Parents
Are Right to Protect Their Children From the Military
by
Jacob G. Hornberger
by Jacob G. Hornberger
A
recent front-page story in the New York Times
reported growing opposition among parents to the U.S. militarys
efforts to contact and recruit their children to join the U.S. armed
forces. In the process, parents are also discovering some uncomfortable
things about the federal government.
One thing parents are learning is that federal funds to local school
districts have less to do with federal concern that children arent
learning in public (i.e., government) schools and more to do with
opportunities to extend federal control over American families.
Do you remember the much-vaunted No Child Left Behind Act? That
Act requires school districts to give the military access
to the names, addresses, and telephone numbers of high-school students
as a condition of receiving federal funds. So, if a school district
says No, we wont give the military the information it
seeks to recruit our students, it loses its federal welfare
even if all those children are supposedly left behind
as a consequence.
Obviously, the biggest reason for parents opposition to the
militarys recruitment efforts would be to protect their children
from losing their lives and limbs for no valid purpose. After all,
ask yourself: What parents would place a higher value on the installation
of an Islamic Shiite regime in Iraq, even a democratically
elected one, than they would on the life or limbs of their own child?
(U.S. officials, of course, do claim that the deaths and maiming
of U.S. personnel, as well at the deaths and maiming of tens of
thousands of Iraqis, have been worth it.)
But another important factor should be going into the thinking of
every parent and, for that matter, every person who is contemplating
going into the military: There is no way to reconcile killing an
Iraqi citizen, including one who is defending his nation against
an unlawful invader and occupier, with Gods sacred commandment
against killing, given that the U.S. government is wrongfully in
Iraq because Iraq never attacked the United States or even threatened
to attack our country.
That makes the U.S. the aggressor nation in this conflict and the
unlawful and immoral occupier of a sovereign and independent country.
That means that the Iraqis who have been killed and who have yet
to be killed as part of the U.S. invasion and occupation are just
as innocent as the victims on 9/11 in the sense that none of the
Iraqi victims had anything to do with the 9/11 attacks and none
of them lived under a government that attacked or even threatened
to attack the United States. Thus, U.S. soldiers who kill or maim
Iraqis as part of what is called a war of aggression,
a type of war barred by the UN Charter and punished at the Nuremberg
War Crimes Tribunal, will ultimately have to struggle morally and
religiously with what they have done.
Some soldiers will undoubtedly say, I didnt know I was
going to have to invade an innocent country when I signed up and,
anyway, Im killing for my country, as if orders by their
government to wage a war of aggression excuse them from exercising the
conscience that God gave them.
But that excuse is not even available to new recruits: Theyre
going to have to explain to God why they signed up knowing that
they were going to have to kill innocent people as part of a military
force that wrongfully invaded a country and persisted in occupying
it with no more purpose than to establish a political regime that
it was hoped would be more friendly to the U.S. government than
Saddam Husseins regime was.
Parents are wise to protect their children from the U.S. military
and its wrongful invasion and occupation of Iraq, not only in the
hope of protecting the lives and limbs of their children from being
wasted in a wrongful and destructive cause but also in the hope
of ensuring that their children are not put in the horrible moral
dilemma of either killing innocent people or being killed.
June
7, 2005
Jacob
Hornberger [send him mail]
is founder and president of The Future
of Freedom Foundation.
Copyright
© 2005 Future of Freedom Foundation
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