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It may be a generation issue. Was WWII the first conflict in which the marines played a major role?

None of the major candidates for 2008 served in the USMC either. When might we see a marine president?

2007-07-18 09:33:03 · 15 answers · asked by Anonymous in Politics & Government Military

That's an excellent point, there are fewer Marines than the Army or Navy.

2007-07-18 10:08:42 · update #1

15 answers

The Corps is a small service. The only one smaller is the Coast Guard. And neither service has produced a veteran who went on to serve as President.
Even the Navy didn't send one of its veterans into the Presidency until the election of 1960. But, from JFK to Gerald Rudolph Ford, we had four Presidents in a row who were former Navy officers.
I only know of one prominent Marine who was " wooed" by political operatives. That was Smedley Butler who had served as Commandant of the Marines. In the early 1930s, a group tried to enlist him in overthrowing FDR and replacing Roosevelt with Butler in a military coup of sorts. To his credit, Butler stayed true to his oath to support and defend the Constitution against all enemies, foreign and domestic. He got on a train, went to D.C., appeared before a Congressional committee and blew the whistle on the plotters.
I think if some party does pick a former Marine as its standard bearer it will have to be from the ranks of State Governors. Keep your fingers crossed.

2007-07-18 10:39:19 · answer #1 · answered by desertviking_00 7 · 1 0

Let me share nothing but the facts. Read into them what you like.

After I graduated high school in 1975, I attempted to enlist in the Navy. Not being aware of what to review for regarding the tests that I would have to take to accomplish this endeavor, I missed on the general technical score by either 2 or 3 points, and was advised to review and retry later.

Two days later, I received a startling phone call. Even though I had not scored high enough to enter the Navy, the caller from the local USMC recruiting office said that my test scores would enable me to qualify for Officer Training in the Marine Corps. One not able to join the Navy due to educational reasons qualifies for OT in the Marines? Is this still true?

I joined, lost almost 40 pounds of unnecessary sedentary rocks around my midsection over the next six weeks and them was given an honorable discharge under general conditions due to a sleep walking disorder discovered during basic training.

2007-07-18 09:55:21 · answer #2 · answered by healthsys2 3 · 0 0

You forget that the Marine Corps is that much smaller than the other services, and by the way the Marine Corps played a major role well before WW2

2007-07-18 10:01:32 · answer #3 · answered by LAVADOG 5 · 2 0

I served as a attempt against medic in Vietnam. on the induction middle and in many places of work on protection rigidity posts, that they had posters with the words, God, accountability and united states of america. in the progressive conflict the protection rigidity commanders have been Pastors and clergymen. God is often first, then accountability and united states of america. each and every unit has Chaplains of each and every faith and not something is compelled on you in case you're atheist. they purely aid you recognize that this united states of america became in keeping with Christian values and ideology. we live in a united states of america, and the only one, the place you're loose to worship the variety you prefer. the protection rigidity preserves that freedom. On perfect of that, the Marines or any branch for that count, is a superb thank you to get far flung from detrimental impacts and study, not in straightforward terms appropriate to the international, yet your self. Plus, once you're finished, you have many reward and a powerful innovations and physique to artwork with and occupation probability is countless. Semper Fidelis is the Marines slogan. They shorten it to Semper Fi. It means, constantly elementary. Get used to it and after Boot Camp i'd be proud to shake your hand and say Semper Fi, even inspite of the indisputable fact that i became military and served in the 1st Cavalry branch. The Marines served next to us like brothers. stable success and would God bless.

2016-09-30 06:45:11 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Just the way it turned out. If you are insinuating that there is a bias against Marines becoming President, it's not true. Like I said, it is just the way it goes.

Nothing personal against the Corps.

2007-07-18 09:41:52 · answer #5 · answered by SgtMoto 6 · 1 0

Because Marines are true leaders and americans don't want someone to make the better decision for the country instead of there own selfish desires

2007-07-18 15:29:44 · answer #6 · answered by Steve 1 · 1 0

the Marine Corps was founded in Tun Tavern PA in 1775. I think a Marine would make a great President.

2007-07-18 09:37:22 · answer #7 · answered by John S 4 · 2 1

Because Marines like to get things done. They don't like to politic. As for the bonehead that said people from wealthy families don't join the Corps, he should tell that to Fred Smith.

2007-07-18 09:50:07 · answer #8 · answered by Bam Bam M 2 · 0 0

A mArine would be an awesome President. Semper Fi!

2007-07-18 09:40:44 · answer #9 · answered by badassp51 2 · 0 0

we haven't seen a U.S.president who served in the marine corps because none has been elected. we will see one when one is elected.it's pretty simple really, don't try and over think the issue, because it's not a issue/

2007-07-18 10:08:20 · answer #10 · answered by darrell m 5 · 0 0

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