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Issue Title   Content
January-March 2019
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Militarized Response to the Central American Refugee Caravan   Since at least the 1980s, Central Americans have been making the journey from their home countries, traveling through Mexico, many with the goal of entering the United States. Different waves of Central Americans have arrived in the U.S. because of various reasons including civil war, persecution, and violence. The shared reason among migrants for leaving their home behind is the constant instability in the region due in large part to the interventionist foreign policies of the U.S. -Full Article
January-March 2019
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JROTC Shooting Ranges Removed from Two Schools   On February 14, 2018, the unthinkable but all-too-common happened. A mass shooting occurred at the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida. Rumors about the identity of the shooter were that he was a former student who had been in JROTC. -Full Article
January-March 2019
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On the Intersectionality of Militarism   At our meeting in December, the COMD board met to reflect on our work over the year, plan our upcoming activities, and discuss how to branch out with other community partners. We recognize that counter-recruitment work can feel isolating, but upon further discussion we realized that many issues intersect with militarism. -Full Article
October-December 2018
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National Commission on Military Service Comes to SoCal   The National Commission on Military, National, and Public Service came to Southern California during September 19-21. -Full Article
October-December 2018
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Report from the National Counter-recruitment and School Demilitarization Strategy Summit   During the weekend of June 23-24, 2018, a group of 28 activists gathered in Chicago to share the knowledge and lessons they have learned from organizing to counter the militarization of schools and military recruitment of young people. -Full Article
October-December 2018
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Army Reservist Speaks out Against the Military Industrial Complex   The motto for the U.S. Army Reserve’s Psychological Operations Command is “Persuade. Change. Influence,” which is exactly what Captain Brittany DeBarros aims to do only, instead, her messaging is in complete opposition to the U.S. military industrial complex. -Full Article
October-December 2017
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"Remember Pearl Harbor" and Forget All Else   How a cult of American militarism continues to mobilize our society toward warmongering and imperialism.-Full Article
October-December 2017
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From "Gung-ho" to "Woke"   Anti-militarism is often associated with the Baby Boomer generation. Thus, as the generation begins to pass, it might appear that anti-militarism does not have a future. Missed in such an observation is the emergence of a new crop of activists in generations X and Y. Juan Perez is one of those new activists.-Full Article
October-December 2017
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Feeding the Deportation Pipeline: Caveat Recruitee   A previous Draft NOtices article, “Removing a Few Bad Hombres” (July-September 2017), discussed the deportation of immigrant military veterans. Non-citizen immigrant recruits in the United States now find themselves possibly facing a similarly cruel and irreversible fate. In this case their potential deportation is not due to any criminal actions on their part.-Full Article
July-September 2017
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Removing a Few “Bad Hombres”: Veterans and Deportation   In the last presidential debate in 2016, when candidate Donald Trump announced that his immigration policy would emphasize deportations, little attention was paid to the issue of how veterans might be affected. -Full Article
July-September 2017
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Connecticut Peace Group Engages Students with a Peace Wheel   Winsted Area Peace Action has been visiting high schools in northwestern Connecticut for at least ten years. The purpose of our visits has been to introduce and discuss with students alternative methods of service to the country and non-military means of earning money after high school. -Full Article
April-June 2017
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Trump Means War   On the afternoon of Saturday, January 7, 2017, I attended an indoor rally titled United Against Trump at the Women’s Building in San Francisco. The room was packed to the rafters. The spirit of resistance was high. There were inspiring speeches on defending immigrants, on fighting the Dakota Access Pipeline, on fighting for health care, on taxing the rich. -Full Article
April-June 2017
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Army Tries to Avoid Recruiting Crisis with New "Offers"   In February, the Pentagon announced additional recruiting quotas for the 2017 fiscal year. Millions of dollars will be spent increasing the overall military force size by up to 13,000 personnel (separately, Trump has mentioned wanting up to 60,000 more soldiers!). -Full Article
April-June 2017
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Think Tank Recommends Universal Draft Registration and Military Testing   The Bipartisan Policy Center (BPC) recently released a report on U.S. military personnel policy that, among other things, recommends registering women for the draft and giving all young people the military’s aptitude test when they register .-Full Article
January-March 2017
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Uncertainties over Female Draft Registration and Future of Selective Service   For the time being, efforts in Congress to require women to register for the draft have failed. . . . Instead, Congress voted to establish a National Commission on Military, National, and Public Service, with a mandate to study whether “there continues to be a continuous or potential need for a military selective service process. And if so, whether such a system should include mandatory registration by all citizens and residents, regardless of sex [sic]."-Full Article
January-March 2017
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Rebuttal to Groups Supporting Female Draft Registration   In July 2016, a letter in support of draft registration for women, signed by 16 organizations, was sent to the chairs and ranking members of the House and Senate Armed Services Committees. The joint letter was coordinated by the national American Civil Liberties Union and was sent on ACLU letterhead.-Full Article
January-March 2017
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NODAPL in North Dakota: A Militarized Response to Peaceful Protest   One of the important and inspiring movements happening in the U.S. is the struggle against the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL) propelled by the Great Sioux Nation and many worldwide supporters. -Full Article
October-December 2016
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Female Draft Registration Still Looming   Legislation that would require women to register for the draft was still uncertain as of our publication date [see following update]. The U.S. Senate’s version of the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for Fiscal Year 2017 contained such a requirement, while the House of Representatives’ version did not.-Full Article
October-December 2016
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Does the Military Protect Our Freedom?   “I’d like to thank our military personnel for defending our country and protecting our freedoms." In the wake of September 11, this is a common public acknowledgment from celebrities, politicians, myriad TV and radio commentaries, and many people on the streets of the United States. -Full Article
October-December 2016
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Support our troops” or “Deport our troops”?   “Support our troops” has been a popular slogan in many circles. As observers like Noam Chomsky have noted, it has been an effective public relations slogan in support of militarism even though it has little meaning and distracts from a critical focus on policies that lead to U.S. American men and women fighting in the Middle East and other regions of the world. -Full Article
July-September 2016
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Senate Passes Draft Registration for Women, Issue Is Still Unresolved   On June 14 the U.S. Senate passed the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (S. 2943) with language that would require women to begin registering with the Selective Service System for a possible future draft. The requirement would apply to women who reach their 18th birthday on or after January 1, 2018. Earlier, the House of Representatives approved a version of the same bill but without language requiring women to register. -Full Article
July-September 2016
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Calling All Womyn to Oppose Draft Registration  

Call issued by: womyn in COMD and Project YANO, Mujeres en Resistencia, San Diego City College Visionary Feminists Club, Mujeres de Maiz. 1/2-page flier in English and Spanish

July-September 2016
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Five Insights from FOIA Documents on Military Recruiting in Schools   What’s the military footprint in your school district? How do you know? If we had access to hard data like the number of recruiter visits, wouldn’t it be easier to make the case for reform?-Full Article
July-September 2016
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Panama Papers and the Military-Industrial Complex   The Panama Papers followed in the footsteps of Wikileaks, Snowden and others to promote economic and political transparency in an increasingly militarized society. The massive data leak of 11.5 million documents from Panamanian-based law firm Mossack Fonseca covered a period of almost 40 years. The greatest controversy includes evidence that many companies and individuals around the world use 320,000 offshore accounts for suspected money laundering, arms and drug deals, and tax avoidance.-Full Article
April-June 2016
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It Is Time to Abolish Draft Registration and Restore Full Rights to People of Conscience   With the combat restriction for women in the U.S. Armed Forces now lifted, discussion of draft registration is back in the news, the courts, and the halls of Congress. But the problems with Selective Service System (SSS) registration go much deeper than gender equality. There is little political interest in bringing back the draft. Yet draft registration remains a burden upon our nation’s young men -- and now, potentially our young women, as well. Full Article
April-June 2016
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Water Crises, Environmental Racism and the U.S. Department of Defense   In March 1977 the United Nations deemed water an essential human right, stating that “All peoples, whatever their stage of development and social and economic conditions, have the right to have access to drinking water in quantities and of a quality equal to their basic needs.” This is rightly concluded given that the human body is made up of 60-70% water, and lack of access to potable and clean water is potentially life-threatening. Full Article
April-June 2016
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Counter Recruiting at Educational Conventions   As many counter-recruitment groups do, Washington Truth in Recruiting (WaTiR) has participated in dozens of tabling events. Usually these are local, and we are invited because of contacts we have made within the schools or peace communities. School career fairs, state PTA meetings, local school counselor meetings, National Lawyers Guild meetings, LBGT meetings, church meetings, Democratic State conventions, antiwar meetings -- we table and present anywhere we can, sometimes through the invitation of allies. Full Article
January-March 2016
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Will women be drafted? Will women be required to register for the draft?

