Home > Children Recruited in the USA: ’Enlistment bonuses’ offered to 14 yr olds
Children Recruited in the USA: ’Enlistment bonuses’ offered to 14 yr olds
by Open-Publishing - Friday 15 April 200539 comments
In an effort to increase its ranks for coming wars, the U.S. military is recruiting - and paying - children as young as 14 years old for future combat duty.
By Tim Schmitt
Colin Hadley spends most of his days after school skateboarding or playing Halo II on his new X-Box with friends. He sleeps until noon or later on weekends and rarely, if ever, does any schoolwork outside the classroom, where he pulls down solid C’s and a few D’s - just enough to get by. He’s the typical 15-year-old American boy: cocksure in demeanor, certain the world revolves around him, and confident that life is going to serve him well.
And he’s the new "target of interest" for U.S. military recruiters who’ve begun signing up boys as young as 14 for military service, which they will be required to begin when they turn 18.
"It’s a sweet deal," says Hadley, who boasts that he bought his X-Box with the enlistment bonus he received after signing up last month. "I don’t have to do hardly anything for three years, but they’re paying me now."
Hadley’s windfall was made possible under the Pentagon’s "pre-enlistment program" that was quietly authorized last month in an effort to ensure the number of military troops available for combat remains steady for at least the next few years. The conditions of the program are simple. A young man who is at least 14 years old and has a parent’s permission can enlist in the U.S. military, but will not report to duty until he reaches the legal age. The future soldier agrees to remain "physically and mentally fit" and to undergo annual physical examinations at the Military Entrance and Processing Station (MEPS). In exchange, the government provides him a $10,000 sign-on bonus that is paid in yearly installments of $2,500 until the age of 18, at which time any remaining balance is given to the recruit.
And while waiting to report to duty at 18, the new recruits are paid a modest stipend and allowed access to funds granted veterans for education. Because combat duty is a requirement of enlistment, the program is currently open only to young men, and it has been authorized for only three years, so Congress will have to renew the program again in 2008.
"The program is still in the early stages, but we’re certain it will prove a valuable tool for the U.S. military while providing future soldiers with much-needed financial assistance so they can start planning for the future now," says Lt. James Pederson, a spokesman for the U.S. Pentagon’s Office of Recruitment and Retention.
With the war in Iraq still taking a toll, and potential conflicts on the horizon in Iran, North Korea, Syria, the Philippines and elsewhere, the U.S. military is faced with a shortage of manpower not seen in decades.
The Army National Guard met only 56 percent of its recruiting quota in January, and the Marine Corps fell short of its recruiting goal that month for the first time since 1995. The Army missed its February recruiting goal by 27 percent, and the numbers for March and April are not expected to improve. And though the Bush administration has explored the idea of re-instituting the draft, the idea has been met with such widespread resistance that doing so seems unlikely.
So the mighty U.S. military has been left with declining rolls during a time of war when the need for warm bodies is at a premium. The result has been a loosening of enlistment requirements and the offering of more incentives to fill the void.
"More and more of our troops are choosing to leave service when their enlistment period comes to an end, and the number of new recruits entering military service is at a 20-year low," says Pederson. "We’ve had to become more and more creative in our efforts to fill the ranks of departing soldiers, and that’s meant reaching out to new target groups and making them offers they simply can’t refuse."
Currently, the National Guard is offering enlistment bonuses of up to $15,000 for new members, who may also receive matching funds to be used as a down payment on a new home. In addition, the Army announced last week that it is raising the maximum age for new recruits by five years, up to 39. It has also increased by 33 percent the number of recruiters on the street and has developed a sales pitch to appeal to parents who otherwise might not approve of their child’s enrollment
"We’re going to appeal to the patriotism of parents," says Pederson. "Parents have to understand that their children are needed in a time of war and that sacrifices need to be made for the good of the nation."
Tom Hadley recognizes this need, and when he heard of the pre-enlistment program, convinced his son that it was in his best interest to sign up.
"There aren’t a lot of opportunities for poor or working class kids in this country right now, so this program is a blessing," says Tom. "Colin can spend the next couple years just being a kid and save a few bucks for school, and after his four years of military service he’ll come out ahead. I’m proud of my son for making such a wise decision and standing up for his country."
