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Friday, November 11, 2005
BAUAW NEWSLETTER-FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2005
Third Anniversary of "Shock and Awe"
March 18 through 20, 2005 Saturday, March 18 and Sunday, March 19 Locally coordinated demonstrations across the U.S. and around the world. Monday, March 20, 2005 Youth and Student Day of Resistance to Imperialism http://www.answercoalition.org/ ........................................................... 59.7 percent Victory for Proposition i! Congratulations for all who worked so hard on Proposition I. This is a real mandate from the people of San Francisco to get the military out of our schools! In spite of the recommendations for a no vote for Prop. I from the Chronicle and other main-stream media, the resolve of the voters of San Francisco is clear. We want the troops home Now and the military out of our schools Now! http://www.sfgate.com/politics/election/2005nov/sanfrancisco.shtml In solidarity, Bonnie Weinstein Www.bauaw.org ........................................................... Film Showing: Hablemos del Poder /Talking of Power Produced by the Global Women's Strike, 2005. 62 minutes, in Spanish, or with English subtitles. Sex, race and class in revolutionary Venezuela. From the hills of Caracas to the banks of the Orinoco, the grassroots tell how they are changing our world. When: 7:00 PM, Saturday, November 12, 2005 Where: 522 Valencia, Third Floor, Near 16th Street, SF (not wheelchair accessible), close the 16th Street BART. Cost: $5/$3 Students, Seniors, Unemployed For more information: Email sfbay@ushov.org ........................................................... It's here! You can look up the # of recruits by state and county, and a wealth of other demographic data on military enlistments here: http://nationalpriorities.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=173&Itemid=61 ........................................................... WHAT DOES 2000 LOOK LIKE? (Powerful Flash Film) http://theunitedamerican.blogs.com/Movies/2000A/2000.html ........................................................... REQUEST FROM JON PREVITALI: ........................................................... Short Online Survey: Visualizing the Ideal Solar Power System Why in this time when our use of fossil fuels is causing severe environmental degradation and war are more people not interested in solar power even if they could afford it? What do factors such as maintenance, ease of use and aesthetic appeal of solar power systems also play in decision-making? "Visualizing the Ideal Solar Power System" is an online survey done as part of a masters project through the University of Colorado's Building Systems Program. The survey is completely anonymous. It usually takes about 10 minutes and you can skip any question. http://www.glsbd.com/survey.html ............................................................ The Jkirks: Music http://www.thejkirks.com/music-11.html The Earnest Soldier The Moment’s slow. Years move so fast. I gotta run. I’ll miss my past. Don’t wake me when its over. The shortest story ever told. Died so young. Born so old. Don’t look its on my shoulder. I won’t be back again. Not punished for my sins. I face eternity with at I chose to be. I’m declaring peace today. Better get out of my way. Go home now the fighting’s over. The Greatest story ever told. A poor man’s peace beats rich man’s gold. We’ll take it off his shoulders. We won’t be back again. Not punished for our sins. We face eternity with what we chose to be. I want to take you with me. I’m holding you round your knees. But I know when I go. I go alone. The heart beats slow. Blood flows so fast. I could not run. I missed my past. Woke up and now its over. The earnest story never told. I died so young for rich man’s gold. Don’t look its on your shoulder. I won’t be back again. Not punished for my sins. I face eternity with at I chose and what we chose and what you chose for me. I want to take you with me. I’m holding you round your knees. But I know when I go. I go alone. I go alone. I go alone. ............................................................. URGENT!! KENT STATE NEEDS HELP!! Subject: [CampusAntiwarNetwork] Date: Thu, 27 Oct 2005 18:57:34 +0000 From: nicole robinson Reply-To: CampusAntiwarNetwork@yahoogroups.com To: CampusAntiwarNetwork@yahoogroups.com I know this is the second time I am sending out a request for help. But if you have not yet called and/or e-mailed KENT STATE administration PLEASE DO SO! Today Dave Airhart (Iraq Veteran and student at KSU) was told he will be facing probation, suspension or expulsion! We need to tell KENT STATE administration that we will not allow them to punish an Iraq Veteran for speaking out for peace! Below are the numbers/e-mails. Let's show them that we are a strong antiwar movement all around the U.S. and we will not tolerate such actions! We have done a press conference but need your support as well. Attached to this e-mail is an article that I wrote about the situation. If you are not familiar with what happened please read it and/or e-mail me. NLR75@hotmail.com. Also if you have more suggestion on what we can be doing e-mail me. Thank-you everyone for your solidarity. Carol Cartwright- University President: 330.672.2210 carol.cartwright@kent.edu Greg Jarvie- Dean of Undergraduate Students: 330.672.9494 gjarvie@kent.edu William Ross- Executive Director of the Undergraduate Student Senate: 330.672.3207 wross@kent.edu ........................................................... Sisters and Brothers, Please check out the new Mumia info and resource guide created by ICFFMAJ. We urge you to download it from our website at: http://www.freemumia.com/pdfs/MumiaBooklet1.pdf ........................................................... People's History of Science: Miners, Midwives, and "Low Mechanicks" By Clifford D. Conner Nation Books / November 2005 ISBN 1-56025-748-2 / 568 pp. / $17.95 "Revisionist history with a strong proletarian bent." -Kirkus Reviews, October 2005 "Cliff Conner's A People's History of Science is a delightfully refreshing new look at the history of science. I know of nothing like it, because it approaches that history free of the usual elitist preconceptions, and shows, in an inspiring way, the role that ordinary people, working people, played in the development of science. He presents startling new historical data which should create some commotion in the halls of orthodoxy." Howard