  When the Supreme Court upheld males-only draft registration in 1981, it based its decision on "deference" to the decisions of the Department of Defense and the Commander-In-Chief, at that time, not to assign women to any combat position. The facts underlying that Supreme Court decision have now changed with the announcement on December 4, 2015, that women in the military will be considered for all combat jobs. Full Article
January-March 2016
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Historic Violence and Repression in Mexico: Follow the Weapons Trail   Despite what the U.S. and Mexican governments would have you believe, there is no democracy in Mexico. The proven complicity between the corrupt Mexican government and organized crime, 150,000 violent deaths in the last 8 years, thousands of missing people, hundreds of political prisoners, the displacement of entire rural communities by the military -- all of these horrors, which describe a country at war, are connected by one blaring event: the Merida Initiative. Full Article
January-March 2016
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Sexual Assaults Lead to Tighter Recruiting Restrictions in Austin Schools

  In October 2015, the school board of the Austin Independent School District approved a policy doubling down on restrictions to military recruiter access. Our Austin truth-in-recruiting group, Sustainable Options for Youth (SOY), had successfully worked with our district in coalition with a student group in 2005-2006 for some recruiter restrictions and equal access for nonmilitary alternatives. Full Article
October-December 2015
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No Longer Missing in Action — The Saga of Latinos and the Vietnam War   Roberto Mendez LCPL-E — Marine Corps-Regular ...Casualty was on Oct 27, 1968 This is part of the inscription on the Vietnam Memorial Wall for my childhood friend. Although I have never forgotten his death, I was reminded of his passing by the 45th anniversary of the largest protest against the war by Chicanos on August 29, 1970. The event was known as the Chicano Moratorium. . - Full Article
October-December 2015
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Draft Registration Bill Defeated in California   The seventh effort by Selective Service to pass legislation that would boost draft registration compliance in California collapsed when the proposal received several crippling amendments, followed by a veto by Governor Brown. - Full Article
October-December 2015
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STARBASE: The Military’s Effort to Indoctrinate Children   The recent release of the 2014 DoD STARBASE annual report provides an opportunity to reflect on this little-known part of the Pentagon’s school militarization program. Starting this year the military plans to extend the reach of STARBASE beyond its primary constituency — fifth-grade students in Title 1 schools — and to march its merry band of “mentors” into middle schools. - FullArticle
July-September 2015
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Bill Linking California Licenses to Draft Registration Advances   Assembly Bill 82 passed the California Assembly on June 2. The vote was 73-2, which cleared the way for it to move on to the senate side of the state legislature. As of this writing, it was scheduled for a June 30 hearing before the Senate Transportation and Housing Committee. If it passes that committee, it will go to an appropriations committee, which is where the same proposal died six previous times. - Full Article
July-September 2015
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Marines Head to Central America — Say It Isn’t So!   The U.S. Marines will soon deploy to Central America, according to a May 9 report in the Miami Herald (and Stars and Stripes). Most of the 280 troops will be headed to Honduras, which, since the U.S.–backed coup in 2009, has become the “murder capital of the world.”. - Full Article
July-September 2015
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The $15/hour Minimum Wage Campaign Is Counter-recruitment   This campaign not only advocates for economic justice, but it will also have an impact on military recruitment, because the most powerful factor that drives people in working-class communities into the ranks of the military is POVERTY.-Full Article
April-June 2015
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Why Environmental Justice Requires Opposing Militarism   More often than not, history classes teach our children that the attack on Pearl Harbor is what triggered and awoke the “sleeping giant” and led the United States to enter WWII. Most history classes also teach that it was the United States who ended WWII with the dropping of two atomic bombs on (the already weak) Japan, killing an estimated 200,000 innocent civilians. - Full Article
April-June 2015
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Action Needed: Undocumented Students Are Hostages in New Attempt to Make Draft Registration Automatic in California   California’s large population has one of the lowest Selective Service registration rates in the country. This would make a future return to the draft less likely because so many men (yes, it’s still male-only) would be beyond the government’s reach. - Full Article
April-June 2015
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Student Debt and Activism   Student debt is an important deterrent that keeps students from considering social justice work after college. - Full Article
January-March 2015
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Kidnapped Student Teachers in México: An Inside Perspective   For many, the September killings of three and disappearance of 43 students from Ayotzinapa Rural Teachers College in the Méxican state of Guerrero has been profoundly painful and tragic. My feelings of outrage and despair are also deep because I was educated in one of Ayotzinapa’s sister schools. - Full Article
January-March 2015
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Changing Recruitment Policies in Schools: One Phone Call and Email at a Time   In the spring of 2014, I went to observe a career day at Santa Barbara High School, where my son is enrolled. The Marines and the Navy recruiters were also there. They were soliciting student contact information. I told them that under the school’s existing recruiting protocol they were not allowed to get student information directly from students,- Full Article
January-March 2015
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U.S. Militarism and the International Sex Industry   It is clear why the United States of America has been given global recognition as the country with the most powerful military in the world. The United States’ military presence worldwide has expanded so much that it has earned it the status of a modern-day imperialist nation - Full Article
October-December 2014
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Attempt to Link Draft Registration to Drivers’ Licenses Fails (Again) in California   Assembly Bill 2201, which would have prevented men from driving legally in California if they didn’t register for a possible future military draft, died when it failed to survive the Senate Committee on Appropriations.- Full Article
October-December 2014
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Reflection on My Time as Project YANO’s Student Intern   In the past nine months as Project YANO’s 2013-2014 student intern, I have learned an immense amount of information about U.S. militarism, its far reach, and counter-recruitment. I have been directly impacted on multiple levels. I have grown mentally through the knowledge I have gained and also personally through the interactions and relationships I have built with youth, advisors, teachers, mentors, and Project YANO supporters, volunteers and board members. - Full Article
October-December 2014
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Any Contradiction Here?   Below is an excerpt from a military regulation governing recruiters when they arrange for high schools to give the military’s aptitude test, the ASVAB. . . . So which one of the two . . . instructions do you think recruiters will obey?- Full Article
July-September 2014
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Draft Registration Requirement Advances for Calif. Driver’s License  

The California bill that would require male driver’s license applicants to register for a possible future military draft has moved forward in the state legislature.AB 2201 is now in the hands of the Senate Appropriations Committee, where it will be given a hearing on August 4. If it is approved by that committee, it will go to the full Senate for a floor vote. It if passes there it will go to the governor’s office for his signature or veto.- Full Article

July-September 2014
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JROTC Instructors Can Now Apply to Teach PE in California   Governor Intervenes to reverse earlier credential decision. In April of this year, the California Commission on Teacher Credentialing (CTC) voted to reject proposed changes to a state regulation that, if approved, would have established a way for JROTC instructors to qualify for authorization to teach physical education in their military science and basic military drill classes.- Full Article
July-September 2014
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Report Exposes Mistreatment of GIs by Fort Hood Leadership   Testimonies recount unethical health care practices, command disregard of medical advice, and violations of base policy.- Full Article
April-June 2014
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Linkage of Draft Registration to California Driver’s License Is Proposed Again  

After failing five previous times, the Selective Service System is again asking the California state legislature to pass a bill linking Selective Service registration to California drivers’ licenses. California’s large population has one of the lowest SS registration compliance rates in the country, which could complicate any future attempt to resort to forced military service.- Full Article

April-June 2014
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Community Says “No” to Another Military Academy  

Ames Middle School for 7th and 8th grade students is located in the Logan Square neighborhood of Chicago. It’s a predominantly Latino working-class community. The school was built in 1998 after extensive pressure from the community to relieve overcrowding.

Sometime in 2012 Roberto Maldonado, the alderman for the ward that includes Ames, visited the school as principal for a day. Apparently the students were a bit rowdy (they are 7th and 8th graders, after all). He claims they were flashing gang signs, so he decided that the school should be turned into a military academy.- Full Article

April-June 2014
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JROTC Seeks Special Authorization to Teach Physical Education in California  

Russia’s recent deployment of military forces into Crimea has precipitated talk about a “new cold war.” Those of us who lived through the old cold war may recall that it was an era of unchecked militarism in which challenges to expansion of military influence often did not meet with success. Obscured by the specter of the new ideological and political struggle was a recent setback for militarism and at least a temporary victory for efforts to curb the intrusion and influence of the military in the public schools of California.- Full Article

January-March 2014
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Signs of a Coming Push to Further Militarize Schools  

In May 2013 the Military Times newspapers carried an article titled, “Services Prepare for Scant Recruiting Year.” It began with the following sentence:

Finding recruits to join the military in 2014 could be increasingly challenging, even with declining recruiting goals, defense and service personnel officials are warning Congress.- Full Article

January-March 2014
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Immigration Reform and the Military   According to a 2008 report by the Pew Hispanic Center, there are an estimated 11 million undocumented (im)migrants living in the United States, mostly from various Latin America countries. This past year saw strong support and momentum for the immigrant rights movement, which ignited a push for a truly comprehensive immigration reform bill. Legislation has been introduced but is currently at a standstill in Congress.

Under the Obama administration there have been more than two million deportations to date, an average of 1,100 people every day, which is a higher rate than that for any other president in the history of the United States. More than 100,000 of those have come from California. Deportations have been facilitated in California via the implementation of the Secure Communities policy in 2009, which established the sharing of the fingerprint database between local law enforcement and federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents.- Full Article

January-March 2014
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Legal Changes in Military Sexual Assault  

The Department of Defense has just released preliminary figures showing that reported cases of sexual assaults in the military have increased by 50% in the last fiscal year -- from 3,374 in 2012 to more than 5,000 in 2013. While DoD officials are still evaluating the numbers, their initial public statement claims that this does not represent an increase in the total number of sexual assaults (which they assume to be about the same as the 26,000 cases in 2012), but rather in the number of people willing to come forward and file reports after having been assaulted. Full Article

