Stupid Soldiers: Central to the Left's Worldview

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Stupid Soldiers: Central to the Left's Worldview
by Tim Kane, Ph.D.
WebMemo #1244
November 3, 2006 |

John Kerry’s comment to college students in California that without education, “you get stuck in Iraq” was not really a joke, botched or otherwise, but neither is the furor over the Senator’s comment entirely fair. This line of thinking did not begin with Senator Kerry, and the sentiment is not just a one-time gaffe made by a single individual. Rather, Kerry’s slip-up reveals a cornerstone of the Left’s worldview: that soldiers are stupid.

Although rarely expressed so boldly, liberals’ beliefs that young soldiers are kids, not adults, and victims instead of volunteers has been apparent for decades. Rather than acknowledge that the hundreds of thousands of American adults who enlist are intelligent, and intelligently choose to serve as warriors, the Left has repeatedly characterized the uniformed service as a burden foisted on the less fortunate and less intelligent.
In a 2002 New York Times editorial, Representative Charles Rangel (D-NY) asserted that a “disproportionate number of the poor and members of minority groups make up the enlisted ranks of the military, while most privileged Americans are underrepresented or absent.” (By the numbers, his characterization is outdated by at least three decades.)

The stupid-victim-soldier stereotype was given a boost in 2004 by what turned out to be the highest-grossing documentary ever made, Michael Moore’s Fahrenheit 9/11:

Where would [the military] find the new recruits? They would find them all across America in the places that had been destroyed by the economy. Places where one of the only jobs available was to join the Army.

They [the two Marine recruiters] decided not to go to the wealthier Genesee Valley Mall in the suburbs. They have a hard time recruiting young people there.​

Moore goes on to paint the recruiters as conniving and young potential enlistees as dupes. Since then, these stereotypes have been repeatedly echoed around the mainstream media:

  • New YorkDaily News, November 8, 2005: “Youth from low-income areas are far more likely to end up in the military.”[1]

  • Washington Post, November 4, 2005 (page A-1): “[T]he military is leaning heavily for recruits on economically depressed, rural areas where youths’ need for jobs may outweigh the risks of going to war.”[2]

  • Los AngelesTimes, September 24, 2005: “The [GAO] report appears to support the contention that service in the military reserves is most attractive to young men living in low- or medium-income families in rural communities.”[3]

  • New York Times, August 18, 2005: “Very few” of the soldiers fighting in Iraq “are coming from the privileged economic classes.”[4]

In fact, the opposite is true. A recent demographic study by this author, published three days before Senator Kerry’s gaffe, reviews the data on all enlistees, not just a sub-sample. The average American enlistee is more educated—not less—than the average young civilian. Wartime recruits also come from wealthier neighborhoods than their civilian counterparts, on average. And the force has been trending towards wealthier troops and smarter troops since the war in Iraq began in 2003.

The Facts About Today’s Soldiers[5]

  • The average reading level of new soldiers is roughly a full grade level higher than their civilian peers’.

  • Enlistees’ high school graduation rate was 97 percent in 2003, 2004, and 2005. The civilian graduation rate is seventeen percentage points lower.

  • The wealthiest 40 percent of neighborhoods in America are the home of 45.6 percent of 2005 enlistees. For every two U.S. recruits from the poorest neighborhoods, three come from the richest.

  • There is no statistical evidence to support the claim that minorities are being targeted or exploited for military service. The 100 zip codes with the highest proportions of African-Americans were actually under-represented among military enlistees in 2005.

  • Every U.S. military recruit of the last 33 years has been a volunteer.

Antiwar criticism has morphed into a patronizing attitude toward GIs, by way of questioning the quality of the men and women who volunteer to serve. Perhaps it is easier for the antiwar Left to believe that soldiers are unintelligent than to believe that they are taking risks willingly because they actually believe in the war’s purpose.

The good news is that many Democrats were quick to condemn Kerry’s statement and call for an apology. But righting this wrong requires more than an apology for a one-time slip. At issue is a core belief that sorely needs to be corrected because it is intertwined with weighty policy issues.

The fundamental irony is that so many elites who are eager to cut and run from Iraq stand in clear contrast to the tens of thousands of young adults who are joining the fight, understand the stakes, and want to win.

Tim Kane, Ph.D., is Director of the Center for International Trade and Economics at The Heritage Foundation.



