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  • Liberals found out about JROTC

    Are you fucking kidding me? Are the boyscouts also bad because they shoot 22lr rifles sometimes?


    Ann Jones takes a startling look at the sort of everyday military indoctrination that may be happening in your very neighborhood.


    America's Child Soldiers: JROTC and the Militarizing of America


    Congress surely meant to do the right thing when, in the fall of 2008, it passed the Child Soldiers Prevention Act (CSPA). The law was designed to protect kids worldwide from being forced to fight the wars of Big Men. From then on, any country that coerced children into becoming soldiers was supposed to lose all U.S. military aid.

    It turned out, however, that Congress -- in its rare moment of concern for the next generation -- had it all wrong. In its greater wisdom, the White House found countries like Chad and Yemen so vital to the national interest of the United States that it preferred to overlook what happened to the children in their midst.

    As required by CSPA, this year the State Department once again listed 10 countries that use child soldiers: Burma (Myanmar), the Central African Republic, Chad, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Rwanda, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, Syria, and Yemen. Seven of them were scheduled to receive millions of dollars in U.S. military aid as well as what’s called “U.S. Foreign Military Financing.” That’s a shell game aimed at supporting the Pentagon and American weapons makers by handing millions of taxpayer dollars over to such dodgy “allies,” who must then turn around and buy “services” from the Pentagon or “materiel” from the usual merchants of death. You know the crowd: Lockheed Martin, McDonnell Douglas, Northrop Grumman, and so on.

    Here was a chance for Washington to teach a set of countries to cherish their young people, not lead them to the slaughter. But in October, as it has done every year since CSPA became law, the White House again granted whole or partial “waivers” to five countries on the State Department’s “do not aid” list: Chad, South Sudan, Yemen, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Somalia.

    Too bad for the young -- and the future -- of those countries. But look at it this way: Why should Washington help the children of Sudan or Yemen escape war when it spares no expense right here at home to press our own impressionable, idealistic, ambitious American kids into military “service”?

    It should be no secret that the United States has the biggest, most efficiently organized, most effective system for recruiting child soldiers in the world. With uncharacteristic modesty, however, the Pentagon doesn’t call it that. Its term is “youth development program.”


    Pushed by multiple high-powered, highly paid public relations and advertising firms under contract to the Department of Defense, the program is a many splendored thing. Its major public face is the Junior Reserve Officers Training Corps or JROTC.

    What makes this child-soldier recruiting program so striking is that the Pentagon carries it out in plain sight in hundreds and hundreds of private, military, and public high schools across the U.S.

    Unlike the notorious West African warlords Foday Sankoh and Charles Taylor (both brought before international tribunals on charges of war crimes), the Pentagon doesn’t actually kidnap children and drag them bodily into battle. It seeks instead to make its young “cadets” what John Stuart Mill once termed “willing slaves,” so taken in by the master’s script that they accept their parts with a gusto that passes for personal choice. To that end, JROTC works on their not-yet-fully-developed minds, instilling what the program’s textbooks call “patriotism” and “leadership,” as well as a reflexive attention to authoritarian commands.

    The scheme is much more sophisticated -- so much more "civilized" -- than any ever devised in Liberia or Sierra Leone, and it works. The result is the same, however: kids get swept into soldiering, a job they will not be free to leave, and in the course of which they may be forced to commit spirit-breaking atrocities. When they start to complain or crack under pressure, in the U.S. as in West Africa, out come the drugs.

    The JROTC program, still spreading in high schools across the country, costs U.S. taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars annually. It has cost some unknown number of taxpayers their children.

    The Acne and Braces Brigades

    I first stumbled upon JROTC kids a few years ago at a Veterans Day parade in Boston. Before it got underway, I wandered among the uniformed groups taking their places along the Boston Common. There were some old geezers sporting the banners of their American Legion posts, a few high school bands, and some sharp young men in smart dress uniforms: greater Boston’s military recruiters.

    Then there were the kids. The acne and braces brigades, 14- and 15-year-olds in military uniforms carrying rifles against their shoulders. Some of the girl groups sported snazzy white gloves.

    Far too many such groups, with far too many underage children, stretched the length of Boston Common. They represented all branches of the military and many different local communities, though almost all of them were brown or black in hue: African Americans, Hispanics, the children of immigrants from Vietnam and other points South. Just last month in New York City, I watched similarly color-coded JROTC squads march up Fifth Avenue on Veterans’ Day. One thing JROTC is not is a rainbow coalition.

