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Disgruntled Veterans

Published: 2025-08-09
Last Updated: 2025-08-09

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Many veterans serve successfully in the military between the ages of 17 and 21, after high school graduation and return home for 4 years of non active duty discharge. The parameters have changed slightly now that the maximum first age of enrollment has been changed to 35 to 40 years old.

Disgruntled veterans often go to service expecting to come back into civilian quarters with the riches and fortune of a millionare. They are often classified as unable to survive on their own within civilian quarters.

This is because most civilians have difficulty paying for all their things and still having money for donations or charity. In fact both charities and non profits have been asked to defer to the Congressional Budget Office for funding instead of asking for donations from the public.

People who volunteer with veterans will often have some type of function they do for an organization that is contracted or subcontracted from the VA. The VA mostly is in place to determine if the veteran can re-enter civilian quarters or if they have ongoing issues that would prevent integration with civilians; such as not being able to survive independently or being too aggressive.

Veterans can expect to go through their VA Tap program and sign up for the same programs other civilians have access to. Additional benefits would often be classified as a disability cost and the civilian workers would often sue the Pentagon or request funding for their additional care from the White House or Congressional Budget Office.

Veterans who are not able to integrate in civilian quarters due to aggression or non feasibility of survival can expect to have a reclassification hearing. This may result in a prolonged stay at a military infirmiry or a fitness test to re-enter a battlefield.

People entering military service after 2015 are aware of the VA Tap Program and Military Onesource which is viewed as the military entry or re-entry process.


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