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http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-recruit9-2008jun09,0,7576883.story
The Los Angeles Times
Activists seek to counter military recruiters on L.A. campuses
Group will ask school officials for access to high school facilities.
But some say their message is controversial.
By Seema Mehta
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
June 9, 2008
Troubled by military recruiting at Los Angeles high schools, activists
are seeking equal access to students on campus to provide what they say
is unvarnished information about the armed forces and information about
nonmilitary careers.
The Coalition Against Militarism in Our Schools, a Southern California
group of educators, volunteers and veterans dedicated to promoting
nonviolent alternatives to military service, is taking the proposal to
the Los Angeles Board of Education, saying it is vital that students
have the truth about military enlistment. That "truth," however, is
subjective: Some view the group's literature as controversial itself.
Recruiters "are marketers. They have a quota, and it's their job to get
students to sign up. So just like a car salesman, they're going to say
everything they can to get students to sign up," said Arlene Inouye,
coordinator of the nonprofit South Pasadena-based group funded by grants
and donations.
"The most im****tant thing we want to tell students is that the military
enlistment decision is probably one of the -- if not the -- most
im****tant decision in their life. It's a really serious matter. They
need to hear about some of the realities of what veterans have
experienced and what the military enlistment contract actually says."
Some military officials questioned the peace group's motives.
" . . . we are not confident that these groups' intentions are to
provide students with op****tunities, but rather to spend a great deal of
time and effort to provide disinformation that advances their
organizations' agenda with little regard to the individual student,"
said Lt. Col. Jonathan Withington, a Pentagon spokesman, in an e-mail.
The federal No Child Left Behind Act, signed into law in 2002, requires
schools to provide military recruiters with the same access to high
schools as colleges and employers, and compels schools to turn over
students' names, addresses and phone numbers unless parents opt out.
The U.S. Department of Defense spends $3.5 billion annually on
recruitment and enlisted more than 181,000 people for active-duty forces
in the 2007 fiscal year and more than 138,000 for the reserves. The
Southland is fertile ground: Los Angeles County ranked third in the
nation in raw numbers of Army recruits in 2007.
Military recruiters' access varies among schools, with some
administrators allowing them to wander the halls chatting with students,
work out with the football team, and bring Hummers and s****ts cars on
campus.
Under a pilot proposal, which United Teachers Los Angeles endorsed in
April, peace group volunteers would visit 10 to 15 high schools per week
and set up a table where they would offer information about enlistment,
career alternatives and opting not to have their personal information
shared with the military.
In May, Los Angeles Unified School District administrators said they
could not unilaterally order high schools to give the group access.
Instead, Inouye was urged to meet with principals, assistant principals
and guidance counselors.
Inouye will present the proposal to the school board's curriculum and
instruction committee Thursday; it could come before the full board in
July.
Legal precedent more than two decades old allows counter-recruiters
equal access to schools, but in practice, rules vary widely. Some
schools have opened their doors to counter-recruiters for years, while
others refuse to allow them on campus. But as concerns about recruitment
in a time of war have grown, schools in Oxnard, Minneapolis and Pinellas
County, Fla., decided this school year to provide equal access to
organizations such as Coalition Against Militarism in Schools, Veterans
for Peace and others.
In Austin, Texas, Nonmilitary Options for Youth has worked for more than
a decade to reach out to student organizations and guidance counselors.
Two years ago, the organization, along with student activists, persuaded
district officials to restrict recruiters' movements on campuses so they
could no longer roam the halls talking to students and to clarify
counter-recruiters' access to campus, said Susan Van Haitsma, a leader
of the group.
Currently, the group sets up a table at most of the district's dozen
high schools about once a semester, distributing "Addicted to War" comic
books, holding a poll in which students vote on how the government ought
to spend its budget, and bringing in veterans to talk to students about
their military experiences. The group is limited by its small budget and
the free time of its volunteers, but Van Haitsma said they reach about
500 students annually.
In Los Angeles, access varies greatly depending on the school, Inouye
said. Some administrators will not allow such groups on campus and try
to restrict them from distributing pamphlets outside school. Others,
such as Garfield High School, are more open.
At a career fair at the East Los Angeles high school last month,
Inouye's organization was given a table next to the Marines.
Staff Sgt. Victor Jimenez distributed T-****rts, water bottles, key
chains and posters, and collected dozens of students' phone numbers.
Jimenez said he typically visits the school about twice a week, meeting
with interested teenagers to discuss enlistment and going running with
students. He also meets with students in his office in Montebello.
"We sit down with them one on one and talk about what the Marine Corps
offers for them," he said.
Recruiters for the Army and the Air Force worked other aisles of the job
fair, sprinkled among scores of recruiters from UCLA, a beauty college,
Toyota and others. About 1,500 students streamed through the gymnasium.
Jimenez was surprised to learn that the women at the next table were
counter-recruiters.
"I don't care," he said. "They're welcome to do what they want."
But when told some of CAMS' talking points, his eyes grew wide. "Wow,"
he said.
The group does not mince words -- a brochure on the table aimed at young
women considering joining the military features the testimony of a woman
who said she was raped while serving in the Navy, and says women in the
armed forces are more likely to be ***ually assaulted compared with
women in the general population.
The volunteers told students that they would be sacrificing their lives
to enrich private companies, that the military unfairly targeted
minorities and poor communities, and that they would be sent to Iraq and
"get your heads blown off."
Freshman Ashley Flores, 15, said she was pleased to hear a different
viewpoint on campus.
"You see lots of recruiters" at school, said Ashley, who said she was
opposed to the war in Iraq and whose stepbrother is an Army soldier
stationed there. "I think the military just shows the positives of what
you get if you join. They just show the good things."
But junior Jessica Reynoso, 16, whose brother is also in the Army, said
the counter-recruiters' table was offensive. In the poll about
government spending, she bypassed the options labeled "education,"
"environment" and "healthcare."
"I put all my pennies in the military," she said. "My brother's risking
his life for us."
Inouye asked students why they wanted to join the military, turning to
freshman Adrian Cruz, who plans to enlist in the Marines upon graduation.
"I want to fight for our country," Adrian said. "I'll be, like, the hero."
Inouye told the wiry teen he would end up in Iraq "killing a lot of
innocent people," or could be killed himself.
"I'm only going to kill people who shoot at me," Adrian replied.
Adrian said he was angry that Inouye, along with his parents, brother
and teachers, questioned his decision about what to do with his life.
"It just made me kind of mad," he said. "I know they are right. I just
put it in the back of my head. I still want to be a Marine."
Adrian went back to the Marines' table, where Jimenez, in his dress
uniform, handed the 15-year-old his phone number.
seema.mehta@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Dan Clore
My collected fiction: _The Unspeakable and Others_
http://tinyurl.com/2gcoqt
Lord We˙rdgliffe & Necronomicon Page:
http://tinyurl.com/292yz9
News & Views for Anarchists & Activists:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/smygo
Skipper: Professor, will you tell these people who is
in charge on this island?
Professor: Why, no one.
Skipper: No one?
Thurston Howell III: No one? Good heavens, this is anarchy!
-- _Gilligan's Island_, episode #6, "President Gilligan"


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