Zinn, author of A People's History of the United States The history of science is more complex and collaborative than the traditional heroic narratives of Galileo, Newton, Darwin, and Einstein suggest. Expanding on Howard Zinn's concept of a people's history, author Clifford D. Conner has written his own populist take on the history of science. A People's History of Science offers a broad survey of the history of science "from the bottom up," covering the entire globe and spanning the Paleolithic to the postmodern eras. His thesis is to demonstrate that science-the knowledge of nature-did not emerge from the brains of "Great Geniuses" with "Great Ideas," but from the collective experience of working people-artisans, miners, sailors, peasant farmers, and others-whose struggle for survival forced them into close contact with nature on a daily basis. In A People's History of Science, Conner demystifies science by locating its origins and development in the productive activities of working people. He also persuasively argues that the increasing specialization of the sciences in universities and medical faculties has more often retarded rather than advanced the growth of knowledge. Conner also establishes that: Medical science began with knowledge of plants' therapeutic properties discovered by preliterate ancient people. Chemistry and metallurgy originated with ancient miners, smiths, and potters; geology and archaeology were also born in the mines. Mathematics owes its existence and a great deal of its development to surveyors, merchants, clerk-accountants, and mechanics of many millennia. The experimental method that characterized the Scientific Revolution, as well as the mass of scientific data upon which it built, emerged from the workshops of European artisans. The emergence of computer science from the garages and attics of college dropouts demonstrates that even in recent times the most important scientific innovations have not always been produced by a professional scientific elite. The mystique of modern science proclaims it to be a superior form of knowledge, but in fact its trustworthiness has been thoroughly undermined by the self-interest of corporations that hire the scientists and manipulate their research findings. Clifford D. Conner grew up in Nashville, TN. He received his masters degree in education from the University of Georgia and his Ph. D in the History of Science from CUNY. He has published a number of articles on the history of science in scholarly journals and has participated in international colloquia on various subjects. Conner worked as a proofreader and taught history in the CUNY system before becoming a full-time author of books on historical subjects. He lives in New York City. ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*-------- ARTICLES IN FULL: ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*-------- 1) Op-Ed Columnist The Deadly Doughnut By PAUL KRUGMAN November 11, 2005 Nhttp://select.nytimes.com/2005/11/11/opinion/11krugman.html?hp 2) Op-Ed Columnist And the War Goes On By BOB HERBERT November 7, 2005 http://select.nytimes.com/2005/11/07/opinion/07herbert.html?hp 3) Op-Ed Columnist Pride, Prejudice, Insurance By PAUL KRUGMAN November 7, 2005 http://select.nytimes.com/2005/11/07/opinion/07krugman.html?hp 4) Op-Ed Columnist Gangsta, in French By DAVID BROOKS November 10, 2005 http://select.nytimes.com/2005/11/10/opinion/10brooks.html 5) Op-Ed Columnist An Army Ready to Snap By BOB HERBERT November 10, 2005 http://select.nytimes.com/2005/11/10/opinion/10herbert.html?hp 6) Close-up Military recruiters target isolated, depressed areas By Ann Scott Tyson The Washington Post Wednesday, November 9, 2005 - 12:00 AM http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2002612542_recruits09.html ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*-------- 1) Op-Ed Columnist The Deadly Doughnut By PAUL KRUGMAN November 11, 2005 Nhttp://select.nytimes.com/2005/11/11/opinion/11krugman.html?hp Registration for Medicare's new prescription drug benefit starts next week. Soon millions of Americans will learn that doughnuts are bad for your health. And if we're lucky, Americans will also learn a bigger lesson: politicians who don't believe in a positive role for government shouldn't be allowed to design new government programs. Before we turn to the larger issue, let's look at how the Medicare drug benefit will work over the course of next year. At first, the benefit will look like a normal insurance plan, with a deductible and co-payments. But if your cumulative drug expenses reach $2,250, a very strange thing will happen: you'll suddenly be on your own. The Medicare benefit won't kick in again unless your costs reach $5,100. This gap in coverage has come to be known as the "doughnut hole." (Did you think I was talking about Krispy Kremes?) One way to see the bizarre effect of this hole is to notice that if you are a retiree and spend $2,000 on drugs next year, Medicare will cover 66 percent of your expenses. But if you spend $5,000 - which means that you're much more likely to need help paying those expenses - Medicare will cover only 30 percent of your bills. A study in the July/August issue of Health Affairs points out that this will place many retirees on a financial "roller coaster." People with high drug costs will have relatively low out-of-pocket expenses for part of the year - say, until next summer. Then, suddenly, they'll enter the doughnut hole, and their personal expenses will soar. And because the same people tend to have high drug costs year after year, the roller-coaster ride will repeat in 2007. How will people respond when their out-of-pocket costs surge? The Health Affairs article argues, based on experience from H.M.O. plans with caps on drug benefits, that it's likely "some beneficiaries will cut back even essential medications while in the doughnut hole." In other words, this doughnut will make some people sick, and for some people it will be deadly. The smart thing to do, for those who could afford it, would be to buy supplemental insurance that would cover the doughnut hole. But guess what: the bill that established the drug benefit specifically prohibits you from buying insurance to cover the gap. That's why many retirees who already have prescription drug insurance are being advised not to sign up for the Medicare benefit. If all of this makes the drug bill sound like a disaster, bear in mind that I've touched on only one of the bill's awful