Posted on 10/22/2011 6:22:24 AM PDT by Libloather
we’ve got millions on the government dole for phantom ailments like ADD and bad backitis, so the idiot lawmakers decide that’s a good time to chop back on LEGITIMATE payments to people they made promises to who ACTUALLY went and did a job at risk of life and limb.
Lawmakers make me sick. I despise every SOB who tries to touch anything either promised, indicated, or even hinted at to our troops for the VOLUNTEER job that they do that none of those sorry-ass welfare clowns would ever consider doing..
I will vote for NO candidate who supports cutting our legitimate debt to our veterans and retirees in ANY way.
Woah, I didn’t even know about some of this stuff. :(
We’ve got to reform military retirement. It’s simply too expensive in it’s current form to be sustained.
No it's not. But the truth wouldn't twist the lefties knickers.
“(A recent Federal retiree and proud of it!)”
and yet you call for military retirement to be cut? There’s a word for people who say such things. It isn’t a very nice word, and I won’t repeat it here. But I would very much dislike to have it applied to me. Apparently you have different standards.
Weve got to reform military retirement. Its simply too expensive in its current form to be sustained.
Yes military retirement is so good, european vacations every year, Alaska fishing trips, eat out when ever I want,live in a great house, the nicest clothes...............OH........Wait....That was a day dream. Struggle to make ends meet, no vacations either Europa or Alaska, eat out once or twice a month if lucky, live in a double wide that is falling apart and most of my clothes are two decades old.
Where the hell did you get the idea that military retirement is so lucrative?
The average military retiree is an E-6, some college but not a degree, with 2-3 school age children, trying to re-enter the job market at 40 years of age. Not a very easy thing to do especially for those in the Army and Marines who were in combat arms MOS’s. Armor, artillery, and infantry is the backbone of the military but are not skills that transfer easily to the civilian environment. Change the retirement and how will we every get anyone to spend a career in the military in those MOS’s? Yes, military retirement is expensive but by looking at the quality of our military I would say it is money well spent.
>Weve got to reform military retirement. Its simply too expensive in its current form to be sustained.
Yeah right, right after we reform the handouts to the unions and illegals. Oh, that’s right, they keep these parasites in office, rather than support your freedom. Rudyard Kipling had it right back then, no change now.
>The average military retiree is an E-6, some college but not a degree, with 2-3 school age children, trying to re-enter the job market at 40 years of age. Not a very easy thing to do especially for those in the Army and Marines who were in combat arms MOSs. Armor, artillery, and infantry is the backbone of the military but are not skills that transfer easily to the civilian environment. Change the retirement and how will we every get anyone to spend a career in the military in those MOSs? Yes, military retirement is expensive but by looking at the quality of our military I would say it is money well spent.
Well put
Congress first
Slash their budgets, staff, pensions and bennies first.
Absolutely...100% The ‘welfare clowns’ should be required to serve someway for the welfare they receive.
Sorry, but no matter how deserving our military members may be, the current military retirement system is simply too expensive to be sustainable. Current serving military members shouldn’t be affected by the coming changes, but new entrants will have to understand that things are going to be different — that’s only fair.
Don’t be an ignoramus. I served in Afghanistan, among other places. And anyway, my own service doesn’t affect the fact that military retirement bennies are simply unsustainable.
Below is the active duty End Troop Strengths for 2004
(1) The Army, 482,400.
(2) The Navy, 373,800.
(3) The Marine Corps, 175,000.
(4) The Air Force, 359,300
Now the 1987 numbers
Army 781,000
Navy 587,000
Marine Corps 199,000
Air Force 607,000
Now add too this the fact the average Lifer unless he is a permenant stateside desk jockey will likely put in nearly twice the total hours per year worked or at least more than a third more hours than civilians for lesser pay. The military retirement system is a bargain. The congressional retirement system is a massive rip off. In my job at sea work days were abut 18-20 hours. It ages you fast.
Carter also had the same bright idea too try and cut military retirement by making it a 30 year required obligation. It never got made policy or if it did it was quickly rescinded by the next CIC.
BTW of those numbers I posted as active duty most of the troops are either junior NCO's or E-3 and below. Most persons joining the military do their first enlistment and get out usually by the end of their second one.
I wasn't a lifer myself. A 6 year sea/2 year shore duty Sea Duty&Shore Duty rotation my job required was one of the many reasons.
I do support the eliminaion of many useless alaphabet agenies who's annual budgets likely exceed the military retirement cost for 20 years though. Let's start with the EPA.
Now lets see in just what capacity you served there.
No Proposed Change to Federal Retirement, Pay Systems in Budget Proposal
Tuesday, July 05, 2011 11:02:42 PM · 11 of 12 Poundstone to WVKayaker
Nope, I meant ALL Federal employees, civilian and military. Plenty of civilian Feds are serving in Afghanistan (as I did), Iraq, and other dangerous places, sometimes alongside US military members, and sometimes in places where there are NO US military!
If you get killed in the line of duty, you bleed red, bub, regardless of what kind of clothing youre wearing. Wise up.
Your posting didn't make sense so I checked your posting history. You were a civilian drawing a nice fat government employee check while working in Afghanistan it seems. You also drive a Beamer? Or is it two you have? I don't know any enlisted retirees or active duty for that matter driving Beamers. Actually I know of none who can retire as in no longer have too work and live only on their service retirement. Most Lifers after they retire from the military must go on to civilian jobs because even an 0-5 retired isn't likely drawing close too what you are nor likely as great of benefits.
Yes, new entrants will understand, do their time in uniform (many simply as a patriotic chore) and leave well before the ten year mark. The military tried this with the 40% retirement and they had to reverse course because the attrition was so large.
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