job was to go in first, secure the immediate area, and start expanding their zone so the rest of the US military can get materiel and personnel in country. It used to be, first 30 days in, the Marines were there to hold the ground. It took that long for the Army to get their equipment and men in country. The Marines enabled the Army to land their tanks and assault vehicles and personnel. That was the original role the marines had before 9/11. Since then, the doctrine has evolved. Marines are now more RDF (rapid deployment force). Their primary job has become security, no longer establishing a base of operations so much as securing the area. Establishing a base of operations has started falling on the Army to do.
Again, the doctrine is evolving, but it would do the entire Marine Corps a disservice to say that they are just there to die, and it's what they do. The Marines have a role to play, just like every other service.
Marines aren't just "there to die". The Marine Corps' original role was to establish a "beach head," a base of operations. Their job was to go in first, secure the immediate area, and start expanding their zone so the rest of the US military can get materiel and personnel in country. It used to be, first 30 days in, the Marines were there to hold the ground. It took that long for the Army to get their equipment and men in country. The Marines enabled the Army to land their tanks and assault vehicles and personnel. That was the original role the marines had before 9/11. Since then, the doctrine has evolved. Marines are now more RDF (rapid deployment force). Their primary job has become security, no longer establishing a base of operations so much as securing the area. Establishing a base of operations has started falling on the Army to do.
Again, the doctrine is evolving, but it would do the entire Marine Corps a disservice to say that they are just there to die, and it's what they do. The Marines have a role to play, just like every other service.
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Here is yet another opinion from someone whose been there.....
Join The Marines - The Few,
The Proud, The Psychotic
By Ken Adachi
editor@educate-yourself.org
Educate-Yourself
The Freedom of Knowledge, The Power of Thought ©
9-22-5
Editor's Note: Update - September 21, 2005. I'm adding a few lines to these introductory comments for the sake of current military service people or their families or friends who might read this and misconstrue my thoughts as a blanket condemnation of anyone who might be serving in the Marine Corps or any other branch of the US military.
I spent four years in the military as an enlisted man in the early 1960's during the buildup phase of the Vietnam War. Due to the nature of my job, I was often liaisoned with personnel from other branches of the US military and became very familiar with the day to day world of enlisted men, warrant officers, and lower level commissioned officers of Army, Navy, and Air Force. I got along well with people in the military and seriously considered re-upping, but ultimately decided that I wanted to get back into civilian life and explore new things. The camaraderie of military life and the excitement of living in foreign lands are powerful incentives to remain in the military as a career.
At the time, we were engaged in a war, but I thought we were in Vietnam for all the right reasons, as did everyone else with whom I worked. It wasn't even discussed; it was understood. We were the Good Guys helping the beleaguered South Vietnamese people resist the yoke of oppression and enslavement coming from the North Vietnamese communists. Of course, I didn't realize that my perception of our Good Guy role was formed for me through the careful application of propaganda coming from both mainstream media (E.g. Time or Newsweek magazine) and the military itself (E.g. Stars & Stripes). We were shown films from time to time in which people like Dean Rusk (Sec. of State at the time) explained the "domino theory" of Southeast Asia ('if Vietnam fell to the communists, then all surrounding countries will fall in a domino fashion'.) etc.
I didn't know about the CIA-sponsored assassination program called Operation Phoenix or the CIA's drug running or any of the other ugly 'operations' taking place in Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, or Thailand using special forces divisions of the Army, Navy, or Air Force, along with federal agents and their contractors where scores of Asian people-mostly innocent- were being slaughtered or scarred for life as a 'by-product' of these operations. Innocent civilians were no longer people, they became 'collateral damage'. The military, like the CIA, operates in complete secrecy and a strict 'need-to-know' basis.
Today's enlisted personnel or lower level officers are no more privy to the dark side of military operations than I was. You are trained to do a job and the 'excellence' of your job performance is what becomes uppermost in your mind as a way of feeling fulfilled and satisfied about yourself. They planned it that way. They don't want you looking at the naked truth of the effect that your "job" may be having on ordinary human beings. You are a very small nut or bolt in a huge Killing Machine and you are never shown the perspective of those who are on the receiving end of that Killing Machine. Those who are on the receiving end are always referred to as 'the enemy'.
Today's military has grossly devolved from what it was in my day. The fascist element is far more transparent today and the amalgamation of US military personnel with 'private' security contractors, as seen in Iraq, is making it obvious to even the densest jar head that the US military is no longer in the business of 'securing the peace' or 'winning freedom' for oppressed people. Today, the US military is doing most of the oppressing against sovereign people in their own country. We are now invaders, not defenders. Of course, you are subjected to rivers of propaganda to convince you otherwise.
