Thank you, sir, for your service to our country. As the big sister to a wonderful Marine who served 4 tours in Iraq, and came home to live on disability after watching many of his platoon die through the years, I am grateful. It's an honorable passion that you have, to serve those soldiers who came home injured physically and mentally. I see those injuries in my baby brother when he remembers how one of his "brothers' died in his arms after stepping on a landmine.
It is with all due respect (and that is alot of respect) that I wonder if you went into the interview sounding as arrogant as your initial post sounded? I am sure that you did not intend to sound that way, but you did and it is a put off.
Thank you for your kindness here. I may have crossed paths with your brother at some point based on what you mention. Was he in the Battle of Nasiriyah in 2003? I'll never forget what I saw there... some spots in Fallujah, Al Kut, and Karbala as well, but enough of that.
I suppose I may have conveyed arrogance, but there are items to consider:
-This medium may leave some of my content lost in translation
-I was angry last night as I wrote it
-There is a fine line between confidence and arrogance
The job only pays $16 an hour, only gives 36 hours a week, and is only available if government grants continue to flow. I can't imagine that there are many folks with high pedigrees and veteran status looking for this. Couple this with the fact that the state I currently live in (Mississippi) is 51st in education, and that many jobs are had through social networking (good ole boy southern stuff)... and I believe that I have just cause to be skeptical.