Yes. Under the seventeenth ammendmant, the USPS has the power to terminate anyone judged unfit due to race, religion, gender, age or political views.
No
For any discharge of Honorable or General Under Honorable Conditions the answer is Yes. And in SOME CASES Less Than or Other Than Honorable you can as well.
It is a "General Under Honorable Conditions" discharge from the US military.
Yes, you can if there is a vacancy.
yes
The same Benefits as you would get, if it was a regular Honorable Discharge....except for the GI Bill. Only members with Honorable discharges are eligible for this benefit.
Yes.
it means a General discharg under Honorable comdisions
Military pay ends on the date of discharge, for honorable, general under honorable, general under less than honorable, and dishonoralbe discharges. There are no residual benefits for less than honorable or dishonorable discharges.
A general discharges is given to a service member whose performance is satisfactory, but is marked by a considerable departure in duty performance and conduct expected of military members. There is no specific discharge called "general discharge with honorable conditions."There are six types of discharges:HonorableGeneralOther than HonorableBad ConductDishonorableUncharachterized (or Entry Level Separation) -- neither good nor badSee more details about general discharge at the related links.
Yes, I did in 1985. Went from General Under Honorable Conditions to Honorable. Board was in Dallas Texas and once they found I was in college with all my VA benefits intack It was Granted. Got a new DD214 and a county job......
An honorable discharge can, on rare occasions, be granted to a former service member (whose service was characterized as less than honorable) as an act of clemency, should that person display exemplary post-service conduct and show evidence of outstanding post-service achievement in areas such as education and employment.