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View Full Version : Who Served In The Military?



Hempstone
06-21-2006, 06:04 PM
I spent 3 years in the Marine Corps from 1984-1987. I was curious, who else here served?

Alive
06-21-2006, 06:16 PM
If I don't get a scholarship for a college im planning on joining the army.

cannabis campbell
06-21-2006, 06:43 PM
Who would want to?

robert42
06-21-2006, 06:47 PM
i applied for the raf but failed due to me gammy leg lol

geonagual
06-21-2006, 11:18 PM
I spent 3 years in the Marine Corps from 1984-1987. I was curious, who else here served?

US Army Infantry 86-89
Marine Corps Infantry 89-93

JDiz
06-21-2006, 11:24 PM
I was a nuclear weapons technician in the US Air Force from 1999-2005. Good experience, and it caused me to have a 6-year break from weed. Needless to say, when I smoked again after 6 years that was an experience, kinda like meeting up with a long-lost friend, "oh hey I remember YOU!" Good stuff.

rainbows.rsexy
06-21-2006, 11:33 PM
i worked on the flight deck of a aircaft carrier in the navy

rainbows.rsexy
06-21-2006, 11:34 PM
nice sunrises....the sleeping quarters sucked ass!

rainbows.rsexy
06-21-2006, 11:39 PM
I attended two seperate boot camps because those showers were to die for......

geonagual
06-21-2006, 11:47 PM
I spent 3 years in the Marine Corps from 1984-1987. I was curious, who else here served?


Where were you stationed?

geonagual
06-21-2006, 11:48 PM
i worked on the flight deck of a aircaft carrier in the navy

Has anyone ever heard or seen what the Navy does with garbage on their ships when they are out to sea. You guessed it..overboard. 1000's of bags of trash. Fuckin polluters

rainbows.rsexy
06-21-2006, 11:57 PM
Has anyone ever heard or seen what the Navy does with garbage on their ships when they are out to sea. You guessed it..overboard. 1000's of bags of trash. Fuckin polluters


nope....not all the garbage, nowdays plastics get melted down and put in tri-walls, then they are helo'd of the flight deck onto a tender.

paper gets burned.

cans and galss get crushed and put in a burlock sack ...then they get deep sixed to the bottom of the ocean....not a toxic or polluting thing to do..

hazmats also get tri-walled and helo'd to a tender

rainbows.rsexy
06-22-2006, 12:02 AM
just to supply one big box of cereal onboard the ship via tender costs the tax payer 12 dollars......or a days earnings for a "new soldier or marine."

navy is different because BAH is authorized for single E1 sailors.....I collected BAH while even out at sea....cha ching$$$

thats why they call sailors squids... because they can afford to eat out..i.e. seafood.

grunts are grunts because, the cheap car they are drivin is so old and heavy it takes a body-builder's strength just to open the door.

johnnylethal
06-22-2006, 12:07 AM
For all you posters talking shit after this thread... Your all welcome for your freedom. Now someone please get me high

rainbows.rsexy
06-22-2006, 12:07 AM
Has anyone ever heard or seen what the Navy does with garbage on their ships when they are out to sea. You guessed it..overboard. 1000's of bags of trash. Fuckin polluters


no trash that is toxic or that would float is put in the water.

even tiny frigate ships have their hazmats helo'd off.....

rainbows.rsexy
06-22-2006, 12:10 AM
For all you posters talking shit after this thread... Your all welcome for your freedom. Now someone please get me high

I'm so free I have to fly over to Europe just to legally smoke weed.....even Alaska has passed a law against pot poss..


i wish the Dutch would "take away our freedom"

markomon
06-22-2006, 12:11 AM
I was in the Navy from 78-82 -Started out as a hospital corpsman -wound up as a cook with the pot munchies (perfect job for a weed head eh?) Now were out we can be friends instead of the squid vs jarhead bullshit !

rainbows.rsexy
06-22-2006, 12:14 AM
genuine sailor here.....I am no poster?!?!

rainbows.rsexy
06-22-2006, 12:16 AM
I luv lobster night........

and tiger cruises because they actually serve good food daily.....no offense to the cooks who have to work with what their superiors order for them

mojoke
06-22-2006, 01:23 AM
Just got signed up for the marines, will be shipping off when i finish school :)

excited!

