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A
Rationale for Counter-Recruitment
By
David Chandler
When
there was a draft in the Vietnam era, and young people were being rounded
up to serve as cannon fodder against their wills, I think most of us
had a pretty clear vision of what we were protesting. But there currently
is no draft. We have an all-volunteer military. What, then, should motivate
our activism against military recruitment efforts? I personally had
a sufficient gut-level feeling that we should be present to challenge
the Porterville recruiting fair (or "War Faire" as Bill Warner
so aptly put it), that I have been spending a significant chunk of my
Spring Break with a table full of fliers on a Wal-Mart parking lot.
But when challenged by a group of 11-somethings to explain why we opposed
other people signing up for the Navy, I found I had trouble articulating
it in simple terms. This motivated me to think the matter through more
carefully for myself.
The term "voluntary"
is really problematic. In the medical arena a patient must give consent
before treatment. The legal standard for consent is that it must be
a free and informed adult decision. Furthermore consent must be continuous:
it may be withdrawn at any time. Anything less is not true consent.
For enlistment to be considered truly voluntary it should meet the same
criteria, but clearly it does not.
True consent must
be fully informed. Recruiters talk about educational benefits, they
talk about job skills, they talk about travel, adventure, and becoming
"all that you can be." The most glaring omission in recruitment
is anything to do with killing or being killed. What other employer
has such a large system of hospitals and cemeteries as a job benefit?
Killing, for whatever reason, tramples on sacred ground; taking the
life of another violates ones own humanity. Perhaps that is why no other
form of employment induces such a high rate of suicide? (Among Vietnam
era veterans there have been more suicides than there were combat deaths.)
What about really
coming to terms with the morality of war? In a draft a conscientious
objector must think through the tangled ethical and moral issues and
be able to articulate his beliefs to the satisfaction of a skeptical
Selective Service board. (The draft has always been gender-specific.)
A volunteer in the military is never asked to think deeply about anything.
A case can be argued among philosophers and theologians for the morality
of some wars, but a potential recruit is never required or even encouraged
to think these issues through. Anyone who is not a conscientious objector
should be a "conscientious participant," but when deep reflection
is absent and actively discouraged, conscience is ignored. Passively
and mindlessly stepping across the line is all that is required.
Any case for the
morality of a "just war" requires that a participant make
moral decisions on a case-by-case basis, yet selective objection is
explicitly ruled out by law. If you would fight to defend your homeland
against a direct attack, you would be denied legal recognition as a
conscientious objector. You would then be denied the right to raise
a moral objection when you are put in the position of being the
attacker in another person's homeland. Of course, any action by the
U.S. military is wrapped in the flag and described as defending freedom.
Any opinions to the contrary are labeled "political" and beyond
the purview of a soldier. If you give up the right to make moral or
"political" choices you allow yourself to potentially become
an agent of evil. The freedom to follow ones conscience is never absolutely
blocked, but the consequences of obeying ones conscience instead of
obeying an order can be severe indeed.
True consent must
be continuous, but enlistment is a trap door. Once you enlist there
are very high legal hurdles, for withdrawing "consent." Many
people become conscientious objectors (or even think about the morality
of war) only after experiencing combat or seeing first hand the realities
of war. There is a provision for discharge as a conscientious objector,
but the grounds are more restrictive than for civilian conscientious
objectors refusing conscription, and in neither case do the legal grounds
allow for moral selectivity.
True consent must
be freely given. Joining the military, however, even without the draft,
involves a major coercive element: economics. The vast majority of current
recruits in the all-volunteer military do so for economic reasons. The
volunteer army has been called the poverty draft. The military provides
food, shelter, clothing, medical care, insurance, and the promise of
job training and educational benefits. With high unemployment in the
ghettos and the social safety net in tatters, the military provides
one of the few apparent options for the children of the poor. But volunteering
for the military because of a lack of options is not a free choice.
The fact that some of the promises may be illusory only compounds the
issue.
Enlisting in the
military may be a voluntary act, but by that act you are entering involuntary
servitude. Whether or not you made a fully informed choice at the outset,
once you have crossed the threshold and see what you have chosen firsthand,
you are not free to reconsider, so your continuing service cannot properly
be described as voluntary. You are the "property" of the U.S.
government, which in a very explicit sense makes you a slave. (The Supreme
Court has ruled that military service is an exception to the 13th amendment,
but if anything that underlines the involuntary nature of "voluntary"
service.)
Finally, consent
must be a decision made by an adult. True, there are age restrictions
in volunteering for the military, but the sales pitch in teen magazines,
high school Jr. ROTC, and Disneyland-style flight simulators in Wal-Mart
parking lots are clearly pitches to children and immature tendencies
in teens. These practices are as odious as using Joe Camel, a cartoon
figure, to sell cigarettes, and should be similarly banned.
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