[quote=Mazomaniac;976475]Cops and firemen "put on the uniform" and put their lives up for it every day (unlike the vast majority of the military who never come in harms way any time during their entire careers). [quote]
What source are you quoting? See below -
Again, firemen do not go into every fire. Sometimes they stand off and keep the fire from spreading. Service members do not have that option.
BTW “The starting salary for a San Francisco firefighter is now over $70,000, and cops start anywhere between $75,000 and $101,000. In 2007, Mayor Gavin Newsom negotiated a generous union contract with both the Police Officers and the Firefighters Union for his re-election – that gave each group 23% raises over four years.” [June 2009]
http://www.beyondchron.org/news/index.php?itemid=7083
September 19, 2009
Since September 11, 2001, more than 1.9 million U.S. service members have deployed to Afghanistan, Iraq, or support operations overseas -- most of them once, many twice, a few three times or more. Of that total, half come from a single service: the Army.
From a historical perspective, the remarkable point is how modest that growth is. With about 550,000 soldiers on active duty today, the regular Army is just 14.6 percent larger than it was in September 2001. That is well below Cold War levels and barely more than one-third the 1968 Vietnam-era peak of 1.5 million.
http://nationaljournal.com/magazine/the-army-s-growing-pains-20090919?mrefid=site_search
Who’s doing what – June 2008
Data compiled by HRC between Oct. 1, 2001, and March 1 shows that 63.6 percent of active-duty soldiers had deployment history, 9.2 percent had pending deployment orders, 7.4 percent were in basic training and 1.7 percent were unavailable to deploy because of medical, legal or other circumstances.
Another 11.5 percent of the active-duty population was listed as recruiters or drill sergeants; in transit, training or some other hold status; or in operational units that may have just redeployed and have no current deployment orders.
The remaining 6.7 percent of soldiers — about 35,000 active-duty troops — are eligible for reassignment to operational units or for an individual replacement requirement. They work in non-operational units, largely under organizations such as Training and Doctrine Command or the Pentagon.
Deployment numbers will never reach a 100 percent rate, according to HRC officials, because of the constantly shifting nature of the Army’s population. That includes growth of the force, which is programmed to reach 547,000 by the end of fiscal 2010, and the loss of soldiers who leave the Army at a rate of about 80,000 each year, taking their deployment history with them.”
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2008/06/army_deployequity_060708w/
Here is a 2007 snapshot of the current state of 41 combat brigades and three Cavalry Regiments in the active Army.
■Of the Army’s 44 combat brigades today, all but the First Brigade of the Second Infantry Division, which is permanently based in South Korea, have served at least one tour. Of the remaining 43:
– 12 Brigades have had one tour in Iraq or Afghanistan
– 20 Brigades have had two tours in Iraq or Afghanistan
– 9 Brigades with three tours in Iraq or Afghanistan
– 2 Brigades with four tours in Iraq or Afghanistan
■Army policy recommends that after 12 months of deployment in a war zone, combat troops should come home for 24 months for recuperation and retraining before returning to combat. The Army has been forced to violate this policy many times.
■Army policy recommends that troops return home after 12 months of deployment in a war zone. Due to overextension, the Army has been forced to violate this policy many times.
■Because each brigade has ongoing rotations of individual troops, the fact that a given brigade has deployed three or four times does not necessarily mean that a particular soldier has also deployed that many times. Nonetheless, the number of troops that have served in Iraq—and who have served more than one tour—is staggering:
– 1.4 million military (Army and other service) troops have served in Iraq or Afghanistan; 650,000 Army soldiers have been deployed to these countries
– More than 420,000 troops have deployed more than once; 170,000 Army soldiers have been deployed more than once
– 169,558 Marines have deployed to Iraq or Afghanistan more than once
– More than 410,000 National Guard and Reservists have been deployed to Iraq or Afghanistan since 2001, for an average of 18 months per mobilization; of these, more than 84,00 have been deployed more than once.
http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2007/03/readiness_report.html