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Is This Really an All-Volunteer Army?
NY Times (Week in Review) ^ | April 6, 2003 | STEVEN A. HOLMES

Posted on 04/06/2003 7:19:11 AM PDT by Pharmboy


Associated Press
The 4th Infantry Division, shipping out from Texas.

WASHINGTON — Does the United States military have to be representative of American society? The question has hung heavy since war with Iraq first seemed inevitable, and with it the possibility of heavy casualties. Now, with that war at a climax, a small band of critics continues to maintain that the all-volunteer force — which is 30 years old this year — is all-volunteer in name only.

They argue that relative economic disadvantage has replaced local draft boards in determining who enters the military, especially the enlisted ranks, and that it is un-American to have an affluent nation being defended by working-class young people, heavily layered with minorities.

"It's not fair that the people that we ask to fight the war are people who join the military because of economic conditions," says Representative Charles B. Rangel, the New York Democrat, who advocates a new draft.

When compared with other groups of the same age, the American military, particularly in its enlisted ranks, in fact has fewer rich people. But it also has fewer poor ones. It has more Southerners and fewer Northeasterners. It has a higher percentage of black people, especially black women, compared with the larger population, but a smaller proportion of Hispanics.

Defenders of the all-volunteer force, particularly in the Pentagon, quickly rebutted Mr. Rangel's arguments. They asserted that the military does reflect the country's population, especially when the number of officers — about one-seventh of the military, virtually all of them college graduates — is considered. They also note that while the median income for households that produce white recruits is lower than for other white homes, the median income of the families of black recruits is actually higher than it is for blacks as a whole.

Moreover, supporters of the volunteer force say, the military is, they say, more professional, better motivated and more stable when soldiers, sailors, pilots and others stay in for longer stints. They point to its performance in the Persian Gulf war, the Afghanistan campaign and now Iraq. And they shudder at returning to the often-troubled conscripted military of the Vietnam era, just to make a point about equity that not everyone feels could even be remedied.

"I served in a draft force," a senior Defense Department official said earlier this year. "I remember when enlisted folks fragged — as we liked to say — threw grenades into the officers' quarters in Vietnam. Not a pretty picture."

Comparisons with Vietnam gloss over the experience of World War II, when an American military force, heavy with conscripts, defeated the German military machine, considered at the time the world's best. Put side by side, the comparisons suggest that when it comes to efficiency and motivation, the issue may not be volunteers versus draftees, but a popular war verses an unpopular one.

But the central question about the volunteer force remains Mr. Rangel's: How much choice is there? In some sense the fact that blacks, especially black women, not only enlist, but re-enlist in a higher proportion than whites is seen as an example of the equal opportunity the armed services provide. But it could also be viewed as indicating the lack of opportunity — real or perceived — for African-Americans in civilian society.

Demographic trends don't promise to make the choices easier. With incomes having stagnated except for those people with college degrees, the percentage of youths choosing to continue their education after high school has exploded. In 1970, about 55 percent of men and about 48 percent of women enrolled in college right out of high school. By 1999, 63 percent of men and 64 percent of women were doing so. The sharp increases, which show no sign of leveling off, have put enormous pressure on military recruiters to fill their quotas.

The Defense Department has responded by trying to reduce the need to make a choice between military service and a college education. In recent years it has expanded programs to help members of the military pay for college after active duty. It has permitted more of them to attend college while in the service. So the issue of who serves and who doesn't becomes more and more a matter of who can afford college without help.

Recruiters' task is further complicated by some more specific educational trends as well. Studies have shown that one of the biggest influences on teenagers' career decisions is the educational attainment of their mothers — more so than of their fathers.

With the spectacular growth in the number of women going to college (they now outnumber men), the Pentagon faces a daunting prospect: some day, those legions of educated mothers will, at the same time, be setting a standard at home that will steer their children more surely toward college, even as their added income will help insure that the family has the money to pay for college without turning to military service.

"Parents are certainly major influences, mothers in particular," said Paul R. Sackett, a professor of psychology at the University of Minnesota who studied the challenges that face military recruiters.