October-December 2013
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The Military Enlistment Opportunity Act: a New Kind of Draft?   It’s well established that many people who join the U.S. military do so because of their economic status. It could be that they do not see options for a civilian job that pays a livable wage, they cannot afford health insurance, or they believe they’ll never be able to go to college without financial aid from the Post-9/11 GI Bill. Whether this belief is accurate or based on an individual’s limited awareness of alternatives, military recruiters are effective at exploiting economic predicament to meet their monthly quotas. Many of us refer to it as economic conscription or the “poverty draft.” It is the reason why counter-recruitment groups spend much of their time and energy gathering and distributing information on alternative sources for job training and college financial aid.- Full Article
October-December 2013
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The Military’s View of Counter-recruitment   Although it takes a bit of work to find out what they think, military recruiters’ candid views on counter-recruitment reveal that many are concerned at the success of activist campaigns. There’s a strategic advantage to knowing where military recruiters’ vulnerabilities lie, for they give us a peek at the soft underbelly of the all-volunteer force and may suggest areas where counter-recruiters could focus more of their resources. And when military officers spend the time to write reports investigating counter-recruitment — even naming specific groups like Project YANO — activists should consider this a badge of honor. You’re rattling their cage a bit, forcing recruiters to regroup and rethink their strategy. Even though they’ve got all the money and power in this lopsided struggle, you’re getting into their heads.- Full Article
October-December 2013
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Implications of the Sentencing in the Manning Court-martial   On August 21, Private Chelsea* Manning was sentenced to 35 years in prison and a Dishonorable Discharge, after one of the longest and most significant courts-martial in U.S. military history. She was originally charged with aiding the enemy, for which the prosecution had sought a life sentence, but her attorney, David Coombs, was successful in challenging that charge. Manning was ultimately convicted of violations of the Espionage Act, among other charges, for releasing the Collateral Murder videotape, Iraq and Afghanistan war logs, and embarrassing U.S. diplomatic cables. - Full Article
July-September 2013
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Patriotism and Propaganda — Superman: Man of Steel   Once again it is summer blockbuster season. Along with incessant pleas for us to spend hard-earned dollars to see the flick claiming to have the biggest explosions and the most seamless CGI, we are also inundated with advertising tie-in campaigns on screens big and small. This, of course, is nothing new. But what many people are unaware of is that the military has been in on this game of working with Hollywood filmmakers for even longer than the retailers have been playing the game. And, like most things, with age comes experience. Full Article
July-September 2013
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Military Sexual Assault: It’s the Culture   The military is once again in crisis over sexual assaults. In recent weeks, it has become more apparent than ever that the military’s sexual assault policy is a failure and that sexual assault in the services has become epidemic.In early May, the Department of Defense (DoD) released new figures showing a significant increase in reported and unreported assaults. DoD estimates that more than 26,000 servicemembers were assaulted in 2012, with only 3,374 of these cases reported to the military. Full Article
July-September 2013
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Decreasing Popularity of High School Military Testing   We hear a great deal about the over-use of tests in schools, but one test that we all need to pay more attention to is the ASVAB (Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery). The ASVAB is purported to be a series of vocational interest and academic skills tests, and the emblem of the sponsoring Department of Defense is intentionally downplayed on the testing materials. Since 1968, millions of high school students have taken the ASVAB and, as a result, have unwittingly given the military access to their personal information. This information is then turned over to recruiters, raising serious legal concerns regarding privacy rights and protections. Full Article
April-June 2013
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Africa: Another Growing U.S. Battleground   In his January inauguration speech President Obama declared that “a decade of war is now ending,” and “enduring security and lasting peace do not require perpetual war.” But the only wars Obama is ending (and even those not 100%) are the big ones, involving large-scale deployment of ground troops, substantial U.S. casualties and direct naked occupations. Full Article
April-June 2013
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Navy Steals: The Military's New Interest in STEM Education   Although women make up about half of the United States workforce, they represent just 24 percent of careers in STEM fields (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics). In order to correct this, major nonprofit groups have been organizing STEM enrichment camps for middle- and high-school girls, driven by the philosophy that more women will pursue STEM careers if their interest is piqued at an early age. Full Article
April-June 2013
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Women in Ground Combat Service: Victory?   In January, outgoing Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta announced the lifting of the Combat Exclusion Policy (CEP), which formally excluded women from ground combat service in the military. Panetta’s action, which reflected the unanimous recommendation of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, will give women potential access to over 230,000 positions previously closed to them. Full Article
January-March 2013
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The Military Prepares for Warmaking but Not Its Medical Consequences  

Many observers say that the military medical system is broken. Full Article

January-March 2013
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Latinos and the Military in 2013   With the beginning of a new year and a second Obama term, it is time once again to take stock of the relationship between the Latino community and the U.S. military. - Full Article
January-March 2013
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Suicides in the Military Reach a New High   Just as Americans have, for over four decades, uncomfortably turned their heads when confronted with homeless Vietnam veterans in the street, people now hear of the escalating suicide rates of our current military and go on about their business. .- Full Article
October-December 2012
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School Governance: Where Electoral Politics Can Really Matter   Some of us who do community organizing have strong doubts about the effectiveness of the ballot box as a way to achieve meaningful change.- Full Article
October-December 2012
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The Militarization of H.S. Students and JROTC in Southern California   In recent years, JROTC, or the Junior Reserve Officers’ Training Corps, has reached an advanced level of proliferation throughout public high schools in the United States. Full Article
October-December 2012
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Suit Filed Over Sexual Assaults in the Military   Reports of sexual assault within the military are rising! Victims are primarily women but include some men. Over the last decade, exposés in special television reports, magazine articles and radio shows have offered personal testimonies and estimates of the high frequency of sexual assaults, but no significant changes have resulted.- Full Article
July-September 2012
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Draft Resistance Grows in Syria   A recent report by Associated Press reporter Ben Hubbard indicates that the Syrian government’s brutal attacks on opponents of President Bashar Assad’s regime have led to a significant increase in draft avoidance.- Full Article
July-September 2012
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Postcript to “The Deception of Kony 2012”   In the April-June 2012 issue of Draft NOtices, we published an article by Stephanie Jennings on the misleading “Kony 2012” campaign of Invisible Children, a San Diego-based nonprofit organization that has been exposed has having connections to groups pursuing a right-wing religious agenda.- Full Article
July-September 2012
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Almost Half of All New War Vets Are Filing Injury Claims   Military recruiters are known for minimizing the personal risk associated with joining the armed forces. They are very good at exploiting any sense of invincibility that comes from the average teenager’s lack of direct experience with death or serious injury. - Full Article
April - June 2012
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San Diego Students Give Pink Slip to High School Military Program   Students at Mission Bay High School in San Diego are now celebrating what amounts to a very rare organizing victory: the expulsion of a Junior Reserve Officers Training Corps unit from their school. The accomplishment is especially remarkable given that it happened in an area with one of the largest concentrations of military personnel and war industry in the world. San Diego County, with over 100,000 active duty sailors and Marines, has a Department of Defense payroll that frequently tops all other regions in the U.S. It’s not the sort of place where you would expect a rejection of anything military.. - Full Article
April - June 2012
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Vets Memorial Monument at Chicano Park   The Latino/a population enlisted in the United States military is rapidly increasing and is projected to be as much as 22.3% of the armed forces by 2020. Without a doubt as the population of Latinos and Latinas increases in the U.S. the amount of Latino/Latina military personnel will do so as well. The Pew Hispanic Center estimates that in 2001 there were 109,487 enlisted soldiers who classified themselves as Hispanics, with 14% of them enlisted in the Marine Corps.- Full Article
April - June 2012
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World Economic Crisis Has Had Limited Effect on Arms Sales   The top 100 global sellers of arms (including sales of military services) maintained their upward trend in 2010, although the increase of one percent was slower than in 2009. This is according to a February 27, 2012, news release from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), which monitors the arms industry and maintains several databases on military spending and related issues. - Full Article
January - March 2012
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A Peace Activist at Occupy   “We are unstoppable -- another world is possible!” This and other hopeful chants rise up in the midst of a small Occupy rally in San Diego. Like other cities, San Diego has gone through a great deal of pain, both real and imagined, as the fledgling Occupy movement swells and shrinks with the changing tides. - Full Article
January - March 2012
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Proxy War   Throughout history, human lives have been improved by technology in many ways. Tools facilitated hunting, the wheel increased the speed of travel, and the industrial revolution greatly increased the production of goodst- Full Article
January - March 2012
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Counter-recruitment and School Demilitarization Activism: From Past Victories to the Challenges Ahead   Counter-recruitment and school demilitarization work in the U.S. has gone through several cycles of expansion and contraction during the last few decades.. - Full Article
October-December 2011
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Repeal of DADT: How it Helps and How it Doesn’t   On September 20, lesbian, gay and bisexual (LGB) service members and veterans, as well as their many supporters, held parties and events around the country to commemorate the official repeal of the military’s policy commonly known as “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” (DADT). Just what is the impact of this change?- Full Article
October-December 2011
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Marine Corps JROTC vs. Academic Classes   In February of 2009, Mission Bay High School students, parents, teachers, and community members waited anxiously and well into a Tuesday night for the decision by the San Diego Unified School District (SDUSD) Board to finally restrict the JROTC program.- Full Article
October-December 2011
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The HAARP that Angels Don’t Play   Some technology can have disastrous long-term consequences, especially when developed for war or as a spin-off from weaponry. One example, nuclear power, has proven to be dangerous and not well understood by the public. The world is now dealing with some of its lethal manifestations in Fukushima Japan.- Full Article
July-September 2011
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A New Generation of Activism Brings Hope

  On April 2, 2011, I accompanied seven students from Mission Bay High School in San Diego who traveled by train to the California Teachers’ Association (CTA) statewide convention in Los Angeles.- Full Article
July-September 2011
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California DMV/Draft Registration Bill Headed for Another Defeat

  It appears likely that Senate Bill 251, the proposal to use the California Department of Motor Vehicles to register males with Selective Service, will die in the senate appropriations committee for the fifth time in eleven years. - Full Article
July-September 2011
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Rekindling the Fire — Now That Would Be Great!

