My aspirations are to become a Medical Researcher then later become a Chemistry Professor/ High School Teacher. Sounds like a lot but becoming a professor/teacher is when I am around 45-50 yrs old. I know I can go to medical school with any degree. I have to pass the MCATS and what not.
Your goals, while high, seem all over the place. This is normal for a college freshman, but you can't really have it all in this regard and be successful.
What would probably fit your goals best is to get A's in college and apply for a medical PhD program. You would be able to teach Chemistry (among other subjects) at the collegiate/graduate school level while also working in research. Many PhD's teach on the side because it pays a lot for very little time consumed. It's like having a part time job that pays over $50k/year.
Something you probably haven't learned goes down significantly starting at around 40 unless you've done something to make yourself valuable. In other words, if you're applying for a job with no prior experience in that field at "45-50," chances are you are going to lose that position to like-qualified 22-24 year-olds who have the same exact in-field qualification that you do. Since you will not have held a teaching job prior to that age, it's unlikely that a school district is going to want to hire you over someone else who is much younger. I am
not saying it's impossible to get a job or change careers when you are middle aged, but I am saying that it's harder due to a myriad of factors.
In my search, I found that becoming a Navy Nuke is the only way of gaining experience in the chemistry field.
I don't know where you got this information from. If you're talking about becoming an ELT, you have to realize that many ELT's never took a college course. Additionally, you can't guarantee yourself an ELT assignment, let alone an MM assignment to even have a shot at ELT when you sign up for the Navy. If you go officer, you will not be using that advanced chemistry degree at all.
There are many ways to obtain experience in the chemistry field through research and internships. Joining the nuclear Navy in hopes that you get ELT is not one of those ways.
Figured why not, heck I'm getting annoyed at pointless classes here at UCF anyways... and arrogant students as well.
Life lesson: you'll have to learn to deal with all types of people. What are you going to do when you're stuck under water with arrogant so-and-so for 6-8 months?
I find it ironic that a person who says "I know I can go to medical school" is calling other people arrogant. You do realize that the average acceptance GPA is around the 3.8-3.9 range, right? That's a bold claim for you to make when the hardest class you've taken is probably intro to 6th grade writing.
So I want to serve and gain experience, who doesn't? But I'm not sure if going Navy Nuke will help be gain my degree in Chemistry/Physics and help me in the long run to become a medical researcher.
It won't. You will not have time to work on your degree during your initial commitment. You will essentially be putting your goals on hold for 5-6 years. The only thing that you will have to show for it is some life experience and the GI bill, but neither of which will make you a shoe-in for a PhD program.
Anyone have any suggestions?
Yes. While I commend your desire to serve, the Navy doesn't fit in with your long term goals the way that you think it does. If you are willing to put those things on hold for a few years, then by all means enlist.