It’s never too late to get involved.
Staff Sergeant Monte L. Gould, a 59-year-old veteran, graduated from Army boot camp in the top 10 percent of his class.
This is the second time that Staff Sgt. Gould has graduated from Army basic training. His first time was in 1978, when he first entered the military. He initially served in the Marine Corps, then in the Army National Guard with a Civil Affairs unit, with which he deployed to Afghanistan, and finally finished off his enlistment with a stint to a Psychological Operations unit.
In 2009, Gould left the military, only three years away from retirement, to spend more time with his family and pursue a career in law enforcement.
thunderstorms are coming into a lot. a lot of people a lot of the region. that s going to hurt some of the people we can t find. families unaccounted for at the rescue and search efforts.e wine moment my brother s wife can t find her. last time he saw her she was pg keeping that high water like the clinging to a piece of card images you just showed moments board. and we found him stuck in the ago from receding. when you have the airfield here tree. and free port here and the dozens have been rescued by in all-volunteer force, erin but inuntags of water as long as the winds continue, the water can t there are so many people out there, just stop for a second to recede. the airport had five to six feet imagine they are entering the third night. just completely submerging it. they will be in the dark. once the waters recede then they unlikely to have food or water and they are waiting for rescue, can inspect the airfield just to a rescue that could take hours or days more to come, er
president nixon the day you were awarded. how has the action of being there you are. how has the action of being awarded the medal of honor changed? well, our wars have changed. we used to fight continuously, and now we fight in fragmented place at fragmented times with a force that s an all-volunteer force and therefore not necessarily representative of everybody. we i think there s a large and i think in certain cases insurmountable gap that s opened up between the people who ve served and the people who are serving. that wasn t the case back in the day. our friend paul rykoff made this point last week. he s the founter of iraq and afghanistan veterans administration, iava. he s tired of the military used as a shield, hearing people blaming the sthant take a knee protest in the nfl on the troops