Carla Bloomer agrees with Tom that poor children have few options, but rankles at the suggestion that selling military service to a child is an answer to the problem. And she didn’t even know this was an issue until she learned a recruiter had talked to her 14-year-old son and convinced him to sign up.
"He’s not smart enough to make a decision like that at this point in his life," she says. "That recruiter came in and played to his teenager’s sense of invincibility and know-it-all attitude and convinced him this was the best thing for him to do. In the end, I had to give in and let him sign up."
After he signed the paperwork, however, Bloomer took a closer look at the contract and was even more disturbed by what she learned. The small print reveals that the $350 monthly stipend her son receives is actually an advance on his $250 per month combat pay and $100 per month hardship duty pay.
"What they’ve done is guarantee that my son will go to war when he’s old enough," says Bloomer. "They’re paying him for it now so he can’t back out later."
Her son, Richard, admits he wasn’t aware of the source of the payments he’s receiving, but adds that he’s not worried about it either.
"At least I’m getting paid now," he says. "Hell, I might get killed my first week out and then I’d get nothing. At least I can enjoy it now."
But it may not be that simple. According to Pederson, the money paid out in the pre-enlistment program is an advance on pay, which will need to be paid back if the soldier is unable to serve in combat for any reason.
"If a recruit is incapacitated or killed before two years of service have been completed, half of the funds paid to him pre-service will need to be returned to the U.S. government," he says. "That’s still very generous, considering we could ask for reimbursement of funds for the entire period of incomplete service."
But this provision has not sat well with some citizens who have petitioned the government to repeal this section. U.S. Rep. Dennis Caster introduced a bill in the last session that would make any repayment of the pre-paid funds strictly voluntary, but it never made it out of committee.
And once these kids sign up under this program, they are committed to serving in a combat zone and face strict punishment if they refuse duty when they come of age. If any refuse to show up for duty they will be charged with desertion in a time of war and be subject to military court martial, which, theoretically at least, could result in the death penalty.
"We expect our recruits of all ages to honor their commitment," says Pederson. "We are expending resources to guarantee their future service and will do whatever is necessary to make sure they live up to their pledge."
The very concept of the pre-enlistment program is frightening to those who’ve spent years in active opposition to violence and militarization. Katherine Beck, Iowa coordinator for the National Peace and Justice Alliance (NPJA) for the past 15 years, says this program is indicative of the Bush administration’s refusal to consider peaceful alternatives to war.
"There is no question that this president wants to keep the country in a state of war, and there seems to be no one willing to stop him - not Congress, not the U.S. Senate, no one," she says. "We’re now paying children - poor children mainly - to give up their childhood and commit to fighting, killing and, possibly, dying in future wars. That is nothing short of pure evil."
But Pederson says the pre-enlistment program is really not that much of a change from recruitment methods that have been in place for the past few years. With passage of the No Child Left Behind Act in 2002, the military was guaranteed access to the nation’s public schools for recruiting purposes.
According to the Office of Recruitment and Retention, the U.S. military was denied access to public schools on 19,228 occasions in 1999. But since the passage of No Child Left Behind, these schools have no choice but to let them in.
"This allows us to send our professionals into schools to share information about the benefits of military service to young people, just as colleges and other businesses are allowed, encouraged even, to visit with students and do the same thing," says Pederson.
But Karen Foss, the mother of a 14-year-old at Lincoln High School, says the intensity of the recruiting focused on her son took her by surprise.
"I don’t think most parents realize how much time and energy they (recruiters) spend on these kids," she says. "I was shocked when I found out that they were calling my son at home and visiting with him outside the classroom without my knowledge."
And Foss is quick to point out that she comes from a family with a long history of military service (her grandfather was at Iwo Jima and her dad earned two purple hearts in Vietnam) and that she’s a registered Republican who supported the war in Iraq.
"This is just too much, though," she adds. "These are children they’re after."
Staff Sgt. Gary Lindell, an Army recruiter working out of the office on Army Post Road says it’s common practice for recruiters to reach out to school-age kids wherever they can.
"The initial meeting with kids in the schools is just the first step in a long process," says Lindell. "We take advantage of the access we’ve been granted to build a relationship with students and then build upon that."
Lindell has taken small groups of students out for pizza and met with them over sodas and snacks at an area coffee shop frequented by teens. He uses these meetings to tell the kids about the advantages of military service.
