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JROTC Scandal In San Diego
- To: ca-resisters@interversity.org
- Subject: JROTC Scandal In San Diego
- From: Rich Gibson <rgibson@pipeline.com>
- Date: Thu, 05 Jun 2008 14:44:47 -0700
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http://www.sandiegoreader.com/news/2008/jun/04/city-light-2/
and a classic "Abolish Rotc" Poster
http://www-rohan.sdsu.edu/~rgibson/abolishROTC.jpg
A Cool Elective You Can't Get Out Of
By
<http://www.sandiegoreader.com/staff/dorian-hargrove/>Dorian
Hargrove | Published Wednesday, June 4, 2008
Text size:
<http://www.sandiegoreader.com/news/2008/jun/04/city-light-2/#>A | A | A
Eduardo Ochoa teaches social justice at Lincoln
High School in Chollas View. Ochoa is also a
coordinator for the Advancement Via Individual
Determination program, or AVID, as everyone
calls it, a high school elective designed to
help midlevel students prepare for college and
meet college eligibility requirements.
During this school year, six of Ochoa?s students
dropped the program in favor of the military
science program, the Junior Reserve Officers?
Training Corps, or JROTC. According to Ochoa,
military science instructors told the students
that their class was easier and would also help students get into college.
Across town, at Mission Bay High School in
Pacific Beach, 11th-grader Anay Barajas was
placed into the newly offered Marines JROTC
class at the beginning of the school year. She
says she had no idea what the class was about,
but when she saw it involved drills and
marching, she wanted out and into the AVID and
Spanish classes that she had picked as her
electives. ?I went to my counselor,? Barajas
says, ?and she told me, ?Yeah, we?ll call you
in,? but they never did. So after two weeks I
had to get my dad to call, and they finally changed me.?
It wasn?t the end of Barajas?s experience with
the military program, as was first reported in
online publication Voice of San Diego. ?So the
second term, we got all-new classes and
everything, and they put me in the class again!
I was, like, ?Wow, I already got out of the
class once. Why would they put me in it again?? ?
Ochoa and Barajas weren?t the only ones in San
Diego?s public high schools who found the
military science program disturbing this year.
Other students and teachers have objected to the
course and its policies. The complaints have led
community activist groups like Encinitas-based
Project on Youth and Non-Military Opportunities,
known as Project YANO, to form the Education Not
Arms Coalition. According to Rick Jahnkow, a
founder of both the coalition and Project YANO,
support has grown, and over 150 people showed up
at a San Diego Unified School District board
meeting in early May to show their opposition to the military science course.
JROTC has been a staple in San Diego Unified?s
high schools for almost 90 years. San Diego
High, the city?s first high school, adopted the
program in 1919. Of the district?s 16 high
schools, only 3 La Jolla, Clairemont, and
University City do not offer the program as part of their curriculum.
The class claims to teach students leadership
skills, self-reliance, and self-discipline, as
well as how to set life goals. Master Chief Rik
Alberto is a military science instructor at Mar
Vista High, an Imperial Beach school in the
Sweetwater Union High School District. ?The
great thing about this program, sir, is that it
teaches a kid to act like an adult after high
school,? Alberto says. ?We teach basic
leadership concepts, public speaking. We build
self-confidence. We teach job-interview
techniques, good manners, and self-conduct,
pretty much which knife and fork to use. We
basically prepare them for the adult world, sir.?
The Education Not Arms Coalition has rallied
behind three points in its opposition to the military science program.
The coalition?s first concern is marksmanship
training on public school grounds. Each JROTC
program represents a branch of the armed forces.
In San Diego Unified schools, 7 of the 13
programs are Army, 3 are Navy, 2 are Air Force,
and 1 is Marines. Every program has a rifle
range except for the two Air Force programs, at
Scripps Ranch High and Mira Mesa High (at
Crawford the range is not in use). The rifle
ranges typically are in an old classroom where
students, supervised by instructors, practice
shooting .17-caliber air rifles at targets. Jack
Brandais of the district?s Media Relations
Department explains, ?This is a controlled, very
specific type of program. At one time it was a
CIF [California Interscholastic Federation]
sport. It?s still an NCAA [National Collegiate
Athletic Association] sport and an Olympic
sport, so it?s taught under very tight control,
in tight conditions, in a specific area of the campuses.?
