Revisting The Green Card Draft Again

Date Put forth on January 24, 2007 by XicanoPwr
Category Posted in Classism, Green Card Draft, Immigration, Military Draft, Racism, Raza, War


In light of last nights State of the Union speech, it is important we bring this subject up again. Last night, Bush stated he will ask “Congress to authorize an increase in the size of our active Army and Marine Corps by 92,000.” This will be done by establish a volunteer Civilian Reserve Corps. What is frightening, this is very similar to a previous post I wrote, The Green Card Draft and how there have been mumblings on about the a military draft - CO Republican candidate Rick O’Donnell called for a national service corp. draft for men and Edward Bernard Glick also recently wrote an op-ed article in the Christian Science Monitor, advocating for the reinstatement of the military draft.

And last night, Bush stated he is proposing a plan that would allow the military to “hire civilians with critical skills to serve on missions abroad … in the defining struggle of our time.”

The US Military has a long history of targeting people who happen to come from working class families and areas with a large amount of minorities, both urban and rural - otherwise known as a “poverty draft.” What makes today’s “poverty draft” more devious, given our current immigration issue, the proposed Civilian Reserve Corps is one way “to uphold the great tradition of the melting pot that welcomes and assimilates new arrivals” and it would “resolve the status of the illegal immigrants who are already in our country — without animosity and without amnesty.”

The truth is without a draft that will impacted young white men and women, there will be no mass resistance among los gringos like it was in the 60s.

In other words, these pour souls will become the few, the proud – the military’s cannon fodder for the current war. In the document “Strategic Partnership Plan for 2002-2007″ written by the U.S. Army Recruiting Command, the architects of what we might call “niche recruiting” stated:

“The Hispanic population is the fastest growing demographic in the United States and is projected to become 25% of the U.S. population by the year 2025.” The Plan goes on to explain: “Priority areas [for recruitment] are designated primarily as the cross section of weak labor opportunities and college-age population as determined by both [the] general and Hispanic population.” Not surprisingly, the top two recruiting batallion areas according to the Plan are Los Angeles and San Antonio.

With the promises of employment and visions of success and prosperity, it will not be surprising if we many Latinos and African Americans be willing to join the new Civilian Reserve Corps.

In hopes of escaping their economic prison, many will come to realize they will be bamboozled with empty words and false images – war really means death and suffering, not some X-box video game they thought it was.

The rest of this post is a re-post of the Green Card Daft because much of what I wrote has not changed.

As the military began preparing the invasion of Iraq, they already realized they were lacking the manpower needed for their invasion. There is no doubt the military’s Recruiting Command did not overlook the use of non-citizens to play a major role in their plan.

In July 2002, President Bush issued an executive order that would grant any non-naturalized soldiers serving honorably in the “war on terrorism” to speed up their process to citizenship once they have enlisted. Within 6 months, citizenship could be granted and they are once naturalized they can apply to have immediate families naturalized also.

According to Betsy Streisand, of the U.S. News & World Report, citizenship applications have gone up from 300 a month before Bush’s order to 1,300 a month in 2003. In short, the only reason Hispanics enlist in the military, really has nothing to do with defending our national security or “honor”, it is solely to increase their access to a decent education and a better life.

In a 2005 report by the Center for Naval Analysis (CNA Inc), a federally funded research organization for the US Navy, analysts found immigrants were half as likely as their US-born counterparts to wash out before completing their enlistment. Based on their finding and recognizing the need to “help fill current gaps and meet future needs,” they made several recommendations to tap into the “roughly 1.5 million potential non-citizen recruits”

To facilitate recruitment and retention of non-citizens in the military, the Department of Defense should:

  • =>Provide military recruiters with more information for non-citizen recruits by developing materials for applicants and new recruits that explain eligibility for expedited citizenship, the advantages of filing for citizenship while in the military, and the benefits of attaining citizenship.
  • =>Consider more structured, installation-based assistance that would help non-citizen service members and their dependents with the citizenship process.
  • =>Investigate, through the Office of the Secretary of Defense, whether more uniform treatment of noncitizens across the military services is needed.

As Congress debates to tighten immigration controls, tens of thousands of undocumented immigrants are serving in the armed forces. What is not generally known is that the Bush Junta, like the business community, has also been exploiting them. Some have even gone even further, Council on Foreign Relations neoconservative senior fellow Max Boot, and have proposed that the military, enlist and actively recruit foreigners from other countries.

The military would do well today to open its ranks not only to legal immigrants but also to illegal ones and, as important, to untold numbers of young men and women who are not here now but would like to come. No doubt many would be willing to serve for some set period in return for one of the world’s most precious commodities — U.S. citizenship. Open up recruiting stations from Budapest to Bangkok, Cape Town to Cairo, Montreal to Mexico City. Some might deride those who sign up as mercenaries, but these troops would have significantly different motives than the usual soldier of fortune. (Emphases mine)

As extreme as that might sound, when it comes to military service, many immigrates are willing to put their life on the line as a way to prove their loyalty to the US in hopes of obtaining the American Dream, equal treatment and acceptance in their new country. Realities the military and neo-cons like Max Boot are well aware of and are willing to exploit.