"It’s important that they know they can make a real difference in the world," he says. "I tell them about the opportunity to travel, the chance to earn money for college, the medical benefits and the feeling of pride that comes with serving your country.
"It’s an important tool to reach these kids before they are influenced by outside forces who lack understanding of the U.S. military’s worldwide goals," he adds. "These kids understand the need for a strong military and haven’t had their thoughts corrupted by unpatriotic ideas."
Foss’ son, 14-year-old Tyler, and his best friend, 15-year-old Matthew Biehn, met with Lindell several times but declined to sign on despite the benefits Lindell told them about. Last month, Lindell arranged another meeting with the boys at a South Side coffee shop and brought along fellow recruiter Sgt. Lindsey Reas. After meeting with Reas several times Tyler decided to join the pre-enlistment program, and once he did, Biehn signed on as well.
"I didn’t even know the recruiter was talking to him until he told me he wanted to sign up," says Karen. "His father, whom I divorced several years ago, agreed to let Tyler join, so there was nothing I could do to stop him. I’m fairly confident that they brought a young woman recruiter in to close the deal with these boys. They’re in the throes of puberty and would pretty much do whatever a pretty girl asks them to. I just don’t think it’s fair."
Reas refused to entertain that notion and said the final incentive for these two boys came when she pointed out the number of comic books $350 per month could buy. And in fact, when Tyler and Biehn agreed to discuss their enlistment, they arranged a meeting at a comic store where they promptly dropped more than $50 each for new releases.
"They give us a lot of money for doing nothing," says Tyler. "If we have to go to war later, it won’t be that bad anyway. She (Reas) gave us a copy of an Army video game that lets you see what it’s really like. If you know what you’re doing, you probably won’t get hurt or killed."
The game Tyler refers to is a free one available at www.goarmy.com that the army has developed as a recruiting tool. The site boasts that the game allows players to "Experience realistic training missions and see what it takes to become part of America’s Army team." Local recruiters will also provide free copies of the game on CD to anyone interested, especially the young boys who generally play such games.
Despite Karen’s concerns, the recruiters are within their rights to talk to the kids without parental permission or knowledge. Section 9528 of the No Child Left Behind Act enables recruiters to gain personal information about students - home addresses, phone numbers, extracurricular activities - from school records. The only time parental involvement is required is when it comes time to sign the papers.
"Yeah, we talk to the kids," says Lindell. "But it’s not like we’re kidnapping them and making them do this. They make an informed decision based on the facts we give them."
In the short time the program has been in place, at least 10,763 young men aged 14-16 have joined the pre-enlistment program. Of those, at least 94 hail from Iowa, which boasts the second highest rate of participation (per-capita) in the nation, falling only behind Mississippi.
These new recruits have begun chatting on the Internet and sharing thoughts on their upcoming service on message boards and have started an informal organization of members called VFW - Veterans of Future Wars.
It’s an accurate title, too. Pederson says these new recruits will be required, after completing boot camp and two weeks of additional training, to serve in combat zones. The very nature of the war on terror, he explains, ensures that the United States will be in a state of armed conflict with some enemy or another for many years to come.
"We will most definitely be at war with someone for the next decade, at least," he says. "And our recruitment programs are an effort to ensure the safety of all American citizens and to protect the American way of life."
Beck, director of the NPJA, disagrees, and says this is indicative that we as a country have reached a level and acceptance of war that may be difficult to turn away from.
"That parents are allowing and encouraging their children to sign up under this program is troubling and shows a real lack of understanding of what’s happening in the world," she says. "By committing our children to wage war, we are committing our society to a path of violence and oppression and militarism that will be impossible to sustain and that will further alienate us from the rest of the world."
Still, Pederson says the program is a necessary step.
"Is it unfortunate that we have to recruit children to serve in battle? Absolutely," he says. "But most countries have had children soldiering for centuries. We’re just leveling the playing field." PB
Forum posts
15 April 2005, 23:28
I cannot find the link to this story anymore????? Is this bogus? OR true? I wouldn’t put it pass the US army though
16 April 2005, 00:09
It looks very much like a hoax.
Google has picked it up, but only from Bellaciao, two hours ago.
http://www.pointblank-dm.com do not show anything. They have just revamped their site and I cannot find a search.
18 April 2005, 02:39
It is bogus. It was supposed to be an April’s Fool joke, according to the editor of Information Clearing House.
