acbytesla
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Dec 14, 2012
- Messages
- 39,534
He committed to six additional years of service in 2001 and said he would deploy with his unit as late as March 2005 then retired during May 2005. However, he had every right to retire, any time after 20 years, for whatever reason, if permitted, and he was permitted.
At least one of the costs of that permission to retire at 24 instead of 26 years was his recent conditional promotion to Command Sergeant Major. The retirement precluded his completion of the Sergeants Major Academy and the required additional two years of service as Command Sergeant Major. I think he knew that he shouldn't call himself a retired Command Sergeant Major, regardless of when the reversion to Master Sergeant was instated, yet he did. This seems like an insult to anyone who permanently earned the rank and verifiably calls themselves a retired Command Sergeant Major.
It's okay to think it's trivial or petty but I think it reflects poorly on him and that the military community might rightly bristle at it.
It is trivial. And your post is campaign nonsense. It doesn't reflect poorly on him and I don't know a single person who has served in the military who thinks it does. And I am surrounded by them.
The percentage of Americans that have served this country in the military is about 5 percent. That is 1 out of 20. The number of people that have retired from the military after 20 years is about .05 percent or 1 out of 200.
That Governor Walz decided after 20 years to serve another 6 years and then decided 24 is enough because he wanted to pursue other interests is hardly a reason for denigrating the man.
All, anyone with any class would ever say to Sergeant Walz is, "Thank you for your service."
And leave it at that.
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