    In Boston, I asked a 14-year-old boy why he had joined JROTC. He wore a junior Army uniform and toted a rifle nearly as big as himself. He said, “My dad, he left us, and my mom, she works two jobs, and when she gets home, well, she’s not big on structure. But they told us at school you gotta have a lot of structure if you want to get somewhere. So I guess you could say I joined up for that.”
    Originally posted by lincolnboy
    After watching Games of Thrones, makes me glad i was not born in those years.

  • #2
    I was a Captain in the JROTC, and the leader of my marksmanship team. Somehow, I never joined the military.
    ZOMBIE REAGAN FOR PRESIDENT 2016!!! heh

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    • #3
      You can't leave the ROTC? Did not know that.
      I wear a Fez. Fez-es are cool

      Comment


      • #4
        Most the people I have known that were in the ROTC never joined the military. Now I know two Eagle Scouts that did, go figure. As for the article he is trying to say that the ROTC programs in America is the same as kid soldiers in the Congo. Is he fucking serious? Kids in high school shooting at paper targets and doing obstacle courses is no where near the same thing as having kids armed and killing in these 3rd world shit holes. This dip shit needs to get his liberal head out of his ass

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        • #5
          Was in the ROTC at my school. And i find this hilarious if anything they should ramp it up
          WH

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          • #6
            This is what happens when you have never shot a gun in your life or held a blue collar job and think going to New Jersey is "going to the country". These stupid fucks get to vote too, that is the scary part.
            Originally posted by racrguy
            What's your beef with NPR, because their listeners are typically more informed than others?
            Originally posted by racrguy
            Voting is a constitutional right, overthrowing the government isn't.

            Comment


            • #7
              These type of people would probably have a heart attack if they saw the "standard practice" for cruising around on our deer lease.
              Last edited by GrayStangGT; 12-17-2013, 01:18 PM.

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              • #8
                Youth Paramilitary Organization. While your precious little Johnny in the 10th grade is learning geometry, they are training straight baby eaters in the room next door.

                Out of the 400-450 we had across three grades, I can only think of 10 in my graduating class that joined the military and none of us did more than 4yrs. That was the running joke that our Air Force Junior ROTC, more of us joined the Marines than Air Force.
                Fuck you. We're going to Costco.

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                • #9
                  We had about 70 total, and I think maybe 10 joined at some point. Not a single jack-booted thug in the bunch. It was more fun than anything. Getting wasted on field training exercises and stumbling around with NVGs on, yes please.

                  And fuck that dreadlocked pit hair having, pseudo-intellectual bitch for even mentioning JROTC programs and third-world child soldiers in the same story. And it is exactly that, a "story".
                  "It is in truth not for glory, nor riches, nor honours that we are fighting, but for freedom - for that alone, which no honest man gives up but with life itself."

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by YALE View Post
                    I was a Captain in the JROTC, and the leader of my marksmanship team. Somehow, I never joined the military.
                    You could openly join now.

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                    • #11
                      Originally posted by Sean88gt View Post
                      You could openly join now.
                      No.
                      ZOMBIE REAGAN FOR PRESIDENT 2016!!! heh

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by YALE View Post
                        I was a Captain in the JROTC, and the leader of my marksmanship team. Somehow, I never joined the military.
                        As was I, on all 3 counts. Several of the people in my class enlisted but even more went through regular ROTC, mostly at A&M. One even graduated from the Merchant Marine Academy.

                        We shot guns, were shot at and we got to fly around in Air Force jets. It was cool in my book.

                        Now the author of this article should hang out at football practice at one of these high schools. That training is way more intense and it's 100x more violent than JROTC. My classes were about military history, command structure and drill and ceremony mainly. The marksmanship thing was something we did as a hobby.

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                        • #13
                          I dont recall any JROTC at my school, not 100% sure we had one. My sister's school did, and they held the flags at graduation. One of them was caught blowing another dude in the bathroom.
                          "If I asked people what they wanted, they would have said faster horses." - Henry Ford

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                          • #14
                            Originally posted by BP View Post
                            As was I, on all 3 counts. Several of the people in my class enlisted but even more went through regular ROTC, mostly at A&M. One even graduated from the Merchant Marine Academy.

                            We shot guns, were shot at and we got to fly around in Air Force jets. It was cool in my book.

                            Now the author of this article should hang out at football practice at one of these high schools. That training is way more intense and it's 100x more violent than JROTC. My classes were about military history, command structure and drill and ceremony mainly. The marksmanship thing was something we did as a hobby.
                            You mean a program pushing the sadomasochistic homosexual agenda that says it's okay to pummel another man because he has a ball you just have to have while wearing tights?
                            I wear a Fez. Fez-es are cool

                            Comment

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