  I was asked to see if I could rekindle (though I can barely keep a campfire going) energy for leafleting our high schools with information to help students understand and respond to attempts to militarize them.- Full Article
April-June 2011
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Legislation Introduced to Limit Selective Service Registration to “National Emergencies”

  Representative Mike Coffman (R-Colorado) introduced a bill in the House of Representatives in February that would suspend the Selective Service System and draft registration for young men. - Full Article
April-June 2011
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Bradley Manning: Army Whistleblower Now Charged with Capital Crime

  Think of yourself as a soldier. Working at a desk job, you see shocking messages, reports and pictures about military activity that seem wrong and sometimes horrifying. And then, one day, you see a video recording of U.S. soldiers laughing as they shoot unarmed civilians from a helicopter.- Full Article
April-June 2011
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HR 637: Fairness for Military Recruiters, but Not for Students

  On Feb. 10, Congressman Duncan Hunter, a Republican House member from San Diego's conservative East County, introduced HR 637, the Fairness for Military Recruiters Act. - Full Article
January-March 2011
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Paradigm Shift: New Victory Over Military Recruiting in San Diego Schools

  Recruiting on high school campuses in San Diego underwent a paradigm shift on Nov. 30, 2010, with another victory by the Education Not Arms Coalition.- Full Article
January-March 2011
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The DREAM is destroyed   The Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors Act (DREAM Act) was rejected by the U.S. Senate on Sept. 21,2010. - Full Article
January-March 2011
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Jr. ROTC Contributes to the School Funding Crisis   As sources of public money for public education shrink, K-12 school districts are being forced to consider budget cuts that will seriously affect classes and student services. In some places they are reducing or eliminating counselors, school nurses, teacher aides, librarians, and programs like art, music and athletics.- Full Article
July-Sept 2010
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ROTC and the Seduction of Liberal Militarism   On April 20, representatives from the Naval War College met with students at Brown University to pressure the school’s administration to bring ROTC back to campus. - Full Article
July-Sept 2010
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The Peace Symbol: Fashion or Political Statement?   They are everywhere! Peace symbols are on clothes, backpacks, jewelry, shoes, school supplies, towels and body parts! We started wondering what this means. Is it just a fad, in the same way that Che Guevara was a few years ago? - Full Article
July-Sept 2010
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Activists Shut Down Army Experience Center in Philadelphia   A coalition of about 30 peace groups has proven triumphant in its goal of shutting down the Army Experience Center (AEC) in a suburban shopping mall in Philadelphia. The Army announced on June 10 that it will close down the recruitment center on July 31, 2010, four months before its lease expires.- Full Article
April-June 2010
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Maryland Legislature
Votes to Ban Testing
for Military Recruitment
  On March 24, the Maryland Senate narrowly approved a measure that will prohibit the automatic release of aptitude test results to military recruiters by public schools. The vote was 24-23. - Full Article
April-June 2010
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"War Is a Racket"   This was the title of a book written by Major General Smedley D. Butler after spending 34 years in the U.S. Marine Corps.  At the time he wrote it in 1935 he was the most decorated military person in the history of the United States. - Full Article
January-March 2010
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Still Waiting, Still DREAMing   For the thousands of young people brought to the United States as children of undocumented immigrant families, a pathway to legalization deferred one more day is a pathway deferred far too long. - Full Article
January-March 2010
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The Education Crisis and Militarization   An education crisis is unfolding in California, particularly in San Diego. Perhaps it is due to the capitalistic system of the United States; perhaps it is because of the militarized country and its greed for world domination; or maybe it is because of the wrong priorities in a hierarchical society. - Full Article
January-March 2010
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Military Testing in Schools Dealt Setback by Public Concerns   Every school year hundreds of thousands of high school students across the country are encouraged — and often required — to take a four-hour military exam during school hours. - Full Article
October - December 2009
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Keeping the Peace: Resistance and Teachers in Japan   As a third generation Japanese American, I didn’t have much of a connection to Japan. It seemed much too expensive for a visit, and like others of my generation, my life was in America. However, in my late forties I applied for a Fulbright Scholarship for a month in Japan along with a team of 12 educators from throughout the United States. It was an opportunity for me to discover my cultural heritage and understand my life experience as a Japanese American woman. - Full Article
October - December 2009
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San Diego Schools Temporarily Suspend Military Access to Student Lists   The San Diego Unified School District has frozen the military’s access to student lists this fall while it takes steps to address parent and student complaints over the way the district is handling releases of data to recruiters. - Full Article
October - December 2009
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Involving Military Veterans in Counter-Recruitment Efforts at Schools   Why in the world would you want to bring military veterans to a counter-recruitment event at a local school? Couldn’t this be counter-productive to your efforts? And if you are a veteran, why would you want to do counter-recruitment work? - Full Article
July - September 2009
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Resistance to ROTC Succeeds at CSU San Marcos   During the 2008-2009 academic year, a proposal to start an Army ROTC program at California State University San Marcos, a 20-year-old campus in northern San Diego County, met with accolades from supporters and strong resistance from students, faculty, and community members who oppose the militarization of schools and universities. - Full Article
July - September 2009
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Inadequate High School Courses Pushes Students into the Military   I remember meeting a girl named Katia Ortiz. She was a junior in high school, probably 16 years old. She was in JROTC. Katia would hide from me the days she was forced to wear her Marine JROTC uniform. She was embarrassed. I asked her why she was in JROTC. She told me her counselor had placed her there for the physical education credit and that there was no other class available..- Full Article
April - June 2009
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Victory!   A truly monumental victory against militarism in our schools has been achieved! And for this victory to come from the city of San Diego makes it even more amazing. The Education Not Arms Coalition, after a 1½-year campaign, has succeeded in moving the San Diego Board of Education to ban rifle training on 11 high school campuses.- Full Article
April - June 2009
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The U.S. Military’s Toxic Legacy

A digest of online articles

  The Green Valley News and Sun of August 29, 2007, has an article by Riley Merline about the island of Vieques, famous for years of protest and the site of 60 years of military occupation by the U.S. Navy. The 10,000 people who live there, along with the 25 endangered species, are surrounded by unexploded munitions and 37 toxic sites.- Full Article
April - June 2009
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Freedom Fighters on My Mind   When it comes to freedom fighters, I’ve met a few. I once shook hands with Martin Luther King long before he gave birth to his wonderful dream. I twice sang to Rosa Parks and basked in her beautiful and warm smile, so thankful that she once sat down so I could stand up tall.- Full Article
January - March 2009
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A Strategic Blind Spot for Progressives   Many advocates of progressive social change in this country are asking important questions about possible directions to follow after the 2008 election. For the peace movement, this question is particularly challenging because, while there is good reason to celebrate the defeat of the Republican Party and the election of the first African American president, there is also a real danger that Obama’s victory will undercut anti-war protest if he doesn’t move quickly to end the Bush administration’s two wars.- Full Article
January - March 2009
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Sexual Assault in the Military   On July 19, 2005, Private First Class LaVena Johnson’s battered and partially burned body was found in a military contractor’s tent in Baled, Iraq. She had a gunshot wound to the head, a broken nose and loose teeth, bruises and abrasions all over her body. A corrosive chemical had been poured over her genital area.- Full Article
January - March 2009
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Don’t Ask Don’t Tell Revisited

  Don’t ask, don’t tell. Don’t tell, don’t ask. Ask and tell. Tell and ask. Anyway you put it, the policy is a web of dysfunctional and contradictory regulations, applied subjectively to suit the needs of the military. And the historic truth is, in wartime, it’s really not about being gay or lesbian. It’s about warm bodies. It’s about feeding the military machine with human fuel- Full Article
October - December 2008
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Free Beer and Dog Tags at Family-Oriented Conference

  Strolling across the convention center with her granddaughter, Dolores Huerta, who made history with Cesar Chavez more than 40 years ago, received an occasional greeting from those who recognized her.- Full Article
October - December 2008
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A Setback for Militarism in San Diego Schools

The San Diego Unified School District announced in May that it was investigating complaints voiced by students who had been involuntarily placed in military science courses (i.e., JROTC), a violation of the California Education Code.- Full Article
October - December 2008
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Surprise Attempt to Force Military Training into High Schools Fails — for Now

  On September 17, 2008, the U.S. Senate was presented with an amendment to the 2009 military authorization bill that would have forced high schools to accept military training.- Full Article
July - September 2008
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Recruiter Repellent - Legislation May Soon Make It Easier for Students to Opt Out

  California has moved closer to passing Assembly Bill 2994, which would grant high school students greater protection from aggressive military recruiters.- Full Article
July - September 2008
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Criticism of JROTC Program Leads to Gag Order and Investigation by San Diego City Schools

