Honorable discharges are legitimate for any job, including law enforcement agencies.
That being said, if you were discharged for incompetent or illegal actions, the police may recognize and disqualify you for that.
But, in general, an honorable discharge is still considered "leaving on good terms".
Unfortunately, yes.
Discharge for overweight Marines is an Other Than Honorable discharge, however it has been known that a few have had theirs modified to honorable via considerable work with their congressman.
A Honorable Discharge
Depends on the individuals Commander. In most cases an honorable discharge is given.
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.
If you are referring to an Honorable Discharge from the military after having been convicted of reckless driving - I would say your chances are probably pretty good if the rest of your military service was exemplary. At the very least you might receive a General DIscharge Under Honorable Conditions.
You can always re-enlist with an honorable discharge. Also, being gay is no longer an issue.
After being arrested and court-martialed during boot camp after he refused to move to the back of a segregated bus during training, Jackie Robinson was later acquitted of the charges and received an honorable discharge in 1944 from the United States Army.
Since the repeal of DADT, Don't ask, don't tell, they get a regular honorable discharge as long as they serve their enlistment and don't get in trouble. Just being Gay is no longer a reason to be discharged.
No. If you commit a crime as a civilian after you've been separated from the military, it has no impact on your discharge. Not that it really matters - you get convicted for a capital crime, no discharge is going to better your life after prison, assuming you eventually get paroled.
Retirement nets you an honourable discharge, but not all honourably discharged personnel are retirees. If you enlist for three, four, etc. years, perform your duties like you're supposed to, and decide not to reenlist, you're discharged when your contract expires. You receive an honourable discharge based on the character of your service. Someone who retires still receives such a discharge, but now we're talking about someone who has reenlisted multiple times, and will be collecting a pension.
Purchase from where, and discharged from where? If this is a military question, it's circumstantial. A regular honorable discharge due to ETS, no. A disability discharge, you MIGHT be able to retain some PX/Commisary privileges. Same with retirement.