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Fwd: [sdcpj_unmoderated] Sparring erupts over new Junior ROTC effort
- To: ca-resisters@interversity.org
- Subject: Fwd: [sdcpj_unmoderated] Sparring erupts over new Junior ROTC effort
- From: Rich Gibson <rgibson@pipeline.com>
- Date: Tue, 24 Jul 2007 13:20:55 -0700
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One of the focuses of the San Diego Coalition for
Peace and Justice, which includes the Rouge
Forum, is to drive military recruiters off school campuses.
People put forward many reasons for doing this,
as Stephanie Jennings' comments demonstrate.
One more reason: The mission of education, surely
a primary one, is to struggle for the truth. The
first rule of the military: The art of deception.
The second: subservience. The military and the
truth--and education--- have nothing in common.
More, why train youth to fight the enemies of their enemies?
best r
Sparring erupts over new Junior ROTC effort
By Helen Gao
STAFF WRITER
San Diego Union-Tribune, July 24, 2007
SAN DIEGO ? Critics of war and the military
yesterday denounceed a proposed Marine Corps
Junior ROTC program for Mission Bay High School
as a recruitment tool aimed at low-income
minority students. Some parents and school
officials touted it as a leadership development program.
The Marine Corps Junior ROTC would be the only
one in the San Diego Unified School District,
the state's second largest. The district has 11
other Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps
affiliated with the Navy, the Air Force and Army.
A school board majority indicated yesterday that
it would support the program, which requires
$65,500 in district funding. Marine Corps Junior
ROTC headquarters in Quantico, Va., has
committed $125,000 to defray start-up costs, such as uniforms and supplies.
A final vote on district funding for the program
won't take place until next month. Trustee John
De Beck said he wouldn't support the program,
saying the 2007-08 budget, which tentatively
included funding for Junior ROTC, was developed
without sufficient community input.
Supporters, including Mission Bay High Principal
Cheryl Seelos, said the program would help
at-risk teenagers and others develop discipline,
pride and good citizenship. Cadets wear
uniforms, participate in community service
projects and go on field trips to military
installations. Some get involved in drill teams and color guards.
About 83 percent of Mission Bay High students
are bused from other parts of the city, and
minorities constitute most of the student body.
Many of those students are struggling
academically. Seelos said attendance and suspensions have been a problem.
The school in Pacific Beach, which is near
military housing developments, would launch the
program in September. Parents and about 95 students have expressed interest.
Pat Hom said her son would like to join Junior
ROTC because he â??wishes to serve his
countryâ?? and would like to become a police officer.
â??There is a strong military presence there,â??
she said. â??Students wish to have access to that program.â??
Stephanie Jennings presented the board with a
packet of letters from teachers, students and
others in opposition. She warned that if the
Junior ROTC were implemented, protests would happen outside the school.
Jennings is an activist with the San Diego
Coalition for Peace and Justice, an anti-war
group, and with The Project on Youth and
Non-Military Opportunities. The project says its
mission is to provide young people with â??an
alternative view about military enlistment.â??
â??Every student has a right to education and
should not be tracked into a war zone,â?? said
Jennings, who asserted that schools with large
minority, low-income student populations tend to
be targeted for military recruitment.
Nancy Cruz, who will be a senior at Mission Bay
High, said the money would be better spent on
programs to help students get to college.
â??I think our school is already exposed to a
lot of military recruitment,â?? she said. â??We
have military recruiters there on a daily basis, at lunch.â??
The school board last month tentatively included
money for the Mission Bay program in the budget
with the understanding that there would be
further discussions. The program was one of
several items trustees had pulled for scrutiny
because they felt there had not been enough discussion.
<http://www.signonsandiego.com/uniontrib/20070724/news_1m24rotc.html>http://www.signonsandiego.com/uniontrib/20070724/news_1m24rotc.html
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Helen Gao: (619) 718-5181;
<mailto:helen.gao@uniontrib.com>helen.gao@uniontrib.com
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