Among one group, Hispanics, increases in college attendance have not kept pace with those among blacks and non-Hispanic whites. This could mean that the percentage of the military made up of Hispanics will grow, and the chances that will happen received a boost from President Bush last July, when he signed an executive order providing that any legal immigrant who has been on active duty since Sept. 11, 2001, may immediately apply for citizenship, bypassing the normal three-year waiting period for military personnel and the five-year period for civilians.

But do all of these changes guarantee that the military will become any more or less reflective of American society? Consider this: Even though a shrinking proportion of teenagers has been seeking to enlist, the number of American teenagers is expected to grow in the coming decade, giving recruiters a bigger pool to appeal to. And even if the armed services sign up more Hispanics, demographers say the percentage of the population that is Hispanic is likely to rise relatively quickly too. So the military may wind up merely reflecting the country's demographic change.

Such calculations — and debates about whether the burden of military service will be fairly distributed — are the price of trying to keep an all-volunteer force in balance with a population that is, itself, constantly changing.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: hyphenatedamericans; quotas; socialclass; usmilitary
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C'mon: it's impossible to have all aspects of society follow the demographics of society as a whole. We must get off this kick. These are individuals we are talking about. Following this reasoning, where will it end? Will we need a quota system for left-handed Methodists?

Ability, character, drive: that's what counts. The left-wing racialists should STFU--once and for all.

1 posted on 04/06/2003 7:19:11 AM PDT by Pharmboy
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To: Pharmboy
And patriotism. The Left really loathes America.
2 posted on 04/06/2003 7:21:36 AM PDT by goldstategop
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To: goldstategop
There really sad thing is that journalists are not representative of American Society.
3 posted on 04/06/2003 7:23:03 AM PDT by SubMareener
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To: SubMareener
An excellent point. We should start a movement for diversity (of opinion) in the newsroom so it reflects an image closer to the real US of A.
4 posted on 04/06/2003 7:25:28 AM PDT by Pharmboy (Dems lie 'cause they have to)
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To: Pharmboy
Leave it to Marx's newsletter, the NY Times, to bolster Rangel's wedge issue. There's no REAL story here, but by gosh that won't stop the TImes from creating one.
5 posted on 04/06/2003 7:25:56 AM PDT by IronJack
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To: Pharmboy
SAN FRANCISCO - Protest Centcon has called an emergency meeting to explore alternative plans. Certain, initially, that their message would grow until millions upon millions would join their ranks, bedecked with flower garlands, top officials have been forced to concede that they are running into unforseen resistance. Not only have the expected "love-not-war" peacenicks not materialized, but the enemy is growing in strength and numbers. According to Field Marshal General Susan Sarandon, what organizational planners had forseen as a collapse of the Vast Right Wing has resulted in merely pissing people off. Sarandon expressed dismay that tactics such as pooping and vomiting on the front stairs of government buildings has not inspired patriotic Ameicans to denounce President Bush as an international terrorist. She did, however, express satisfaction that the barrage of demonstrations and rallys had given drag queens an opportunity to party.

6 posted on 04/06/2003 7:27:07 AM PDT by Shenandoah
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To: Pharmboy
Those who work suceed. Those who lazily remani behind an don't work fail.

Laziness is epidemic among the left.

7 posted on 04/06/2003 7:27:38 AM PDT by bert (Don't Panic !)
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To: Pharmboy
The Left are irrational, seeking power and control at all costs.

They cannot be debated, convinced or persuaded.

They can only be vanquished.

8 posted on 04/06/2003 7:28:11 AM PDT by Enduring Freedom (To smash the ugly face of Socialism is our mission)
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To: Pharmboy
a small band of critics continues to maintain...

Wow, they buried this in Week in Review? Usually a small band of critics is all the Times requires to play their pet leftist polemics page one above the fold.

