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NYTimes Op/Ed: "Moral Waivers & The Military"

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Hissyspit Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-19-07 11:07 PM
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NYTimes Op/Ed: "Moral Waivers & The Military"
Edited on Mon Feb-19-07 11:07 PM by Hissyspit
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/20/opinion/20tues1.html?hp

Moral Waivers and the Military

Published: February 20, 2007
The Iraq war has plunged the Army into a vicious cycle of declining standards. Multiple, extended tours of duty have sapped morale and blighted recruiting. New plans for a larger overall force could reduce pressures but would also mean that recruiters would have to meet higher quotas.

To keep filling the ranks, the Army has had to keep lowering its expectations. Diluting educational, aptitude and medical standards has not been enough. Nor have larger enlistment bonuses plugged the gap. So the Army has found itself recklessly expanding the granting of “moral waivers,” which let people convicted of serious misdemeanors and even some felonies enlist in its ranks.

Last year, such waivers were granted to 8,129 men and women — or more than one out of every 10 new Army recruits. That number is up 65 percent since 2003, the year President Bush ordered the invasion of Iraq. In the last three years, more than 125,000 moral waivers have been granted by America’s four military services.

Most of last year’s Army waivers were for serious misdemeanors, like aggravated assault, robbery, burglary and vehicular homicide. But around 900 — double the number in 2003 — were for felonies. Worse, the Army does no systematic tracking of recruits with waivers once it signs them up, and it does not always pay enough attention to any adjustment problems. Without adequate monitoring and counseling, handing out guns to people who have already committed crimes poses a danger to the other soldiers they serve with and to the innocent civilians they are supposed to protect.

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benddem Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-19-07 11:15 PM
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1. this is really nuts
anyone who was in the Army in the 60's knows this. There were tons of guys that the judge said "enlist or go to jail." Being not too dumb they enlisted. Now some of them were really great guys and good workers...the rest took up most of the commander and clerks time writing them up, article 15's, dishonorable or other discharges. The Army and Marine corp don't need this.
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