MaloryThomas@aol.com.
18 April 2005, 03:36
It’s not a hoax that this article was published by a seemingly legit news source::
http://66.102.7.104/search?q=cache:...
19 April 2005, 03:28
You wouldn’t put it "pass" the Army? You do mean "past" don’t you?
By the way this is a complete hoax. It was originally posted on April Fools’ Day. Apparently it has fooled many a fool.
19 April 2005, 14:47
http://www.snopes.com/politics/satire/recruit.asp
It is a HOAX ! GOOD GRIEF! Doesn’t ANYBODY check things out on the internet anymore?
16 April 2005, 00:49
It may not be a hoax. There are many sites out there that promote interesting and negative comments about the US, but when you try to access them - they are blank. Personally I think they have been censored.
I wouldn’t put anything past the US and the story sounds real to me. The US needs a continual supply of soldiers if they are to keep going to war with the world.
19 April 2005, 22:29
you’re a moron if you believe this, you can’t even buy CDs through the mail without parental consent, haven’t any of you ever taken Business Law 101. Must be 18 to sign into a contract
16 April 2005, 01:14
If you go to Google "Enlistment bonuses for youth in US Military" - there are similar sites with more of a spin put on this by the americans. You have to search through them. But in essence the article is correct - but you can only ascertain this by reading through some of the numerous articles that relate to this subject.
16 April 2005, 02:17
I’ll buy this as the real McCoy. Reading the story put me into a state of mind that made me question reality, so I know that the administration is behind this 100%. Every day, reality becomes more and more warped, thanks to the mainstream media and the work of the administration. To think that the military would stoop to recruiting 14 year olds is not even a stretch - it’s fully believable. The part about it being an advance on the comabt pay is also reasonable (if you’re a military hawk). And the part about No Child Left Behind allowing recruiters onto school campuses is fact.
What I’m wondering is that in 4-6 years, with all these moron kids out in the field with live weaponry, where on Earth will be safe? I’ve been thinking South America, but that’s probably too resource-rich for the US to overlook, so maybe I’d better stick with Europe or China as a safe place to which to emigrate.
I’m a proud American, or rather, I was. But I am increasingly reluctant to support this country as it continues to threaten civilization itself.
16 April 2005, 06:37
The US under Cheney, Rummy< and Wolfy are a threat to the WHOLE world!! If they would allow thousands of Americans to die on 9/11 to advance their agendathey will do ANYTHING!!
19 April 2005, 03:30
Wake up. This is a complete hoax. If you really hate America so much, admit it and leave. It’s easy.
Just go. We won’t miss you at all.
22 April 2005, 13:52
When I was in high school the recruitment was pretty intense, and that was in the 1970s, just after the end of the draft. It did not start at age 14, but it was there, mostly in the form of mailers, but there were also people who would come to school to "speak," and it was to extol the virtues of the Army life, promises of paid college. It was a standard part of guidance counseling, that that was an option. I think the article is just a hoax too, but usually when someone writes an April Fool’s Day thing ridiculing current attitudes by hypothesizing an extreme end of a current trend, there’s more humor. This article has no humor.
4 May 2005, 22:35
It is not a question of hating America. It is because we love our country that we remain vigilant.
It’s very disturbing that people label as unpatriotic anyone who dares question the morality and intelligence of their leaders. It’s very disturbing and very dangerous. We love this country and consider precious every human life because that is the legacy of our democratic society. It is dangerous to retreat from an exhaustive critique of ourselves as well as others, just out of fear of someone accusing us of hating our country. It is dangerous and narrow-minded and not characteristic of the American way of life, much less of any way of democratic life.
16 April 2005, 15:55
At least the author, Tim Schmitt, apparently exists. See http://cannonfire.blogspot.com/2005_04_10_cannonfire_archive.html, that mentions his being fired from Pointblank, and the restructuring of the site.