If you are foolish enough to volunteer for Special Forces, then you will be trained to kill, up close, without compunction, without hesitation, and on cue. You will also be subjected to covert mind control technologies which will affect you for the remainder of your life. They do not tell you, nor do they ask you for your permission to be programmed. You gave them permission when you "volunteered". The programming is done electronically. Sometimes drugs are also involved to put you under programming. They can take you while you are sleeping, program you, and put you back in bed and you won't know a thing about it.
I don't assign blame to lower level service personnel who find themselves in the military today. Enlisted ranks are mostly poor people who usually have not gone beyond high school in education. They are looking for a pay check, job security, medical benefits, specialized training, and perhaps the excitement of foreign lands. Some join because they come from military family backgrounds or they feel a need to serve their country. I felt that obligation and desire to get involved when I joined the service. If I knew then what I know now, I never would have joined. On the other hand, if our country was GENUINELY threatened, as was the case with World War II, AND if the US military was in the business, once again, of DEFENDING liberty, and our country, and our people, then I probably would join, assuming that we get rid of the satanic infiltrators at the highest echelons of military command.
Join The Marines - The Few,
The Proud, The Psychotic
By Ken Adachi
editor@educate-yourself.org
Educate-Yourself
The Freedom of Knowledge, The Power of Thought ©
9-22-5
Editor's Note: Update - September 21, 2005. I'm adding a few lines to these introductory comments for the sake of current military service people or their families or friends who might read this and misconstrue my thoughts as a blanket condemnation of anyone who might be serving in the Marine Corps or any other branch of the US military.
I spent four years in the military as an enlisted man in the early 1960's during the buildup phase of the Vietnam War. Due to the nature of my job, I was often liaisoned with personnel from other branches of the US military and became very familiar with the day to day world of enlisted men, warrant officers, and lower level commissioned officers of Army, Navy, and Air Force. I got along well with people in the military and seriously considered re-upping, but ultimately decided that I wanted to get back into civilian life and explore new things. The camaraderie of military life and the excitement of living in foreign lands are powerful incentives to remain in the military as a career.
At the time, we were engaged in a war, but I thought we were in Vietnam for all the right reasons, as did everyone else with whom I worked. It wasn't even discussed; it was understood. We were the Good Guys helping the beleaguered South Vietnamese people resist the yoke of oppression and enslavement coming from the North Vietnamese communists. Of course, I didn't realize that my perception of our Good Guy role was formed for me through the careful application of propaganda coming from both mainstream media (E.g. Time or Newsweek magazine) and the military itself (E.g. Stars & Stripes). We were shown films from time to time in which people like Dean Rusk (Sec. of State at the time) explained the "domino theory" of Southeast Asia ('if Vietnam fell to the communists, then all surrounding countries will fall in a domino fashion'.) etc.
I didn't know about the CIA-sponsored assassination program called Operation Phoenix or the CIA's drug running or any of the other ugly 'operations' taking place in Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, or Thailand using special forces divisions of the Army, Navy, or Air Force, along with federal agents and their contractors where scores of Asian people-mostly innocent- were being slaughtered or scarred for life as a 'by-product' of these operations. Innocent civilians were no longer people, they became 'collateral damage'. The military, like the CIA, operates in complete secrecy and a strict 'need-to-know' basis.
Today's enlisted personnel or lower level officers are no more privy to the dark side of military operations than I was. You are trained to do a job and the 'excellence' of your job performance is what becomes uppermost in your mind as a way of feeling fulfilled and satisfied about yourself. They planned it that way. They don't want you looking at the naked truth of the effect that your "job" may be having on ordinary human beings. You are a very small nut or bolt in a huge Killing Machine and you are never shown the perspective of those who are on the receiving end of that Killing Machine. Those who are on the receiving end are always referred to as 'the enemy'.
Today's military has grossly devolved from what it was in my day. The fascist element is far more transparent today and the amalgamation of US military personnel with 'private' security contractors, as seen in Iraq, is making it obvious to even the densest jar head that the US military is no longer in the business of 'securing the peace' or 'winning freedom' for oppressed people. Today, the US military is doing most of the oppressing against sovereign people in their own country. We are now invaders, not defenders. Of course, you are subjected to rivers of propaganda to convince you otherwise.
If you are foolish enough to volunteer for Special Forces, then you will be trained to kill, up close, without compunction, without hesitation, and on cue. You will also be subjected to covert mind control technologies which will affect you for the remainder of your life. They do not tell you, nor do they ask you for your permission to be programmed. You gave them permission when you "volunteered". The programming is done electronically. Sometimes drugs are also involved to put you under programming. They can take you while you are sleeping, program you, and put you back in bed and you won't know a thing about it.