[1] Juan Gonzalez, “Racial divide evident in military,” New York Daily News, November 8, 2005.

[2] Ann Scott Tyson, “Youths in Rural U.S. Are Drawn to Military,” The Washington Post, November 4, 2005, p. A1.

[3] Tony Perry, “Whites Account for Most of Military's Fatalities,” Los Angeles Times, September 24, 2005, p. A-9.

[4] Bob Herbert, “Blood Runs Red, Not Blue,” The New York Times, August 18, 2005.

[5] See Tim Kane, Ph.D., “Who Are the Recruits? The Demographic Characteristics of U.S. Military Enlistment, 2003–2005,” Heritage Foundation Center for Data Analysis Report No. 06-09, October 27, 2006, at www.heritage.org/Research/NationalSecurity/cda06-09.cfm.

http://www.heritage.org/Research/NationalSecurity/wm1244.cfm
 
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I forgot that the right really respects & supports military service as they;
Cut veterans benefits,
Reduce military insurance benefits,
Refuse to purchase modern body armor,
Cut G.I. educational benefits,
And do everything they can to avoid having to serve in the military themselves.
Just a bunch of ChickenHawks
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"Military men are dumb, stupid animals to be used as pawns for foreign policy." </font><font face="tahoma" size="3" color="#0000FF">
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-- Henry A. Kissinger, quoted by Monika Jensen-Stevenson, Kiss the Boys Goodbye, Dutton, 1990, Page 97, citing The Final Days, Woodward and Bernstein (Simon & Schuster, 1976) </B></FONT><p>



<font color="#ff0000" size="3"><b>Watch the video below -MILITARY RECRUITMENT ABUSES UNCOVERED</b><p>
<object width="425" height="350"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/0ZntDHh_lTk"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/0ZntDHh_lTk" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="600" height="350"></embed></object><p> <font face="arial black" size="5" color="#0000ff">Military Recruitment
Abuses Uncovered</font>
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By Jim Hoffer

(New York- WABC, November 2, 2006) - These are tough times for the U.S. Military. With a bloody war in Iraq, finding new recruits isn't easy. But does that justify lying to recruit new soldiers?

The Investigators uncovered unethical tactics by recruiters in New York and New Jersey.

Last year, the Army fell short of its recruiting goals for the first time in years. While this year the Army is making its quota, it's how they're doing it that's being called into question because of what we found undercover.

Mt. Vernon recruiter: "We're like we're not at war, war ended a long time ago."

A recruiter tells our undercover student the war is over.

Mt. Vernon Recruiter: "The news never said war, they're not lying now they never said war."

It appears some Army recruiters are willing to say just about anything to reel-in a new soldier.

Student: "Will I be going to war?"
Recruiter: "I would say your chances would be slim to none..."

We sent students undercover to ten Army recruiting offices throughout the Tri-State area.

Recruiter: "We almost welcome being shot at because it helps us identify where they are shooting from ..."

Some recruiters were up front about the dangers of enlisting.

Stamford recruiter: "Every job in the Army does include combat. Plain and simple."

But nearly half of the recruiters who talked to our undercover students compared everyday risks here at home to being in Iraq.

Elizabeth recruiter: "I like Subway sandwiches and salads. I watched the news yesterday, a guy got killed at Subway."

Patchogue recruiter: "You have a 10-times greater chance of dying out here on the roads than you do dying in Iraq."

Mt. Vernon recruiter: "I'd rather be hit by a car instead of getting hit by a bomb, what's the difference. Your not living, your dead. That sucker is gone it's a wrap."

And with the end of the war no where in sight, the general in charge suggesting more troops might be needed, some recruiters told our students if they enlisted there was little chance they'd go to war.

Student: "Aren't people still being shipped out?"
New Jersey recruiter: "Naw, they bringing people back."
Student: "Nobody is going out to Iraq anymore?"
Recruiter: "Naw, we bringing people back."

Yonkers recruiter: "As long as you don't choose a job in this area, you don't have to worry about going over there."

Hoffer: "Chances are if you're signing up to the Army these days, you have a pretty good chance of going to Iraq, don't you?"
Colonel Robert Manning/1st Recruiting Brigade: "I would not disagree with that ... we are an Army and a nation at war still."

