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6/26/2025, 7:17:26 AM
>>63896420
>I just declined my national 4-year marine ROTC scholarship because I feel like too much of an autistic depressive loser with physical deficiencies to make it. Instead I will be bringing my deficiencies into the air force, and paying for a couple years of college because I was too lazy (and depresed) to apply for the air force scholarship during the season for it.
AFROTC is arguably more competitive than Marine/Navy ROTC. Air Force gets a high volume of officer applicants and have a lower number of spots. During bad years, AFROTC selection rates can be in the 50%. Good years more like 90%. You won’t know until your year happens, but it’s fair to guess the bottom 30% of your cadet class isn’t making it.
The physical standards are somewhat lower for the Air Force, but cadets are expected to do well on the test. You are, of course, trying to come in outranking 80% of the operational AF, many of whom score at least 90 (if not 100) on the PT test. 90 is your expectation. 95+ should be your goal. 100 is very doable, especially for the female standards (which are frankly too easy even accounting for biological differences between men and women).
Also, pilot is not guaranteed in Air Force ROTC, and I would say like 50% of those retards want to be a pilot. All you can do is do your best and tell them what you want. No guarantees you get it. Flight physical can also do you in, but you can’t control that either.
I’d say AFROTC is the way to go, but it’s not the “easier” route in the way you think it is. It’s easier in some ways, but being a bare minimum sandbagger will get you non-selected come sophomore year.
>I just declined my national 4-year marine ROTC scholarship because I feel like too much of an autistic depressive loser with physical deficiencies to make it. Instead I will be bringing my deficiencies into the air force, and paying for a couple years of college because I was too lazy (and depresed) to apply for the air force scholarship during the season for it.
AFROTC is arguably more competitive than Marine/Navy ROTC. Air Force gets a high volume of officer applicants and have a lower number of spots. During bad years, AFROTC selection rates can be in the 50%. Good years more like 90%. You won’t know until your year happens, but it’s fair to guess the bottom 30% of your cadet class isn’t making it.
The physical standards are somewhat lower for the Air Force, but cadets are expected to do well on the test. You are, of course, trying to come in outranking 80% of the operational AF, many of whom score at least 90 (if not 100) on the PT test. 90 is your expectation. 95+ should be your goal. 100 is very doable, especially for the female standards (which are frankly too easy even accounting for biological differences between men and women).
Also, pilot is not guaranteed in Air Force ROTC, and I would say like 50% of those retards want to be a pilot. All you can do is do your best and tell them what you want. No guarantees you get it. Flight physical can also do you in, but you can’t control that either.
I’d say AFROTC is the way to go, but it’s not the “easier” route in the way you think it is. It’s easier in some ways, but being a bare minimum sandbagger will get you non-selected come sophomore year.
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