Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5750|London, England

unnamednewbie13 wrote:

JohnG@lt wrote:

unnamednewbie13 wrote:


If it's sunny weather, I usually am. Sometimes on national holidays, too. Sucks if you're into the entitlement thing, though.
What do you do?
Contracting. Concrete/asphalt repair, signs, painting and other stuff that doesn't care for the rain. Pays well, but small businesses don't exactly have huge reserves of employees to take up slack for very long vacations.
That's a west coast issue man. The uptight, conservative, northeast wouldn't play those games "You want two weeks off to go mountain biking? Sure, start today and find a new job in two weeks".
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
unnamednewbie13
Moderator
+2,068|7164|PNW

Tell me about it. A guy signs back on because he couldn't find a job up where he was living, and the next day he wants to take the weekend off for his brother's friend's nephew's wedding or something.
13urnzz
Banned
+5,830|6890

unnamednewbie13 wrote:

burnzz wrote:

sorry i'll miss you then Newbie, i'm in Tukwila right now, catch a plane 1st thing next national holiday . .  .
lol, I'd probably just eat a cheeseburger and talk about Starcraft 2.

kcd's tried to nail me down for lunch, but my schedule's too unpredictable.
Downy's east of Leavenworth, watching swamp buggy races.

i kid you not.

on another note, i successfully entered the country today - i guess customs doesn't care about personal histories, just correct paperwork.
unnamednewbie13
Moderator
+2,068|7164|PNW

burnzz wrote:

on another note, i successfully entered the country today - i guess customs doesn't care about personal histories, just correct paperwork.
You shouldn't ring any alarm bells if you aren't from Mexico, I guess.
13urnzz
Banned
+5,830|6890

unnamednewbie13 wrote:

burnzz wrote:

on another note, i successfully entered the country today - i guess customs doesn't care about personal histories, just correct paperwork.
You shouldn't ring any alarm bells if you aren't from Mexico, I guess.
i was born in Tijuana Heights, but my passport reads "San Diego".

sorry for derailing, and to answer the OP, sign up as "Engineer Lt. Fox"
you from TJ?

oh the heights.. the NNNNNNNNNNNorth side of tj.
Uzique
dasein.
+2,865|6863

jord wrote:

Sisco wrote:

I´m with Viktor on this one. I can´t speak for America of course, but in Germany/Austria service is somewhat less helping your country than civil service (which is the alternative). But no one admires those, who chose to feed old bed-ridden people, clean them up or drive people in wheelchairs to the theater or their families.
There is a certain glorification going on with the military. No doubt, the institution itself is good, you take a lot of shit but you get much in return, but I just can´t and won´t understand the admiration people are getting, just for signing up.

I myself was in a situation where I seriously considered joining the armed forces not too long ago, despite having them turned down as draftee to become a civil servant.
Well it seems it varies for country to country and from each individual. I don't have an all encompassing respect for everyone in the military, far from it. Anyone who choose a combat role when they have other options I admire though. Someone who joins and goes and becomes a logistics driver or a HR and finance person I wouldn't really call a soldier.
the whole idea of 'respecting' somebody for joining the armed forces really pisses me off. as ive discussed with you here before... the average recruit to the uk army is an absolute fucking yob-layabout with no other opportunities in life, anyway. and this whole bollocks about respecting their 'bravery'... nobody asked them to do the job, no particular public consensus even wants the job fucking done in the first place. sorry but i refuse to 'respect' someone because they decided to join the army instead of passing more than 5 GCSE's in school. and as for this inherent 'valor' of soldiers... fuck that. nobody joins the military in our modern age out of some heroic or high-minded principle; people join because they need cash, they need something to do or because they just want a change in their life, period. people have many reasons for joining but this aint the fucking napoleonic era anymore... i respect you for it not one bit. each and every person to their own merit.
libertarian benefit collector - anti-academic super-intellectual. http://mixlr.com/the-little-phrase/
11 Bravo
Banned
+965|5630|Cleveland, Ohio
i needed college money
Uzique
dasein.
+2,865|6863
i think, dare i say it based on little to nothing at all... that american sign-ups are probably a bit more 'principled' than english ones, nowadays. the whole propagandist side of the american military - 'world police', 'freedom fighters' - and what not is probably inspiring rhetoric for a minority. we don't really have that in england anymore. it's pretty much an unsaid-yet-acknowledged thing that most recruits into the basic grunt-ranks of the english military are fuck-ups of one kind or another.
libertarian benefit collector - anti-academic super-intellectual. http://mixlr.com/the-little-phrase/
11 Bravo
Banned
+965|5630|Cleveland, Ohio

