Posted on 12/04/2006 7:36:31 AM PST by kellynla
Rep. Charlie Rangel (D.-N.Y.), soon to chair the powerful House Ways and Means Committee, has announced his intention to try to reinstate the draft. He has offered three justifications for returning to conscription after 33 years of an all-volunteer force: social justice, peace and better troops.
Rangel claims that mostly poor people with few opportunities enlist, often driven to military service because of structural unemployment. If a young fellow has an option of having a decent career, or joining the Army to fight in Iraq, you can bet your life that he would not be in Iraq, he said on Fox News Sunday, November 26. This serious chargethat the most vulnerable citizens are being hauled away to fight in corporate Americas wars of choice while the elite are earning fortunesis untrue.
Higher Quality
According to military data analyzed by the Heritage Foundation, U.S. troops come from wealthier neighborhoods than their civilian peers (see page 3). In fact, the only underrepresented neighborhoods are those with the lowest incomes.
A November 2005 Heritage report comparing military enlistees in 1999 to those in 2003 showed no degradation in troop quality. Recently, we revisited the issue by examining the full recruiting classes for all branches of the U.S. military for every year from 2003 to 2005.
The demographic characteristics of volunteers have continued to show signs of higher quality.
For example, our review of Pentagon enlistee data shows that the only group lowering its participation in the military is the poor. The percentage of recruits from the poorest American neighborhoods (with one-fifth of the U.S. population) declined from 18% in 1999 to 13.7% in 2005. The distribution of household income of recruits is noticeably higher than that of the entire youth population.
Like their peers in 1999 and 2003, recruits in 2004 and 2005 came primarily from middle-class areas. Poor areas are proportionally underrepresented in the wartime years (2003-2005).
The Department of Defense does not track family income data for recruits, and there are no individual income data for enlistees. Military service is the first full-time job for most of them. We approximated each recruits household income by using the median household income of his or her hometown ZIP code.
By assigning each recruit the median 1999 household income for his hometown ZIP code as determined from Census 2000, the mean income for 2004 recruits was $43,122 (in 1999 dollars). For 2005 recruits, it was $43,238 (in 1999 dollars). These are increases over the mean incomes for the 1999 cohort ($41,141) and 2003 cohort ($42,822). The national median published in Census 2000 was $41,994. On average, the 2004 and 2005 recruit populations come from even wealthier areas than their peers who enlisted in 1999 and 2003.
When comparing these wartime recruits (2003-2005) to the resident population ages 18 to 24 (as recorded in Census 2000), areas with median household income levels between $35,000 and $79,999 were overrepresented, along with income categories between $85,000 and $94,999. This suggests the U.S. isnt sending the poor to die for the interests of the rich.
From 2003 to 2005, the representation of the highest-income quintile rose 0.68 percentage points, from 22.17% to 22.85%. As conflict in Iraq continues, youth from wealthy areas continue to volunteer for duty despite increased risk. Additionally, over the course of these three recruit years, representation from the poorest quintile has decreased dramatically. The representation among recruits of the lowest-income quintile fell nearly a full percentage point, from 14.61% in 2003 to 13.66% in 2005.
Educational achievement is the characteristic most commonly cited as evidence of lower military standards driven by the Iraq War. In general, though, the higher quality of recruits compared to equivalent civilian population has held steady during the war years.
Given the nature of the military rank structure, most enlisted recruits do not have a college education or degree. Members of the armed forces with higher education are usually commissioned officers (lieutenant and above). In 2004, 92.1% of active-duty officer accessions held bachelors degrees or higher. From 2000 to 2005, between 10% and 17% of active-duty officer accessions held advanced degrees, and between 35% and 45% of the active-duty officer corps held advanced degrees. This indicates that officers continued their education during their military service.
Additionally, the Department of Defense reports that the mean reading level of 2004 recruits is a full grade level higher than that of the comparable youth population. Fewer than 2% of wartime recruits have no high-school credentials. The national high-school graduation rate is 79.8%.
