arushbhai said:Also, If I am not successful in St Jean, I get discharged, basically i lose 1 year of my life?
arushbhai said:When you do ROTP, do you do as a cadet officer, second lieutenant or lieutenant? because in forces.ca, ROTP is included in all 3 ranks with different salary. What does that mean?
Pusser said:Under ROTP, while you are in university, you will be an Officer Cadet (or Naval Cadet if you wear a naval uniform) and paid as such in accordance with the ROTP pay scale. Once you graduate and are commissioned you will continue to be paid in accordance with the ROTP pay scale up to the rank of Captain (= Lieutenant(N) in the Navy). Simply put, junior officers of equal rank (except for Captains/Lieutenants(N)) and seniority are paid at different rates depending on their entry plans. This has no bearing on their employment, training progress or level of responsibility.
MGalantine said:and in my personal opinion, if you're doing the reserves solely to benefit your policing dreams... then what do you have to offer them? Why should they take you?
arushbhai said:I live in Mississauga and thinking about joining the reserves. The only problem is, I wanted to join the Military police reserve which in my area, I have armour reserve. Do you think, It will help me become a cop? My goal is to get as much experience as possible from reserve so my resume looks good for police when I apply. I am taking criminal justice in humber college. Its a degree program. What are your thoughts? Am I doing it right so far? Should I go ahead and apply for Reserves? even though the one I wanted to join doesnt exist in my area
greydak said:Also I find in these type of situations, they generally make poor soldiers and even worse team players and thus don't do well in the military, and the police usually pickup on this trait and don't hire them.
greydak said:I have witnessed many soldiers come and go with the same intent as you, and waste everyone's time and money.
Also I find in these type of situations, they generally make poor soldiers and even worse team players and thus don't do well in the military, and the police usually pickup on this trait and don't hire them.
arushbhai said:Do you think, It will help me become a cop? My goal is to get as much experience as possible from reserve so my resume looks good for police when I apply.
ballz said:You may have an opinion about "these type" being "poor soldiers and even worse team players," but you're insinuating that having the Reserves on your resume is going to show up as a negative, and that's a load of bullshit.
You make it sound so "Go big or go home" and that's just not the case.
I'll say it again, if the CF didn't want to be "used as a stepping stone" they wouldn't advertise "we make a great stepping stone!"
N. McKay said:I don't mean to sound confrontational, but how do you know why the police don't hire them?
greydak said:I'll stand by my opinion that guys who use the CF for their personal benefit are a "load of bullshit" as you so eloquently put it
+1Searyn said:Doesn't every soldier use the CF for their own personal benefit?
They all get paid right?
(Just playing Devils Advocate )
greydak said:Simmer down there pal, First I didn't say the reserves is any kind of negative, only that tours would look better, have another read..
greydak said:As for the "Go big or go home" theory of work ethic, whats wrong with that?