  Crawford High School, 900 Building; Hoover High, 800 Building; Lincoln High, Room 1416; Madison High, Room 206; Mission Bay High, Room 162; Serra High, Room 415; Morse High, JROTC Room. If you would like to see San Diego high school students learning to use guns, these are the locations of some of the shooting ranges on our campuses. - Full Article
July - September 2008
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JROTC Instructors Are Not Trained as Teachers   Following a recent vote by the San Francisco School Board, students in San Francisco can no longer get physicaleducation credit for the military’s JROTC (Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps).- Full Article
April - June 2008
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California Bill Would Limit Military’s Access to Data on Students   A new bill in the California legislature could, if passed, set a major precedent at the state level for protecting students from aggressive military recruiting. Assembly Bill 2994, the Student and Family Privacy Protection Act of 2008, was introduced on February 22, 2008, by Assembly members Sally Lieber (D-Mountain View) and Loni Hancock (D-East SF Bay). - Full Article
April - June 2008
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New Studies Show Most Military Veterans “Not Career Ready”   “It's really hard to make the things you were doing in Iraq relevant to what an employer is looking for today.”— Army Cpl. Vicki Angell - Full Article
April - June 2008
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“The Short Life of José Antonio Gutierrez” Movie Review:   “The Short Life of José Antonio Gutierrez” is a 2006 documentary that begins with Gutierrez's birth in the highlands of Guatemala during its civil war and ends with his death as a soldier in the U.S. invasion of Iraq. The film opens with an anti-war memorial, in which a staged cemetery is erected next to images of the fallen soldiers. - Full Article
January - March 2008
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Struggle Heats up in San Diego Schools Over Military Training Programs   Aren’t shooting ranges on high school campuses in complete contradiction to the “zero weapons tolerance” rules? Is JROTC, in reality, a well-planned, back-door recruitment tool that targets vulnerable young people? Do parents and students have a clear understanding of what JROTC is all about? - Full Article
January - March 2008
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Guam: Where USA’s Empire Begins   A part of the U.S., yet apart from it; a colony in a world where colonialism supposedly no longer exists; the “tip of America’s spear” in Asia – welcome to Guam, USA. This is a place where the residents, including its indigenous population, the Chamorros, are U.S. citizens, yet cannot vote for president and have no voting delegate in Congress. - Full Article
January - March 2008
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Military Health Care in Crisis   The Iraq occupation and war in Afghanistan are taxing the military medical system beyond its limits. As the number of combat-related injuries and illnesses increases, many soldiers report that it is difficult to get medical care. Some are discouraged from going to sick call or flatly (and illegally) refused permission to see doctors, and others are sent away after inadequate examinations by overworked corpsmen or medics. - Full Article
October - December 2007
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The Dilemma of “Double Deportation”   In an obscure memoir of the U.S. war in Southeast Asia, an undocumented Mexican who had enlisted in the U.S. Army with the aid of an unscrupulous recruiter, writes: “I realized that for me to live in the United States, the system was asking me to pay a high price. Now I probably would have to give my life. Was it worth it?”- Full Article
October - December 2007
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Was Bush War Advisor Proposing a Draft?   On August 10, 2007, Army Lt. Gen. Douglas Lute, sometimes referred to as the Bush administration’s new “war czar,” was being interviewed on National Public Radio’s “All Things Considered.” During the interview, he mentioned that a draft had always been “an option on the table” as one of the possible ways to address the serious staffing crisis faced by the military. Lute said, "I think it makes sense to certainly consider it." - Full Article
October - December 2007
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The Militarization of Mission Bay High School   During the summer, while most students, parents and teachers were busy doing other things, the principal at Mission Bay High School, together with the San Diego Board of Education, were hurriedly going through the motions of approving Marine Corps Junior Reserve Officers Training Corps for the Pacific Beach school. - Full Article
July - September 2007
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Immigration and Military Enlistment: The Pentagon’s Push for the DREAM Act Heats Up   "The Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors, or DREAM, provision in the immigration bill is expected to help boost military recruiting.”— Bill Carr, Acting Deputy Undersecretary of Defense for Military Personnel Policy.- Full Article
July - September 2007
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Fourth Attempt to Pass Bill Linking Draft Registration to DMV in California   Another attempt is being made to boost draft registration compliance in California by enlisting the aid of the Department of Motor Vehicles. On February 23, Assembly Bill 1661 was introduced in the state legislature to require the DMV to add a special notice about registering with the Selective Service System on the form used to apply for a driver’s license or state identification card.- Full Article
July - September 2007
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Reproductive Rights and the Military. What Choice?   The Christian right’s move to erode the landmark decision in Roe v. Wade has generated critique and fear by many. The 1973 Supreme Court decision gave women the right to terminate pregnancy in the pre-viable state by banning state laws that prohibited abortion. Since then, stipulations on abortion have been made on the state level, but generally Roe v. Wade has made tangible improvements in women’s reproductive choices and safety nationwide. Back alley abortions seemed to be a thing of the past. But, with the composition of the Supreme Court changing and a resurgence of “pro-life” advocacy, a ban on late-term abortion has passed and many states are debating the circumstances in which minors can have access to an abortion.- Full Article
April - June 2007
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"I Was Just Doing My Job"   With the exception of John Wayne’s The Green Berets (1968), the long U.S. war in Southeast Asia produced no high-profile Hollywood films during its ten-year duration and only a handful of ream films immediately after the war’s end. As the U.S occupation of Iraq enters its fifth year, we already have a wide range of superb documentaries and two fictional films — Home of the Brave by veteran film maker Irwin Winkler and G.I. Jesús by Belgian writer-director Carl Colpaert. sives.”- Full Article
April - June 2007
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Navy versus Marine Mammals   The Navy is refusing to mitigate the harm to marine mammals when it uses sonar for training exercises off the coast of Southern California. The Navy contends that Coastal Commission restrictions are not valid because their training takes place more than three miles off shore, beyond the scope of the commission’s authority.- Full Article
April - June 2007
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On Global Garrisons

 

  Nemesis . . . deals with the way arrogant and misguided American policies have headed us for a series of catastrophes comparable to our disgrace and defeat in Vietnam or even the sort of extinction that befell our former fellow "superpower."--Chalmers Johnson - Full Article
January - March 2007
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Muddled Thinking About Conscription   Ever since House Democrat Charles Rangel introduced his first proposal to bring back the military draft in 2003, it’s been amazing to see how much amnesia there is on the subject, especially among some of those who consider themselves liberals or “progressives.”- Full Article
January - March 2007
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Growing the Military: Who Will Serve?   In late December 2006, the Bush administration reversed its previous position and agreed to a permanent expansion of the Army and Marine Corps.(1) In reality, the size of the two “ground services” has grown steadily since 2001 when Congress approved a temporary increase of 30,000 to the Army and authorized additional increases to the Army and Marines in 2005 and 2006. The current proposal would make these increases permanent and by 2012 achieve the objective of an active-duty Army of 542,400 and a Marine Corps of 190,000..- Full Article
January - March 2007
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Enlightenment at Boot Camp Leads to Discharge   Christopher is home now. He got an early separation for failure to adapt to military life. I am so proud of him for standing up for what he believed and for his courage to recognize his mistake quickly. His experience is pretty interesting. I am trying to get him to write it down but right now he is just enjoying being home and in the throes of looking for a job. While I can’t do his story justice, I will share some things he told me that I found to be particularly disturbing.- Full Article
October - December 2006
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Structured Cruelty: Learning to Be a Lean, Mean Killing Machine   I will never forget standing in formation after the end of our final “hump,” Marine-speak for a forced march, at the end of the Crucible in March, 1997. The Crucible is the final challenge during Marine Corps boot camp and is a two-and-a-half-day, physically exhausting exercise in which sleep deprivation, scarce food, and a series of obstacles test teamwork and toughness.- Full Article
October - December 2006
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California Governor Vetoes Opt-Out Bill   Governor Schwarzenegger vetoed Assembly Bill 1778, legislation that would have required California high schools to redesign their student emergency cards to help parents and students opt out when school lists are given to military recruiters - Full Article
October - December 2006
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“The Ground Truth”

Directed and produced by Patricia Foulkrod, distributed by Focus Features.

  I teach courses about multicultural education at a university in Southern California. My class prepares teachers to instruct children from a wide variety of backgrounds, including those whose parents are in the Marines and Navy, refugees from war-torn areas, privileged groups, and immigrants.- Full Article
July - September 2006
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Suzanne, Sara, and Military Sexual Trauma

 

Sara Rich wore her thick, remarkably red hair in a long braid down her back for decades. Just a few days ago she cut it all off. A luxurious twelve-inch braid will now be donated to Locks of Love. When I interviewed Sara and asked why she did it, she said, “For my daughter, Suzanne.” - Full Article

July - September 2006
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Another Cover for Army Recruiting  

High school students across the country are greeted with this message when they log on to the March2Success.com Web site hosted by the U.S. Army. March2Success, a popular, Web-based, 30-hour course designed by Educational Options, The Princeton Review, and Kaplan, Inc., is ostensibly a program that provides training in test-taking strategies and problem-solving skills and teaches students how to improve their math and English knowledge.- Full Article

July - September 2006
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Why COMD Opposes the California Military Recruiting Opt-out Bill  

At the time of this writing in early July, California Assembly Bill 1778 had passed the full state assembly, been approved by the senate education committee, and was on its way to a final vote this summer in the full senate.

AB 1778 says that if a school district collects emergency information for its high school students, the information card must include a notice that informs the parent or legal guardian and pupil of her or his right to request that the student’s name, address and phone number not be released to military recruiters or institutions of higher education.
- Full Article

April - June, 2006
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Militarism Kills Whales

  Whales and other sea mammals are the “collateral damage” of the U.S. Navy’s use of low-frequency active sonar. The struggle to keep the Navy from wreaking havoc on ocean mammals continues. As recently as January 30, 2006, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has written a formal comment in response to the Navy’s draft environmental statement proposing a 500-square nautical mile range to be used for sonar testing about 40 miles east of North Carolina. - Full Article
April - June, 2006
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The F-18 as a Theme Park Ride

A teacher’s response to the military in her school.