16 April 2005, 17:31
My comment in French >>>>. Penser que les militaires se pencheraient à recruter des olds de 14 ans n’est pas même un bout droit - elle est entièrement crédible. La partie à son sujet étant une avance sur le salaire de comabt est également raisonnable (si vous êtes un faucon militaire). Et la partie au sujet d’aucun enfant a laissé permettre des recruteurs sur des campus d’école est fait. Queest-ce que je me demande est celui en 4-6 ans, avec tous ces gosses de débile dehors dans le domaine avec les armements de phase, où sur terre serai sûr ? J’avais pensé l’Amérique Du sud, mais cela est probablement trop riche en ressources pour que les USA donnent sur, tellement peut-être j’améliorerais le bâton avec l’Europe ou la Chine comme endroit sûr auquel pour émigrer. Je suis un Américain fier, ou plutôt, j’étais. Mais je suis de plus en plus peu disposé à soutenir ce pays car il continue à menacer la civilisation elle-même.
Translation in English >>>. To think that the military would stoop to recruiting 14 year olds is not even a stretch - it’s fully believable. The part about it being an advance on the comabt pay is also reasonable (if you’re a military hawk). And the part about "No Child Left Behind" program allowing recruiters onto school campuses is fact.
What I’m wondering is that in 4-6 years, with all these moron kids out in the field with live weaponry, where on Earth will be safe? I’ve been thinking South America, but that’s probably too resource-rich for the US to overlook, so maybe I’d better stick with Europe or China as a safe place to which to emigrate.
I’m a proud Italian/American, or rather, I was. But I am increasingly reluctant to support this country as it continues to threaten civilization itself.
16 April 2005, 18:40
Why would the offer only be open to boys? Do you actually think that this administration would leave itself vunerable to charges of sexist practices? Or is it more likely that recruiters have determined that girls are moved by neither money nor promises of adventure in exchange for their lives?
19 April 2005, 03:34
There is no such offer for boys or girls. It is a hoax. Only a fool would believe such a silly story.
16 April 2005, 20:26
This is a hoax. It has been around the net many times with slightly different details.......
17 April 2005, 06:27
Guess you haven’t been in the class rooms in the high schools in the southern states, and other places. Many informed young people are organizing and their caring parents are helping to resist this desperate recruiting by the U.S. military. Welfare kids are most at risk, people on food stamps get targeted. It is shameful, thus many refuse to believe it is happening.
18 April 2005, 16:02
The original post is in the google’s cache
20 April 2005, 08:06
One question for you,
If the military ever fails to provide enough recruits voluntarily by visits to high schools and colleges, do you believe that our country, the United States of America is just going to do without a military?... what is going to happen next? I say if you do not support military recruiters in their efforts to provide the strength of the military, then I suppose you would support a draft. Ironically its like this, I work over 70-80 hours weekly looking for those who would serve, If thier is a draft, my job gets alot easier, keep up the good work!!
military recruiter
20 April 2005, 08:29
Guess you should get a brain and realize 14 year olds can’t be contracted to anything legally without parental consent. Use common sense here, it was originated as a Apr Fools joke, and many people have no common sense and think it’s real
18 April 2005, 07:22
This article is yet another tool used to bend our emotions as concerned, civilized humans into an intended ugly shape of mistrust. However deceiving our governments may be at times, we must also remember how deceiving the counter-fundamentalists can also be, or just anyone else that has nothing better to do in their time than to mislead other people.
I personally spoke with three different army recruiters and they each stated that the earliest age a minor may sign-up for any military service in all U.S. states is 17 years of age, with parental consent.
This article, even though believable by today’s wicked standards, was crafted from guile and was meant to feed off of and destablize our pathos. We must be more careful in the things we read into, and from the sources we gather our information. We can not have full trust in our goverments these days and we must constantly question them, this is true - but this same rule must apply to all other establishments, figures, and information that emerge from the mysts - otherwise, we are doomed to fall into the Deceitful and Unknown, where greater injustices may lay in wait.
18 April 2005, 12:37
What could be more distrustful or deceiptful than the current administration ?
They need more hired killers to do their filthy slaughter/robbery and I believe this story is true as has been mentioned before. They already seek out the most economically disadvantaged, but as this becomes widespread knowledge, and distasteful amongst the poor, the targets become younger and younger. The actual bounty is a pittance compared to what those draft dodging billionaire scum accrue.
Its an insult to decent Americans prepared to kill and be killed for their criminal masters.
18 April 2005, 17:18
Definately a hoax:
http://www.snopes.com/politics/satire/recruit.asp
19 April 2005, 04:54
Excuse me, but you give here what? A link to the urban legends website? It has been ’updated’ on 18th (today), nearly 5 days after the article was written. It only has ONE example, and that is the original written by Tim Schmitt. Seems like you need to come up with -definite- proof that this is a hoax, or stop posting bullshit links.
