Landeraxe, on 10 January 2013 - 08:06 PM, said:
These are good points, and I applaud your service to our country. I hope you understand that my disagreement in no way indicates disrespect.
As a marine, do you get a huge cash bonus for kicking *** on the battlefield, or do you get a flat rate +/- danger-pay (I honestly don't know how it works, but I'm pretty sure you don't get mercenary wages)? See the difference already?
Also, mechwarriors are not soldiers. They are nobility, by virtue of owning a battlemech. Basically, a modern-day marine would be an infantyman or special forces soldier in the armies of mechwarrior; but mech pilots (mechwarriors) are different. Their mechs are handed down generation to generation until destroyed or captured by an enemy. They personally own their own mechs, and if they don't (called 'disinherited'), then they may serve a house by piloting a house mech (i.e., the free-to-pilot, non-customizable Trail mechs) for reduced pay and freedom from repair bills.
Mechwarriors that own their own mechs are responsible for repairs, upgrades, replacements, which they usually afford by their outrageous paydays. When they can no longer afford to field their own mechs, they stop making the $$$ that comes with putting their own mechs on the line.
I hope this makes sense to you, and I'd be happy to discuss this in further depth if you'd like.
The MechWarrior = Nobility system was due to what happened over the course of the 2nd Succession War (2830-2864) and persisted through the beginning of the 3rd Succession War. By the time the 3rd Succession War ended in 3025, the Successor States had rebuilt enough production that the House militaries were back up to the level where most MechWarriors were at the same level as contemporary fighter pilots are today (Academy graduates, specialized military training), while actual House Nobles were back in their palaces "governing" or whatever they do not getting themsleves killed on the front lines. Very few MechWarriors in House Armies after 3025 actually owned their own 'mechs. Exceptions would be the few nobles that still participated in "playing soldier".
House army 'mechs belonged to the House governments. If someone owned their own personal 'mech and used it in combat they were most likely to be Mercs or Planetary Militia. Even Solaris Gladiators rarely owned their own machines. Their 'mechs were usually provided by their "stable", which in turn was more like what happens in NASCAR. Sponsors pay the "stable" lots of money to buy a machine and get a pilot to take it into an arena to fight with their brands plastered all over them. If they can manage to not get it smashed to pieces in the first 30 seconds, there's probably more money in store for them.
As for pay, regular armies (in both the contemporary world and in make-believe future robot war land) don't get paid "per-mission". At least not as individuals. The government gives them pay on a regular basis per rank. A job classification may at times offer special "risk compensation" depending on the situation, but it's the rank that calls in the money. Excellent performance (especially in the line of duty) may have a significant effect on evaluations, however, which in turn may result in a promotion... which means more money on a regular basis.
To contrast this with a Mercenary's income, an individual in the regular army will ALWAYS get far less than an individual performing the same actions in a Merc unit. However, a Merc has a LOT more they have to take care of on their own (Weapons, Ammo, Armor, Maintenance, Medical Bills, etc.). The government provides a regular army unit with what they need (NOTE: this is based on what the Government deems that the unit needs, not what the unit may say that they need). A Merc unit has a lot more freedom in getting whatever they want, but it comes out of their own pocket. So while being in a regular army unit may be more financially "secure" (it doesn't have the extremes in wealth and poverty of Merc life), there is also very little freedom of choice in the equipment you get issued (sure, you've got a roof over your head and food in your belly, but you're flying in a loud, outdated F-4 because your government doesn't think you need to upgrade to an F-22).