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<blockquote data-quote="NavyChief" data-source="post: 916930" data-attributes="member: 77174"><p>I was actually an EW for 18 years before the rate changed names and we fell under the CTT rating. Not much changed other than the name except that the CT community now had a rate that had a sea shore rotation of 5 at sea and two on shore and a bunch of new black shoe sailors with warfare pins and real sea stories. Never really liked working with the CT community. The CT community always seemed opposed to sea duty which I never really understood. Why join the Navy if you don't want to go to sea? The army, air-force, and marine recruiters are usually in the same strip mall so I never could figure out why they went in the Navy and spent their entire careers trying to avoid duty aboard a ship. Go figure? I did know a few CT's that were standout shipmates but they were very few and very far between. You must have a little sea time yourself if you see the oxymoron in a CT with an SW pin.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="NavyChief, post: 916930, member: 77174"] I was actually an EW for 18 years before the rate changed names and we fell under the CTT rating. Not much changed other than the name except that the CT community now had a rate that had a sea shore rotation of 5 at sea and two on shore and a bunch of new black shoe sailors with warfare pins and real sea stories. Never really liked working with the CT community. The CT community always seemed opposed to sea duty which I never really understood. Why join the Navy if you don't want to go to sea? The army, air-force, and marine recruiters are usually in the same strip mall so I never could figure out why they went in the Navy and spent their entire careers trying to avoid duty aboard a ship. Go figure? I did know a few CT's that were standout shipmates but they were very few and very far between. You must have a little sea time yourself if you see the oxymoron in a CT with an SW pin. [/QUOTE]
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