  At the end of the last semester, the principal of the small rural high school where I teach Spanish and ELD announced that there would be a change in the exam schedule. The semester usually ends by giving exams on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. We go back the following Monday to start the new semester. However, this year the principal had run into someone from the Navy SEALs who had offered to help us celebrate the end of the semester by bringing a flight simulator to our campus.- Full Article
April - June, 2006
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Jarhead: Military Culture Under Fire   I recently viewed British director Sam Mendes’s 2005 film, Jarhead. Based on former Marine Anthony Swofford’s Gulf War memoir, the film depicts the experiences of United States soldiers. The film’s subject matter has a limited scope, but among post-Vietnam war movies (such as The Three Kings in 1999 and Black Hawk Down in 2001), Jarhead presents the most stinging critique of the effects of U.S. military culture on soldiers. - Full Article
January - March, 2006
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In Need of a Proactive Peace Movement  

Some important stories have appeared recently about disagreements between military commanders and the Bush administration over whether to begin a significant withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iraq in 2006. A related development is the recent call for an immediate withdrawal by Rep. John Murtha (D-PA). Murtha is a decorated combat veteran who is also considered a military hawk and one of the closest congressional allies of the high-level officer corps.- Full Article

January - March, 2006
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Private Soldiers and the New Age of Warfare   After the collapse of the Berlin Wall when militaries seemingly shrank in size, many military personnel from around the globe became part of the privatized military industry (PMI). PMI has grown to operate in more than 50 nations, generating over $100 billion in revenue annually. With a growing military presence around the world, recruitment difficulties, and public policy determined by war profiteers, the U.S. has become the largest consumer of PMI of any nation. - Full Article
January - March, 2006
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Opening Eyes on the Big Island   The career fair committee of Kea‘au High School in Hawai‘i was kind enough to allow me to have a table on Friday, Nov. 4, at their high school career fair to discuss with the students alternatives to military enlistment and the realities of war. As far as I know, this is the first time a table like mine has been present at one of these Big Island high school events. I felt it was important to be there to counterbalance the several tables touting careers in the Armed Forces.- Full Article
November -December 2005
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Hispanic Heritage Month Means Covert Recruiting  

On October 7, 2005, at the Anaheim, California, Convention Center not far from Disneyland, the Hispanic Engineer National Achievement Corporation hosted an awards luncheon for approximately 500 people including more than 300 middle school, high school and college students. The featured employer at the luncheon was the Department of Defense.- Full Article

November -December 2005
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Harold Pinter

Nobel Prize Winner is a Conscientious Objector and Fierce Counter-militarism Advocate

 

The Swedish Academy says playwright, poet, and polemicist Harold Pinter “uncovers the precipice under everyday prattle and forces entry into oppression’s closed rooms.

An East London boy, son of working-class Jewish immigrants, is sent away to rural England on a traumatic separation where he immerses himself in reading. The reason for his sojourn is to escape bombs falling from the sky; it is the Battle of Britain and the Nazis are terrorizing the civilian population of London. The boy returns to find a devastated urban landscape. This experience would forever impact and alter the consciousness of this boy named Harold Pinter.- Full Article

September - October 2005
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"The Art and Science of Recruiting," According to the Army   With the Army still short of its 2005 quota by some 16,000 recruits and no end in sight to the disastrous occupation of Iraq, the new school year promises to be one in which military recruiters step up their activities. Pressures to meet their "mission" create the potential for increased recruiter abuse. The New York Times reported that last year the Pentagon investigated over 1,000 recruiting "improprieties," and after one enterprising young man in Denver tape-recorded a recruiter suggesting that he lie about his background, the recruiter was demoted one pay grade.- Full Article
September - October 2005
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Embedding the Military in Civilian Society   The United States military's campaign of public relations and cultural subversion is a beast of many personalities. One Navy advertisement cuts between footage of a placid suburban scene and footage of highly visual, highly testosterone fueled actions performed by members of the Navy during which a voiceover laments, "Somewhere some poor guy is buying a minivan." In another military ad, parents marvel at the firmer handshakes and more assertive eye contact of their homecoming sons. In a political climate whose main feature is an increasingly ambiguous and unpopular war, the military continues to employ a manifold strategy to captivate and capture new victims.- Full Article
July - August, 2005
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Beyond Opt-out  

It is encouraging to observe the contemporary anti-war movement's recent shift toward giving greater attention to military recruiting. This means that a growing number of individuals and organizations now understand that there is an organizing strategy that can be employed with much more effectiveness than the symbolic protest that has characterized most anti-war activism since September 11, 2001. People are finally looking deeper into the issues and understanding that no matter how frightening and uncontrollable the Bush administration may seem, it has a very reachable Achilles heel when it comes to needing human resources to wage its wars.- Full Article

July - August, 2005
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Military Enlistment, or When a Contract Isn't Really a Contract  

It is an axiom among activists working in the area of counter-recruitment that the enlistment contract isn't worth the paper it's printed on. What this means in practical terms is that whatever a recruiter promises to deliver to a new recruit — specific jobs or assignment, length of service, benefits, or even citizenship — can be withdrawn or changed at any time.- Full Article

May - June, 2005
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Proposal Would Restore Privacy Rights Surrendered to the Military

 

Representative Michael Honda, a Democratic member of Congress from San Jose, California, has introduced legislation that would require written permission from a parent before any secondary school that receives federal funds could release a student's name, address and phone number to military representatives.- Full Article

May - June, 2005
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Military Lies

 

I give everyone the benefit of doubt. I'm probably one of those "pushovers" that used-car salesmen like. As a matter of fact, I've been taken in by my fair share of them. I usually chalk it up to "live and learn" and vow not to let it happen again. We expect certain types of behavior from used-car salesmen. We know in advance that they will say anything to make a sale. My apologies to the sincere and honest used-car salespeople out there in the world. I know you are the exception, not the rule.- Full Article

March-April, 2005
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Uncle Sam Goes to College:

Military Recruiters Target Community College Students

 

  When students at Seattle Central Community College forced military recruiters off their campus in January, they fired an illumination round over a new front in the counter-recruitment movement. Traditionally both recruiters and activists have considered high schools as their primary site of engagement. Today, with the Pentagon straining to maintain sufficient force levels and some military branches failing to meet recruiting quotas, your local community college campus has joined your local high school as the target of aggressive recruitment campaigns.- Full Article
March-April, 2005
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Bush Administration Uses Political Theater to Override Criticism of Iraq War  

Mainstream media outlets have long compared activist demonstrations to street theater, both as a way of emphasizing the decentralized, grass-roots, and live nature of activists' tactics and as a way of ridiculing activism as outdated, obnoxiously "in-your-face," and melodramatic. This portrayal was certainly clear in The San Diego Union-Tribune coverage of those San Diegans protesting Bush's January 20, 2005, presidential inauguration. The article began by stressing the rudimentary nature of the protesters' rally: "People banged pots and pans and waved banners and chanted and cheered, but none of that was in celebration," staff writer Michael Stetz wrote. - Full Article

January-February, 2005
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2005 Could Be a Turning Point for the Antiwar Movement   Despite 2005 being the start of a second presidential term for George W. Bush, this year may bring together a number of factors that will offer the antiwar movement an important opportunity to shorten the U.S. occupation of Iraq and begin to reverse the decades-long growth of militarism in this country. However, to take advantage of this opportunity, the antiwar movement will have to think critically about its emphasis on symbolic war protest and look more closely at strategies for interfering with the flow of human resources needed for war, especially through counter-recruitment organizing.- Full Article
January-February, 2005
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Recruiters' Tricks Revealed in Their Own Handbook   Many people, including school staff, students, parents and activists have expressed concern about the presence of military recruiters in our high schools and on our college campuses. When deciding how best to address these concerns, it helps to understand just what recruiters do and how they present themselves to teachers and administrators to gain what seems like unfettered admittance to many schools. It may be productive to share this information with school staff. They may want to reassess their policy on recruiter access or incorporate a counter recruitment component..- Full Article
November - December, 2004
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Draft Legislation Voted Down in Political Chess Game   On October 5, Representative Charles Rangel's proposal for a draft was brought to the floor of the House of Representatives under a procedure that bypassed the normal legislative committee process and gave little advance notice. Members of the House voted 402-2 against the bill, and even its author voted to defeat it.- Full Article
November - December, 2004
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The Interpretation of Dreams

Covert recruitment strategies in the DREAM Act

 

The Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors Act, known as the DREAM Act, has received strong support from Latino activists across the country. Throughout the month of September, numerous groups staged rallies and fasts in over fifty cities. What advocates and the media have ignored are the potential consequences of the military service component of the proposed legislation.- Full Article

September - October, 2004
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The Kerry Conundrum  

The controversy surrounding presidential candidate John Kerry's service in Viet Nam raises a number of difficult issues for peace and antimilitarism activists.

Fueled by television attack ads featuring U.S. Navy Swift boat veterans who claimed Kerry lied about what he did in Southeast Asia as a Navy officer, the controversy exploded in the media in mid-August. On August 20, the Washington Post exposed links between the anti-Kerry vets, the Republican Party, and long-time Bush operatives. On August 21 William Rood, a former officer who served with Kerry, corroborated Kerry's account of how he won a silver star and disputed the claims made by the anti-Kerry group.- Full Article

September - October 2004
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Claremont Parents Counter Military Recruitment   "Schools exist for the purpose of educating our children." This was the cry of John Cullen, spokesman for Parents Against Military Recruiting on Campus, at a recent Claremont Unified School District Board meeting in California. Cullen founded the parents group last year when his son came home from middle school talking about a man in uniform who was teaching kids about weapons of destruction, and he later learned that toy dog tags and pro-military posters were given to students as gifts. Cullen felt something is wrong with a school system that teaches children violence and weaponry, and inculcates militarism in people still too young to choose a career, let alone a violent career. - Full Article
July - August, 2004
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National Counter-recruitment Movement Enters New Stage   Over 100 activists were present in Philadelphia the weekend of June 25-27 to officially christen the new National Network Opposing the Militarization of Youth (NNOMY). Born from a proposal made at the "Stopping War Where It Begins" counter-recruitment conference held a year earlier in Philadelphia, NNOMY is an effort to bring together the growing number of organizations and activists who are working against the militarization of young people in communities across the country. - Full Article
July - August, 2004
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Maneuvering Consent   Cynthia Enloe, a research professor in the Government and International Relations program at Clark University in Massachusetts, has been a leading scholar of militarism on an international scale. Probing into how militarism utilizes and functions within the lives of people of color and women, Enloe has offered important insights to students of militarization since the publishing of Ethnic Soldiers: State Security in Divided Societies in 1970. While this text focuses on the state's usage of the political and manpower benefits of mobilizing and deploying ethnic soldiers, her more recognized and influential body of work focuses on the ways in which women's lives and identities play a role in and are shaped by international relations and the global political economy... - Full Article
May - June, 2004
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Held Against Their Will: U.S. Military and Reservists

