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PO1 Drill Sergeant
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I was hoping this post would catch like wild fire. Largely ignoring RP for a few months because of the incendiary nature of most of the conversations, this is the perfect place for this article.

This may become a policy, but if one of my new checkins walks in with a huge neck tattoo it will effect they way he or she is looked at. If you are silly enough to place a permanent tattoo on your neck, than you are not the professional we are looking for in the Navy. To each his or her own.

The most offensive part of this is allowing for "tatted" Sailors to become RDC's. I am reporting to RDC duty this summer and this really shows me what the Navy thinks of that billet. Why did I have to do all that paperwork when I applied if this is what squared away means to them? All of the gouge on RTC duty seems to imply that they only take the best of the best and the most squared away Sailors. If someone with a zip code tattoo on his or her neck is the most squared away Sailors we have, than we are in trouble. Whats next, Blue Angel Billet with neck tats? Hopefully they put these Sailors on the 7 deck or maybe scrubbing out the bilge where no one can see them.

Full disclosure, I do have two tattoos.
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PO1 Paralegal
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I agree with the RTC duty to an extent, but what if a sailor had the tattoo prior to joining and is a legit squared away sailor? Personally I think that making it not an automatic disqualification for RTC duty can open up the billets to some who may have otherwise been disqualified solely on the fact that they had a visible tattoo. Now if someone was accepted to RTC or recruiting duty and decided to get an obvious tattoo in route, that person should probably get checked the moment they arrive on board.
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PO1 Drill Sergeant
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I stand by my opinion that we cannot let Sailors or civilians do stupid things when they are young and use that as an excuse. Well I got that illuminati tattoo on my lower arm when I was 18 and stupid, says Sailor who wants to go to RTC. Sorry shipmate, if you are old enough to vote you are old enough to know that doing something stupid can follow you. I got a DUI when I was 17 and it still follows and haunts me 15 years later. I spent a 7 years being passed over for jobs and promotions because of it. At least I knew the military would take me. Wanna be taken serious in life, make good decisions.
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CSM Charles Hayden
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I wish the designs and statements of tattoos were more obvious. I honestly cannot fathom the intent of many tattoos! SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL
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