Lincoln High School?s Ochoa says his students
questioned the mixed message the school was
sending. ?We teach our kids to think
critically,? Ochoa says, ?so as soon as my kids
became conscious about a gun range on campus and
other students being trained to shoot weapons,
they started asking questions about the
zero-tolerance policy. Since day one at this
school, they?ve been told about there being no
exception to having any weapons on campus, so
they started making petitions and getting
signatures from other students and staff members.?
Cristabel A., who graduated from San Diego High
last year, was a member of the school?s Army
JROTC marksmanship team. In 2007, the team won
the California Junior Olympics. She recalls the
experience of being on a shooting team. ?For one
thing, it is the one sport that needs the most
teamwork,? she says. ?It takes a team to win. It
helps with concentration, good health, and
dedication. It teaches a group of people how to
be a team. Through that, the team becomes family, like my team did.?
The second concern of the Education Not Arms
Coalition is that students are being placed in
JROTC who have not chosen it as an elective.
Once they are enrolled, it is difficult for them
to transfer out. The allegations come despite a
districtwide policy requiring that parents
provide written consent to their child?s
enrollment in the class. The instructors pass
out the consent forms at the beginning of the
term. However, the program?s own manager,
Lieutenant Colonel Jan Janus, has reported missing forms at some schools.
Barajas, the Mission Bay High student, is aware
of several classmates who had a difficult time
transferring out of the class. ?During the few
weeks that I was in the class, some kids signed
up because they thought it was going to be an
easy class,? she says, ?and there were others
who were just placed in it without them knowing
what it was. Another boy said that he was in
there even though he didn?t want to be, so he
told the instructor, and the instructor just
told him that he was going to have to figure it out.?
However, according to Brandais, the district?s
media representative, the school district has
not received any formal complaints concerning
students in the program who do not want to be
there. ?We require all of our students to return
a consent form for the class,? he says. ?Our
assistant superintendent has never received an
appeal call from a parent about their child in
Junior ROTC. Now, if the parent wants their
child to be in the program, but the student
doesn?t want to be there, then that?s a matter
the student must resolve with the parent.?
Jorge Mariscal, professor of literature at UCSD
and a Vietnam War veteran, feels that it is a
common occurrence for students who have not
chosen the elective to be placed in the class.
?The most troubling development in some Los
Angeles and San Diego schools is the placement
of students in JROTC programs without student or
parent consent,? he says. ?This is an
infringement on students? rights, and any school
official that condones this practice should be reprimanded.?
The coalition?s final objection to the military
science program stems from allegations that
JROTC instructors are recruiting cadets by
stating that the course meets college
eligibility requirements. Jahnkow, of Project
YANO, says, ?Even those who choose to go into
the program are often doing it based on
misinformation given to them to hype the program
and make them believe that it provides benefits
it really doesn?t. Specifically, students have
been told this will help them qualify for
college, when, in fact, the credits that
students get for this elective aren?t even
counted by colleges, and the grades aren?t even
counted for eligibility for financial aid.?
Brandais disagrees. ?It does help them on the
college applications, for a couple of reasons,?
he says. ?One is the shooting program is an NCAA
sport, so there are scholarships available for
that, and if they decide to go into the military
science field and enter the college ROTC
program, it helps to get in. The final one is
that it qualifies as a leadership skill, and
that is one of the things they judge you on on college applications.?
Captain Gladimiro Vasquez, professor of military
science and a recruiting officer for San Diego
State?s ROTC program, acknowledges that the high
school program does not meet any college
eligibility requirements. ?It is considered a
leadership quality, though,? he says, ?and
that?s equivalent?kind of like ASB president or
something like that. They ask for
extracurricular activities, and JROTC would be
something you put down for that.?
