Log in

View Full Version : 90% of Pittsburgh unfit for military; too uneducated, unhealthy, criminal & drugged



Nothing Human Is Alien
14th May 2011, 01:04
This is the former "Steel Capital of the World," incredibly important to capital's expansion. Now look at it.

* * *

Pittsburgh's young adults are so physically unfit and uneducated that up to 90 percent of them can't get into the military, according to a scathing report to be released today by a consortium of 200 top retired military officers and several nonprofits.

The "Unable to Serve" study found that about 25,000 of the city's young men and women between the ages of 18 and 24 are dogged by obesity, asthma and other health issues, poor academic performance, criminal records, drug addiction and eyesight so poor that they couldn't enter the military even if they wanted to do so.

Although Pentagon studies show similar problems nationwide bar about 75 percent of America's young adults from enlistment, the report contends Pittsburgh's problems are noticeably worse. The city's crime rate is higher than much of the rest of the nation, the report notes, and most high school students here fail to graduate on time.

When they do graduate in four years, the report said, they often flunk military entrance exams that test basic math, logic and language skills.

The solution? High-quality state programs designed to educate at-risk nursery school children who otherwise might become worthless to an all-volunteer military by the time they reach adulthood, the report says.

"From my perspective, I want to talk about the fitness of these kids," said retired Air Force Col. Edmund Effort, 61, a dentist who screens local nominees for the Air Force Academy. "Are they physically and mentally fit to serve in our military?"

Effort is slated to speak today when the report is presented at Soldiers and Sailors Memorial Hall in Oakland. The Pennsylvania chapter of the Washington-based "Mission: Readiness" organization wrote the report. Pennsylvania's chapter includes 10 retired generals or admirals and numerous former officers and senior enlisted personnel.

Analysis of military testing data by the Washington-based nonprofit The Education Trust shows that one out of every five Pennsylvania high school grads who take the military test flunks it. For black and Hispanic graduates, the failure rate doubles.

In Pittsburgh city schools, 48 percent of 11th-graders in 2009 failed to score above basic levels in reading and 57 percent scored below basic levels in math.

Research on pre-school initiatives in the military's Child Development Centers and similar preschool initiatives in Ypsilanti, Mich., Chicago and Pittsburgh's Pre-K Counts program suggests that early investments by taxpayers in disadvantaged tots could aid the Pentagon by producing solid students a dozen years later.

According to the Pennsylvania Office of Child Development and Early Learning, however, about 45 percent of Pittsburgh's children aren't served by early education programs.

"From the earliest stages in preschool and Sunday school, you learn core values. We need to put some money into those early childhood development programs. Education is going to be a salvation. We need to invest in these kids because we'll see the results later in our military," said Effort, who served in the Air Force more than 30 years.

Effort and the other retired officers are quick to say that the problems bedeviling Pittsburgh's at-risk kids already are rippling across the larger economy. They point to an Army report in 2009 that warned the United States will "face a significant workforce shortfall and both the civilian and military sectors may not have the skilled labor required to meet the demands of a knowledge-based economy."

Although the Army was hurt by a recruitment crunch after the invasion of Iraq in 2004, the service and the rest of the Department of Defense report solid enlistment rates today.

Thanks to a lingering recession and large enlistment bonuses, the nation's 15,000 military recruiters will sign up about 168,000 recruits this year. But the retired officers and Pentagon officials agree that today's pool for non-college enlistees comprises only about 15 percent of the young adult population nationwide -- and it's considerably smaller in Pittsburgh.

The efforts by the retired officers to create high-quality pre-kindergarten classes haven't been without controversy. Peace groups and those opposed to military recruiting in schools have praised the social initiatives, but not the reasons behind them.

"It's deeply disturbing that our government has failed to provide decent health care and education for young children, leaving the private sector and groups like Mission: Readiness to pick up the slack," said Scilla Wahrhaftig, the Pittsburgh program director for the American Friends Service Committee.

"That is to their credit. But we must carefully monitor these programs, to avoid inculcating militarism in even young children," Wahrhaftig said. "The military is growing embedded in our schools, even as these failed wars in Afghanistan and Iraq continue."

Read more: Study: 90% of Pittsburgh's young adults unfit for military service - Pittsburgh Tribune-Review http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/news/pittsburgh/s_736843.html#ixzz1MHRDGw5f

agnixie
14th May 2011, 02:52
That basically is the reason Bismarck's conservative social reform program happened: the Prussian army was turning away the majority of draftees.

MattShizzle
14th May 2011, 03:52
Steelers fan here!!!

Funny thing is those educated enough wouldn't want to join the imperialist military for the most part.

Threetune
14th May 2011, 14:31
This is the former "Steel Capital of the World," incredibly important to capital's expansion. Now look at it.

* * *
http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/news/pittsburgh/s_736843.html#ixzz1MHRDGw5f

Capitalist crisis in a nutshell. Not "can we put the surplus labour to productive or even profitable work? But, "oh shit we can't even train them to destroy other nations productive capasity and surplus labour in war."

What an enditment of the 'American dream'. An entire theaving system financialy banctupt and violently degenerate.

Eastside Revolt
15th May 2011, 01:20
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UePtoxDhJSw

Tim Finnegan
15th May 2011, 01:56
That basically is the reason Bismarck's conservative social reform program happened: the Prussian army was turning away the majority of draftees.
Britain went through a similar thing during the Boer War, when it ended up turning away the majority of volunteers. The need for halfway-healthy bodies to toss at rivals seemed to play a pretty big part in early bourgeois welfarism; is it possible that it could produce a similar effect today, or are modern militaries just too different?

Texas Expat
15th May 2011, 02:12
Interesting. Great commentary on the state of American public education, too. Of course, the fascist "solution" is to take away tax dollars from the schools because they have "failed," and funnel those same tax dollars to private for-profit charter or religious schools where students do even worse on standardized tests than the public school students do.

In the past, capitalist employers wanted decently educated workers to hire for everything from factory to office work. Now, they don't need many American factory workers and with computer devices such as spellcheck(which this old barbarian refuses to use) they don't even need people who can spell. You don't need to be able to spell "cheeseburger" if you can just press a picture of a Big Mac.

The real objective now is to destroy free public education because an ignorant population is easier to control. As some other posters have noted, the reason Bismarck improved public education in Prussia was because the military wanted more educated soldiers. How ironic that history may repeat itself here if the military really raises a stink, which it just might do.

And, as I will no doubt post at greater length sometime, the capitalists cannot depend on the military to save them from the consequences of their collapsing system.