Xequecal wrote:
Diamondeye wrote:
Not even close, unless you're going to count pay by all 24 hours in a day for the entire deployment, which is silly because A) you're not working all 24 hours and B) who cares? Minimum hourly wage sucks in the U.S. because you're trying to get by on 8 hours a day, 5 days a week of it. The amount I'm making per week still vastly exceeds what a minimum wage person could make in a work week.
In my case, I'm a senior Captain so my pay is pretty high to begin with. There's also hazard pay of various types on top of all this, and no income taxes.
Yes, 12/12 is brutal, but its only for a year, there's nothing else really to do (well there is, but you can only watch so many movies, play so much softball, etc.) and there's not a lot to spend money on. You sleep free, eat free, and if you're not a dumbass spending all your money on snacks, video games, extra gear that isn't issued to you and you don't really need anyhow, or buying a motorcycle or a car you come home with an assload of money in the bank, plus a nice little form you can add to any future job application - especially any government job - saying you're a combat veteran. All this plus whatever nice skills you learned from your MOS.
Really, don't be ridiculous. 12/12 is a reason not to join the military? It's only like that in the field and in combat. Please, don't sign up. We don't need more whiners.
84 hours per week at $7.25 per hour is $31,668 per year. According to
this chart, that's about the equivalent of an E-6 with 4 years of service. Now I realize I'm probably not matching rank and years of service well, (I don't really know how many years of service generally corresponds to what rank) but that's not a low rank and with 4 years of experience you get minimum wage for the work you do.
When you say, "no income tax," are you referring to the fact that you don't make enough to pay income tax, or are military members exempt from paying income tax?
An E-6 with 4 years of service is a very, very competant E-6; its highly unusual to be any higher than E-5 at 4 years.
Military members are exempt for Federal income tax during any month in which they are in a combat area for any one day. When not in a combat area they are not exempt.
You don't get all this back in a tax refund either; it's in an actual paycheck. IIRC it was a separate check at the end of the month. Don't ask why; the vagaries of DFAS are beyond my comprehension.
In any case, who gives a **** if the hourly wages are the same? You're still not making minimum wage for any practical purpose. It only appears that way if you insist on comparing it hourly. Where can you find a minimum wage job you can make $31,000 a year at?
By the way, that's only basic pay. That doesn't include things like your housing and expense allowances, hazard/combat pay, etc.
And yes, a Captain is an O-3.