Nowadays, most soldiers were raised in single parent households. Those households struggle. They joined for money, for the hope of one day getting a college degree.
I am not saying ALL of them did, but the majority of the boots on the ground did just that.
You knocking single-parent households, eh?
nope.
More like knocking the divorce rate.
Soooo...people who enter the armed forces that come from single parent households...aren't qualified?![]()
no. he's saying that most soldiers are from single-parent households and they enrolled in military for college money.
Nowadays, most soldiers were raised in single parent households. Those households struggle. They joined for money, for the hope of one day getting a college degree.
I am not saying ALL of them did, but the majority of the boots on the ground did just that.
Perhaps. Recruiting also targets low-income neighborhoods...but...who cares? If it weren't for those benefits, we'd be short-staffed.![]()
But who cares? These aren't "free" benefits. There's a trade-off. Personally, I have mixed feelings about recruitment tactics in low-income neighborhoods. I HATED ROTC in my old school. I hated the "special" curriculum, the low standards for ROTC teachers...etc cetera...but...that doesn't mean joining the military so you can get a college education is a bad thing. Very very few people join the military while thinking, "F this country, man, I'm just gonna get some college cash! Yeeehaw!" All servicemen (and women) I know that joined the military partially for college aid are very proud to be serving their country.
Plus...if you're wiling to do a tour in Iraq to get some college cash, that says quite a bit about your determination to succeed in life.
imo
Nowadays.... joining military for some college money is kinda silly because it's not much. You'll be limited to community or state college. The easiest way to get your tuition 100% paid for in any college you're at is to get signed up... meaning you'll have to serve in military between 3-7 years depending on branch and circumstance.
Nowadays.... joining military for some college money is kinda silly because it's not much. You'll be limited to community or state college. The easiest way to get your tuition 100% paid for in any college you're at is to get signed up... meaning you'll have to serve in military between 3-7 years depending on branch and circumstance.
still cheaper than silly investigations into Obama's birth certificate and frivolous lawsuits against White House
We could always bring back the draft.Perhaps. Recruiting also targets low-income neighborhoods...but...who cares? If it weren't for those benefits, we'd be short-staffed.![]()
We could always bring back the draft.![]()