Not quite, I left on a hardship discharge as a single parent and received an Honorable Discharge and was combat arms.MeMelYup wrote:Not necessarily. A Gen With Honorable Condition can be for reasons that you were not able to complete a tour. Use to be, your wife died and you had to take care of the five kids and were nondeployable in a combat arms MOS you had to get out on a hardship discharge. Anything not of a disciplinary nature that a person could not complete their tour. Was elected as a State Representative while on active duty.SkipB wrote:I was going to stay away from this post but I'm going to have my say. An Honorable Discharge is what one gets after completing a commitment of time served in the service. A General Discharge is when the service just gets rid of you for what ever reason. For me looking at that I think you have already got way more than you deserve. When you try to put your situation in the same category as an Honorable Discharged service member is the same as Stolen Valor.
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Return to “Discharged "under honorable conditions" = not "honorably"”
- Thu Apr 09, 2015 3:29 pm
- Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
- Topic: Discharged "under honorable conditions" = not "honorably"
- Replies: 193
- Views: 49596