Peach.Optimo.Bluntz
06-22-2006, 01:47 AM
thats like the gabillionth post from rainbow on this thread lol. no offense of course.

Hempstone
06-22-2006, 07:01 AM
On October 23rd, 1983, the Marine Barracks in Beirut, Lebanon was bombed and over 300 Marines were killed. A few days later Marines went into Grenada to rescue American hostages. I turned 18 just a few days after that, on November 4th, 1984. I had wanted to join the Marines but my mom would not sign for me so I signed up as soon as I turned 18.

I did not understand the politics, I did not understand the history. I just knew that something was going on, it seemed darn serious and I wanted to be a part of it. I was very gung-ho. My plan was to go Infantry and then try out for Recon and go to Beirut or wherever the Corps was to send me.

A lot seemed to be going on back then. Ronald Reagen was the President and regardless of what one now thinks about his politics it is undeniable that back then he inspired a fervent patriotism. He really worked us up. We were in the last throes of the Cold War. I thought that us and the Soviet Union might go head to head and figured that I wanted to protect America from this threat.

I signed the papers in November of 1983 but was not scheduled to go to Boot Camp until July of 1984, shortly after high school graduation. In between the time I signed the papers and the time that I went in Reagen withdrew the Marines from Beirut so I called my recruiter and told him that I did not want to go in anymore. He said "But I thought you were all gung-ho, what happened?" I told him that it was just that I really had my heart set on going to Beirut and that now that we weren't there anymore it didn't seem like I was needed. The recruiter assured me that it was a very dangerous world and that within the next 4 years we would be in a major war and the Corps would definitely need me. Reassured, I decided to go in.

So I reported to Parris Island, South Carolina for Boot Camp on July 2nd of 1984 along with a bus load of other new recruits. What a shock! Boot Camp was an absolutely amazing experience! I became fully immersed in the culture of the Warrior. For the first time, down on Parris Island I finally "got it". They had a deathly serious way of expressing to us the reality of our situation and our mission. The mission of the Marine Corps is to meet, close in with and destroy the enemy. War is brutal and hard so we trained very hard. Preparing for war is serious business and the Corps takes it very serious.

I came to this realization that I did not want to kill, I did not want to die. I really just wanted to BE. But I also realized that I had signed a contract and that I was in the service of higher ideals than my own wants and dreams. I was in the service of FREEDOM, DEMOCRACY, the CONSTITUTION and the BILL OF RIGHTS. I signed a contract for three years of active duty and I would honor that. I would do whatever I was called to do in those three years and I would do it with the best professionalism I could muster. I would kill if I had to kill and die if it was my turn to die. I sprinted forward at full speed for the next three years and had a wild and intense ride.

Although I had planned on the Infantry and Recon, the Corps had other plans for me. Late in Boot Camp I got my assignment and learned that I would be a Tank Crewman on the M60A1 Tank. I was a Loader, Driver and Gunner. Fort this I had to go to Tank School which was actually on an Army base, Ft. Knox, Kentucky. That was wild because there were like 80 Marines and like 30,000 Army dudes. Tank School was a bit miserable because it was in the winter, we hardly ever were allowed off base and there didn't seem to be much going on around Knox anyway.

After Tank School I reported to Camp Schwab, Okinawa in January of 1984. I was there for 3 weeks when they sent me on 5 months TAD to Camp Kinser on the southern part of the island to work at Naha Port. There I worked on the Near Term Prepositioned Force. Basically what it is is there are ships that float all around the world's hot spots with enough Tanks, Jeeps (now Humvees) Amtracs, Artillery, etc. to supply a Marine Expeditionary Unit. All that equiptment has to be serviced a couple times a year so I unloaded Tanks from the ships and did all sorts of preventitive maintenance on them and then reloaded them onto the ships. After 5 months it was back up to Camp Schwab again.

My whole unit rotated to 1st Tank Bn at the 41 Area (Los Flores) on Camp Pendleton. There we started doing a lot of field training. I joined another company that was going to the CAX (Combined Arms Exercise) at 29 Palms. (We also sometimes just called it desert training. After the Cax I stayed with that company and rotated with them to Camp Fuji, Japan for 4 months at the base of Mount Fuji. It snowed almost everyday there so I took vacation to the Phillipines right after the people Power Revolution in 1986. Went back to Fuji and our whole unit went to Camp Schwab on Okinawa again for 2 months and then it was back to Pendleton where I spent my remaining 11 months.