  Apparently, deploying troops to Iraq, Afghanistan, South Korea and Europe simultaneously is beyond what the U.S. military can do. Yet they're doing it — by holding thousands of soldiers and reservists long past their release dates, against their will, with serious detriment to their health, careers, families and morale.-Full Article
May - June, 2004
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With Kerry as President, Our Work Would Be Just as Urgent

  If you were thinking "relief" is spelled K-E-R-R-Y, think again. John Kerry could be just as bad on the issue of militarism— more specifically, the militarization of young people — as the previous several administrations. Besides the fact that Kerry advocates enlarging the military (imagine spending more on war making than we already are!) and supports continuing the occupation of Iraq, Kerry has a plan for national service that could be an intermediate step in the direction of mandatory civilian/military service.-Full Article
March - April , 2004
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Proof that a Draft is Being Readied for 2005?   Stories have been flying around the Internet warning us that the machinery for a draft is being "oiled" and will be used within a year. . . . COMD is receiving copies of these articles or alerts every week, and we've spent a lot of time answering questions about whether or not they are true. Unfortunately, much of the information in them is inaccurate or untrue . . ..Full Article
March - April , 2004
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Organizing to Demilitarize Schools in the Greater Los Angeles Area

  We gather near Martin Luther King Boulevard, at Manual Arts High School, one of the many heavily recruited inner city schools in the 750,000-student Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD). A high school student reads her anti-war poetry and tells her audience she is friends with a murderer, a former JROTC drill team leader, who enlisted, went to Iraq, and killed five people. Vietnam Veteran Ron Kovic urges everyone to speak out against school militarization. A paraplegic, Kovic recounts how police clubbed and beat him and threw him from his wheelchair when he led the Vietnam Veterans Against the War. Many others, such as Fernando Suarez del Solar, Rick Jahnkow, Jorge Mariscal, Blase Bonpane, and student leaders, add stories and personal experiences.Full Article
January-February, 2004
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Fernando Suarez del Solar: Letters from Iraq

  As he crossed the Iraqi desert during the 12-hour drive from Amman, Jordan, to Baghdad, Fernando Suarez meditated on his long journey from his youth in Mexico City to moving his young family to Tijuana and then across the border to San Diego, and now to his entering the lands of ancient Mesopotamia. As one of the more recognizable members of a fact-finding delegation organized by Global Exchange, Military Families Speak Out, and Veterans for Peace, Suarez was completing the next logical step in his role as a peace activist. He had come to the country where his son Jesús, a 20-year-old U.S. Marine, had died on March 27, 2003, after stepping on a U.S. cluster bomb.Full Article
January-February, 2004
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Stepping Up Recruitment   Military recruitment has experienced a downturn since the mid-1980s with heightened difficulty following the 1990-1991 Gulf War. Since planning for peace is not on the current administration's agenda, the Department of Defense (DoD) must take up the issue of how to attract more combatants to carry out its current and future wars. It is absolutely vital that objectors to militarism understand the elaborate demographic analyses compiled by think tanks at the request of the DoD to prepare military recruiters for swaying youth enlistment decisions. Activists and others involved in the work of (re)educating youth on militarism must know which youth are being targeted and which selling points are being used so sufficient energy can be allocated to compiling literature, videos, and classroom presentations that effectively respond to recruiters.-Full Article
November-December, 2003
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Rebuilding? Iraqi Farms Bulldozed by U.S. Military

  How many times have we recently heard and read that the U.S. military focus in Iraq has shifted to rebuilding and ensuring "security" for the people recently freed from an oppressive dictator? How many of us sat with mouths agape when we learned that the unjust war in Iraq has damaged the country so badly that U.S. taxpayers are being charged billions of dollars to "rebuild" that which most of us didn't want destroyed in the first place? And now news has broken that the U.S. troops aren't rebuilding Iraq, but ruining the livelihoods, property, food sources, and independence for Iraqi farmers — and, indeed, being oppressive and dictatorial.Full Article
November-December, 2003
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Will A Draft Be on the Government's Agenda in 2004?

 

Ever since the last draft ended in 1973, proposals to bring back conscription have lacked the support needed to win passage. However, several factors are developing that are adding momentum in Congress for the idea of forcing young people into the military, and the Bush administration may wind up revising its previously stated opposition to reactivating the draft.Full Article

September - October, 2003
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An American Hero from South of the Border

  One of the most eloquent voices speaking out against the folly of George W. Bush, Inc.'s invasion and occupation of Iraq is Fernando Suarez del Solar. An average-sized man with large eyes and a serene expression, Mr. Suarez speaks imperfect English and often apologizes to his audiences. But what he has to say in his native Spanish is nothing less than one of the most intelligent, powerful, and absolutely riveting analyses of why Bush and Co. must be stopped. Full Article
September - October, 2003
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Air Force Academy Rape Trials Begin

One in Five Female Cadets and a 7th Grader Sexually Assaulted

  Draft NOtices recently reported (March/April 2003) on a series of rape allegations by female cadets at the U.S. Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, CO. Now, many months later, the investigations are underway, courts-martial have begun, the top brass at the Academy has been replaced and overridden in decisions made before their replacement, and more investigations continue. .Full Article
July - August 2003
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Counter-recruitment Conference Ushers in Renewed Resistance to Militarism   Almost 200 activists came together during June 27-29 for the first national counter-recruitment conference, titled "Stopping War Where It Begins: Organizing Against Militarism in Our Schools." With the tremendous amount of information that was exchanged, the high concentration of organizing experience that was present and the powerful energy that was generated, it may prove to be a significant watershed event for not only those organizations that focus on youth and militarism issues, but for the overall peace and social justice movement, as well.Full Article
MJuly - August 2003
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The Ballot Trap   Having worked on Eugene McCarthy's campaign in 1968, George McGovern's in 1972, and several congressional races (including one for a third-party candidate), I am aware of the old -- and continuing -- debate on the relationship between social change and the electoral process.Full Article
May - June 2003
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"Support the Troops"   Waging empire abroad requires a propaganda war at home, and peace activists have been challenged by a powerful sound-bite blitz since 9-11. As Bush, Inc. moves from its war of conquest to occupation and exploitation, the rest of us can reframe our strategies and language, including unpacking one of the most vexing phrases -- "support the troops."Full Article
May - June 2003
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Military Family Violence: A Hushed Epidemic   Studies suggest that domestic violence rates are two to three times higher in U.S. military families than in the country's civilian population. In fact, military domestic violence incidents increased from 18.6 per 1,000 marriages in 1990 to 25.6 per 1,000 in 1996.Full Article
March - April 2003
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Open Letter to George W. Bush  

Dear Mr. Bush,

I'm writing you this letter as a United States citizen, Navy veteran and parent. I have several questions to ask you. I've paid attention to what you and members of your administration have said concerning Iraq. However, I've found considerable information that seems to contradict much of what you've said about the necessity of attacking Iraq. I've also found information that suggests that your goal is something other than the disarmament of Iraq.Full Article

March - April 2003
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Counter-Recruiting the "Hispanic Market"   The 2000 census teaches us two interesting facts about the way in which Latinos are contributing to the changing face of the United States. First, more legal immigrants arrived in the decade of the 1990s than in any previous decade in our history. The economic boom (or bubble) of the Clinton years attracted large numbers of people from around the world. Second, the majority of these immigrants came from Latin America (approximately 51%; 26% are from Asian countries). Full Article
January - February 2003
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New Draft Proposal: Cannon Fodder for Peace?   During the days of the anti-Vietnam War movement, I remember hearing of a tactic that some people used to try to bring home to the public how completely twisted our values had become. As I recall, a news release and fliers would be circulated inviting people to gather at a specific time and place to witness a live animal (usually a dog) being immolated with homemade napalm. Immediately, there would be vigorous debate and loud outcry against the idea of such cruelty. - Full Article
January - February 2003
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They Gave Me the Bronze Star for My Efforts   "They gave me the bronze star for my efforts," said Joe Queen before he snapped and opened fire onto the spectators at the opening game of the 2027 World Series. This was the fictitious thought that entered my mind as I read about a Private First Class Joe Queen, whose job during the first Gulf War was to bulldoze and cover up the bodies of the Iraqi dead. On February 24, 1991, in an area between Saudi Arabia and Iraq known as the Neutral Zone, the 1st Infantry Division (Mechanized) began the ground war to retake Kuwait, breaking through the defensive front lines of Saddam Hussein's army. - Full Article
November - December 2002
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Mark Twain: Words for Our Times  

November 30, 2002, will mark the 92nd anniversary of the death of American author Samuel Langhorne Clemens, more commonly known as Mark Twain. While many are familiar with Twain for his fiction, most notably Tom Sawyer and Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, his political writings comprise a significant and important part of his work. Twain's incisive and scathing speeches, essays, and sketches on America's imperialistic and militaristic practices - and the support drummed up for them in the name of patriotism - drew widespread attention both in this country and abroad. - Full Article

November - December 2002
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Anti-War Activists Leaflet High Schools   San Diego area activists have been busy this fall encouraging high school students to think about the government's proposed war against Iraq and providing them with information not available to them via the corporate media. This action grew out of the San Diego Coalition for Peace and Justice in coordination with San Diegans to Stop the Violence Against Iraq, using COMD's leafleting experience as a model. Activists wanted to focus on providing high school students information to balance the barrage of militarism they receive from TV, radio, video games, movies, and the military in their schools. - Full Article
September - October 2002
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For Those Who Believe We Need a Draft

 

Every now and then we hear people talk about wanting to bring back conscription. Sometimes it comes from conservatives and militarists who would like to see a larger military force so they can expand U.S. bases abroad and conduct warfare in more places simultaneously. - Full Article

September - October 2002
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Socialization Messages in Schools and the Culture of Militarism

