Silly me, at one time I truly expected the US government would bring back the draft. With troops facing multiple combat deployments and family stress issues that affected those back home I figured Congress would be forced to reinstate the draft just to keep the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan going. You simply cannot keep asking people to repeatedly go through the physical and mental meat grinder while the vast majority sat on the sidelines watching television. Low and behold the economy collapses and millions of people are out of work. Not one for conspiracies but that sure is damn convenient, now we have a waiting list of people wanting (needing) to enlist. Excuse my cynical statement but what a country! I need a drink.
The big boys and girls in recruiting will feed you a line of BS saying its the new super-doper GI Bill which is drawing these young patriotic Americans into service. Yeah, its a nice benefit but with the rising cost of college tuition and with the middle and working class families finding it increasingly hard to pay for such an education for their kids I'm choking back a retort on that one. Hate to beat a dead horse but I do believe the draft should be brought back. Namely to force what Thomas Paine called "sunshine patriots" to put up or shut up on their love of country and gung-ho attitudes about others going out and fighing in wars that don't affect them.
Young Americans looking to join the armed forces may have to wait to serve. The combination of lower recruitment target numbers, a weak economy and the implementation of the GI bill has made waiting lists, officially known as the Delayed Entry Pool, longer than they have been in recent years. The Marine Corps, which has traditionally had a smaller recruiting base, has fulfilled more than 65 percent of its target for fiscal year 2011. The Army entered the new recruiting year in October having fulfilled 50 percent, or half its targeting goals for next year. The number is a near record for the Army. The last time in recent decades the waiting list was so long was 1996, when the Delayed Entry Pool was at 42.9 percent at the start of the fiscal year. In recent years, the Army lowered standards to boost recruitment, including allowing those with low test scores and even criminal records to join. But after years of such incentives and hefty bonuses, recruitment interest has not only surged but the quality of Americans who have expressed interest has improved considerably.
For the first time since fiscal year 1992, nearly all of the Army recruits -- 99.9 percent -- in fiscal year 2010 were high school graduates. "It's a great time for us. We're very pleased with the way things are going. The characteristics of the people we're recruiting are near all time highs," Maj. Douglas Smith, spokesman for the Army recruitment command at Ft. Knox, Ky., told ABC News. The higher number of high school graduates "was a good sign and we have been able to restrict the number of waivers we give for conduct, so that's been an improvement as well," he said. A number of factors are behind the surging numbers. The military has cut back recruitment goals across the board. The Army target, for example, for the fiscal year 2011 is 67,000, lower than 74,500 in 2010 and well below the average recruitment goal of 80,000 between 2005 and 2008.
The economy also plays a crucial part. Unemployment remains relatively high at 9.8 percent, the same level as last year, and among 18-to-24-year-olds -- the Pentagon's prime recruiting age -- it's even higher. Officials admit that unemployment has led more volunteers to visit recruitment centers, but caution that it's only part of the equation. "Our economy has something to do with this, but not everything," Col. David Lapan, deputy assistance secretary of defense for media operations, said at a briefing in October. "A lot of people would think that, as we look at where we are right now in terms of the challenges facing us, it's more to it than the economy."
The post-9/11 GI Bill has also created a new incentive for young men and women to join the armed forces. Passed last year, the bill pays for education and housing for family and service members who have served at least 90 days and were honorably discharged.
"The post-9/11 GI Bill has made a big difference in United States Army recruiting, as I look and talk to our noncommissioned officers and our officers who are out providing the strength for the Army every day," said Maj. Gen. Donald M. Campbell, Jr., commanding general of the U.S. Army recruiting command With more Americans eager to sign up to serve, what new recruits shouldn't expect to see are the hefty bonuses that their predecessors were promised as an added incentive. In fiscal year 2010, average bonuses dropped to $5,900 for those with no prior military service, considerably lower than $13,300 in 2009 and $18,300 in 2008.
