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CSM Charles Hayden
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LTC Stephen F. Colonel, are you equating those college athletes who try to avoid injuries with those who attend our service academies and then become supplicants to play professional sports rather than performing the military duty they contracted for?
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LTC Stephen F.
LTC Stephen F.
6 y
Not exactly my friend CSM Charles Hayden. I can only speak from my experience as a cadet at West Point. The other Service Academies have their own rules.
At West Point we had "free board and room" and were inspected with little notice at times :-)
We paid for uniforms, haircuts, etc. The law established an account which was funded at 50% of a 2LT from some time in the past. We were allotted $50 per month as plebes in 1976. the rest of the money went into an account which was debited for books, uniforms, haircuts, etc.
Every cadet could resign up to the beginning of junior year [Cow] with no punishment or funds owed. For those who were forces out after that point they could be reduced to enlisted-man status to work out what they owed in terms of years served. If that was not possible they owed the government money for the education that they had been furnished ...
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SGT David A. 'Cowboy' Groth
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You got that right, other kids work hard to pay for their education, if these bums skip out, pay your tab.
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LTC Stephen C.
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I agree with you, Maj Marty Hogan, but the prospect of big money is simply too tempting. For many of these athletes, if not most, pro football is the goal.
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Maj Marty Hogan
Maj Marty Hogan
>1 y
LTC Stephen C. and then they become bigger problem kids in the NFL. Domestic violence, drugs, gang rapes...they feel untouchable and get light sentences when they do get caught. Being good at a sport shouldn't be a free pass.
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