Colonel Manning is in charge of U.S. Army recruiting for the entire northeast. He agreed to take a look at our undercover video of his recruiters.

Colonel Manning: "It's hard to believe some of things they are telling perspective applicants. ... I still believe that this is the exception more than the norm."
Hoffer: "Well what are you saying then? That we just got wildly lucky to find recruiters more than half of the 10 we visited to be stretching the truth or even worse, lying?"
Colonel Manning: "I've visited many stations myself and I know that we have many wonderful Americans serving in uniform as recruiters."

Yet we found one recruiter who even claimed if you don't like the Army you could just quit.

Yonkers recruiter: "It's called "failure to adapt" discharge. It's an entry level discharge so it won't affect anything on your record it will just be like it never happened."

Hoffer: "This recruiter makes it seem its's pretty easy to get out of it if you change your mind? Is that true?"
Colonel Manning: "I would believe it's not as easy as he would lead you to believe it is."
Hoffer: "It's probably pretty tough isn't it?"
Colonel Manning: "It's tough."

Sue Niederer, mother: "They need to do anything they possibly can to get new recruits."

Sue Niederer says she's all too familiar with recruiters' lies.

Hoffer: "So he was told he wouldn't see combat?"
Sue: "Absolutely, absolutely."

Her son joined the Army in 2002 and ended up in Iraq. His job, to find roadside bombs.

Hoffer: "How did he die?"
Sue: "Killed by an IED."
Hoffer: "A bomb?"
Sue: "A bomb."

Two years later, she says our investigation confirms her belief that there's a widespread recruiting problem.

In which another casualty appears to be the truth.

Recruiter: "We've had more close calls on the Long Island Expressway than we did when we were over there."

Hoffer: "Doesn't this fly in the face of what this military stands for honesty and honor?"
Colonel Manning: "Yes, obviously, there is training that needs to be done."

Sue Niederer, mother: "Ninety percent going to be putting their lives on the line for our country. Tell them the truth. That's all. Just tell them the truth."

The colonel in charge of recruiting says he plans to open his own investigation to see how widespread the misconduct might be.

Now, if you have a tip about this story, e-mail The Investigators here or call 877-TIP-NEWS.

Tomorrow at 11, our undercover investigation continues where we take a look at how the Army tests new applicants for drugs, and you'd be surprised to find out, if you fail it's not necessarily a problem.
http://abclocal.go.com/wabc/story?section=investigators&id=4722401

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Insulting Our Troops, and Our Intelligence</font>
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By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN

November 3rd 2006</b>

http://select.nytimes.com/gst/tsc.h...BQ23Q26-Q24lQ24Q26lQ23Q2AQ2BWzQ24KZAPl,(Q22A6

George Bush, Dick Cheney and Don Rumsfeld think youre stupid. Yes, they do.

They think they can take a mangled quip about President Bush and Iraq by John Kerry a man
who is not even running for office but who, unlike Mr. Bush and Mr. Cheney, never ran
away from combat service and get you to vote against all Democrats in this election.

Every time you hear Mr. Bush or Mr. Cheney lash out against Mr. Kerry, I hope you will say
to yourself, They must think Im stupid. Because they surely do.

They think that they can get you to overlook all of the Bush teams real and deadly insults to
the U.S. military over the past six years by hyping and exaggerating Mr. Kerrys mangled
gibe at the president.

What could possibly be more injurious and insulting to the U.S. military than to send it into
combat in Iraq without enough men to launch an invasion of a foreign country not by the
Powell Doctrine of overwhelming force, but by the Rumsfeld Doctrine of just enough troops
to lose? What could be a bigger insult than that?

What could possibly be more injurious and insulting to our men and women in uniform than
sending them off to war without the proper equipment, so that some soldiers in the field were
left to buy their own body armor and to retrofit their own jeeps with scrap metal so that
roadside bombs in Iraq would only maim them for life and not kill them? And what could be
more injurious and insulting than Don Rumsfelds response to criticism that he sent our troops
off in haste and unprepared: Hey, you go to war with the army youve got get over it.

What could possibly be more injurious and insulting to our men and women in uniform than
to send them off to war in Iraq without any coherent postwar plan for political reconstruction
there, so that the U.S. military has had to assume not only security responsibilities for all of
Iraq but the political rebuilding as well? The Bush team has created a veritable library of
military histories from Cobra II to Fiasco to State of Denial all of which contain the same
damning conclusion offered by the very soldiers and officers who fought this war: This
administration never had a plan for the morning after, and weve been making it up and
paying the price ever since.