I made this deal with myself that if I saw combat in those 3 years then I would stay in and either become a Drill Instructor or a Tank Instructor because then I would owe it to the young Marines the benefit of my experience. But if I did not see combat there was no sense in me staying in. I had the plan in the beginning to do my one enlistment and that's it so that's what I did.

I don't regret it at all. I saw a lot of things, I went to a lot of places and learned a lot. It was a wild ride, a fantastic adventure. I packed 10 years of adventure into my 3 year stint. I enjoyed it greatly but I did not think I could maintain that gung-ho attitude for 20 years. I really just wanted to get on with my life and not worry about war.

To this day I have that dual nature. I have the Warrior Spirit and I have the side that craves and works for Peace. I suppose you can say that these days I am a Peace Warrior. Although I am not as completely pacifist as my Amish and Mennonite neighbors, I am a Christian and believe as Jesus said that "Blessed are the Peacemakers." I long for the days when men have beaten their swords into plowshares. War is terrible and cruel and to be avoided as much as humanly possible. It is also important that we have a Marine Corps and a military and that we have a segment of our population that is ready at any given time to put it all on the line for the greater good.

I could go on and on about this but for now this is good. By all means, tell your military stories, I love good stories...

minnesota man
06-22-2006, 09:12 AM
Hempstone, I think I've read your military stories in the p[ast. Very interesting. Yeah, that was you.

Hey, thanks to all of you for fighting for our freedom. I really appreciate it and I love this country.

whitekat
06-22-2006, 11:22 AM
marine corps 74-78.....louisiana national guard(reservist) 85-2002 total service time 21 years 3 months 12 days. cant wait for my first military pension check on my 60th birth day. i retire from my civil service job in october(25 years)....hempstone.... i too was "born" on parris island ...and did the okie rotation and west pac and east pac floats.

daima
06-22-2006, 12:48 PM
I spent 3 years in the Marine Corps from 1984-1987. I was curious, who else here served?

Army. 1972-76

dai*ma:stoned:

beachguy in thongs
06-22-2006, 01:02 PM
Spaced Invader '94-'99

jamstigator
06-22-2006, 01:47 PM
U.S. Army, 82-86. Started out in communications, ended up in special forces (psychological operations). Served in Alabama, Georgia, Arizona, North Carolina, Grenada for the invasion and most of the following year, then a bit more than a year in and around Izmir, Turkey.

Because of my extremely low weight, I never failed a drug test, and smoked pot the entire four years except for the year in Turkey (although I did have some kickass hash in Turkey one night).

For the most part, I had a great time in the Army, and have no regrets.

willystylle
06-22-2006, 01:50 PM
Spaced Invader '94-'99

HA HA LOL

3rd infantry, '82-'86. Served under Colonel Mustard.

geonagual
06-22-2006, 05:18 PM
On October 23rd, 1983, the Marine Barracks in Beirut, Lebanon was bombed and over 300 Marines were killed. A few days later Marines went into Grenada to rescue American hostages. I turned 18 just a few days after that, on November 4th, 1984. I had wanted to join the Marines but my mom would not sign for me so I signed up as soon as I turned 18.

I did not understand the politics, I did not understand the history. I just knew that something was going on, it seemed darn serious and I wanted to be a part of it. I was very gung-ho. My plan was to go Infantry and then try out for Recon and go to Beirut or wherever the Corps was to send me.

A lot seemed to be going on back then. Ronald Reagen was the President and regardless of what one now thinks about his politics it is undeniable that back then he inspired a fervent patriotism. He really worked us up. We were in the last throes of the Cold War. I thought that us and the Soviet Union might go head to head and figured that I wanted to protect America from this threat.

I signed the papers in November of 1983 but was not scheduled to go to Boot Camp until July of 1984, shortly after high school graduation. In between the time I signed the papers and the time that I went in Reagen withdrew the Marines from Beirut so I called my recruiter and told him that I did not want to go in anymore. He said "But I thought you were all gung-ho, what happened?" I told him that it was just that I really had my heart set on going to Beirut and that now that we weren't there anymore it didn't seem like I was needed. The recruiter assured me that it was a very dangerous world and that within the next 4 years we would be in a major war and the Corps would definitely need me. Reassured, I decided to go in.