  Our illegitimate vice president, Dick Cheney, is lying to us again. He is lying in order to frighten us into supporting a U.S. military invasion and occupation of yet another nation. The socialization message that Cheney is sending to our children as they get ready to begin another year of school is that violence is an acceptable means of solving our "problems" in the world and that it is okay to be dishonest to achieve that goal. - Full Article

July - August 2002
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Dr. Strangelove Lives  

Are we in some kind of Nuclear Time Warp? Feels like it, but it's no joke. The Bush administration's Nuclear Policy Review (NPR), leaked to the Los Angeles Times in early March, revealed dangerous major changes in U.S. nuclear policy. - Full Article

July - August 2002
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Bases Provide Clues to Understanding "War on Terror"  

From May 31 to June 2 I attended the Radfest conference in Lake Geneva, Wisconsin, where I heard Zoltan Grossman speak. Grossman, a long-time peace activist who recently received his doctorate in geography, shared with conference participants his insights about a largely ignored consequence of U.S. military interventions in the last decade.
- Full Article

May - June 2002
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U.S. Indoctrinated Afghan Children with Hate and Violence  

Less than one month after September 11, 2001, the Bush administration launched a military campaign to establish political and economic control over the geopolitically strategic country of Afghanistan. The cover story invented by the White House for this illegal action is the so-called "war on terrorism."
- Full Article

May - June 2002
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Israeli Refuseniks Raise a Powerful Dissenting Voice  

In recent months, a growing number of Israeli soldiers dubbed "refuseniks" are refusing to serve in the occupied Palestinian territories. As the violence in the current Intifada has escalated, more young men are stating their opposition to the occupation of the West Bank, Gaza Strip, and East Jerusalem by refusing to carry out their compulsory military service . . .
- Full Article

March - April 2002
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Does the Military Protect Our Freedom?  

"I’d like to thank our military personnel for defending our country and protecting our freedoms." In the wake of September 11, this is a common public acknowledgment from celebrities, politicians, myriad TV and radio commentaries, and many people on the streets of the United States.

As a Navy veteran, whenever I hear statements like these, I think, "What are they talking about? Since when does the military have anything to do with freedom?"
- Full Article

March - April 2002
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Alarm Over House Draft Proposal Misses the More Immediate Proble  

A Universal Military Training and Service Act (HR 3598) was proposed in the House on December 20, 2001, generating some concern about a possible draft. If passed, the legislation would require young males to report for 6-12
months of training and "education" in the military. Even conscientious objectors would be required to report for non-combat training in the military, a departure from previous drafts that allowed some war objectors to qualify for civilian alternative service.
- Full Article

 

January-February 2002
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Congress Plants Another Pentagon Virus in Public Education   Another hole has been ripped open in the barrier protecting U.S. civilians from the influence of militarism. In December 2001, the U.S. House and Senate gave final approval to an education bill with a provision that severely erodes the right of local schools to control military access to campuses and personal information about students. The legislation, signed by President Bush on January 8, 2002, will go into effect soon as Public Law No: 107-110. - Full Article
January-February 2002
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RESISTING THE PLEDGE  

Since September 11, 2001, schools across the U.S. have increased the recitation of the "Pledge of Allegiance" in an effort to enforce patriotism. Previously lax policies have become mandatory in many school districts, making students feel pressured to pledge allegiance to a country and a flag regardless of their personal, religious or political beliefs. - Full Article

November-December 2001
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Breaking the Cycle of Violence:
The Need to Move Beyond Revenge
  Why do people wish to exact revenge? What is it about pain and grief that spurs the desire to inflict the same emotional state on others? In the wake of the September 11 attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, collective revenge appears to have consumed the majority of people in the United States. - Full Article
November-December 2001
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School Violence:
A Result of "Bad Parenting" or Militarism?

  When a student takes a gun to school and goes on a shooting rampage — as one 15-year-old is charged with doing in a community near me in California — the public immediately expresses its shock and confusion over how such a thing could ever occur. - Full Article
August - Sept - Oct 2001
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Two War or
Not Two War?
  Once in office, George W. Bush quickly followed up on his presidential campaign promises to set in motion "an immediate, comprehensive review of our military" and to give the Secretary of Defense "a broad mandate to challenge the status quo." - Full Article
August - Sept - Oct 2001
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Biowarfare: The Darkest Side of Genetic Engineering
  In June, San Diego was host to BIO2001, an annual conference for the biotechnology industry. As a result it also became the host for Beyond Biodevastation, the fifth grassroots gathering to celebrate biodiversity and question genetic engineering. - Full Article
May - June - July 2001
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The Bush Regime: Militarism’s "Finest" Hour
  Well, the reign of King George II certainly started off in an interesting fashion — the first person in over a century to take the White House without winning the popular vote. So what can we expect from him? - Full Article
May - June - July 2001
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Military Escalates Assault on Civilian Schools
  Apparently, the Pentagon and its supporters aren’t satisfied with only using extreme political pressure to accomplish a military invasion of civilian high schools. They would rather employ a more familiar method: force.- Full Article
Mar - Apr 2001
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U.S. MILITARISM SANK THE EHIME MARU!   When the U.S. submarine Greeneville executed a rapid ascent on February 9 and speared the hull of the Ehime Maru, killing nine people who were on the Japanese trawler, it revealed much more than a tragic failure in seamanship and Navy equipment. For those who care to open their eyes, it also provided an example of the degree to which the U.S. has thrown its own national soul overboard and sunk into the depths of militarism.- Full Article
Mar - Apr 2001
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SUPPORT THE "MILITARY ENVIRONMENTAL RESPONSIBILITY ACT"   The extent to which the U.S. military has to comply with environmental laws varies from statute to statute. There are generally three ways they get around compliance with these laws: direct exemption, sovereign immunity, and the Unitary Executive policy. They are exempt from many important environmental and public safety laws, such as the Oil Pollution Act of 1990 and sections of the Clean Water Act, and naval nuclear reactors are not regulated by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. - Full Article
Jan - Feb 2001
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THE U.S. MILITARY’S SILENT ASSAULT ON COMMUNITIES   Imagine that communities all over a country are suffering from a multitude of war-related health problems. Imagine a community where girls as young as 13 years old are dying from ovarian cancer caused by military pollution. Imagine a community where 100% of the children are born contaminated by military toxic waste. Imagine a community where over 90% of adults and nearly 80% of children have multiple illnesses — including neurological disorders, respiratory problems, and lead contamination. Where would you guess these people live? Iraq? Yugoslavia? The former Soviet Union? - Full Article
Jan - Feb 2001
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IN SERVICE TO THE NATION?   Referring to the deaths on the USS Cole as a tragic loss, President Clinton spoke truer than he knew. My Webster’s defines tragedy as "a serious play or drama typically dealing with the problems of a central character, leading to an unhappy or disastrous ending brought on, as in ancient drama, by fate and a tragic flaw in this character, or, in modern drama, usually by moral weakness, psychological maladjustment, or social pressures." - Full Article
Nov - Dec 2000
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GUSH VS. BORE: WHEN MILITARISM WINS, EVERYONE LOSES   In the long list of similarities between major party candidates George W. Bush and Al Gore, we find no choice for voters on military spending: both men advocate more for the Pentagon. In fact, any historical differences between Democrat and Republican military platforms are rapidly disappearing as the candidates try to outdo each other in their eagerness to please their military-industrial complex campaign contributors. - Full Article
Nov - Dec 2000
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$540,000 CAMPAIGN TARGETS OPPONENT OF MILITARY ACCESS TO STUDENT LISTS   San Diego has become a major battleground in the struggle between the military-corporate complex and civilian public education. In what may be the worst case of political overkill in a school district election, over half a million dollars is being spent by wealthy businessmen in an effort to oust a single individual . . . - Full Article
Sept - October 2000
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ARE SAN DIEGO SCHOOLS ON THE VERGE OF A MILITARY TAKEOVER?   While most attention is focussed on the races for national and state offices that will be decided by voters this November, some of the most significant decisions will actually be made at a much more local level in school board elections — particularly in San Diego. - Full Article
Sept - October 2000
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DEATH BY PROFIT: CORPORATE GREED AND MILITARISM   A decade after the official end of the Cold War, the Pentagon budget is still astonishingly bloated and Congress routinely gives it more than they ask for. Military spending takes up over half of the discretionary federal budget — $305 billion in 2001. The next largest category, education, is only $42 billion.
- Full Article
July - August 2000
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VIEQUES: "Hey, how about some beads and a blanket for that island?"   It has been over one year since David Sanes was killed by an errant U.S. Navy bomb on the Puerto Rican island of Vieques (see Draft NOtices, July/August, 1999). The killing brought to a head decades of frustration and resentment from the residents of Vieques and other Puerto Ricans throughout the islands and the mainland United States. - Full Article
July - August 2000
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COMD PREVAILS IN HIGH SCHOOL AD CONTROVERSY   With only one issue of the student newspaper left in the school year, the Orange Glen High School administration apparently decided it could not defend an earlier decision to reject a counter-recruitment ad submitted by COMD.
- Full Article
May - June 2000
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PATTERNS OF BEHAVIOR: Army Recruiters and the Sexual Harassment of Female Recruits   Four years of involvement with counter-recruiting issues in the Shoreline School District has uncovered a number of sexual harassment cases involving U.S. Army recruiters and female high school students. If not for the close scrutiny recruiters were receiving from activists and the media, it is doubtful the incidents of sexual harassment would have been made public. The question remains — how common is the sexual harassment of female students in our schools by military recruiters?
- Full Article
May - June 2000
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WAR AND EDUCATION: A Good Mix?   Most Californians probably don’t know that our state has an agency called the "Military Department" and that it is slated for a 58% budget increase in these times of peace and prosperity. Traditionally, the Military Department’s job has been to manage the California Army and Air National Guard, the state’s reserve forces for times of war, insurrection and disaster. - Full Article
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Revised 1/23/19      
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