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What age did you join the Military and why? What motovate you? Any regrets?

Posted on 12/30/2005 8:15:40 AM PST by FlatLandBeer

What age did you join the Military and why? What motovate you? Any regrets?

What would advise a young person to do these days?


TOPICS: Your Opinion/Questions
KEYWORDS: airforce; army; coastguard; draft; fun; job; marines; motivated; navy; recruit; stupid; usmilitary
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To: FlatLandBeer
I was 17 years old when I joined the ARMY in 1980 as a 91B (Medic). I didn't get along with my step-dad so we all decided that it would be the best for me to go.
My dreams at the time were to become an actor so I concentrated most of my time and efforts into acting and the rest of my grades were suffering, that was the cause of most of our fights. (mom, step-dad and I) While I was stationed at Ft. Lewis, I finished High School at night school.
I came out of the ARMY at the aqe of 19 1/2 and brought back with me a world of experience and maturity. I would do it again if I could.
121 posted on 12/30/2005 11:00:45 AM PST by StayoutdaBushesWay
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To: FlatLandBeer
I joined through a NROTC scholarship. I was more than reluctant and fairly liberal at the time.
Itwas the best thing that ever happened to me, although I certainly didn't realize it at the time.
122 posted on 12/30/2005 11:03:56 AM PST by Scarchin (www.classdismissedblog.com.)
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To: FlatLandBeer
I enlisted in the USN at age 17 in 1969. I served in the Ceremonial Guard paying honor and tribute to those who gave all. I spent three years on a tin can and cruised the east coast from the Caribbean to Halifax and loved every minute of it. I wish I could serve again.
123 posted on 12/30/2005 11:08:40 AM PST by granite ("I don't know anyone here that's been killed with a handgun.")
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To: FlatLandBeer

I joined the Navy in '82 after being a bum for a couple of years. While I was in DEP, got my first real job and met my future wife, so it looked like a bad move for awhile.

Spent 6 years in (Advanced Electronics required a 6 year hitch), did some overdue growing up, had a hell of a time, saw some things...

Not a momments regret...

Comrade Bork


124 posted on 12/30/2005 11:21:14 AM PST by ComradeBork (Consistency is the hobgoblin...)
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To: MamaB

Your brother is a true military hero but...from a personal point of view...he's a true brother and hero to his sister. That's beautiful. God bless you both and hope he continues to live a long time.


125 posted on 12/30/2005 11:34:47 AM PST by cubreporter (I trust Rush. He has done more for this country than anyone will ever know. He's A++)
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To: Casloy
Enlisted in the Marine Corps in 1985 at the age of 22. Served seven years, seven months and enjoyed every single minute of it. Earned my Bachelor's on active duty. Left active duty in 1993 as a Sergeant.

Joined the Marine Corps reserve in 1994. Transferred to Navy reserve in 1996 as an Intelligence Specialist. Got re-married in 1998 and left the Navy reserve in 1999 at the end of my contract. Wished I had stayed in and am currently considering going back in to finish my 20 years (currently have 13 years towards retirement).

I loved every minute of being in the military. Would recommend it for any young man or woman considering it.
126 posted on 12/30/2005 11:45:51 AM PST by FortWorthPatriot (Semper Fidelis)
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To: All
Joined the army at 18, in Jan '55, rather than waiting for the draft at 20..

Lucked out by being stationed in Munich '56 to '58 with the 503rd/502nd - 11th Airborne Div.

No regrets, - great years, great duty..
127 posted on 12/30/2005 11:48:22 AM PST by don asmussen
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To: FlatLandBeer

I was 18 when I joined the Navy in 1975 - to get into Aviation. F14's on CV-64. yeah, baby! I don't regret a bit of it.


128 posted on 12/30/2005 12:08:54 PM PST by SolutionsOnly
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To: FlatLandBeer

I first put on the Air Force uniform in September 1951 at the Univeristy of Arkansas two weeks after my 17th birthday. My motives were patriotism and desire to fly airplanes. AFROTC commission and active duty 1955. Regular Air Force 1961. The outline of my career is linked to my name. Retired from the Air Force in October 1985. Absolutely no regrets.