In recent months, there have been accusations of
intimidation by school administrators. Mission
Bay High students said that in April during a
school walkout protesting the program, school
faculty followed them with a video recorder.
Students also reported that a school
administrator confiscated an anti-JROTC button a
student was wearing and never returned it.
More serious allegations surfaced from Mission
Bay High students claiming that during an open
house on February 20, principal Cheryl Seelos
prevented them from passing out leaflets. The
action prompted the American Civil Liberties
Union to send a formal letter of complaint nine
days later to the principal and to the
district?s general counsel requesting no further
infringement on the students? right to free speech.
In late April, matters got even worse for
Seelos, according to a May 2 Voice of San Diego
story, when she released a student protester?s
confidential medical records to the publication
in an attempt to defend the school?s program.
Assistant superintendent Nellie Meyer told the
Voice that the action led to an unspecified
disciplinary action by the school board.
According to Brandais, the situation has also
resulted in a districtwide ban on JROTC
instructors and school administrators from commenting on the program.
Brandais says the gag order will remain until
completion of the school district?s independent
investigation on the policies of the military
science program as well as the actions taken by
school administrators in response to the
mounting opposition. ?We?re hoping to have the
review completed by the end of the school year,?
he says. ?If it goes beyond the end of the
school year, we have telephone numbers to
contact parents and students. If parents want to
contact the staff, they can call the office of
Nellie Meyer, assistant superintendent for high schools.?
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Comments
* #1.
* Minorities should embrace JROTC. Afterall,
it's this country's great Military that allows
the freedom that so many flock here to find.
Maybe they should start protesting wrestling
next-- since it trains students in the art of grappling and submission.
* By
<http://www.sandiegoreader.com/users/a_girl_in_oceanside/>a_girl_in_oceanside
3:01 p.m., Jun 4, 2008
<http://www.sandiegoreader.com/comments/flag/5992/>> Report it
* #2.
* Hi Girl in Oceanside, I served in the
military, completing two cruises with squadrons
at Miramar. I was Sailor of the Month for my
squadron and recommended for the academy by my commanding officer.
* Since that time I've lived and worked not
only here, but in Europe and Asia, interacting
with people from around the world and learning a few languages along the way.
* So I can completely disagree with you with total confidence.
* Our military is NOT what makes us great.
Quite the contrary. The military is a necessary
evil in an unjust world. Our founding fathers
didn't even want a standing military, prefering
to only call up soldiers as the need arose.
* The world admires us (or used to admire
us) for our freedom, our creativity, our
ability to advance from poverty to wealth.
* The world admires our music, our films,
our open spaces and natural places. Only a few
isolated nuts are gung ho about our advanced weaponry.
* The military doesn't allow freedom. In
fact, when you sign that contract you sign away
a number of constitutional rights for the
duration. And if the military chooses, they can
unilaterally extend that contract as long as
they like. It's like indentured servitude, the close-cousin to slavery.
* Recruiters lie. I know it. Everyone who's
ever been in the military knows it. They take
the gullible young and tell them whatever they
want to hear. The truth is you sign your life
away when you sign that contract.
* The fact that minorities are
over-represented in the military is because for
many it's the only choice they have left. There
is often no other path to getting out of the
ghetto. So they believe the promises, only to
find themselves chipping paint in the sun, all
the offers of job training long forgotten.
* I was one of the fortunate few who got
real world training that served me well in
later life. The overwhelming majority of my
shipmates were taught skills relevant solely to
the military. There isn't a lot of demand for
bomb loaders in the civilian world, my friend.
* The truth is that the schools have so
abdicated their responsibilities to teach basic
academic skills like research and writing that
we are falling far behind as a nation. The
proliferation of JROTC and the shanghaiing of
students into the programs against their will is a bad sign.
* I do support JROTC, but only as a
conscious choice. Not as a place to warehouse
students until they are graduated and left with
few alternatives but enlistment.
* Best,
* Fred
* By
<http://www.sandiegoreader.com/users/Fred_Williams/>Fred_Williams
3:23 p.m., Jun 4, 2008
<http://www.sandiegoreader.com/comments/flag/5994/>> Report it
* #3.