So I reported to Parris Island, South Carolina for Boot Camp on July 2nd of 1984 along with a bus load of other new recruits. What a shock! Boot Camp was an absolutely amazing experience! I became fully immersed in the culture of the Warrior. For the first time, down on Parris Island I finally "got it". They had a deathly serious way of expressing to us the reality of our situation and our mission. The mission of the Marine Corps is to meet, close in with and destroy the enemy. War is brutal and hard so we trained very hard. Preparing for war is serious business and the Corps takes it very serious.

I came to this realization that I did not want to kill, I did not want to die. I really just wanted to BE. But I also realized that I had signed a contract and that I was in the service of higher ideals than my own wants and dreams. I was in the service of FREEDOM, DEMOCRACY, the CONSTITUTION and the BILL OF RIGHTS. I signed a contract for three years of active duty and I would honor that. I would do whatever I was called to do in those three years and I would do it with the best professionalism I could muster. I would kill if I had to kill and die if it was my turn to die. I sprinted forward at full speed for the next three years and had a wild and intense ride.

Although I had planned on the Infantry and Recon, the Corps had other plans for me. Late in Boot Camp I got my assignment and learned that I would be a Tank Crewman on the M60A1 Tank. I was a Loader, Driver and Gunner. Fort this I had to go to Tank School which was actually on an Army base, Ft. Knox, Kentucky. That was wild because there were like 80 Marines and like 30,000 Army dudes. Tank School was a bit miserable because it was in the winter, we hardly ever were allowed off base and there didn't seem to be much going on around Knox anyway.

After Tank School I reported to Camp Schwab, Okinawa in January of 1984. I was there for 3 weeks when they sent me on 5 months TAD to Camp Kinser on the southern part of the island to work at Naha Port. There I worked on the Near Term Prepositioned Force. Basically what it is is there are ships that float all around the world's hot spots with enough Tanks, Jeeps (now Humvees) Amtracs, Artillery, etc. to supply a Marine Expeditionary Unit. All that equiptment has to be serviced a couple times a year so I unloaded Tanks from the ships and did all sorts of preventitive maintenance on them and then reloaded them onto the ships. After 5 months it was back up to Camp Schwab again.

My whole unit rotated to 1st Tank Bn at the 41 Area (Los Flores) on Camp Pendleton. There we started doing a lot of field training. I joined another company that was going to the CAX (Combined Arms Exercise) at 29 Palms. (We also sometimes just called it desert training. After the Cax I stayed with that company and rotated with them to Camp Fuji, Japan for 4 months at the base of Mount Fuji. It snowed almost everyday there so I took vacation to the Phillipines right after the people Power Revolution in 1986. Went back to Fuji and our whole unit went to Camp Schwab on Okinawa again for 2 months and then it was back to Pendleton where I spent my remaining 11 months.

I made this deal with myself that if I saw combat in those 3 years then I would stay in and either become a Drill Instructor or a Tank Instructor because then I would owe it to the young Marines the benefit of my experience. But if I did not see combat there was no sense in me staying in. I had the plan in the beginning to do my one enlistment and that's it so that's what I did.

I don't regret it at all. I saw a lot of things, I went to a lot of places and learned a lot. It was a wild ride, a fantastic adventure. I packed 10 years of adventure into my 3 year stint. I enjoyed it greatly but I did not think I could maintain that gung-ho attitude for 20 years. I really just wanted to get on with my life and not worry about war.

To this day I have that dual nature. I have the Warrior Spirit and I have the side that craves and works for Peace. I suppose you can say that these days I am a Peace Warrior. Although I am not as completely pacifist as my Amish and Mennonite neighbors, I am a Christian and believe as Jesus said that "Blessed are the Peacemakers." I long for the days when men have beaten their swords into plowshares. War is terrible and cruel and to be avoided as much as humanly possible. It is also important that we have a Marine Corps and a military and that we have a segment of our population that is ready at any given time to put it all on the line for the greater good.

I could go on and on about this but for now this is good. By all means, tell your military stories, I love good stories...

Nice story.