I believe most young people should volunteer for one tour of military service (enlisted or commissioned) -- to find out what they are made of, to grow up and earn some self-respect, and to repay a bit of the debt we all owe this country -- and then decide whether they will continue in the military or go into a civilian career.


129 posted on 12/30/2005 12:13:26 PM PST by zot (GWB -- four more years!)
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To: FlatLandBeer

I was nineteen when I went into the Navy. It was 1965. During my tour there was Vietnam, the explosion of the drug culture and the Black Power movement. I did not choose to re-up. I do not regret my service, in fact I am quite proud I served. I would recommend it to anyone who feels a sense of duty.


130 posted on 12/30/2005 12:17:54 PM PST by Aeronaut (It is deeply irresponsible to rewrite the history of how the war began.)
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To: Night Hides Not

Got out of college, got married, and got my draft notice all in two weeks time. Had been in USMC reserve for extra $$. Went to Quantico, then to Pensacola for flight trng.
Went with UAL and flew for 30 yrs. Only regret was going with a company that had unbelievably bad CEO's after founder Patterson died. Otherwise wouldn't change a thing. {replying to you because noticed you went to Gonzaga. I went to Gonzaga H.S.


131 posted on 12/30/2005 12:20:26 PM PST by Freeper john
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To: FlatLandBeer

Went Navy ROTC when I was 17. Did it mainly because I was absolutely sure I would be an admiral. Didn't work out quite that way but I don't regret it at all. I can honestly say that I got more out of than it got out of me.


132 posted on 12/30/2005 12:20:58 PM PST by Non-Sequitur
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To: Casloy

Joined the Army at 20 'cause I flunked out of GA. Tech. Planned to go military anyway, but as an ossifer. Also hoped to get to fight the Iranians (joined during the "hostage crisis"). Still went four years. Nobody threw a war, so I'm cold warrior.


133 posted on 12/30/2005 12:21:50 PM PST by Little Ray (I'm a reactionary, hirsute, gun-owning, knuckle dragging, Christian Neanderthal and proud of it!)
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To: FlatLandBeer
Joined the Navy just before I turned 22. I had been to college and decided that college wasn't for me at that time.
Went in under the Advanced Electronics program. Made E-3 out of boot camp. Got 1 1/2 years of electronics training before I ever went on board a ship.
Spent 5 1/2 years in the Philippines on the only warship ever homeported out of the Philippines, the USS Sterett, CG-31.

No regrets, no hind sight 'wish I had done that instead'.

I would advise any young person considering joining the military to give it a great amount of deep thought before doing so. It's not for everyone.
If they did decide to join, talk to all the recruiters, see which branch will will give you the most for your time.
It's just like negotiating for a job with more than one company.

Once you're in, do what your superiors tell you, do it when they tell you to do it, and do it well.

134 posted on 12/30/2005 12:29:58 PM PST by Just another Joe (Warning: FReeping can be addictive and helpful to your mental health)
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To: NRA1995

My last tour on a 180 in Guam got my Golden Dragon right off. Second underway trip we went to Howland & Baker and we did the whole enchelada, Golden Dragon /Shellback initiation. My last U/W trip we crossed the equator just south of Kapingamaringi and I got to lead the party that took over the bridge and threw the CO in the brig. This was justa few months after my Chief's initiation and he was the lead procecuter at my trial so I got my payback!

ARRRRG ! ! !

The last RefTra in Hawaii was more than 4 years since the ship ahd been in "US" waters so we got to fly the coming home pennant and I got a piece of it when I retired. and we made a clean sweep in RefTra so we ran a broom up the rigging for the trip back home.

That was a good tour!


135 posted on 12/30/2005 12:53:33 PM PST by Delta 21 (MKC USCG-ret)
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To: Gumlegs

Which LPD were you on. I was on LPD #2 the Vancouver before desert storm. It was the oldest LPD in the fleet and had seen duty in Viet Nam.

It was a rust bucket and was the only part of my service that I did not enjoy on a daily basis (I still managed to have a good time).


