Do you regret becoming 88M? Where are you stationed? I talked to a recruiter over the phone yesterday and he told me to come into his office the 1st week of August, I want to be 88m
It depends on what your duty station is and if you are really seeking a lot of drive time but from my experience fort Campbell, bliss, hood, Germany, and korea.
Great video but I don’t agree completely about active being more efficient. We actually have lots of active in my reserve unit and even with them being fresh out a lot of them forget
I want to join usarmy as a 88m but i dont know wat to choose if i should go national guard or active duty im from jamaica im will be there in november and im also in the army in jamaica but my contract is gonna up in november so im gonna move to the us so im jus thinking
I always say go active first n try if uno don’t it you can always go national guard. But if uno went national guard first it is a difficult process to go active
Well think about it ..that’s like asking the difference between life and death. The seat is you only safety net if it’s to loose you die. I explained the time in the video
I was an 88M Motor Transport Operator for over 20 years in the Active Component, Kentucky Army National Guard & the Army Reserve. I spent a total of 24 years in the Army. I went up in rank from a Private to a First Sergeant/Master Sergeant & now enjoy the fruits of my labor in a monthly retirement check. I obtained my Commercial Driver's License (CDL) & drove various heavy vehicles for 10 years after retiring from the Army. The 88 Series Career Management Field (CMF) actually encompasses nearly a dozen transportation related Military Occupational Specialties (MOS') & several of the 88 Series MOS' are only available in the Army Reserve. Who would have ever thought that the Army has three (3) U.S. Army Transportation Corps RAILROAD Battalions? Though primarily for wartime activation & use, the Army must keep these units trained. I do not regret a single day as an 88M. After my Army Career, that MOS set me up to be a civilian truck driver. Training was free, the CDL was free & the money rolled in like the tires turning on the trucks - constantly! The Army Transportation Corps motto is "Nothing Happens Until Something Moves!"