I too went to Fort Benning for Army basic training, after Infantry school went to Germany, 8 infantry for the whole 3 years I was in. Did go to French Commando School and alot of field time. Once we went to the field for 45 days and I didn't take a shower once. I still applied camo paint on my face everyday. So, I was pretty smelly with lots of dingleberry's. Ha. Germany was a fun ass place. Got out as an E-4 and only had 2 article 15's and smoked hash and partied pretty much the whole time.
Got out in '89 moved to Boston and joined the National Guard. I was only in for 6 months and decided to join the Corps. I too went to Parris Island for Boot Camp. Graduated as an honor graduate. After SOI and MCT, shipped off for Okinawa. Stationed at Camp Hansen. Did lots of jungle training. Did the NTA at Camp Shwab. Deployed to Phillipines, Thailand and Korea during my stay. Then I was shipped to 29 Palms. Did the snow survival/skiing training at the mountain warfare school in Bridgeport, Did 3 months in Somalia when all that shit was going on. Lots and lots of training. But no real war and I am glad.

peacepipe36
07-26-2006, 01:44 PM
I was a crewchief on a UH-1H helicopter (it's the Huey, you know, 'Flight of the Valkyries" in "Apocolypse Now") from 88-93.

IanCurtisWishlist
07-26-2006, 07:56 PM
i can't join the service because of my history. but i'd do it if i could.

i appreciate the fact that our young men and women are willing to put their lifes on the line to fight war. however, i don't support war, in any case; unless, of course, we have a direct threat looming over us. Iraq, I feel, was not a direct threat. Sadaam Hussein is a schizoid mongolid idiot fucking madman who ought to be lynched in public by angry Kurds, but it makes me very upset knowing that our young boys and girls are dying for this shit. I support each and every soldier's efforts and courage, however I don't support most of the wars my country America has engaged in.

Thanks for my freedom, soldiers. But your leaders are fucking idiots, basically.

dopesmoker
07-26-2006, 08:51 PM
i've subbmitted all my papers and whatnot and now im just waiting for the military to tell me when all my tests are. My school has a military co-op where you are sworn into the reserves and are officially part of the military. Then you go and do your infantry courses just like any other soldier would, but i get 4 school credits and get paid $300 canadian a week. Then in the summer i have the option to finish my infantry training(which i plan on doing), then i have all my training, and when im 18 i can apply to serve overseas if i want to. (im 16 now)

benagain
07-26-2006, 09:12 PM
Has anyone ever heard or seen what the Navy does with garbage on their ships when they are out to sea. You guessed it..overboard. 1000's of bags of trash. Fuckin polluters

The Cruise ships to the same thing with thier sewage. In fact, they're trying to make it so they don't have to be so far out to see before they dump. Needless to say that us fisherman around port canaveral aren't too happy with it. I doub't they'll succeed anyway.

Anyway off topic again....Never served the military, but I have nothing but respect for those who did (do). Whether you did it for your country or your family (gotta keep them fed), you've got guts and you deserve a pat on the back (and a nice fat blunt) :thumbsup:

chisme
07-26-2006, 09:18 PM
Who would want to?


my thoughts exactly. if any huge wars went underway in our homeland half the people here would run back to their own countries.....funny how imigration works

benagain
07-26-2006, 09:25 PM
i can't join the service because of my history. but i'd do it if i could.

i appreciate the fact that our young men and women are willing to put their lifes on the line to fight war. however, i don't support war, in any case; unless, of course, we have a direct threat looming over us. Iraq, I feel, was not a direct threat. Sadaam Hussein is a schizoid mongolid idiot fucking madman who ought to be lynched in public by angry Kurds, but it makes me very upset knowing that our young boys and girls are dying for this shit. I support each and every soldier's efforts and courage, however I don't support most of the wars my country America has engaged in.

Thanks for my freedom, soldiers. But your leaders are fucking idiots, basically.

I kindof get your point. I used to lisetn to Rush Limbaugh and he was allways saying that it was impossible to support our troops, but not the president. I would try to call in to explain thats just not true, but I would never get through the lines. I also agree that the war wasn't needed (at least not yet), but once it got started, I dropped the political muck and focused support on the troops doing the job. I didn't want them to have to do it, but once they got started on the job, I'm behind them 100%.

napolitana869
07-26-2006, 09:27 PM
just wondering how many of you took your families over seas with you? my dad was in the navy 23 years so i spent most of my childhood on bases over seas.

seattle420
07-26-2006, 10:27 PM
well, no one ever fought in the military for my freedom!