features. There are many others, like the clause that prohibits Medicare from using its clout to negotiate lower drug prices. Why is this bill so bad? The probable answer is that the Republican Congressional leaders who rammed the bill through in 2003 weren't actually trying to protect retired Americans against the risk of high drug expenses. In fact, they're fundamentally hostile to the idea of social insurance, of public programs that reduce private risk. Their purpose was purely political: to be able to say that President Bush had honored his 2000 campaign promise to provide prescription drug coverage by passing a drug bill, any drug bill. Once you recognize that the drug benefit is a purely political exercise that wasn't supposed to serve its ostensible purpose, the absurdities in the program make sense. For example, the bill offers generous coverage to people with low drug costs, who have the least need for help, so lots of people will get small checks in the mail and think they're being treated well. Meanwhile, the people who are actually likely to need a lot of help paying their drug expenses were deliberately offered a very poor benefit. According to a report issued along with the final version of the bill, people are prohibited from buying supplemental insurance to cover the doughnut hole to keep beneficiaries from becoming "insensitive to costs" - that is, buying too much medicine because they don't pay the price. A more likely motive is that Congressional leaders didn't want a drug bill that really worked for middle-class retirees. Can the drug bill be fixed? Yes, but not by current management. It's hard to believe that either the current Congressional leadership or the Mayberry Machiavellis in the White House would do any better on a second pass. We won't have a drug benefit that works until we have politicians who want it to work. Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*-------- 2) Op-Ed Columnist And the War Goes On By BOB HERBERT November 7, 2005 http://select.nytimes.com/2005/11/07/opinion/07herbert.html?hp The coalition of the clueless that launched the tragically misguided war in Iraq is in complete disarray. Dick Cheney is simultaneously running from questions about his role in the Valerie Wilson affair and fighting like mad to block any measure that would outlaw torture by the C.I.A. His former top aide, Scooter Libby, one of the original Iraq war zealots, is now an accused felon who is seldom seen in public unaccompanied by defense counsel. Donald Rumsfeld, the high-strutting, high-profile defense secretary who was supposed to win this war in a walk, is suddenly on the down-low. There are people in the witness protection program who are easier to find than Rummy. As for the president, he went all the way to South America to get away from the Washington heat. But even within the luxurious confines of Air Force One, Mr. Bush found that he couldn't escape the increasingly corrosive effect of the fiascos plaguing his administration. The ominous news of the president's plummeting approval ratings followed him like a dark cloud. A Washington Post-ABC News poll found that Mr. Bush has never been less popular with the public. On nearly every important measure of character and performance, he was given lower marks than ever before. For the first time, according to the poll, a majority of Americans even questioned the president's integrity. And fully 55 percent of respondents to a new USA Today/CNN/Gallup poll said they believe the Bush administration has been a failure. The fact that Mr. Bush is struggling in his own political purgatory (for the sin of incompetence) is bad news for the soldiers in Iraq, where the suffering and dying continues unabated. The administration that was so anxious to throw scores of thousands of healthy young Americans into the flames of war now has no idea how to get them out. Troops are being sent into Iraq for two, three, even four combat tours by an administration in which clowns like Scooter Libby and Karl Rove were playing games with the identity of a C.I.A. agent, and the vice president has been obsessed with his twisted protect-the-torturers campaign. Now the Bush crew, which should be focused like a laser on what to do about the war, is consumed with damage control - pumping up the poll numbers, defending its handling of prewar intelligence, fending off further indictments and staying out of prison. The war? There's no plan for the war. The architects of this war had no idea what they were getting into, and they are just as clueless now. The war just goes on and on, which is not just tragic - it's criminal. Opposition to the war may be mounting. But the reality of the war, especially the toll of American dead and wounded, fades in and out of the public's consciousness. There was a rush of articles a couple of weeks ago when the number of deaths of Americans serving in Iraq reached 2,000. But those stories were quickly superseded by Harriet Miers's withdrawal of her nomination to the Supreme Court; President Bush's selection of Samuel Alito to take her place; the indictment of Mr. Libby; the president's address to the nation on the possibility of a bird flu pandemic and so on. The killing of G.I.'s in Iraq once again took its place as a relatively minor story, meriting in most cases just a brief mention on the inside pages of the major newspapers, and the most cursory coverage on television newscasts. The death toll has now reached at least 2,035 and, of course, it is climbing. More than 15,000 G.I.'s have been wounded in action. Limbs have been lost. Men and women have been permanently paralyzed, horribly burned, or blinded. Thousands more have been injured in nonhostile incidents, such as accidents, and many have fallen ill. If the American public could see the carnage in Iraq the way television viewers saw the agony of New Orleans in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, this war would be over. A solution would be found. Imagine watching a couple of soldiers in flames, screaming, as they attempt to escape the burning wreckage of a vehicle hit by a roadside bomb or a rocket-propelled grenade. For all the talk, neither the administration nor the public has taken the reality of this war seriously enough to do something about it. If the sons and daughters of the privileged were fighting it, we'd be out of Iraq soon enough. But they're not fighting it. So the war goes on and on. Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*-------- 3) Op-Ed Columnist Pride, Prejudice, Insurance By PAUL KRUGMAN November 7, 2005 http://select.nytimes.com/2005/11/07/opinion/07krugman.html?hp General Motors is reducing retirees' medical benefits. Delphi has declared bankruptcy, and will probably reduce workers' benefits as well as their wages. An internal Wal-Mart memo describes plans to cut health costs by hiring temporary workers, who aren't entitled to health insurance, and screening out employees likely to have high medical bills. These aren't isolated anecdotes. Employment-based health insurance is the only serious source of coverage for Americans too young to receive Medicare and insufficiently destitute to receive Medicaid, but it's an institution in decline. Between 2000 and 2004 the number of Americans under 65 rose by 10 million. Yet the number of nonelderly Americans covered by employment-based insurance fell by 4.9 million. The funny thing is that the solution - national health insurance, available to everyone - is obvious. But to see the obvious we'll have to overcome pride - the unwarranted belief that America has nothing to learn from other countries - and prejudice - the equally unwarranted belief, driven by ideology, that private insurance is more efficient than public insurance. Let's start with the fact that America's health care system spends more, for worse results, than that of any other advanced country. In 2002 the United States spent $5,267 per person on health care. Canada spent $2,931; Germany spent $2,817; Britain spent only $2,160. Yet the United States has lower life expectancy and higher infant mortality than any of these countries. But don't people in other countries sometimes find it hard to get medical treatment? Yes, sometimes - but so do Americans. No, Virginia, many Americans can't count on ready access to high-quality medical care. The journal Health Affairs recently published the results of a survey of the medical experience of "sicker adults" in six countries, including Canada, Britain, Germany and the United States. The responses don't support claims about superior service from the U.S. system. It's true that Americans generally have shorter waits for elective surgery than Canadians or Britons, although German waits are even shorter. But Americans do worse by some important measures: we find it harder than citizens of other advanced countries to see a doctor when we need one, and our system is more, not less, rife with medical errors. Above all, Americans are far more likely than others to forgo treatment because they can't afford it. Forty percent of the Americans surveyed failed to fill a prescription because of cost. A third were deterred by cost from seeing a doctor when sick or from getting recommended tests or follow-up. Why does American medicine cost so much yet achieve so little? Unlike other advanced countries, we treat access to health care as a privilege rather than a right. And this attitude turns out to be inefficient as well as cruel. The U.S. system is much more bureaucratic, with much higher administrative costs, than those of other countries, because private insurers and other players work hard at trying not to pay for medical care. And our fragmented system is unable to bargain with drug companies and other suppliers for lower prices. Taiwan, which moved 10 years ago from a U.S.-style system to a Canadian-style single-payer system, offers an object lesson in the economic advantages of universal coverage. In 1995 less than 60 percent of Taiwan's residents had health insurance; by 2001 the number was 97 percent. Yet according to a careful study published in Health Affairs two years ago, this huge expansion in coverage came virtually free: it led to little if any increase in overall health care spending beyond normal growth due to rising population and incomes. Before you dismiss Taiwan as a faraway place of which we know nothing, remember Chile-mania: just a few months ago, during the Bush administration's failed attempt to privatize Social Security, commentators across the country - independent thinkers all, I'm sure - joined in a chorus of ill-informed praise for Chile's private retirement accounts. (It turns out that Chile's system has a lot of problems.) Taiwan has more people and a much bigger economy than Chile, and its experience is a lot more relevant to America's real problems. The economic and moral case for health care reform in America, reform that would make us less different from other advanced countries, is overwhelming. One of these days we'll realize that our semiprivatized system isn't just unfair, it's far less efficient than a straightforward system of guaranteed health insurance. Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*-------- 4) Op-Ed Columnist Gangsta, in French By DAVID BROOKS November 10, 2005 http://select.nytimes.com/2005/11/10/opinion/10brooks.html After 9/11, everyone knew there was going to be a debate about the future of Islam. We just didn't know the debate would be between Osama bin Laden and Tupac Shakur. Yet those seem to be the lifestyle alternatives that are really on offer for poor young Muslim men in places like France, Britain and maybe even the world beyond. A few highly alienated and fanatical young men commit themselves to the radical Islam of bin Laden. But most find their self-respect by embracing the poses and worldview of American hip-hop and gangsta rap. One of the striking things about the scenes from France is how thoroughly the rioters have assimilated hip-hop and rap culture. It's not only that they use the same hand gestures as American rappers, wear the same clothes and necklaces, play the same video games, and sit with the same sorts of car stereos at full blast. It's that they seem to have adopted the same poses of exaggerated manhood, the same attitudes about women, money and the police. They seem to have replicated the same sort of gang culture, the same romantic visions of gunslinging drug dealers. In a globalized age it's perhaps inevitable that the culture of resistance gets globalized, too. What we are seeing is what Mark Lilla of the University of Chicago calls a universal culture of the wretched of the earth. The images, modes and attitudes of hip-hop and gangsta rap are so powerful they are having a hegemonic effect across the globe. American ghetto life, at least as portrayed in rap videos, now defines for the young, poor and disaffected what it means to be oppressed. Gangsta resistance is the most compelling model for how to rebel against