And what could possibly be more injurious and insulting to our men and women in Iraq than
to send them off to war and then go out and finance the very people theyre fighting against
with our gluttonous consumption of oil? Sure, George Bush told us were addicted to oil, but
he has not done one single significant thing demanded higher mileage standards from Detroit,
imposed a gasoline tax or even used the bully pulpit of the White House to drive
conservation to end that addiction. So we continue to finance the U.S. military with our tax
dollars, while we finance Iran, Syria, Wahhabi mosques and Al Qaeda madrassas with our
energy purchases.

Everyone says that Karl Rove is a genius. Yeah, right. So are cigarette companies. They get
you to buy cigarettes even though we know they cause cancer. That is the kind of genius Karl
Rove is. He is not a man who has designed a strategy to reunite our country around an
agenda of renewal for the 21st century to bring out the best in us. His genius is taking some
irrelevant aside by John Kerry and twisting it to bring out the worst in us, so you will ignore
the mess that the Bush team has visited on this country.

And Karl Rove has succeeded at that in the past because he was sure that he could sell just
enough Bush cigarettes, even though people knew they caused cancer. Please, please, for our
countrys health, prove him wrong this time.

Let Karl know that youre not stupid. Let him know that you know that the most patriotic
thing to do in this election is to vote against an administration that has through sheer
incompetence brought us to a point in Iraq that was not inevitable but is now unwinnable.

Let Karl know that you think this is a critical election, because you know as a citizen that if
the Bush team can behave with the level of deadly incompetence it has exhibited in Iraq and
then get away with it by holding on to the House and the Senate it means our country has
become a banana republic. It means our democracy is in tatters because it is so
gerrymandered, so polluted by money, and so divided by professional political hacks that we
can no longer hold the ruling party to account.

It means we're as stupid as Karl thinks we are.

I, for one, dont think were that stupid. Next Tuesday well see.


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In theory, I would think you would defend the left instead of attacking the right. The two are not one in the same.

You would think you would have learn from the 2004 elections.
 
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<font face="arial black" size="4" color="#d90000"><u>Bush Cuts All Support Systems That Benefit American Troops </u></font>


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Who Supports The Troops? Democrats, As It Turns Out</font>

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The Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America took a look at 324 legislative votes in the last five years which affected American troops and veterans. Legislative proposals included veterans' benefits, healthcare, and medical research dedicated towards injured soldiers (head injuries, etc.) Based on these votes, IAVA calculated which senators and congressmen had a history of supporting the troops, and which didn't, and graded them on a curve.

You can see the full results at the IAVA website, here. But Bob has put the Senate rankings in order of letter grade, and produced this handy chart. As you'll note, based on the over 300 votes the IAVA used in its calculation, all Senate Democrats have been more supportive of the troops -- when it comes to their actual votes, over the past five years -- than any of the Senate Republicans.</b></font>


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by Bob Geiger

Monday, October 23, 2006</b>

http://iava.org/index.php

Paul Rieckhoff, Executive Director and founder of <a href="http://iava.org/index.php" target="_blank">Iraq &amp; Afghanistan Veterans of America</a> (IAVA), the country's first and largest Iraq Veterans group, announced on Friday that IAVA has made available a <a href="http://www.iavaaction.org/" target="_blank">web site</a> giving the results of their analysis of who in Congress truly backs up their words on supporting the troops.

&quot;Sure, politicians say they support the troops. But whose votes back up their rhetoric, and who's just wearing an American flag lapel pin?&quot; asked Rieckhoff in a <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/paul-rieckhoff/86-legislators-score-d-_b_32140.html" target="_blank">Huffington Post column</a> last week. &quot;Now there's an easy way to know for sure. The nonprofit, nonpartisan Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America's Action Fund has tallied up every Congressional vote cast on troops' and veterans' issues for the last five years. We've crunched the numbers, and given every legislator a letter grade - the IAVA Congressional Rating.&quot;

It is a wonderful idea to be sure and IAVA is certainly the organization to do it. So I thought I would go out over the weekend and do some crunching of my own to document what I think we already know about who in Congress really sticks up for the military and who are merely support-the-troops hypocrites.