I don't assign blame to lower level service personnel who find themselves in the military today. Enlisted ranks are mostly poor people who usually have not gone beyond high school in education. They are looking for a pay check, job security, medical benefits, specialized training, and perhaps the excitement of foreign lands. Some join because they come from military family backgrounds or they feel a need to serve their country. I felt that obligation and desire to get involved when I joined the service. If I knew then what I know now, I never would have joined. On the other hand, if our country was GENUINELY threatened, as was the case with World War II, AND if the US military was in the business, once again, of DEFENDING liberty, and our country, and our people, then I probably would join, assuming that we get rid of the satanic infiltrators at the highest echelons of military command.
Originally Posted by shadowcat
being a marine is not "being a basic infantryman". A Marine is an infantryman PLUS something else. Marine basic is so long because it's basic training WITH infantry AIT (advanced initial training). If you went in to the Army as an infantryman, your basic and AIT would be combined, and would be just as long as Marine Basic. A marine ALSO has an MOS, a main specialty like commo, petroleum supply specialist, water purification, whatever. It's just that all marines are infantry as well. There may be marines that are just riflemen/infantry, but I've never met a marine that didn't have a specialty, so my experience with "just riflemen" is pretty limited.
Marines aren't just "there to die". The Marine Corps' original role was to establish a "beach head," a base of operations. Their job was to go in first, secure the immediate area, and start expanding their zone so the rest of the US military can get materiel and personnel in country. It used to be, first 30 days in, the Marines were there to hold the ground. It took that long for the Army to get their equipment and men in country. The Marines enabled the Army to land their tanks and assault vehicles and personnel. That was the original role the marines had before 9/11. Since then, the doctrine has evolved. Marines are now more RDF (rapid deployment force). Their primary job has become security, no longer establishing a base of operations so much as securing the area. Establishing a base of operations has started falling on the Army to do.
Again, the doctrine is evolving, but it would do the entire Marine Corps a disservice to say that they are just there to die, and it's what they do. The Marines have a role to play, just like every other service.
Marines aren't just "there to die". The Marine Corps' original role was to establish a "beach head," a base of operations. Their job was to go in first, secure the immediate area, and start expanding their zone so the rest of the US military can get materiel and personnel in country. It used to be, first 30 days in, the Marines were there to hold the ground. It took that long for the Army to get their equipment and men in country. The Marines enabled the Army to land their tanks and assault vehicles and personnel. That was the original role the marines had before 9/11. Since then, the doctrine has evolved. Marines are now more RDF (rapid deployment force). Their primary job has become security, no longer establishing a base of operations so much as securing the area. Establishing a base of operations has started falling on the Army to do.
Again, the doctrine is evolving, but it would do the entire Marine Corps a disservice to say that they are just there to die, and it's what they do. The Marines have a role to play, just like every other service.
Originally Posted by psoper
Here is yet another opinion from someone whose been there.....
Join The Marines - The Few,
The Proud, The Psychotic
By Ken Adachi
editor@educate-yourself.org
Educate-Yourself
The Freedom of Knowledge, The Power of Thought ©
9-22-5
Editor's Note: Update - September 21, 2005. I'm adding a few lines to these introductory comments for the sake of current military service people or their families or friends who might read this and misconstrue my thoughts as a blanket condemnation of anyone who might be serving in the Marine Corps or any other branch of the US military.
I spent four years in the military as an enlisted man in the early 1960's during the buildup phase of the Vietnam War. Due to the nature of my job, I was often liaisoned with personnel from other branches of the US military and became very familiar with the day to day world of enlisted men, warrant officers, and lower level commissioned officers of Army, Navy, and Air Force. I got along well with people in the military and seriously considered re-upping, but ultimately decided that I wanted to get back into civilian life and explore new things. The camaraderie of military life and the excitement of living in foreign lands are powerful incentives to remain in the military as a career.
At the time, we were engaged in a war, but I thought we were in Vietnam for all the right reasons, as did everyone else with whom I worked. It wasn't even discussed; it was understood. We were the Good Guys helping the beleaguered South Vietnamese people resist the yoke of oppression and enslavement coming from the North Vietnamese communists. Of course, I didn't realize that my perception of our Good Guy role was formed for me through the careful application of propaganda coming from both mainstream media (E.g. Time or Newsweek magazine) and the military itself (E.g. Stars & Stripes). We were shown films from time to time in which people like Dean Rusk (Sec. of State at the time) explained the "domino theory" of Southeast Asia ('if Vietnam fell to the communists, then all surrounding countries will fall in a domino fashion'.) etc.