18 April 2005, 21:22
Thank you for this article, it is quite informative. I have one comment or possibly correction.
My understanding is that, as parents, we do have the right to make a written request to our school not to release personal information about our child to the military, and that the schools are required to honor this request. Perhaps this is incorrect, but it is what we have been told by our local high school. Parents should know that they do still have some rights.
Frances Loberg
Salem, OR
19 April 2005, 03:37
This is a complete hoax wirtten to turn Americans against one another. Wake up and smell the coffee. If you don’t believe me, send a 14 year old down to the local recruiter and have him say he wants to sign up and watch the recruiters fall on the floor laughing. If there were such a program they wouldn’t be laughing, they’d be getting out the prescreening forms.
23 April 2005, 18:08
That is my understanding also from when the No Child Left Behind Bill first came into affect. At least your school knew this. I called my daughter’s high school and they had no clue that this was the case, but that was several years ago.
Stephen Boudreaux
Clear Lake Shores, TX.
19 April 2005, 07:43
At first I thought it was a joke. Then I started believing it. I cycled thru it’s a joke/ it’s a true story. Also, I looked around the net and while I got 800K stories on kid soldiers, I got zero stories on US recruitment of kid soldiers. So it’s a joke. BUT why not believe it. The EPA just decided to cancel its plans to study the effect of pesticide in children who being overexposed. The EPA liked the study! It was overly fastidious do-gooders that protested poisoning some farm kids. So why not believe it. Can you say Tuskegee?
19 April 2005, 14:43
This story is a total HOAX. GOOD GRIEF! You know nitwits: you can print ANYTHING on the internet and get people to believe it!
My GOD the stupidity of PEOPLE to believe this crap.
19 April 2005, 14:52
http://www.snopes.com/politics/satire/recruit.asp
FAKE FAKE FAke FAKE FAKE.
What else do you expect to read here?
20 April 2005, 07:56
This story is false. It’s sad that someone would fabricate such a story that has the potential to cause grief. Sometimes we Americans are our own worst enemy. For the parent who wants to know if he can keep his childs information from recruiters. The answer is yes. The recruiter would probably appreciate it. One less American who doesn’t believe in serving his or her country to talk too. For the person who thinks its an insult to have a trained military prepared to take lives for the defense of this Nation. I say it’s more of an insult to Americans not to have a trained military prepared to defend our nation’s freedom.
Military Recruiter
21 April 2005, 15:26
When has the US needed to defend itself ? With the exception of Pearl Harbour -every US adventure has been to dominate a region in an imperialistic nature. Nationalism and propaganda are the staple diet, and a conservative figure of 10 000 000 deaths since 1945 the result of US foreign policy. Although many sources cite 17 000 000 as a true figure. Hired killers for Wall Street, the world does not need you.
21 April 2005, 15:27
When has the US needed to defend itself ? With the exception of Pearl Harbour -every US adventure has been to dominate a region in an imperialistic nature. Nationalism and propaganda are the staple diet, and a conservative figure of 10 000 000 deaths since 1945 the result of US foreign policy. Although many sources cite 17 000 000 as a true figure. Hired killers for Wall Street, the world does not need you.
21 April 2005, 14:57
This "news article" is definitely a hoax. The youngest you can be to enlist in the U.S. Army or Army Reserve is 17 years old, and only with parental consent. Otherwise, you must be at least 18 years old.
Douglas Smith, Public Affairs Officer, U.S. Army Recruiting Command, Fort Knox, KY
26 April 2005, 17:02
This was a story in the "April Fools" edition of the PointBlank Paper. We called the number at the bottom of the article and spoke with John Gaskell, the managing editor of the City View paper. The reporter Tim Schmitt is a real person, but is no longer with the paper. The City View took over the Point Blank paper in the past few weeks. Mr. Gaskell stated that the paper had "April Fools" at the bottom of the printed page.
5 May 2005, 22:23
This absolute Bullsh*t. I was in the Army and had to wait until I was 17 years old and had parental consent(it was in 1986 and they weren’t recruiting me for war!). I also had to have a GED w/college credits or a High school diploma. Your bonus is not payable until you have completed all of your training. Please get your facts staright before posting these kinds of lies.