B
BoomBoomMancini
Guest
To be clear, I’m not laying into your people. I’m not saying this applies to all or even most junior enlisted folks. Just that the ones I see most vocally complaining about being underpaid are the ones who are trying to live a lifestyle completely inappropriate for a 19 year old. And yes, it IS my business who they’re supporting, if they’re asking for more money out of the public treasury. If you’re 19 years old and making 25k a year, maybe thinking, “Yup, it’s time I settled down and started a family” is not the brightest idea you’ve ever had.Lay off my people, please. I was enlisted once; in 1996 I cleared $414 a paycheck - and that was well below minimum wage for a Federal police officer who was also K9 trained, with the exact same training that the Secret Service and other Federal agencies received (back then I had an FAA agent in my class and two US Customs agents, along with military members, as all K9 handlers for all Federal agents are trained at Lackland AFB by my service). I worked 50-60 hour weeks, spent literally months on call because for a while I was the only non-deployed explosive team on base, and in general more than earned my $818 a month, while the Federal agents with the same level of experience made three times that in 1996.
We as leaders should be doing more to encourage long term thinking and responsibility. “Look, you’ve known this girl for two months, have you really thought through this whole marriage idea?” is an uncomfortable conversation, but it can be a very necessary one.
And if you were enlisted in '96, I think you might be a little out of date. The pay is much better now, even adjusting for inflation, and there probably aren’t too many federal agents today (to go with your comparison) who are 19 and have no education or experience. And again, factor in all the benefits unique to the military: free healthcare. Pension or matching TSP. If you’re junior enlisted, you’re living free in the barracks. Yeah, it ain’t fancy, but neither are the college dorms your peers are living in. You can eat free in the chow hall. You’re working out for free in the base gym. For a lot of junior enlisted folks, their only real expense is their cell phone bill. And again, that Post 9/11. You realize that that can be worth hundreds of thousands of dollars?
I’m not saying military pay is extravagant or anything, but I do think it’s more or less a fair trade for the junior folks, considering the benefits and the the fact that you can come on board with nothing but a high school diploma.