Affirmative Action Scandal Rocks Naval Academy: Students Disillusioned at Lower Admissions Standards, Easier Coursework for Minorities
January 29th, 2011 Posted in The SandGram v1.0Minority recruiting is becoming the hot topic again in the Marine Corps and all the other services as well. This is a like a bad cold that keeps coming around and around. General Krulak, the CMC in the mid 90’s, tried to implement the 12/12/5 program that would push for 12% Black, 12% Hispanic and 5% others in the Officer ranks by a certain year. This lead to recruiter misconduct (desperate to make mission they faked scores), leading to lower qualified applicants being accepted and a lawsuit that changed this from being a Mission, to being called a “Goal” that we need to aspire to.
Recruiting Blacks is not impossible but it’s a difficult market to break into when all the other Generals are out there are offering Johnny a $100K signing bonus to join the likes of General Motors and General Electric so that they can meet their minority staffing goals.
I get tired of old dinosaurs like the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) demanding equal rights and that the Marine Corps step up their recruitment of Blacks and yet they do nothing in return to help out. If I was the Commandant of the Marine Corps, I would request, no I would demand that if they want to see this shift, they need to instill more pride in our Military and back us up, pushing more highly qualified students to serve our country. I attended the NAACP national Convention in St. Paul MN back in 1995. Yes, I was one of maybe fifteen white guys in this entire place and can understand the feeling of being a Minority. There was a black Marine Major there who was in charge of some Military event with the Tuskegee Airmen. He had the balls to ask me to leave the room because this event was for blacks only. One of our black recruiters we brought to the event heard him say this and started out of the room with me. The Major said “No Dave, we want you to stay here.” Dave laughed and said “No thanks, I go where Taco goes.” The Major finally relented and let me stay in the room but wasn’t happy about it. One thing I picked up at the conference was that the old Vietnam perception that we are drafting and putting only blacks on the front line was still alive and well. I think that would be shattered today if you looked at the fallen in the last ten years, I think you would be shocked to know the actual percentages of Black vs White vs Hispanic deaths.
Race is a tough card. No way around it. I have two buddies in the Corps who are black but that never comes up. They are brothers and guys that I would run through the gates of hell with an open gas can if it meant saving them (borrowed that from my favorite Congressmen Allen West USA (Ret) who I campaigned for) and that is something that I like about the Corps. You succeed on your merit, not your skin color. White/Black/Tan/Red doesn’t matter, you are all equally Green in the Marine Corps and rewarded on your outstanding performance or your failure, it’s based on you.
The Article below highlights the problem that arises when you lower the minimums to make a “Goal” at even the toughest of schools to get into, the Naval Academy. I think it’s unfair to the minorities who have worked hard, have the smarts and leadership abilities but are cast into this shadow of doubt as to whether they made it on merit or just because they were a “Goal”.
Tags: BigPeace.com, blacks in the Marine Corps, MARINE CORPS RECRUITING, Minority recruiting, NAACP, Peter Schweizer, USNA