* JROTC is good. By
<http://www.sandiegoreader.com/users/Ponzi/>Ponz
i 3:59 p.m., Jun 4, 2008
<http://www.sandiegoreader.com/comments/flag/5995/>> Report it
* #4.
* Thank you, Fred Williams, for your great
comments. You should contact Project YANO and
volunteer to speak in high school classrooms.
Students need to hear your perspective. Paula,
teacher Education Not Arms Coalition
* By
<http://www.sandiegoreader.com/users/Peace_Is_Patriotic/>Peace_Is_Patriotic
8:24 p.m., Jun 4, 2008
<http://www.sandiegoreader.com/comments/flag/6001/>> Report it
* #5.
* Thank you, Paula, for your kind words. I
do support JROTC, but only as a choice, not a default.
* For me, enlisting turned out okay. It got
me out of a trailer trash environment, and
because I was careful to get my rating and
training as part of the enlistment agreement
(NEVER go in unrated!) I learned some valuable skills.
* I found out when I attended college that
the paltry sum I got each month (the stingy
VEAP program, replaced by the much better GI
Bill that I wasn't eligible for) was
automatically deducted from any student aid. So
I gave four years of my life for educational
benefits I would have gotten without my
enlistment. I hope this is no longer the case.
I just recently finished paying off student
loans. So the Navy did NOT pay for my education
afterall. And taking classes at Miramar College
while enlisted was NOT encouraged, but made
very difficult by the squadron and frequent work up deployments.
* Just because I was considered to be very
responsible, I was put in charge of the ready
room during the night check. This meant that
when we finally got into port I was too tired
during the day to enjoy it much. Yes, I
traveled the world, but ended up falling asleep
while sightseeing, and then laying awake all night.
* I lost about 20 percent of my hearing in
the Navy, sleeping under the Kitty Hawk's
arresting gear, and then right between the Carl Vinson's forward catapults.
* I found out that some fighter pilots are
dumb as rocks. I think about half of my
squadron's pilots were PE majors...football
players who weren't good enough for the pros.
It's more important to have a lot of muscle
mass and withstand a lot of G's than to be
smart. In fact, I was told that too much brains
is a disadvantage in the cockpit, since second
guessing is worse than quick reactions and
instantaneous obedience to oral commands.
(Former fighter pilots, feel free to correct me if I'm wrong.)
* So I'd probably have been just as well off
working at McDonalds and going to community college as enlisting in the Navy.
* But there were other reasons to enlist. I
sincerely love this country and felt obligated
to serve. The cold war was still on, and
fighting against tyrany and oppression, on the
side of freedom, was and is important to me.
* Unfortunately, this country seems to have
lost its mind in recent years. Now WE are
torturing prisoners, and our leaders are taking
away our freedoms. We've become a surveilance
society. Instead of being admired, we are loathed around the world.
* This is a tragedy that will haunt us for decades to come.
* So joining the military now is probably
not a good move. Instead, I urge young people
to join a political campaign, help elect new
leadership in this country, and fight for peace
rather than Halliburton, KBR, and Blackwater.
* Best,
* Fred
* By
<http://www.sandiegoreader.com/users/Fred_Williams/>Fred_Williams
7:42 a.m., Jun 5, 2008
<http://www.sandiegoreader.com/comments/flag/6006/>> Report it
* #6.
* How did this turn into a debate about the
philosphy of war and whether or not it's
"right"? JROTC is not war, it is an elective
and students CAN decide to take it or not.
Also, who cares if they are trained to shoot an
AIR gun?!? Wrestlers learn how to submit people
on school grounds, too. Besides all of that,
this is a porrly written article with little to no substance. It's propoganda.
* By
<http://www.sandiegoreader.com/users/a_girl_in_oceanside/>a_girl_in_oceanside
2:27 p.m., Jun 5, 2008
<http://www.sandiegoreader.com/comments/flag/6030/>> Report it
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