Uzique wrote:

i think, dare i say it based on little to nothing at all... that american sign-ups are probably a bit more 'principled' than english ones, nowadays. the whole propagandist side of the american military - 'world police', 'freedom fighters' - and what not is probably inspiring rhetoric for a minority. we don't really have that in england anymore. it's pretty much an unsaid-yet-acknowledged thing that most recruits into the basic grunt-ranks of the english military are fuck-ups of one kind or another.
i joined in the mid 90's....

college money dude
unnamednewbie13
Moderator
+2,068|7164|PNW

Uzique wrote:

i think, dare i say it based on little to nothing at all... that american sign-ups are probably a bit more 'principled' than english ones, nowadays. the whole propagandist side of the american military - 'world police', 'freedom fighters' - and what not is probably inspiring rhetoric for a minority. we don't really have that in england anymore. it's pretty much an unsaid-yet-acknowledged thing that most recruits into the basic grunt-ranks of the english military are fuck-ups of one kind or another.
I don't know about the UK, but the US recruiters are pretty crafty at inspiring spur-of-the-moment patriotism. Plus in some cultural zones, it's just expected.
Uzique
dasein.
+2,865|6863
you'd be very hard pressed to get that in the uk armed forces, tbh...

jingoism is the preserve of the lord haw haw officer classes... and they're a closed network, anyway,  and always have been.
libertarian benefit collector - anti-academic super-intellectual. http://mixlr.com/the-little-phrase/
unnamednewbie13
Moderator
+2,068|7164|PNW

Coy expression on the American eagle, I think.
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/08/10kMiles.JPG/800px-10kMiles.JPG

[edit: relevance->jingoism^]
jord
Member
+2,382|7070|The North, beyond the wall.

Uzique wrote:

jord wrote:

Sisco wrote:

I´m with Viktor on this one. I can´t speak for America of course, but in Germany/Austria service is somewhat less helping your country than civil service (which is the alternative). But no one admires those, who chose to feed old bed-ridden people, clean them up or drive people in wheelchairs to the theater or their families.
There is a certain glorification going on with the military. No doubt, the institution itself is good, you take a lot of shit but you get much in return, but I just can´t and won´t understand the admiration people are getting, just for signing up.

I myself was in a situation where I seriously considered joining the armed forces not too long ago, despite having them turned down as draftee to become a civil servant.
Well it seems it varies for country to country and from each individual. I don't have an all encompassing respect for everyone in the military, far from it. Anyone who choose a combat role when they have other options I admire though. Someone who joins and goes and becomes a logistics driver or a HR and finance person I wouldn't really call a soldier.
the whole idea of 'respecting' somebody for joining the armed forces really pisses me off. as ive discussed with you here before... the average recruit to the uk army is an absolute fucking yob-layabout with no other opportunities in life, anyway. and this whole bollocks about respecting their 'bravery'... nobody asked them to do the job, no particular public consensus even wants the job fucking done in the first place. sorry but i refuse to 'respect' someone because they decided to join the army instead of passing more than 5 GCSE's in school. and as for this inherent 'valor' of soldiers... fuck that. nobody joins the military in our modern age out of some heroic or high-minded principle; people join because they need cash, they need something to do or because they just want a change in their life, period. people have many reasons for joining but this aint the fucking napoleonic era anymore... i respect you for it not one bit. each and every person to their own merit.
Like I said, I don't have an all encompassing respect for everyone in the military. There's rapists, paedophiles, useless morons, fat, power abusive NCO's, utter scum, etc that deserve the opposite of respect. I wouldn't like to generalise though, maybe a lot of people do join because they have no other options and if I were to speculate I'd imagine such people would choose a job path "in the rear with the gear". The tests for applicable job choices aren't hard here, even I got nearly the highest marks and was offered every single role in the Army and we all know how unintelligent I am. I admit that, mentally it's not hard to get into the UK military, whatsoever, physcially it is. Moreso than the majority of other military's. It does take some amount of effort to get to the standard, and some amount of persistance to carry out the application process over a year-3 years. So no, I don't think the average yob layabout does have that persistance and motivation.

Respect is earned on individual merits, sure. There are groups who are prone to receiving it quicker than others, ie Firefighters over Heroin addicts. Or Soldiers over Mcdonalds workers,. It's just human nature.
jord
Member
+2,382|7070|The North, beyond the wall.

JohnG@lt wrote:

Colossal waste of time and effort being with someone who won't support themself.
I think that phrase can be universally applied, regardless of if you've made a few vows at a ceremony.

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