Stopping the war machine: military recruiters must be confronted
- added June 2, 2008
- 5 responses
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- sinlung
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We must use every means of creative, nonviolent resistance to stop military recruitment across the country.
As a former United States Marine Corps sergeant who was shot and paralyzed from my mid-chest down during my second tour of duty in Vietnam on Jan. 20, 1968, I am sending my complete support and admiration to all those now involved in the courageous struggle to stop military recruitment in Berkeley and across the country.
Not since the Vietnam War protests of the late 1960s has there been a cause more just than the one you are now engaged in. Who knows better the deep immorality and deception of military recruiters than those of us who, decades ago, entered those same recruiting offices with our fathers, believing in our hearts that we were being told the truth -- only to discover later we had been deceived and terribly betrayed? Many of us paid for that deceit with our lives, years of suffering and bodies and minds that were never the same again. If only someone had warned us, if only someone had had the courage to speak out against the madness that we were being led into, if only someone could have protected us from the recruiters whose only wish was to make their quota, send us to boot camp and hide from us the dark secret of the nightmare which awaited us all.
Over the past five years, I have watched in horror the mirror image of another Vietnam unfolding in Iraq. So many similarities, so many things said that remind me of that war 30 years ago which left me paralyzed and confined to a wheelchair for life. Refusing to learn from the lessons of Vietnam, our government continues to pursue a policy of deception, distortion, manipulation and denial, doing everything it can to hide from the American people their true intentions and agenda in Iraq. As we pass the fifth anniversary of the start of this tragic and senseless war, I cannot help but think of the young men and women who have been wounded, nearly 30,000, flooding Walter Reed, Bethesda, Brooke Army Medical Center and veterans hospitals all across our country. Paraplegics, amputees, burn victims, the blinded, shocked and stunned, brain-damaged and psychologically stressed, a whole new generation of severely maimed men and women who were not even born when I came home wounded to the Bronx Veterans Hospital in New York in 1968.
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), which afflicted so many of us after Vietnam, is just now beginning to appear among soldiers recently returned from the current war. For some the agony and suffering, the sleepless nights, anxiety attacks and awful bouts of insomnia, alienation, anger and rage will last for decades -- if not their whole lives. They will be trapped in a permanent nightmare of that war, of killing another man, a child, watching a friend die ... fighting against an enemy that can never be seen, while at any moment someone, a child, a woman, an old man -- anyone -- might kill them.
As a former United States Marine Corps sergeant who was shot and paralyzed from my mid-chest down during my second tour of duty in Vietnam on Jan. 20, 1968, I am sending my complete support and admiration to all those now involved in the courageous struggle to stop military recruitment in Berkeley and across the country.
Not since the Vietnam War protests of the late 1960s has there been a cause more just than the one you are now engaged in. Who knows better the deep immorality and deception of military recruiters than those of us who, decades ago, entered those same recruiting offices with our fathers, believing in our hearts that we were being told the truth -- only to discover later we had been deceived and terribly betrayed? Many of us paid for that deceit with our lives, years of suffering and bodies and minds that were never the same again. If only someone had warned us, if only someone had had the courage to speak out against the madness that we were being led into, if only someone could have protected us from the recruiters whose only wish was to make their quota, send us to boot camp and hide from us the dark secret of the nightmare which awaited us all.
Over the past five years, I have watched in horror the mirror image of another Vietnam unfolding in Iraq. So many similarities, so many things said that remind me of that war 30 years ago which left me paralyzed and confined to a wheelchair for life. Refusing to learn from the lessons of Vietnam, our government continues to pursue a policy of deception, distortion, manipulation and denial, doing everything it can to hide from the American people their true intentions and agenda in Iraq. As we pass the fifth anniversary of the start of this tragic and senseless war, I cannot help but think of the young men and women who have been wounded, nearly 30,000, flooding Walter Reed, Bethesda, Brooke Army Medical Center and veterans hospitals all across our country. Paraplegics, amputees, burn victims, the blinded, shocked and stunned, brain-damaged and psychologically stressed, a whole new generation of severely maimed men and women who were not even born when I came home wounded to the Bronx Veterans Hospital in New York in 1968.
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), which afflicted so many of us after Vietnam, is just now beginning to appear among soldiers recently returned from the current war. For some the agony and suffering, the sleepless nights, anxiety attacks and awful bouts of insomnia, alienation, anger and rage will last for decades -- if not their whole lives. They will be trapped in a permanent nightmare of that war, of killing another man, a child, watching a friend die ... fighting against an enemy that can never be seen, while at any moment someone, a child, a woman, an old man -- anyone -- might kill them.
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sounds good to me, where can i sign up?
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We allow these recruiters to go into our schools and prey upon our teenagers too. They tell them all about how "your parents will always think of you as a baby, but we know you are a man!" and "what better way to show them all what a man you are?" and of course "you are guaranteed to get laid in that uniform". They tell them how to get around their parents and ask for cell phone numbers if the kid says "my Mom doesnt want you to call here anymore". They play all the mind games that they are trained to use on our kids, and most Americans think it is OK. We parents keep them in their bedrooms playing video games and shelter them and protect them and then we let the recruiters go into their schools and lie to them. And if the kid is polite, look out, cuz there is no way to say "thanks but no thanks" to these people. They just do not take no for an answer. They just keep on stalking the kid until the day they catch them mad at Mom or Dad and tell them how they can "show them!" And then they put commercials on TV telling the parents that if they dont agree and "support their decision" that they are bad parents. If they try to talk them out of it then they are hurting their kid. And then all those same people that have the ribbon on the back of their mini van will say "well, they volunteered". As if "supporting our troops" means you can do whatever you want to them in the name of patriotism. To me supporting them means giving them the best treatment we can. Giving them the best equiptment, not denying their benefits we promised them, taking care of their medical needs, and not breaking the contract you made with them just because it says you can in fine print.
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We are in a catch-22.
For a free military of choice, you must have recruiters.
Otherwise we have a draft.
Either way, we lose. -
Iraq veterans - soldiers of conscience testify about the brutal occupation of Iraq by the U.S. military.
WINTER SOLDIER - Iraq and Afghanistan - eyewitness accounts of the occupations with unembedded journalist and author, Dahr Jamail -
My problem isn't with the concept of recruiters. My problem is that recruiters will paint a rose colored of military service. If recruiters would be strait forward and not try to sway young potential recruits with words of scholarships and job opportunities and instead actually tell the recruits that this is a dangerous job that they are volunteering for and it is quite possible that they could come back with physical, mental or emotional scars for pay that really boils down to less then minimum wage, then I wouldn't be so pissy about it.
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- Varex_Sythe
- 2 months ago
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