During the 2004 Presidential race, many people were talking about the possibility of reinstating the draft. But want many people don’t realize, once America went to war and after Bush’s executive order, the military, Congress and Citizenship and Immigration Services were already in the process of fast-tracking applications and making it easier for immigrants to become citizens.

When reports were coming in about the military recruitment was at a 30-year low, the military already started targeting Latinos to meet their targeted numbers. One of the Pentagon goals is to double the amount of Hispanic enlistment through aggressive marketing.

Another tool aiding the military in recruiting Latinos into the armed services is through the little known Hispanic Access Initiative Act (HAIA) of 1996, which allows ROTC recruiters to target Latino students at high school and Hispanic Serving Institutions, colleges with a large Hispanic student body. Recruiters are given access to high school students’ addresses and phone numbers and are free to contact them at home, unless parents object. In 2004, the Army has added $10 million to its recruitment budget to advertise directly aimed at Hispanic audiences.

So how effective are their advertisement efforts in the recruiting process? As of Sept 9, 2006, everything is going as planned:

The Pentagon announced Friday that the Army met its recruiting goal for August, which a senior Army official said makes it virtually certain that the service will achieve its aim of signing up 80,000 new soldiers for the full recruiting year, which ends Sept. 30. Last year the Army fell short for the first time since 1999.

And recently, Emilio Gonzalez, director of the Bureau of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, announced there are more than 40,000 immigrants currently serving in the military and more than 26,000 have already been naturalized since Sept. 11, 2001.

Their pipeline for a brighter future - a chance to become the next teachers, doctors, scientist, and other professionals - is soon to becoming nothing more but a pipe dream of empty hopes and promises. For them, there is no American Dream, only an American Nightmare.

The sadistic irony in all of this, as many immigrants risk life and limb entering this country for a better life, they are now being asked to risk life and limb to be played as pawns in a geopolitical chess game - all for the most “precious commodity” - US citizenship.

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , ,

Related posts

Tags Tags: , , , , , , | Print This Post Print This Post |
functional

16 Responses to “Revisting The Green Card Draft Again”

3 Trackbacks/Pingbacks

  1. odd appletree » Blog Archive » Thursday Links: Floral Urinals Edition Trackback on Mar 1st, 2007 at 8:23 pm
  2. even » The Green Card Draft: One Immigrant's Nightmare is Uncle Sam's DREAM - By ¡Para Justicia y Libertad! Trackback on Jun 22nd, 2007 at 10:29 pm
  3. odd Immigration reform or Uncle Sam’s green card draft? « Scholars and Rogues Trackback on Jun 28th, 2007 at 8:28 am

13 Comments

You can follow any responses to this entry through the Feed Comments (RSS) feed.

  1. Gravatar Icon slyc Jan 24th, 2007 at 12:15 pm

    since when did the phrase “holy shit” just not cover it anymore?

  2. Gravatar Icon XicanoPwr Jan 24th, 2007 at 12:55 pm

    Hey Sly! Yeah I know what you mean.

    Oh how I wish I could say “told ya so” to everybody who thought I was being a chicken little, but the sad truth is, what is happening and going to happen outweighs the pettiness of who is right or wrong.

    People should be concern and should start going outside banging their pots and pans and saying enough already.

  3. Gravatar Icon XicanoPwr Jan 24th, 2007 at 1:08 pm

    Hola FEMA, I hope you enjoyed reading this post.

    FEMA

  4. Gravatar Icon luisa Jan 24th, 2007 at 5:55 pm

    i saw this shirt in new orleans that said “katrina blew me and FEMA fucked me” :)

    my grandfather got his citizenship in WW2. while the military was still segregated and he had to go through the “colored only” door (he is a dark mexican).

    fucking chicken hawks.

  5. Gravatar Icon luisa Jan 24th, 2007 at 5:55 pm

    correction: pinche chicken hawks

  6. Gravatar Icon XicanoPwr Jan 24th, 2007 at 8:54 pm

    That is funny, if FEMA is going to handle the Civilian Corp, I guess we know what is going happen. When are you heading to New Orleans by the way?

    My uncle’s father did the same thing, but his brothers decided to go back to Mexico. I guess US citizenship back then was a “precious commodity” and people were willing to do anything to reach the American Dream, even if it means risking their life.

    pinche….jejeje….what did that mean again? fucking or cocksucker….j/k j/k :)

  7. Gravatar Icon luisa Jan 25th, 2007 at 12:12 am

    NOLA? in mid-febuary if things go as planned…. i’ll be there for at least a month. you should come do martigras with me and the professor.

