Expanded Americorps has an authoritarian feel
By Examiner Editorial
- 3/26/09
With almost no public attention, both chambers of Congress in the past week advanced an alarming expansion of the Americorps national service plan, with the number of federally funded community service job increasing from 75,000 to 250,000 at a cost of $5.7 billion. Lurking behind the feel-good rhetoric spouted by the measureâ™s advocates is a bill that on closer inspection reveals multiple provisions that together create a strong odor of creepy authoritarianism. The House passed the measure overwhelmingly, while only 14 senators had the sense and courage to vote against it on a key procedural motion. Every legislator who either voted for this bill or didnâ™t vote at all has some serious explaining to do.
Last summer, then-candidate Barack Obama threw civil liberties to the wind when he proposed âœa civilian national security force thatâ™s just as powerful, just as strong, just as well-fundedâ as the regular military. The expanded Americorps is not quite so disturbing, but a number of provisions in the bill raise serious concerns.
To begin with, the legislation threatens the voluntary nature of Americorps by calling for consideration of âœa workable, fair, and reasonable mandatory service requirement for all able young people.â It anticipates the possibility of requiring âœall individuals in the United Statesâ to perform such service â" including elementary school students. The bill also summons up unsettling memories of World War II-era paramilitary groups by saying the new program should âœcombine the best practices of civilian service with the best aspects of military service,â while establishing âœcampusesâ that serve as âœoperational headquarters,â complete with âœsuperintendentsâ and âœuniformsâ for all participants. It allows for the elimination of all age restrictions in order to involve Americans at all stages of life. And it calls for creation of âœa permanent cadreâ in a âœNational Community Civilian Corps.â
But thatâ™s not all. The bill also calls for âœyouth engagement zonesâ in which âœservice learningâ is âœa mandatory part of the curriculum in all of the secondary schools served by the local educational agency.â This updated form of voluntary community service is also to be âœintegrated into the science, technology, engineering and mathematics curriculaâ at all levels of schooling. Sounds like a government curriculum for government approved âœservice learning,â which is nothing less than indoctrination. Now, ask yourself if congressmen who voted for this monstrosity had a clue what they were voting for. If not, theyâ™re guilty of dereliction of duty. If yes, the implications are truly frightening.
UPDATE:
Between being first officially "reported" to the House and being voted on by the full House, bill managers stripped one whole section of the measure that created a Congressional Commission on Civil Service, thus removing the section that contained the language cited above concerning "a workable, fair, and reasonable mandatory service requirement for all able young people" and a possible requirement for "all individuals in the United States" to perform such service. The section could be restored during the Senate-House conference committee meeting. A new, separate bill containing that language has since been introduced in the House.
Of course, they'll allow the AmeriKa Korp to unionize, too...lol.. card check for everybody
The lugend doesen't exist. ?Lugend?

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