Why
Go to College, When You Can be Cannon Fodder?
Do
You Know What Your Kids Are Watching on "Educational"
TV at School?
By
Dr. Teresa Whitehurst
"A parent
who's too busy or doesn't realize the importance of tuning in
to his or her child often expresses surprise when the child
gets into trouble or drops out of school. The child knows, but
can't explain, that those "bad kids" he or she hangs
out with are alike a lifeline. This is the secret pullall the
unpleasantness and risk in the world is worth the feeling of
being seen and heard by someone."
from Jesus
on Parenting: 10 Essential Principles that Will Transform Your
Family
I learned something new yesterday. Channel One News, the
"educational" TV show that my daughter Isa and
millions of other American kids watch every morning at school,
is busy recruiting our teenagers into the military.
"Mom, they're really aiming at the black kids, and the
Hispanic kids too. I'm so sick of seeing those military ads
everyday. "The Power of One", and all that lots of my
friends are falling for it!"
This is especially upsetting to Isa because several of her black
friends, 18, 19 and 20 years old, have been shipped to Iraq.
Some were promised they wouldn't have to be in combat, but would
be doing "mechanical work",
"communications", or "wiring".
It seems doubtful that, when push comes to shove, kids who've
been promised such jobs will be allowed to avoid combat. One of
her friends has already been shot "in an embarrassing
place"; he's being treated overseas instead of the US so
that he can be sent quickly back into combat in Iraq. Mr. Bush's
military needs warm bodies, able or not.
I stopped
the car and asked, "Wait a minute. What do you mean when
you say you're "seeing those military ads every
day"?"
"We have to watch this short thing every morning in
homeroom called "Channel One News"," Isa
explained with a weary tone. "It's educational, supposedly.
You know, the day's news, so we'll be up on current events. But
in between the stories, there are more and more ads for the Army
and the Marines."
I thought about "No Child Left Behind" and the
malignant purpose behind that sweet-sounding act that Mr. Bush
and his men (and at least one journalist paid $250,000 by the
White House) have continuously promoted to trusting parents
across the US. After catching my breath I asked,
"Are you saying you're being recruited through the
TV you watch during homeroom?" She nodded. I asked again,
"What do your teachers think about this? What about Mr.
Hitchens (not his real name), who told you privately that he's
antiwar? Doesn't he say anything against it?"
Persuaded
Away from College, Towards the Military
"No, I think the teachers and the kids are so used
to it at my school that they don't even notice anymore. I mean,
the other day I was walking to Sociology class and heard the
ROTC instructor telling the kids, "Okay, this is how you
hold your M-16". The whole culture of the school is
military these days, so nobody notices anything unusual about
this. And I think the few teachers who aren't prowar or proBush
are afraid to get in trouble if they say anything that doesn't
sound pro-military."
As noted in my recent articles on military recruitment and the
coming draft, for two years my daughter and I have been fighting
the aggressive and often sneaky efforts of military recruiters
to sign her up. Certainly they don't want her for her physical
prowess-she weighs 98 pounds-so I can only assume they want her
for other reasons. Either they've seen her high verbal scores,
or they just want young bodies-even a tiny one-to serve as
cannon fodder.
With a military recruiter present every day in the cafeteria,
military "speakers" visiting classrooms, and huge
recruiting posters in the guidance office, perhaps it's not
surprising that teachers and even guidance counselors have been
influenced by the constant hum of "enlist, enlist,
enlist". Students at Isa's school are told that, yes, they could
consider college, but that it's "very expensive" and
"may not guarantee you a job", while the military
"will pay for college" and "practically
guarantees you'll have a great career". Oh, and "a big
cash bonus right now if you sign up today!"
Joining the military is presented as the one and only
path of honor, heroism, and service to one's country. Many
students, not surprisingly, want to be heroes or get out of
poverty, so they're signing up in droves. College
recruiting is a rarity at this school, and at her previous
school, as well. Ah, but military recruiters are
constantly lurking around, spending quality time with fatherless
boys, handing out materials, giving "aptitude tests"
(played down as "just helping you figure out what you're
really good at"), handing out Marine bumper stickers, and
otherwise making their smartly-uniformed presence known.
"It's just everywhere", Isa continued. "Here's an
example: In gym we don't exercise or play sports like we used to
do-now we "sound off", just like in the military,
while running and doing jumping jacks, push-ups, and pull-ups.
The freshmen are told to shout, "one, two!", then the
sophomores are supposed to answer, "three, four!", and
then the whole group of us has to say "Sound off!" I
mean it's ridiculous Mom! How are you supposed to exercise while
you're shouting at the top of your lungs?"
As I started driving again, I took a moment to reflect on this
"military culture" that's replacing the educational
culture in America's public schools. Surely Channel One News,
which parents and educators have criticized from the start as
nothing more than a way to let corporations advertise their
products directly to kids without their parents' knowledge,
wouldn't go so far as to market the military to children as a
(better, more heroic, more exciting) alternative to college? Surely
they wouldn't override Mom and Dad by sneakily recruiting
through "educational" TV at school? Would they?
Could they?
Dr. Teresa
Whitehurst is a
clinical psychologist and writer. Her most recent book describes
the nonviolent guidance of children,Jesus
on Parenting: 10 Essential Principles that Will Transform Your
Family, Baker Books, 9/2004.
You can contact
her at DrTeresa@JesusontheFamily.org
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