9 posted on 04/06/2003 7:29:54 AM PDT by Timesink (When was the last time YOU remembered we're on Code Orange?)
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To: Enduring Freedom
I hereby nominate your post above for "Quote of the Week."
10 posted on 04/06/2003 7:30:48 AM PDT by Pharmboy (Dems lie 'cause they have to)
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To: Pharmboy
No politician and certainly no loberal wnts any institution to reflect the way America thinks.Thinking is unpatriotic among the left.
11 posted on 04/06/2003 7:31:29 AM PDT by xkaydet65
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To: Pharmboy
God, I hate this newspaper.
12 posted on 04/06/2003 7:31:42 AM PDT by Tulsa Brian
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To: IronJack
Right on, IJ. If there were low numbers of blacks in the military, they'd b*tch; if there are a bit more in the armed services than their percentage in the population, they b*tch.

There is never any satisfying the left, and as a poster above says, that's why we should not bother to try. They just need to be defeated.

13 posted on 04/06/2003 7:34:22 AM PDT by Pharmboy (Dems lie 'cause they have to)
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To: Pharmboy; SubMareener
An excellent point. We should start a movement for diversity (of opinion) in the newsroom so it reflects an image closer to the real US of A.

Oh, believe me, they're way ahead of you on this. Go to any journalism industry news site and you'll find "Diversity" sections as big as regular news sites play "Sports." You would think it was still 1962 from how hard they beating people over the head with the issue day in day out.

It's also unquestionable, close-the-book, QED proof that the news business is OVERWHELMINGLY liberal.

14 posted on 04/06/2003 7:34:44 AM PDT by Timesink (When was the last time YOU remembered we're on Code Orange?)
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To: Pharmboy
If we had the draft on right now, the left would still be whinning about the same thing. These people are nuts.

Why don't we just hire illegals to do our wars. The left is great at hiring illegals and expect the rest of to take care of their medical and economic needs.

Shut Up!
15 posted on 04/06/2003 7:36:24 AM PDT by Nagual
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To: Pharmboy
...The question has hung heavy since war with Iraq first seemed inevitable...

...Only among the elite liberal establishment bent on dividing our society by race and economic status.

16 posted on 04/06/2003 7:36:25 AM PDT by Oldeconomybuyer (Let's Roll)
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To: Pharmboy
I did not volunteer to try to better myself.
I did not volunteer to study hard.
I did not volunteer to resist temptations.
I did not volunteer to be selective of my friends.
I did not volunteer to go finish school.
I did not volunteer to get a job.
I admit it.
I did all of those things because I "had-To".
If drinking whiskey, playing cards, chasing women, staying out all night,
and sleeping until noon just paid a little better;
then I probably would have volunteered for that.
17 posted on 04/06/2003 7:36:29 AM PDT by error99 (this space for lease)
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To: Pharmboy
"Parents are certainly major influences, mothers in particular," said Paul R. Sackett, a professor of psychology at the University of Minnesota who studied the challenges that face military recruiters.

Pure genius.

18 posted on 04/06/2003 7:36:30 AM PDT by facedown (Armed in the Heartland)
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To: SubMareener
There really sad thing is that journalists are not representative of American Society.

They seem to more represent Russian society.

19 posted on 04/06/2003 7:36:32 AM PDT by Drango (Two wrongs don't make a right...but three lefts do!)
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To: Pharmboy
Re: the forces being "heavily layered with minorities"

It is my experience

(and is borne out statistically in recent widely reported news that frontline combat troops are disproportionately white southern males, rather than minorities)

that the layers of minorites are in support roles such as supply and administrative work that occurs largely far from any combat zone (nb: most such jobs are easier to qualifiy for, which explains the disproportionality). Obviously some of non-combat positions are very competitive -- but not the ones that are disproportionately minority.

As such, this truly is a low-risk way for innercity kids to get some skills that they can use after their enlistment is over.

It is also my experience that affirmative action is more apt to occur in these units, and less likely to occur in combat units and the officer corps.

Minorities tend to work for the government in disproportionate numbers - the military is no different.

This reporter is a whiner who seems clueless as to the facts of life: those without money take jobs that those with money won't do.



20 posted on 04/06/2003 7:37:19 AM PDT by Notwithstanding (Airborne 3d Infantry Division Dogface Soldier Vet - "Rock of the Marne!")
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