that oppression. If you want to stand up and fight The Man, the Notorious B.I.G. shows the way. This is a reminder that for all the talk about American cultural hegemony, American countercultural hegemony has always been more powerful. America's rebellious countercultural heroes exert more influence around the world than the clean establishment images from Disney and McDonald's. This is our final insult to the anti-Americans; we define how to be anti-American, and the foreigners who attack us are reduced to borrowing our own clichés. When rap first came to France, American rappers dominated the scene, but now the suburban immigrant neighborhoods have produced their own stars in their own language. French rap lyrics today are like the American gangsta lyrics of about five or 10 years ago, when it was more common to fantasize about cop killings and gang rape. Most of the lyrics can't be reprinted in this newspaper, but you can get a sense of them from, say, a snippet from a song from Bitter Ministry: "Another woman takes her beating./This time she's called Brigitte./She's the wife of a cop. " Or this from Mr. R's celebrated album "PolitiKment IncorreKt": "France is a bitch. ... Don't forget to [deleted] her to exhaustion. You have to treat her like a whore, man! ... My niggers and my Arabs, our playground is the street with the most guns!" The French gangsta pose is familiar. It is built around the image of the strong, violent hypermacho male, who loudly asserts his dominance and demands respect. The gangsta is a brave, countercultural criminal. He has nothing but rage for the institutions of society: the state and the schools. He shows his own cruel strength by dominating women. It is perhaps no accident that until the riots, the biggest story coming out of these neighborhoods was the rise of astonishing and horrific gang rapes. In other words, what we are seeing in France will be familiar to anyone who watched gangsta culture rise in this country. You take a population of young men who are oppressed by racism and who face limited opportunities, and you present them with a culture that encourages them to become exactly the sort of people the bigots think they are - and you call this proud self-assertion and empowerment. You take men who are already suspected by the police because of their color, and you romanticize and encourage criminality so they will be really despised and mistreated. You tell them to defy oppression by embracing self-destruction. In America, at least, gangsta rap is sort of a game. The gangsta fan ends up in college or law school. But in France, the barriers to ascent are higher. The prejudice is more impermeable, and the labor markets are more rigid. There really is no escape. Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*-------- 5) Op-Ed Columnist An Army Ready to Snap By BOB HERBERT November 10, 2005 http://select.nytimes.com/2005/11/10/opinion/10herbert.html?hp Have you heard what's been happening to the military? Most people have heard that more than 2,000 American G.I.'s have been killed in the nonstop meat grinder of Iraq. There was a flurry of stories about that grim milestone in the last week of October. (Since then the official number of American deaths has jumped to at least 2,055, and it continues to climb steadily.) More than 15,000 have been wounded in action. But the problems of the military go far beyond the casualty figures coming out of the war zone. The Army, for example, has been stretched so taut since the Sept. 11 attacks, especially by the fiasco in Iraq, that it's become like a rubber band that may snap at any moment. President Bush and Donald Rumsfeld convinced themselves that they could win the war in Iraq on the cheap. They never sent enough troops to do the job. Now the burden of trying to fight a long and bitter war with too few troops is taking a terrible toll on the men and women in uniform. Last December, the top general in the Army Reserve warned that his organization was "rapidly degenerating into a 'broken' force" because of the Pentagon's "dysfunctional" policies and demands placed on the Reserve by the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. As one of my colleagues at The Times, David Unger of the editorial board, wrote, "The Army's commitments have dangerously and rapidly expanded, while recruitment has plunged." Soldiers are being sent into the crucible of Iraq for three and even four tours, a form of Russian roulette that is unconscionable. "They feel like they're the only ones sacrificing," said Paul Rieckhoff, a former Army lieutenant who served in Iraq and is now the executive director of Operation Truth, an advocacy group for service members and veterans. "They're starting to look around and say, 'You know, it's me and my buddies over and over again, and everybody else is living life uninterrupted.' " When I asked Mr. Rieckhoff what he thought was happening with the Army, he replied, "The wheels are coming off." The Washington Post, in a lengthy article last week, noted: "As sustained combat in Iraq makes it harder than ever to fill the ranks of the all-volunteer force, newly released Pentagon demographic data show that the military is leaning heavily for recruits on economically depressed, rural areas where youths' need for jobs may outweigh the risks of going to war." For those already in the Army, the price being paid - apart from the physical toll of the killed and wounded - is high indeed. Divorce rates have gone way up, nearly doubling over the past four years. Long deployments - and, especially, repeated deployments - can take a vicious toll on personal relationships. Chaplains, psychologists and others have long been aware of the many dangerous factors that accompany wartime deployment: loneliness, financial problems, drug or alcohol abuse, depression, post-traumatic stress disorder, the problems faced by the parent left at home to care for children, the enormous problem of adjusting to the devastation of wartime injuries, and so on. The Army is not just fighting a ruthless insurgency in Iraq. It's fighting a rear-guard action against these noncombat, guerrilla-like conditions that threaten its own viability. There are reasons why parents all across America are telling their children to run the other way when military recruiters come to call. There are reasons why so many lieutenants and captains, fine young men and women, are heading toward the exit doors at the first opportunity. A captain who is on active duty, and therefore asked not to be identified by name, told me yesterday: "The only reason I stayed in the Army was because one colonel convinced me to do it. Other than that, I would have walked. Basically, these guys who are leaving have their high-powered educations. Some are from West Point. They've done their five years. Why should they stay and go back to Iraq and die in a war that's just going to keep on going?" Beyond that, he said, "Guys are not going to stay in the Army when their wives are leaving them." From the perspective of the troops, he said, the situation in Iraq is perverse. He could find no upside. "You go to war," he said, "and you could lose your heart, your mind, your arms, your legs - but you cannot win. The soldiers don't win." Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*-------- 6) Close-up Military recruiters target isolated, depressed areas By Ann Scott Tyson The Washington Post Wednesday, November 9, 2005 - 12:00 AM http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2002612542_recruits09.html WASHINGTON — As combat in Iraq makes it harder than ever to fill the ranks of the all-volunteer force, newly released Pentagon demographic data show that the military is leaning heavily for recruits on economically depressed, rural areas. More than 44 percent of U.S. military recruits come from rural areas, Pentagon figures show. In contrast, 14 percent come from major cities. Young people living in the most sparsely populated ZIP codes are 22 percent more likely to join the Army, with an opposite trend in cities. Regionally, most enlistees come from the South (40 percent) and West (24 percent). Many of today's recruits are financially strapped, with nearly half coming from lower-middle-class to poor households, according to new Pentagon data based on ZIP codes and census estimates of mean household income. Nearly two-thirds of Army recruits in 2004 came from counties in which median household income is below the U.S. median. Such patterns are pronounced in such communities as Martinsville, Va., that supply the greatest number of enlistees in proportion to their youth populations. All of the Army's top 20 counties for recruiting had lower-than-national median incomes, 12 had higher poverty rates, and 16 were non-metropolitan, according to the National Priorities Project, a nonpartisan research group that analyzed 2004 recruiting data by ZIP code. "A lot of the high recruitment rates are in areas where there is not as much economic opportunity for young people," said Anita Dancs, research director for the NPP, based in Northampton, Mass. The war's impact Senior Pentagon officials say the war has had a clear impact on recruiting, with a shrinking pool of candidates forcing the military to accept enlistees of lesser quality. In fiscal 2005, the Army took in its least-qualified group of recruits in a decade, as measured by educational level and test results. The war is also attracting youths driven by patriotism, including a growing fringe of the upper class and wealthy, but military sociologists believe that greater numbers of young people who would have joined for economic reasons are being discouraged by the prolonged combat. The Pentagon ZIP code data, applied for the first time to 2004 recruiting results, underscores patterns already suggested by anecdotal evidence, such as analysis of the hometowns of troops killed in Iraq. Although still an approximation, the data offer a more detailed portrait of the socioeconomic status of the Americans most likely to serve today. Tucked into the Piedmont foothills of southern Virginia, Martinsville is typical of the lower-income rural communities across the nation that today constitute the U.S. military's richest recruiting grounds. Albert Deal, 25, had struggled for years to hold onto a job in this rural Virginia community of rolling hills and shuttered textile mills. So when the high-school graduate got his latest pink slip, from a modular-homes plant, he took a hard look at his life. Then he picked up the phone and dialed the steadiest employer he knew: the U.S. Army. Two weeks later, on Oct. 27, Deal sat in his parents' living room and signed one enlistment document after another as his fiancée, Kimbery Easter, somberly looked on. "This is the police check," said Sgt. 1st Class Christopher Barber, a veteran Army recruiter, leading Deal through the stack of paperwork. "This is the sex-offender check ... " Barber spoke in a monotone, sounding like a tour guide who had memorized every word. Left adrift, young people such as Deal "are being pushed out of their communities. They want to get away from intolerable situations, and the military offers them something different," said Morten Ender, a sociologist at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point. To be sure, some young people who need jobs or college money also seek adventure and a chance to serve their country. Others come from towns with large bases or populations of veterans interwoven with a military culture that helps keep enlistments high. And a rising percentage of youth from wealthy areas is signing up, presumably for patriotic reasons. But nationwide, data point above all to places such as Martinsville, where rural roads lined with pine and poplar trees snake through lonely, desolate towns, as the wellspring for the youth fighting America's wars. "They are these untapped kids," Enders said "that nobody found." Working the territory Barber's territory spans 862 square miles in one of the country's most productive recruiting regions. Roaming in and out of cellphone range through tiny towns, Barber and his partner post Army brochures at mom-and-pop groceries, work the crowd at NASCAR races at the local track, and log more than 100 miles a day meeting potential recruits. On a recent day, he palmed the steering wheel of his gray Dodge Stratus as he drove northwest into the steeply undulating backcountry surrounding Martinsville, where he commands a recruiting station. In fiscal 2005, the Army's worst year for recruiting since 1999, they signed up 94 percent of their target, a relatively high number in one of the Army's top recruiting regions. "We were pretty much dead-on," said Barber of Miami, attributing his success in part to the region's shrinking job market and the inability of families to afford college. Unemployment in Martinsville was 12.1 percent in 2004. Median income is $27,000, with a poverty rate of 17.5 percent, 2000 census data show. "The job market is dwindling, and it's