Darth Vapour
Well-Known Member
Actually for the recordHey Darth.
Count to ten and simmer down just a bit. I am not going to get too deep here but our military is made up of all high school or collage grads. We haven't really looked at enlisting drop outs sense the draft and that ended back in the seventies. And they are all retired by now.
For the record.
According to a new report, three-quarters of young people ages 17-24 are ineligible to enlist in the military because they have either failed to graduate from high school, have a criminal record or are physically unfit.
Approximately one out of four young American adults lacks a high school diploma. And, while students who receive a general equivalency degree (GED) can sometimes receive a waiver of the graduation requirement, most do not score well enough on the military’s entrance exam to qualify. Additionally, about 30 percent of potential recruits with high school diplomas do not pass the entrance exam.
One in 10 young adults is prevented from enlisting by a conviction for a felony or serious misdemeanor.
Obesity is the third major factor identified by the report as preventing enlistment with an estimated 27 percent of young Americans identified as being too overweight to join the military. As the rate of obesity among American adults has more than doubled over the past four decades, America’s youth suffer from an obesity epidemic. Experts expect weight issues to prevent more potential recruits from enlisting in the coming years.
All told, these factors mean that, for 75 percent of young American adults, military service is not a career option. For many, military service also is a way to receive critical job training and reimbursement for college expenses.