I have to post this before Bill and Ryan get the topic locked with politics.
RyanShort1 wrote:
I'm all for a strong military in time of national emergency, but if the war's not really accomplishing worthy goals, every single service member is costing their relatives and other people a lot of money to support them. They will also continue to cost business owners when they retire.
I don't know a single person in the military that doesn't pay taxes. Do some get their income tax free from time to time because of a deployment or something like that? Yes they do. But they do pay taxes most of the time. It costs the same no matter if the goal is "worthy" or not.
RyanShort1 wrote:
I wish more young people had a vision for peaceful business endeavors rather than jumping into the military and giving politicians more fodder to work with. We should go back to the model where Congress couldn't keep an army more than two years.
I've quite enjoyed my nearly 19yrs in the Military. My wife enjoyed her 4yrs. I know some folks that have joined the military simply because they have no other options. But I know far more that joined for other reasons. Believe it or not, a lot of them are like me and my brother and joined because, as my grandfather said "this is what you owe your country for the privilage of living here". I never intended to stay until retirement but it has been a good life, I've enjoyed it, I've paid my dues and I will be rewarded for it.
If you knew anything at all about military service you would understand how bad the idea of turning over your personel every two years.
RyanShort1 wrote:
There are plenty of opportunities for veterans, Bill, the trouble is that the military and our current public school system doesn't train them to find the jobs, or create them.
The military is not here to teach you to find a job. We are here to teach you to "fly, eat and kill" in the case of the Air Force. When your hitch is up and you choose to return to civilian life, all branches of the military have transition assistance programs to help a person navigate in a world where you have to think for yourself. If you want to stay and make a career out of the military, that option is nearly always open. You just have to play the game long enough to make it 20yrs.
RyanShort1 wrote:
We need more people trained by their fathers to be entrepreneurs. To assess a situation, find problems or areas that could use a solution, or build a better mousetrap, and then go out and do it. If you are a veteran and want to work, and have been trained to use your skills, then you should be able to find something to occupy yourself with, just like the rest of us who are civillians!
What we need are more people not afraid to do the jobs that are available but they think they are above doing them. What we need is less people that are sitting around waiting for someone else to pay their way in this world, but are unwilling to do anything in return. I know very few groups of individuals that are better at assessing a situation, finding solutions and such than ones that have been in the military. I agree, if you want to work you should have the same chances of finding a job that somebody not in the military has.
Now as far as Bill's original post that started this all, I think one thing is being overlooked. When these wars do end for good, we won't have a mass demobilization of the Military flooding the job market. Nobody was drafted in on a "duration of the war plus six months" timeline. Everyone is on a 2, 4 or 6 year enlistment (commitment levels change between services and officer and enlisted positions) and they would still be in the military tomorrow if we went to a total peactime military right now. When the wars end and we don't need the numbers we have in the military at the moment, then yes there will be quite a few folks looking for civilian employment. It will be nothing like the end of WWII though.
As for the GI Bill, as Randy said, yes it is still around and it is a good deal. My wife is going to college right now using hers. Due to a change in the law recently, my eleven year old daughter will be using my GI bill to go to college when she gets older. All it did was add a few months to my commitment to the USAF.