hard for a young man or woman to find something other than the fast-food business," Barber said on the way to the one-story home of Mike McNeely, Deal's stepfather. Closed doors Still, many young people such as Deal exhaust other options before considering the Army, making today's recruits older on average. "These kids have tested the labor market and gone on to college but didn't perform well," said Curtis Gilroy, director of accessions for the Pentagon. From 2000 to 2004, the number of teenagers joining the military dropped, while 20- to 25-year-olds rose from 31 to 36 percent. As his fiancée stares impassively at a TV soap opera, Deal cradles Kadence, her fussy 6-month-old daughter, and explains how he turned to the Army after doors kept slamming in his face. "I tried anything and everything" to land a job, Deal said, ticking off glass and furniture companies and a local telemarketing firm. "No one ever called back." Divorced and the father of a 3-year-old son, Deal decided to call the recruiter because "it's a job to do," he said. "It's something to make a life of." Sitting in a kitchen decorated with religious figurines, McNeely, 50, agreed. "You're not looking at a lot around here in terms of a future," said McNeely, who is disabled. He added that the textile and furniture factories where he once worked have vanished or downsized. But McNeely, Deal and Easter are uneasy over the prospect that the job will lead to Iraq. "That bothers me a lot," said McNeely, saying that his wife also likes to have Deal "in hollerin' distance." Easter now supports Deal, after being angry at first over his plans to join the Army. Still, she hesitates to marry him before he leaves for boot camp. Deal, who wants a job as a tank driver, said he hopes he won't deploy. "Believe me, I don't want to go over there." But, he said, "that's the risk I take." It was just after lunch at Magna Vista High School south of Martinsville. Sgt. Michael Ricciardi strode through the door and was ushered inside by a smiling woman signing in visitors. He was soon joking with kids heading to class, including several future soldiers. "This is pretty much my 'anchor' school," said Ricciardi, Barber's partner, who spends hours each week handing out Frisbees and footballs in the hallways. "They know me pretty well." In contrast to some schools around the country that limit access to recruiters, Magna Vista, where half of students receive financial aid or free lunch, welcomes them. School officials give recruiters a list of seniors to contact, and encourage upperclassmen to take a vocational test required by the military. "We expose them to the fact that the military is there," said guidance counselor Karen Cecil. "We're setting the stage for (students) to know it's an option," especially as a way to afford college, she said. Indeed, like many heavy recruiting areas, Martinsville has more people seeking Army jobs than are qualified for them. Army recruiters here turn away scores of interested youths because they fail vocational tests, physicals or legal-background checks. To fill its ranks nationwide, the Army in fiscal 2005 accepted its least-qualified pool in a decade — falling below quota in high-school graduates (87 percent) and taking in more youths scoring in the lowest category of aptitude test (3.9 percent). Support for military service among parents has dwindled nationwide, but many parents here view it as an opportunity, often phoning recruiters to urge them to enlist their children. A ticket elsewhere Senior Miyana Gravely, 17, had long talks with her mother before asking for approval to join the Army and go to boot camp last summer. "You can do it. I don't want you to grow up and say, 'Mama wouldn't let me,' " Gravely recalls her mother telling her. Gravely sees soldiering as a ticket to an active life somewhere else. "I don't want to be one of the people still sitting around Martinsville," she said, adding she is contemplating airborne training and "wouldn't mind" going to Iraq. Being black and female, Gravely contradicts a national decline over the past four years in the willingness of both African Americans and women to consider military service — a shift polls attribute to the U.S. anti-terrorism effort and perceived discrimination. African Americans fell from 22.3 percent of Army recruits in fiscal 2001 to 14.5 percent this year; Hispanics rose from 10.5 percent to 13.2 percent, and whites, from 60.2 percent to 66.9 percent. Women dropped from 20 percent to 18 percent. Gravely is active in the school's large Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps (JROTC), which draws 300 of the 1,200 students each year and works closely with recruiters. JROTC programs are prolific in Virginia and across the rural South. "The parents heavily support it. We've kept a lot of kids from getting kicked out of school," said JROTC instructor John Truini. The program gives students military ranks and strips them away if they break discipline. "I don't want to say [we] control the kids, but we have influence over them," Truini said. Davey Brooks, 17, grew up on a small farm; he said JROTC "changed everything about my life." He joined JROTC in hopes the military could fulfill his dream of learning to fly — "like 'Top Gun,' " he says. Now, Brooks is "battalion commander" and leader of a nine-person Raider Team — modeled after Army Rangers — which competes in military skills such as evacuating casualties and orienteering. He plans a 20-year Army career. "I want to be in the Army and fly whatever I can get my hands on," Brooks said. He is eager to go to Iraq as a pilot, although he admits to one drawback: He's scared of heights. "But when I'm up there," he predicted, "I'll feel like I'm free and I'm in control of everything." Copyright © 2005 The Seattle Times Company ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*-------- LINKS: ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*-------- No-Bid Contract to Replace Schools After Katrina Is Faulted By ERIC LIPTON Published: November 11, 2005 http://www.nytimes.com/2005/11/11/national/nationalspecial/11schools.html?hp&ex=1131771600&en=9c902d201cc0f26a&ei=5094&partner=homepage Rethinking ‘Capitalist Restoration’ in China by Yiching Wu http://www.monthlyreview.org/1105wu.htm Army reaches low, fills ranks 12% of recruits in Oct. had lowest acceptable scores By Tom Bowman / Baltimore Sun November 8th, 2005 6:27 pm http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/nationworld/bal-te.recruit08nov08,1,1130565.story?coll=bal-home-headlines&ctrack=1&cset=true