As support for the war in Iraq has declined, criticism of the war has translated into criticism of our nations troops, at least by way of criticizing the quality of wartime recruits. But the estimate for mean household income of recruits increased every year from 2003 through 2005. The poorest areas continue to be underrepresented, while middle-class areas are overrepresented. Although the richest income brackets are underrepresented, the difference between the recruit and population proportions for these brackets is less than 0.25%. Overall, the distribution for recruit household incomes is very similar to that of the youth population.
In contrast to the patronizing slanders of antiwar critics, recruit quality is increasing as the war in Iraq continues. Although recent recruiting goals have been difficult to meet, re-enlistment is strong and recruit quality remains high. No evidence supports arguments for reinstating the draft or altering recruiting policies to achieve more equitable representation.
ping
Of course, the MSM will completly ignore this.
..wait..it was all a joke!!
(mutterin a string.....%&*#)
Doogle
Rangel is wrong about so much, one has difficulty deciding where to start.
But don't you see, the military is clearly discriminating against the poor!!
You don't really think he believes what he says about the demographics of the Army, do you?
Move along...nothing to see here.
Charlie Rangel is just plain wrong. The only "data" you need to prove it is to listen to the crap pouring out of his mouth.
Now hold it! Weren't the Dims freaking out because they thought that Pres Bush was going to re-instate the draft??? Since it's coming out of the mouth of Rangle now makes it OK?
And where does he get off on saying that our military personel are just a bunch of losers who couldn't get any other kind of job? That has really got to rankle with all personel who are professionals and hold a degree if not multiple.... I don't know about his army, but in mine I'm protected by seriously brilliant, caring and giving people. To bad they fight to protect the likes him also......
"mean income for 2004 recruits was $43,122 (in 1999 dollars). For 2005 recruits, it was $43,238 (in 1999 dollars). These are increases over the mean incomes for the 1999 cohort ($41,141) and 2003 cohort ($42,822)."
You have to look at this data with Charlies Dem-o-crat worldview --
If you are a family of 4 and only make $43K/yr, you must be at poverty level, right? It is the 'mean' after all.
(Real life, a family of five making $23,108 dollars in 2004 is at poverty level) see http://www.census.gov/hhes/www/poverty/povdef.html
I would like to see some pay raises.
I think it is a disgrace that many military with families are on food stamps!
Semper Fi,
Kelly
Rangel knows the truth. He calmly chooses to endlessly lie (he is a democrat)
Rangel lies, know he lies, but lies anyway. It is his part of the Left agenda of deceit.
bump
Ping!
Rangel Offers Solution to Social Security Funding Problem
Rep. Charles Rangel (D-N.Y.) said the solution to shoring up the solvency of the Social Security System may lie in a new approach to the draft. Rep. Rangels proposal to revive the military draft has been given little chance for passage in the upcoming congress.
The youth of America may just be too selfish to submit to the call to serve, Rangel conceded. But I was thinking, if we drafted the oldsters we might kill two birds with one stone.
Under Rangels new plan, those receiving Social Security benefits would be required to serve two years in the military. War today is highly mechanized and automated, Rangel pointed out. A senior citizen is perfectly capable of pushing a button to launch a missile or drop a bomb. The hand-to-hand combat could still be left to the younger volunteers.
The government is expected to save money in two ways. First, the drafted seniors will displace some of the current military personnel. Instead of having to pay salaries to soldiers and Social Security benefits to retirees, wed make one payment to the senior soldiers, Rangel observed.
The second source of savings is the option of seniors to opt out of the draft by declining to receive Social Security benefits. The government wouldnt have to make any payments to those unwilling to serve, Rangel said. A lot of the elderly are well-off financially. They own homes free-and-clear. They have private sector pensions. Many own stocks and bonds or businesses. They wont need Social Security in their old age.
read more...
http://www.azconservative.org/Semmens1.htm
"Rangel Offers Solution to Social Security Funding Problem"
and your post has what to do with military recruiting? LOL
The type of people Rangel is appealing to do not have the ability to understand words and numbers. Especially when mixed together.
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