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2 Few, 2 ProudHow not to become a MarineALEX BRANT-ZAWADZKIPublished on May 25, 2006
Now, no job, no car and a jail sentence hanging over my head—long story—being one of the few and proud, not to mention employed and fed, is an attractive prospect, especially since news reports tell us that dwindling numbers have made military recruiters so desperate they'll take practically anyone. Hey, I'm anyone! So one Friday morning, I'm off to meet Marine Corps Officer Selection Officer Captain Randall Horner. Now all that remains is a trip to the recruitment office . . . which I can't find. Could this be part of the recruitment process? Is there a recruitment process? The New York Times reported last year that recruiters allegedly hid or altered police and medical records and took a bipolar kid fresh from the hospital. That sounds more like fraud, but what measure are words in wartime? I call twice to get proper directions, and I stumble across the place only when muscular men in crew cuts emerge from a particular door—a door with a Marine insignia. Semper found! I stick my head into one office and ask where I can find the officer selection officer. Turns out I've snuck in the back door—infiltrated a military installation, as it were—and I'm redirected to the front. The office I'm sent to is a bit smaller than a one-car garage, and the walls are covered with framed shirts from various battle groups, each trying to out-badass the other, to wit: "Pain is inevitable. Suffering is optional." Two desks take up most of the space, with chairs and what looks like comic memorabilia occupying the rest. One Marine, a stocky Latino, sternly interviews an Asian college student who takes up about a third as much space as the sergeant. The room's other occupant, Staff Sgt. Petrisevac, invites me to sit down, and I tell myself he's not looking too hard at my noodle arms. He's fairly thin himself, but in a sinewy, toned way. He could kick my ass. We both know it. STEP 2: HAVE FEW/NO PRACTICAL SKILLS What inspired me to consider the Marines? I wax patriotic about serving my country, I talk about the frustrations of writing, and I mumble about being inspired by Robert Heinlein's Starship Troopers—the book, not the film. Petrisevac smiles knowingly. It turns out—oh, happy coincidence—that that particular novel is on the Commandante of the Marine Corps' reading list. What skills do I have? Well, I write. I'm a writer, not a fighter, I like to say; kinda inappropriate now. Yeah, so writing's about it. I do bake a mean batch of chocolate-chip cookies. And lasagna. I like lasagna. Petrisevac looks down at some papers in his hand for a while, taps his pen on his thigh, then looks up. There's plenty of opportunity to write for the Corps, he tells me, as long as I'm up to scratch. I nod. What is scratch? STEP 3: USE RECREATIONAL DRUGS Married? Nope. We share a shallow chuckle. Kids? Surely not. Drugs? Well—what if I had a prescription for medical marijuana? Petrisevac looks up quickly. "Yeah, you'll have to quit that. If you want to sign up, you'll need a clean system. Stop any substance abuse for at least 30 days." But it's medicinal. What happens if I get nauseated and vomit in basic training? I tell Petrisevac about prisoners being given synthetic marijuana derivatives in prison. He's not familiar with this. "You'd better just not talk about it," he says. By now, the other interviewee has departed and I'm shuttled over to Staff Sgt. Lopez—imposing in crew cut and preposterously bulging T-shirt despite his skimpy shorts. He looks me up and down, standing briefly to shake my hand. He isn't afraid of anything, and certainly not drug use. "We've all got pasts," he says. STEP 4: HAVE SEVERELY LIMITED VISION The Navy deploys the world's third-largest air force (behind the USAF and China), but it's becoming increasingly obvious I won't be joining their ranks. In Starship Troopers, Juan "Johnnie" Rico wants to become a pilot in the Federal Service, mainly to get with his sexy classmate Carmencita. When asked to choose a duty, his first choice is pilot and his last is mobile infantry (the grunts). He ends up getting fired out of spaceships in a giant gorilla battle suit. From the way Lopez is looking at me, I don't think I'm getting the gorilla suit, let alone a Harrier.
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