volfanbill
pack light and love heavy…
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- Sep 6, 2006
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I've always heard Irwin is far worse than Polk, but I've fortunately never been to either.
And, good, or bad, I'm DA Select for Army Recruiter, so I'm not going to a military base. I had six places to choose from and I got to rank them:
1. Nashville (covers Tennessee and lots of Kentucky)
2. Raleigh (Covers North Carolina)
3. San Antonio (covers South Texas (due to my inability to speak Spanish, this might be a no go))
4. Tampa, Fl (covers central Florida)
5. Houston (east Texas)
6. Syracuse (western upstate NY)
Knowing the Army, I won't wind up in any of those places.
There’s a lot to unpack here. A lot of times talking just to recruits, you aren’t just talking to the recruit. The family wants confirmation their kid is going to be taken care of and it also helps the recruit if you can speak Spanish to him. That’s the short version, I’m not really excited to unpack the intricate details, so I hope this is good enough.Do recruits not have to speak English? Not going political but more practical. How would they know the orders they are given?
Makes total cents.There’s a lot to unpack here. A lot of times talking just to recruits, you aren’t just talking to the recruit. The family wants confirmation their kid is going to be taken care of and it also helps the recruit if you can speak Spanish to him. That’s the short version, I’m not really excited to unpack the intricate details, so I hope this is good enough.
There’s a lot to unpack here. A lot of times talking just to recruits, you aren’t just talking to the recruit. The family wants confirmation their kid is going to be taken care of and it also helps the recruit if you can speak Spanish to him. That’s the short version, I’m not really excited to unpack the intricate details, so I hope this is good enough.
We would see that in the San Francisco VA. The patients (veterans) could speak English, but family members might only speak Tagalog, Chinese, etc. And if the providers could speak the other language, they would a lot of times even with the veteran to help him or her relax.Sure. Just curious. In my world this is a topic due to safety information all being in English.
Exactly. Puts the recruit at ease and the family.We would see that in the San Francisco VA. The patients (veterans) could speak English, but family members might only speak Tagalog, Chinese, etc. And if the providers could speak the other language, they would a lot of times even with the veteran to help him or her relax.
