You made the effort which is a lot more than 85% of Americans. I have friends who were mustered out for medical reasons; blown knees and high blood pressure were the most common.
Thanks for serving.You are light years ahead of those who served longer but broke their oaths.
Thank you for your thank you... But I really do not feel like I served served... If you know what I mean.
I really would not have commented so adamantly on most aspects of serving, but I have had a lot of real experience on the medical aspects of serving. I can speak to that.
I am a bit of an armchair general, and freely admit that I am just an armchair general. I got involved with it back when I was in JR ROTC, and have never been able to completely shake it.
The Ukrainian War is fascinating, because Ukraine is really an extension of the Northern European Plains. The same environment stretches from the Netherlands, through Germany and Poland, and into Ukraine. The Russians are using the weapons and strategies of the USSR, and the Ukrainians are testing out the weapons and strategies of NATO.
It is the great test of the war we spent half a century preparing for. The war where the USSR attacked Western Germany and tried to drive to the sea. Vietnam and Iraq were totally different environments and very different enemies. This is the sanity test to all the plans and all the weapons systems.
I am going to quit my job soon, and might take a few months off to just nerd out at being an armchair general before starting something productive again. I doubt I would be useful to the Ukrainians, but it is a fascinating thing to study.