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#51
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BTW, (for those Army officers among us), is there any good reason Choi is/was still a Lt? He was a USMA grad and in the Guard when he came out, so I would presume he did 5 years active (some quick research backs this up), and I was under the impression that nearly everyone makes O-3 within 5 years. Of course, may be completely wrong in my assumptions, but if not it raises an interesting question.
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Lawls, my signature is invisible |
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#52
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Excellent points in your previous post, fjer. Devil, joining the military actually means giving up many of the freedoms that we fight for. The military is one of the only "businesses" in America that is not only allowed to "discriminate" it is encouraged to. There is a minimum required GT score for entrance into each branch. Why? It keeps people that would be more of a liability than a help out. There are medical requirements that must be met to enter each branch. Why? Many reasons actually, but to name a few, it keeps medical costs down and it makes it so that anyone who can pass those physicals should theoretically be able to accomplish the job/MOS that they go into at the same level as anyone else physically. Homosexuals are currently not allowed to serve while being openly gay, or violating S.A.M. (statements, acts, or marriage). Why? I already answered that question in my previous post, and those were only a few of the points I made in my paper. Women aren't allowed in certain MOS's. Why? I have a post on this issue somewhere in the archives, but briefly because they cannot physically do the same things men can (if you argue that they can, why is there a seperate score chart for females?), pregnancy issues, personal hygiene issues, etc.
The military doesn't discriminate in areas that have no bearing on how well someone can do our job, namely religion and race. In any area that the military does "discriminate" there are valid reasons for it. If the reasons weren't valid, there would be no standard to have to meet. The standards are there for a reason, and it seems to have been working out for us for the past few centuries or so.
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I am the Infantry, FOLLOW ME!
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#53
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There are many possibilities, a look at his OERs could probably answer a lot. |
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#54
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I also did more research on "Don't ask, don't tell" and actually discussed this issue with my fellow Senior NCOs in JROTC today. We all came to the conclusion that Mister Choi was in violation of several military policies and felt that he should be discharged for his actions. On a lighter note I thank you fjer for thinking the arguments I presented in my previous post were copied and pasted, and would like to report that those ideas were my own deductions about the topic. Furthermore, I enjoyed reading up on military policy and history while garnering a better understanding of this situation.
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LET III C/1SG Graduate of JCLC Carolina Flag Detail Commander Assistant S-3 |
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