France Declares 12-Day State of Emergency to Curb Crisis By MEG BORTIN, International Herald Tribune Published: November 8, 2005 http://www.nytimes.com/2005/11/08/international/europe/08cnd-france.html?hp&ex=1131512400&en=16bffc43c5fa3eb9&ei=5094&partner=homepage FOCUS | Frank Rich: The Mysterious Death of Pat Tillman Frank Rich writes, it would be a compelling story," Patrick Fitzgerald said of the narrative Scooter Libby used to allegedly mislead investigators in the Valerie Wilson leak case, "if only it were true." http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/110605Z.shtml Groups against recruiters LARGELY SYMBOLIC PROP. I OPPOSES MILITARY OFFICIALS' PRESENCE AT CITY SCHOOLS By Dana Hull Mercury News http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/local/states/california/peninsula/13096573.htm?template=contentModules/printstory.jsp French rioters shoot at police By Anna Willard and Franck Prevel Mon Nov 7, 2005 09:00 AM ET http://go.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=10184789&src=eDialog/GetContent Lawmakers Call for Limits on F.B.I. Power to Demand Records in Terrorism Investigations By ERIC LICHTBLAU Published: November 7, 2005 http://www.nytimes.com/2005/11/07/politics/07fbi.html First Death Is Reported in Paris Riots as Arson Increases By CRAIG S. SMITH Published: November 7, 2005 http://www.nytimes.com/2005/11/07/international/europe/07cnd-france.html?hp&ex=1131426000&en=165b4421caeda67a&ei=5094&partner=homepage UAW: http://www.uaw.org/ Report on first of two auto rank-and-file meetings (found at www.kclabor.org/news.htm) Monday, November 7, 2005 http://www.detnews.com/2005/autosinsider/0511/07/0auto-374260.htm Students protest war; others back U.S. military PAUL SAND; The News Tribune Published: November 3rd, 2005 03:00 AM http://www.thenewstribune.com/news/local/story/5304174p-4809122c.html washingtonpost.com Youths in Rural U.S. Are Drawn To Military Recruits' Job Worries Outweigh War Fears By Ann Scott Tyson Washington Post Staff Writer Friday, November 4, 2005; A01 http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/03/AR2005110302528.html Bush ratings drop to new lows in poll Thu Nov 3, 2005 11:46 PM ET http://go.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=10160729&src=eDialog/GetContent Vehicles torched in French riots Fri Nov 4, 2005 07:39 AM ET By Kerstin Gehmlich http://go.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=10165728&src=eDialog/GetContent Thousands Protest Against Bush at Summit in Argentina By ELISABETH BUMILLER and LARRY ROHTER Published: November 4, 2005 http://www.nytimes.com/2005/11/04/international/americas/04cnd-prexy.html?hp&ex=1131166800&en=3cdb8cc69efdac1c&ei=5094&partner=homepage Pacifists for War How the fractured counterrecruitment movement includes those hoping to bring the draft back By Cristi Hegranes From sfweekly.com Originally published by SF Weekly 2005-11-02 ©2005 New Times, Inc. All rights reserved. http://www.sfweekly.com/Issues/2005-11-02/news/feature_print.html Military Recruits Come From Poor Areas United Press International | November 03, 2005 WASHINGTON - Most military recruits in the United States come from areas in which household income is lower than the national median, a non-profit group says. Nearly two-thirds, 64 percent, of recruits to the military were from counties that have average incomes lower than the national median National Priorities Project said. The group looked at Department of Defense data for 2004. According to NPP, 15 of the top 20 counties that had the highest numbers of recruits had higher poverty rates than the national average, and 18 of the top 20 had higher poverty rates than the state average. The U.S. military has long been considered a step away from economic hardship, a trend that is apparently continuing. Military recruiting officials contend money is not the only reason people join the military, since it also attracts those looking for an opportunity for public service, travel, and structure and discipline. http://www.upi.com/NewsTrack/view.php?StoryID=20051101-035849-1019r Red Cross seeks access to CIA prison By Stephanie Nebehay Thu Nov 3, 2005 08:56 AM ET http://go.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=10152008&src=eDialog/GetContent Israel and the Neocons The Libby Affair and the Internal War By JAMES PETRAS November 3, 2005 http://www.counterpunch.org/petras11032005.html A Thousand Evictions a Day for Weeks Why are They Making New Orleans a Ghost Town? By BILL QUIGLEY November 1, 2005 On Halloween night, New Orleans was very, very dark. Well over half the homes on the east bank of New Orleans sit vacant because they still do not have electricity. More do not have natural gas or running water. Most stoplights still do not work. Most street lights remain out. Fully armed National Guard troops refuse to allow over ten thousand people to even physically visit their property in the Lower Ninth Ward neighborhood. Despite the fact that people cannot come back, tens of thousands of people face eviction from their homes. A local judge told me that their court expects to process a thousand evictions a day for weeks. Renters still in shelters or temporary homes across the country will never see the court notice taped to the door of their home. Because they will not show up for the eviction hearing that they do not know about, their possessions will be tossed out in the street. In the street their possessions will sit alongside an estimated 3 million truck loads of downed trees, piles of mud, fiberglass insulation, crushed sheetrock, abandoned cars, spoiled mattresses, wet rugs, and horrifyingly smelly refrigerators full of food from August. There are also New Orleans renters facing evictions from landlords who want to renovate and charge higher rents to the out of town workers who populate the city. Some renters have offered to pay their rent and are still being evicted. Others question why they should have to pay rent for September when they were not allowed to return to New Orleans. http://www.counterpunch.org/quigley11012005.html ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*-------- ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*-------- ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*-------- ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*-------- ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*--------
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