Posted on 01/06/2007 10:42:15 AM PST by governsleastgovernsbest
-Goldie Hawn, Private Benjamin (1980)
"And you need to know also that any recruiter who tells you you're not going to go to Iraq is telling you less than the truth."
If I get in (waiting on recruiter to call me), I could care less where they send me. I'll just obey like a good soldier should.
Heck I was hearing the same stories 30 years ago.
"See, I did join the army, but I joined a *different* army. I joined the one with the condos and the private rooms."
I guess it helps to review before I post!
Anyone who actually believes CNN isn't likely to be visiting military recruiters anyway, so it hardly matters what they say.
File under "What's New?"
Lot's of my fellow basic training company members felt they had been lied to. I didn't. Besides, my football, swimming and lacrosse coaches in high school were way harder and way meaner than anything I ever faced in basic. The food was better there, too.
You mean we can't opt for an assignment guarding the beach set of BayWatch?!
The people yelling at you in basic are making sure you know your job. They are really protecting your butt, but don't ever smile at them. After that, your military experience is as good or bad as you decide to make it.
I can't take issue with CNN doing such a report as long as the subject matter was handled fairly. I remember an oft-stated rejoinder during my Marine Corps days: "U Signed Mother-something Contract." (USMC)
If recruiting is being stepped up even beyond the rather fervent pitch it is currently at, then the sound advice to potential recruits to get it in writing can only be a good thing.
Yuh, like anyone remotely interested in joining the military was gonna watch CNN anyway. The network is just trying to cement the incorrect impression their fans have of all branches of the military anyway. They just think they're a bunch of war-mongers, and nothing anyone says is going to change their minds.
You do know that you are the 1st person in the history of Freerepublic.com that has ever done that. You are in soooo much trouble!
In the brief experience I had with recruiters, they seemed to be not allot better than car salesmen. I remember meeting with one at my dad's house when I was 17, he just promised me the world. All sorts of assurances, but nothing on paper. After he left, my dad, who is a Viet Nam vet, told me the guy was full of sh1t, and not to trust him.
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