I cover the Senate so I decided to do my digging there and what I found will not surprise anyone. IAVA analyzed 155 Senate votes that have taken place since September 11, 2001 and, to calculate their ratings, looked at &quot;&hellip;each piece of legislation that affected troops, veterans or military families.&quot; IAVA then matched each Senator's votes with the organization's own view of what constitutes true support for active troops, Veterans and their families.


<div align="right"><!-- MSTableType="layout" --><img src="http://i39.photobucket.com/albums/e164/bobgeiger/IAVA_Ratings_numbers.gif" align="right">
</div>IAVA assigned an 'A' through 'F' grade using the scale at left showing the percentage of time each Senator has indeed supported troops and Veterans. As someone who has watched Senate Republicans vote time and time again against legislation that would benefit military families, the results did not shock me in the slightest.

No Senator in either party was given an A grade by IAVA. Thirteen Senators received a rating of A- and all of those were Democrats. A total of 23 Senators were given a B+ rating and 22 of those were Democrats as well. The other was Independent James Jeffords of Vermont, who caucuses with the Democrats.

Cutting to the chase -- and, perhaps more than anything I've seen in recent years, truly defining the difference between the two parties -- is that the worst grade received by a Senate Democrat was higher than the best grade granted a Republican. GOP-lite Ben Nelson (D-NE) received the lowest grade of any Democrat with a B- while Lincoln Chafee (R-RI), Olympia Snowe (R-ME) and Arlen Specter (R-PA) managed a C grade from IAVA.

And, when I averaged the scores of both the Democratic and Republican caucuses by assigning the numeric midpoint of the letter grade received by each Senator, which party truly supports the troops was made remarkably clear: The 44 Democrats and Jeffords had an average military-support grade of B+, while the 55 Republicans, who beat their chests with disgusting regularity about how strong they are on military issues, averaged a pathetic D.

And how about the guys Americans will be voting on in two weeks? Republican Senator Mike DeWine -- you know, he's the guy who starts one of his campaign's television ads with &quot;While they're fighting for us abroad, he's fighting for them at home&quot; -- came in with a D+. His opponent, Democrat Sherrod Brown, was given a B rating for his military votes in the House, despite DeWine's bogus claim in an October 1 Meet the Press debate that Brown &quot;has voted against funding for the military when it really counted.&quot;

Let's look at some of the other GOP stalwarts trying to keep their Senate seats this year by telling voters how much they fight for military families. George Allen (R-VA), Conrad Burns (R-MT) and James Talent (R-MO) couldn't manage to get over a D+. John Ensign (R-NV), Jon Kyl (R-AZ) and Rick Santorum (R-PA) were all rated a lowly D- by the largest group dedicated to the troops and Veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Of course, of those Republican Senators, only Burns has actually served in the military himself.

And here's more stunning hypocrisy: In May, 2006, while giving a speech at the Nevada Republican Convention, Mr. D-minus himself, John Ensign, said &quot;Democratic leaders like Nancy Pelosi and Ted Kennedy -- let me tell you, I say this without reservation -- they have hurt our military&quot; and, of Kennedy, Ensign once said &quot;Every time Ted Kennedy gets up and speaks (against the war) he undermines our troops.&quot;

Pelosi and Kennedy both received a B+ rating from IAVA.

This is an incredibly interesting and enlightening resource and everyone who is really interested in finding out who is supporting our men and women in uniform with action and not just words, should pay a visit. You can <a href="http://bobgeiger.blogspot.com/2006/10/iava-support-troops-rankings-for-senate.html" target="_blank">go here</a> to see a list showing how each of the 100 Senators scored -- and you'll even find out which Republicans were given a failing grade of F by IAVA.

While assigning a simple letter grade to the choices being made by elected officials may seem to oversimplify the matter, these ratings are the result of exhaustive research and IAVA Executive Director Rieckhoff makes clear that these are serious decisions, where there's no room for fake patriotism or posturing.

&quot;Politicians' choices in Washington have a real human cost: Troops on the streets of Iraq with inadequate body armor. Veterans waitlisted for treatment at the VA. Military widows facing cuts in their survivor benefits,&quot; wrote Rieckhoff last week. &quot;There is no excuse for a low score.&quot;</font>
 
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