I didn't know about the CIA-sponsored assassination program called Operation Phoenix or the CIA's drug running or any of the other ugly 'operations' taking place in Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, or Thailand using special forces divisions of the Army, Navy, or Air Force, along with federal agents and their contractors where scores of Asian people-mostly innocent- were being slaughtered or scarred for life as a 'by-product' of these operations. Innocent civilians were no longer people, they became 'collateral damage'. The military, like the CIA, operates in complete secrecy and a strict 'need-to-know' basis.
Today's enlisted personnel or lower level officers are no more privy to the dark side of military operations than I was. You are trained to do a job and the 'excellence' of your job performance is what becomes uppermost in your mind as a way of feeling fulfilled and satisfied about yourself. They planned it that way. They don't want you looking at the naked truth of the effect that your "job" may be having on ordinary human beings. You are a very small nut or bolt in a huge Killing Machine and you are never shown the perspective of those who are on the receiving end of that Killing Machine. Those who are on the receiving end are always referred to as 'the enemy'.
Today's military has grossly devolved from what it was in my day. The fascist element is far more transparent today and the amalgamation of US military personnel with 'private' security contractors, as seen in Iraq, is making it obvious to even the densest jar head that the US military is no longer in the business of 'securing the peace' or 'winning freedom' for oppressed people. Today, the US military is doing most of the oppressing against sovereign people in their own country. We are now invaders, not defenders. Of course, you are subjected to rivers of propaganda to convince you otherwise.
If you are foolish enough to volunteer for Special Forces, then you will be trained to kill, up close, without compunction, without hesitation, and on cue. You will also be subjected to covert mind control technologies which will affect you for the remainder of your life. They do not tell you, nor do they ask you for your permission to be programmed. You gave them permission when you "volunteered". The programming is done electronically. Sometimes drugs are also involved to put you under programming. They can take you while you are sleeping, program you, and put you back in bed and you won't know a thing about it.
I don't assign blame to lower level service personnel who find themselves in the military today. Enlisted ranks are mostly poor people who usually have not gone beyond high school in education. They are looking for a pay check, job security, medical benefits, specialized training, and perhaps the excitement of foreign lands. Some join because they come from military family backgrounds or they feel a need to serve their country. I felt that obligation and desire to get involved when I joined the service. If I knew then what I know now, I never would have joined. On the other hand, if our country was GENUINELY threatened, as was the case with World War II, AND if the US military was in the business, once again, of DEFENDING liberty, and our country, and our people, then I probably would join, assuming that we get rid of the satanic infiltrators at the highest echelons of military command.
Join The Marines - The Few,
The Proud, The Psychotic
By Ken Adachi
editor@educate-yourself.org
Educate-Yourself
The Freedom of Knowledge, The Power of Thought ©
9-22-5
Editor's Note: Update - September 21, 2005. I'm adding a few lines to these introductory comments for the sake of current military service people or their families or friends who might read this and misconstrue my thoughts as a blanket condemnation of anyone who might be serving in the Marine Corps or any other branch of the US military.
I spent four years in the military as an enlisted man in the early 1960's during the buildup phase of the Vietnam War. Due to the nature of my job, I was often liaisoned with personnel from other branches of the US military and became very familiar with the day to day world of enlisted men, warrant officers, and lower level commissioned officers of Army, Navy, and Air Force. I got along well with people in the military and seriously considered re-upping, but ultimately decided that I wanted to get back into civilian life and explore new things. The camaraderie of military life and the excitement of living in foreign lands are powerful incentives to remain in the military as a career.
At the time, we were engaged in a war, but I thought we were in Vietnam for all the right reasons, as did everyone else with whom I worked. It wasn't even discussed; it was understood. We were the Good Guys helping the beleaguered South Vietnamese people resist the yoke of oppression and enslavement coming from the North Vietnamese communists. Of course, I didn't realize that my perception of our Good Guy role was formed for me through the careful application of propaganda coming from both mainstream media (E.g. Time or Newsweek magazine) and the military itself (E.g. Stars & Stripes). We were shown films from time to time in which people like Dean Rusk (Sec. of State at the time) explained the "domino theory" of Southeast Asia ('if Vietnam fell to the communists, then all surrounding countries will fall in a domino fashion'.) etc.
