Depends on what ranks the police is and what rank the military personnel is. It can switch off
It depends on various factors such as rank, years of service, and location. Generally, higher-ranking military officers can earn more than police officers, while lower-ranking military personnel generally earn less. However, it is important to note that military service often comes with additional benefits and allowances that can offset lower base pay.
A sniper in the military would get paid appropriate to their pay grade. The same is true for a police sniper. A sniper other than police or military is considered an assassin.
These are comparable professions with comparable rates of pay.
What you're being paid in the military is ridiculous. It is very hard to find anyone willing to loan to military because they're already paid most than more people but definitely not enough. Good luck and God bless.
You would not be paid more than the limit on the policy you paid for.You would not be paid more than the limit on the policy you paid for.You would not be paid more than the limit on the policy you paid for.You would not be paid more than the limit on the policy you paid for.
Military police officers are much deadlier than they are so yes they will open fire if the bad guys did not listen.Added: Military Police operate under an entirely different set of rules, regulations, standards and laws that civilian police agencies.
Here are opinions and answers from FAQ Farmers: * Currently, the USAF leases their cars, and Chevy won the contract. So, a Chevy Impala civilian police car and a Chevy Impala USAF patrol car are pretty much the same. I would expect the civilian cars to be more customized after ordering though. * The difference is a civil police car is used by local police agencies that deal with day-to-day crime, while a military police car is used by the military to police military establishments. The biggest difference is that military work on a different radio frequency than a civil police department and the military does not engage in high speed chases that civil police do.
No, military pay is based on rank and years of service, not gender. Men and women in the military receive equal pay for equal work and are subject to the same pay scales and regulations.
You are paid at the police recruit level, which is obviously less than an actual officer is paid and varies from state to state etc. You are paid as an employee of the city and or state that your going to be an officer in and you also are given health benefits.
Almost certainly, no. There are about 800,000 law enforcement officers in the United States, where there are around 1.4 million people on active duty in the U.S. military, with another 850,000 in the various reserve and National Guard components. Assuming there is at least one firearm available for every member of the military, the military would have the police outgunned almost 3 to 1. Moreover, the military has much more powerful and larger weapons than the police, who use mainly pistols, shotguns, and semi-automatic rifles similar to those carried by infantry. The military uses far more ammunition than the police. Police officers qualify with their weapons at intervals ranging from one to six times per year, and typically fire 50 rounds at each qualification. Military riflemen expend many times that number of rounds on any exercise, and that doesn't take into account the ammunition used by machine guns, artillery, grenadiers, etc.
It all depends on your rank. Enlisted get paid far less than officers. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Well the above answer is right. But there are many ranks in the military. Each one has a different pay grade and as you stay in the military your pay goes up because likely it is that you have more experience. Once you have been the military for four years as an enlisted man you can take the test for becoming an officer. Once you are an officer you will get paid more than an enlisted because you have four years of service already as an enlisted member. If you choose to go to college and take ROTC classes and you pass the test in college you will be commissioned as a Second Lieutenant. Then you will get paid more than enlisted but not as much as you would if you had four years as an enlisted. So it all depends on the amount of experience that you have-- and your rank.
cilivian rule is better than military because cilivian are more civilized than the military they are more peaceful than military
Of course an MP can become a civilian police officer after military service. He or she applies just as one without any police experience would apply. He or she will go through the police academy as a recruit the same way as those without experience. They will find the training easier than a raw recruit but the training is substantianaly different than the military since it addresses civilian procedures and laws.