136 posted on 12/30/2005 1:08:43 PM PST by dangerdoc (dangerdoc (not actually dangerous any more))
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To: FlatLandBeer

I would adivise any one to join if they asked me. I was commisioned USNR in 1985. Four of my active duty years, I dressed like a Marine. Those were the best 4 years of my service.

They paid for my school and I got to shoot nearly every weapon in the USMC armory. It just doesn't get much better. I was medical, if a group of marines looked like they were having fun, I just asked to join and they always let me jump right in. I can SPI rig, fast rope, and have more good stories than I can remember thanks to the USMC.

Thanks devil dogs.


137 posted on 12/30/2005 1:15:20 PM PST by dangerdoc (dangerdoc (not actually dangerous any more))
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To: FlatLandBeer

Volunteered for the Marines my senior year of college in 1965. Became a heart-breaker and a life-taker. Regrets? Only that I did not extend for a second tour in Vietnam. Got out when the party was over.


138 posted on 12/30/2005 1:30:16 PM PST by JoeGar
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To: FlatLandBeer
What motovate you?

What be motovate? Does it have to do with dirt bikes or something?

Just axing, yo.

139 posted on 12/30/2005 1:33:23 PM PST by humblegunner (If you're gonna die, die with your boots on.)
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To: FlatLandBeer
I was barely 19 and just flunked out of college on an athletic scholarship, too much party and not enough books, and good at football. Didn't make it to my third quarter.

My draft papers were on the kitchen table in my mother's hands when I got home from school 4 days later, she was crying. My dad was disappointed but he didn't give me one of his famous lectures. He said, "You had your chance, now it's time to make a decision, a decision that will be the most important of your life. What are you going to do, son"?

After a long night of drinking, pacing, and thinking and 2 hours sleep I went down to breakfast. It was a quiet breakfast with my family until I spoke. I looked at my dad and said, "I'm going to enlist today Dad, I'm going to enlist in the Army, and I'm going to be a 101st Airborne Ranger, just like you were in WWII". Mom broke down, dad hugged her and gave me the strangest look I'd ever seen. It was pride mixed with WTF are you doing? My little brother, as always, said the wrong thing, "Timmy, are you going to get killed"?. The rest is long and not interesting, needless to say, my brother had said the wrong thing, as was his forte.

When I got back from the recruiters office I had lots of paper. I left home at eight in the morning, I got back at 4 in the afternoon. I had been to people and places that were very special to me. I walked into the house and went to the kitchen, there was my father at the kitchen table. A slightly less that a full bottle of scotch and two glasses, his half full. I didn't even ask where my mother and brother was, I knew dad wanted to talk to me.

He poured me a half a glass of scotch and put 2 cubes of ice in it (why I remember those 2 ice cubes, I'll never know. Maybe because it's the first drink my Dad ever fixed me, and he was a professional bartender. He was famous for a full glass of scotch and ONLY 2 ice cubes). We talked about war, the Airborne, killing the enemy, the spirit of the Corps, the pride, the sacrifice until it was dark and that bottle of scotch was gone.

The day I left to report for duty was a real circus. My mother cried, my brother just wandered around not knowing what to do, and my dad just stood there like a great stone statue, nothing to say, and no where to move. When I boarded the bus mom was a bucket of tears, Bennie (my brother) was crying, cause mom was, and my dad grabbed me in a hug I had never felt before and said, "you come back here alive, DO YOU HEAR ME"? Then he pushed me back, with his hands on my shoulders and I saw he was crying. That's the first, and only time, I ever saw my father cry. He wasn't sobbing but the tears were running down his cheeks.

Last part of your question: did I believe in it. Answer: without a fragment of a doubt, and that's the way we fought, without a fragment of a doubt. The war in Vietnam was won by the troops on the ground. It was lost by the chickenshit politicians in the democratic party. We will not lose this one, not as long as I am drawing breath. Those troops will never feel what I felt. They will feel pride and the glory of victory and the freeing of an oppressed people. No shame, and NO SPIT. Not as long as this old Ranger breaths on God's green earth.

Happy New Year, and God Bless our troops and the United States of America!

Timy

140 posted on 12/30/2005 2:18:59 PM PST by timydnuc (I'll die on my feet before I'll live on my knees.)
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