    “I guess US citizenship back then was a “precious commodity” and people were willing to do anything to reach the American Dream, even if it means risking their life.”

    yeah, it is crazy, huh? i think this says something more about mexico’s state of affairs. shit must have been bad then. for people to rather go to war than go back. also, weren’t they deporting mexicans around this time (even those with u.s. citizenship)?

  8. Gravatar Icon The insomniac gringo Jan 25th, 2007 at 1:11 am

    Congratulations… I got a vistit from Army Intellegence not top long ago (weird, it was the same night I also had a hit from Iran).

    I don’t think there’s anything intrinsically wrong with expediting citizenship for service members (something done since George Washington’s day) and military service is always going to be a more viable option for poor and rural kids than for others. But, yeah… the devil is in the details.

    There was a huge stink about five years ago when the U.S. was accused of recruiting in Mexico. It turned out it was one sergeant who’d been back visiting his friends in Tijuana, and mentioned U.S. military service to some friends.

    Recruiting for the U.S. military may satisfy some of Bush’s dwindling supporters who want a huge military (but aren’t willing to make sacrifices themselves), but it’s not going to go over with other governments.

    Now that I’m over 50, maybe I can support universal service. Everybody … see how the Bushistas like that.

  9. Gravatar Icon XicanoPwr Jan 25th, 2007 at 6:30 am

    I see nothing wrong with expediting citizenship for service, the only problem I have with it, I dislike their approach. I think it is unfair to threaten deportation for service.

    Jenna may be able to escape because she is in South America, I think Barbara might join here, but the way they are upping the age, the “Little Brown Ones” are just right age.

  10. Gravatar Icon XicanoPwr Jan 25th, 2007 at 9:23 am

    Luisa - that sounds like a plan. Not to long ago, I found out my grandfather went back to Mexico after he arrived to the US. Last year, I had written a post on the history of mass deportation during that time, the immigration issue was pretty interesting.

    It seems there was a movement to recruit “Mexicans” into the military like your grandfather, my paternal grandfather and my uncle’s father, however, it was the beginning of the Bracero Program. But before then WWII, yeah, there was that a previous mass deportation program - it was the one that established the border patrol.

    However, I wouldn’t go by what I wrote, after having done other research for my other posts and family history, it seems there are a lot of contradicting evidence of what really was going on during time.

  11. Gravatar Icon Richard Grabman Jan 25th, 2007 at 6:20 pm

    “The little brown ones…”

    You’ve put your finger on exactly what’s bothered me since the beginning. I was in Mexico at the start of this war (it was the only time I’ve been tempted to claim I’m Canadian… in Mexico City, there were massive protests, and all polls showed like 95+ % opposition to Mexican involvement, let alone any involvement… but, then again, if I was the citizen of a oil producing country with a crappy army, I’d worry too!).

    When I came back to the U.S. there was all that “patriotic” display, but no real sense of being at war. No calls for sacrifice (except other people’s kids), no conservation of resources, no “we’re all in this together” kind of atmosphere. This whole war is surreal,except for those who have to go.

    For your research, X… the bracero program was sold in Mexico (after it entered the war in May 1942) as a patriotic gesture, and even recruited people like teachers and lawyers to work in the U.S. The Mexican Air Force served in the Pacific under McAuthur, who said the Mexicans were his best soldiers (sorry, can’t find the quote). Interestingly enough, McA was probably the ONLY officer ever to have fought against the Mexican Army (during the Pershing Expedition) and then to have commanded Mexican troops. I’m finishing up my book, and will send you what I’ve written on WWII for your comments, corrections (I’ve got a tough skin) and amusement.

    Saludos!

  12. Gravatar Icon XicanoPwr Jan 26th, 2007 at 10:40 am

    Richard - I remember where I was when the war started and when it is was being hyped up, but at the same time it did not feel like we were going to war. Not like the Gulf War I, it was very surreal. The friend who sent me that pic, he was living here but was forced to move back to Lebanon because nobody would hire him and his visa was about to expire. Before then, I would do a Colbert and play the “super patriotic American” so I would tease how, his country and the those in the middle east better fall in line yada yada. But when it got close to invasion day, well, it was time to stop because I knew he was concern about this. Everything that is happening now in Iraq, he predicted. But what was surreal about it, it was done like if it was just business as usual, news media were riding along as if they were playing some X-box game. Very very disturbing.

    Thanks for the email, I start reading it.

  13. Gravatar Icon Penis Enlargement Feb 6th, 2007 at 7:53 am

    Here you will find articles penis about serious penis enlargement products and much more like penis conditions, erection, sexual health, sexuality, jelqing, penis enlargement pills. Visit: http://www.sinepenis.com

Speak your mind

Comment Policy: First time comments are moderated. Please be patient.

XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

functional