I didn't know about the CIA-sponsored assassination program called Operation Phoenix or the CIA's drug running or any of the other ugly 'operations' taking place in Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, or Thailand using special forces divisions of the Army, Navy, or Air Force, along with federal agents and their contractors where scores of Asian people-mostly innocent- were being slaughtered or scarred for life as a 'by-product' of these operations. Innocent civilians were no longer people, they became 'collateral damage'. The military, like the CIA, operates in complete secrecy and a strict 'need-to-know' basis.
Today's enlisted personnel or lower level officers are no more privy to the dark side of military operations than I was. You are trained to do a job and the 'excellence' of your job performance is what becomes uppermost in your mind as a way of feeling fulfilled and satisfied about yourself. They planned it that way. They don't want you looking at the naked truth of the effect that your "job" may be having on ordinary human beings. You are a very small nut or bolt in a huge Killing Machine and you are never shown the perspective of those who are on the receiving end of that Killing Machine. Those who are on the receiving end are always referred to as 'the enemy'.
Today's military has grossly devolved from what it was in my day. The fascist element is far more transparent today and the amalgamation of US military personnel with 'private' security contractors, as seen in Iraq, is making it obvious to even the densest jar head that the US military is no longer in the business of 'securing the peace' or 'winning freedom' for oppressed people. Today, the US military is doing most of the oppressing against sovereign people in their own country. We are now invaders, not defenders. Of course, you are subjected to rivers of propaganda to convince you otherwise.
If you are foolish enough to volunteer for Special Forces, then you will be trained to kill, up close, without compunction, without hesitation, and on cue. You will also be subjected to covert mind control technologies which will affect you for the remainder of your life. They do not tell you, nor do they ask you for your permission to be programmed. You gave them permission when you "volunteered". The programming is done electronically. Sometimes drugs are also involved to put you under programming. They can take you while you are sleeping, program you, and put you back in bed and you won't know a thing about it.
I don't assign blame to lower level service personnel who find themselves in the military today. Enlisted ranks are mostly poor people who usually have not gone beyond high school in education. They are looking for a pay check, job security, medical benefits, specialized training, and perhaps the excitement of foreign lands. Some join because they come from military family backgrounds or they feel a need to serve their country. I felt that obligation and desire to get involved when I joined the service. If I knew then what I know now, I never would have joined. On the other hand, if our country was GENUINELY threatened, as was the case with World War II, AND if the US military was in the business, once again, of DEFENDING liberty, and our country, and our people, then I probably would join, assuming that we get rid of the satanic infiltrators at the highest echelons of military command.
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Originally Posted by 1reguL8NSTi
I'd like to remind you that the greatest amphibious invasion ever had not one Marine in it. D-Day
The Marine Corp, despite the name "Corps", is quite small in size.
Originally Posted by shadowcat
Yes, and that was an invasion that the Marines were not equipped nor designed to handle, so why are you bringing this up?
The Marine Corp, despite the name "Corps", is quite small in size.
The Marine Corp, despite the name "Corps", is quite small in size.
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Originally Posted by 1reguL8NSTi
Why are you posting this?
thats what im wondering. whats up with the SF guys?
Any of you ever read the book "jarhead"? if so can someone explain to me if field-****ing is?
Originally Posted by A 04 GUIZE
thats what im wondering. whats up with the SF guys?
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Originally Posted by 1reguL8NSTi
Why are you posting this?
Psoper must have gotten picked on by jocks in High School gym. He frames torn underwear as a testament to his broken past. One of his life long missions is to take out his aggression on any organization or group consisting of alpha-males. Nobody cares, Psoper! And guess what? You can finally put those fears to rest because the military works at the team level. In fact, old high school D&D nerds work with old high school jocks all the time… I was one of those nerds.
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Originally Posted by 1reguL8NSTi
I think he probably got peered out in SFAS and now holds a grudge against everyone that made it.
Originally Posted by Salty
Because he hates the military. He'll claim he likes members of the armed forces... he just doesn't want to hear them unless they have something negative to say, or have anything to do with them unless they’re supposed to be saving him.
Psoper must have gotten picked on by jocks in High School gym. He frames torn underwear as a testament to his broken past. One of his life long missions is to take out his aggression on any organization or group consisting of alpha-males. Nobody cares, Psoper! And guess what? You can finally put those fears to rest because the military works at the team level. In fact, old high school D&D nerds work with old high school jocks all the time… I was one of those nerds.
Psoper must have gotten picked on by jocks in High School gym. He frames torn underwear as a testament to his broken past. One of his life long missions is to take out his aggression on any organization or group consisting of alpha-males. Nobody cares, Psoper! And guess what? You can finally put those fears to rest because the military works at the team level. In fact, old high school D&D nerds work with old high school jocks all the time… I was one of those nerds.


