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Author Topic: Unacceptable discriminatory behavior
Baloo
Curmudgeon-in-Chief
Member # 5

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I received the following as an email at work. I thought it was interesting enough to share.

-----Original Message-----

Subject: FW: Worth a read

This is worth a read...

Every now and then I run across an article that cuts to the heart of military service. There are two articles here. The first article appeared in the 4 Oct edition of US News & World Report. The next letter is a reply to this professor from an AWACS controller currently assigned to AF Rome Labs in NY. The response is particularly well-written and I thought you would appreciate it (even if you're not an ROTC product). I hope this makes your day.
ALOHA!

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    US News & World Report, 4 Oct 99; Letters

HOW DISTURBED I WAS TO SEE YOUR article in the September 6 issue about ROTC scholarships as a means of providing funds for a college education. The education associated with ROTC is a contradiction to the academic freedom enjoyed at university campuses; military training on college campuses, in fact, makes a mockery of education. Far from taking a global view of learning, ROTC encourages narrow patriotism and a philosophy of any means (killing people and polluting environments) to the end. The institutionalized mistreatment of gays and lesbians in the military and sexual harassment of women are par for the course .

    KATHERINE VAN WORMER Professor of Social Work University of Northern Iowa Cedar Falls, Iowa

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Dear Professor Van Wormer, I just finished reading your letter to the editor in U.S. News & World Report magazine (4 Oct) and was compelled to address your shockingly prejudiced, obviously uninformed and frankly laughable viewpoint on ROTC and the military in general. Your unenlightened perspective belies a reckless if not tragic ignorance that brings disrepute upon the institution that employs you. It is a shame you felt obliged to comment on something you apparently know so little about. I wonder if in your extensive research in "Social Work" you ever encountered someone who's actually served in the armed forces? The answer goes without saying. Allow me to be your first.

It troubles me that you must be reminded that the academic freedom you enjoy and cherish so dearly was purchased with the precious lives and blood of many a noble soldier on wretched battlefields here and abroad over the past 223 years. Do you honestly believe freedom of any sort comes without tremendous cost? Are you so willfully naive to think you'd enjoy the same license if you were a professor in China, Iran, North Korea, or the Sudan?

How many young men and women have you talked to lately who spent their Christmas holiday patrolling some godforsaken minefield like Bosnia, or their 5th wedding anniversary in a row at sea, or the birthday of their first daughter stopping a madman from achieving his goal of ethnic cleansing? Tell me. Do you really think we acknowledge a call to the profession of arms so we can "kill people and pollute environments?" To believe such sophomoric rubbish demands some fairly sophisticated cerebral blinders.

I have served in the U.S. Air Force for 11 years now, flying long hours over countless global hot spots, and I have not once encountered a fellow solider, sailor, or airman who subscribes to a "narrow patriotism and a philosophy of any means." Not one. Rather, they are ladies and gentlemen of highest caliber, selfless devotion to the cause of freedom, and tireless service to an often-thankless nation. Your mischaracterization is so off base it borders on unforgivable.

It would seem to me that your Department of Social Work would have whole syllabi devoted to the role of the military in the field of social work. I can think of no greater social service than an institution committed to risking the lives of its members to preserve and defend the very citizenry from which it hails. How many oppressed refugees, disaster victims, and starving children have been mercifully delivered from their plight by the military in just the last decade? Need we reflect on the fact that the whole of Western Europe owes its freedom from Nazi fascism to a valiant few in olive drab and khaki? Perhaps you should invite a concentration camp survivor or a Kosovar Albanian to give a guest lecture extolling the magnificent "social services" they've benefited from at the hands of the military.

Finally, I find it humorous that academics like yourselves who indoctrinate our youth with the dogma of "positive tolerance" for every aberrant lifestyle cannot find it within yourselves to tolerate an institution to which you owe your very peace, comfort, and well being. It is an amusing double standard.

My exhortation to you is to get out of the rarified air in your office, walk over to your ROTC detachment in Lang Hall and interact with the men and women in uniform and those aspiring to wear it. Perhaps then you will wake up from your slumber of conscious ignorance, join the ranks of the enlightened, and offer a prayer of thanksgiving to God for the freedoms you take for granted and those who sacrifice daily on your behalf to secure it.

    In Service To You,
    Capt Jonathan Clough

No profession or occupation is more pleasing than the military; a profession or exercise both noble in execution (for the strongest, most generous and proudest of all virtues is true valour) and noble in its cause. No utility either more just or universal than the protection of the repose or defence of the greatness of one's country. The company and daily conversation of so many noble, young and active men cannot but be well-pleasing to you.

Michel de Montaigne (1533-92), French essayist. Essays, bk. 3, ch. 13, "Of Experience" (1588; tr. by John Florio).

I also perceive that some folks assume military people joined the service so they'd have the opportunity to perpetrate evil deeds under the blanket of "national interest". Military members are frequently stereotyped as brutal, cruel, lazy, sociopathic, and generally stupid. It's a thankless job, and I expect it to remain so, but it does irritate me that when someone spots a person in a military uniform, they don't take the time to recognize the fact that there is a human being inside the uniform, but assume they are viewing some sort of monster.

Feel free to comment.

--Baloo

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My mind wanders, but don't worry. It's weak and can't get very far.
--Steve Allen
www.geocities.com/Area51/Shire/8641/


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Aethelwer
Frank G
Member # 36

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I agree with Captain Clough's letter in principle, although IMO the US military is too large and poorly organised. But that's a different topic.

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Warped1701
Back from Vacation
Member # 40

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It's unfortunately true. More people ought to respect the military, and what they all sacrifice so that our country remains the free nation that it is. That kind of outright idiocy disgusts me.

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"I see you have the ring. And that your Schwartz is as big as mine!
-Dark Helmet, Spaceballs



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Curry Monster
Somewhere in Australia
Member # 12

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Baloo, you're dead right, that's a laughable viewpoint. What I've noticed from various friends that join up is that they are in it for the right reasons. The bastards in all this are -quite frankly- big business and politicians and those lovely long term strategic thinkers who cause short term suffering for long term national gain. Frankly the whole concept of one group of humans from a particular region exercising a mix of political, economic and military strength in an effort to gain resources is repugnant.

But hey, people as individuals are good human beings. Groups are a whole different thing.

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"Diplomacy is the art of Internationalising an issue to your advantage"

Field Marshal Military Project
http://fieldmarshal.virtualave.net


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Kosh
Perpetual Member
Member # 167

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I have many relatives who have served, some didn't make it back.

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"One Tequila, Two Tequila, Three Tequila, Floor". George Carlin


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Curry Monster
Somewhere in Australia
Member # 12

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That's a bummer.

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"Diplomacy is the art of Internationalising an issue to your advantage"

Field Marshal Military Project
http://fieldmarshal.virtualave.net


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