The Senate Appropriations Committee also slashed about $500 million out of the recruiting and reenlistment bonuses. Fiscal year 2009 was the first time since the military became an all-volunteer force in 1973 that all the services met their goals for both numbers and quality of recruits in the 12 months ending Sept. 30. Waiting lists for recruits are not a new phenomenon, but how long the list and the wait is has varied over the years. Delayed Entry Pools usually depend on the availability of the recruit or the availability of a training slot. The size of the military services is set in stone, so they can't bring in more people than they're authorized, so in many cases, recruits have to wait for the slots to open up.
On Radical Optimism And Defiant Hope
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This thread from Joan Westenberg on Mastodon is worth sharing, and so like
the Bad Blogger that I am, I’ve copied and pasted it here because I know
you laz...
1 hour ago
11 comments:
Interesting post. A good site to visit to counter the willingness of high school age people from joining the military:
http://www.wearenotyoursoldiers.org/
Returning soldiers tell students the real deal about "defending" the country.
I see your point but do we really need to go down the same road like in the 60's with violent protest marches, burning draft cards, draft dodgers heading for hills, false medicals. Nobody wanted to be involved in the war Vietnam anyway.
Liberality: I just love the way the government has shoe horned us into a no win position, lack of real action to stop the flow of American jobs overseas forces many into the military to feed their kids. So they can go hungry or get shot at.
Windsmoke: No, going that route would serve the interests of no one. Although, as a 21 year retired veteran myself I find the attitude of many for whom the wars are nothing but an ignored reality show discouraging.
I got an idea, double b. Let's cut taxes again.......But not, of course, until we invade (officially, that is) Yemen first.......Yeah, that's the ticket.
Will: Sounds like a plan! One the idiots in Washington might actually try.
War is so futile isn't it? :(
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Great posting Bum .... actually this is also a subject that I have really wrote a decent amount about. Why? Because we really dont see what is going on currently in Washington ... what they dont want us to know basically for political reason's ... and what ever they tell us basically is timed very carefully around election's, etc. But about a year or so ago I reckon .... I posted something about the water cooler chat that is going on in Washington ... because many politician's on both side's currently are trying to figure out how and when to sell the new draft package to us. This is another deep detailed subject too lengthy to get in here ... but yes ... a draft scam is in the work's ... although it will be presented in a package that we wont reckonize. Also another thing that is being worked on behind the scene's is the plan to put in place to make SSI dissolve on it's own (which I gave detail's on a few posting's back, I think you might have seen it, cant recall if you commented(?))... basically become obsolete, which will be also packaged and sold to us over the next two year's covertly, but will atually be drafted and legislated approximately 2013 ... based on everything going as planned that is, which is that Tea Party and GOP plan on dominating the House and Senate both by 2012 (their even banking on taking the Oval Office as well) (heh, heh, heh, heh, heh ... I know all their trick's) :) ... who are also being funded by anonymous donor's which are actually all international corporate's. Too much to comment here though. Just a tip brother.
Basically what issue's become mainstream through major media's are simply designed and planted to do such by those player's that run the system which are the 3 entities that I speak of. See Parsley's Pic's last posting on HCR and death panel's comment's section, because I pointed out there, how HCR was actually desigend and planted by pharma/ insurer giant's ... and not ... heh, heh, heh, heh, heh ... by the people. :)
Anywayz ... have a cool NYE man! :)
Hey Bum ... I'm the one who deleted the 2 that say deleted, because for some reason ... my post comment posted 3X time's actually! Oop's....
I was drafter almost 40 years ago. failed the physical.... they said I was too ughly to serve....yea
Happy New Yuppers
We never learn, double b; the Philippines, Cuba, Vietnam, Iran (2 words - THE...SHAH) Lebanon (yes, Mr. Reagan ultimately did the right thing there), El Salvador, Iraq, Afghanistan, etc.. We just never, EVER, frigging learn.
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