Not going to be their job - plenty they could get done at Texas A&M and other Universities. Massively over staffed across the board.
The problem is that because of how the system is set up, you almost have to get your foot in the door for what at the time, seem like minor issues but continue to get worse as you age. I'm going thru that right now because I waited, so it has been a lot more difficult to say the issues are service connected. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to look at my medical records and see when and where all my issues began to figure out most of them stem from the burn pits we were around everyday. Because I waited the symptoms have become much worse, and tying it back to those burn pits has been a pain because I've been out for years. Same thing happened to my Uncle with exposure to agent orange. The system almost requires you to claim something to cover yourself as you get older and service connected problems get worse.IDaggie06 said:
I'm been told by several people who used to be on active duty that if you retire without getting some form of dissability, you are doing it wrong. Unfortunately it is becoming the norm for military to get disability for petty things.