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NPR Joins Sen. Kerry in Insulting Servicemen
The American Thinker ^ | 03 November 2006 | Patrick Poole

Posted on 11/03/2006 4:37:36 PM PST by Lando Lincoln

On the same day that Senator John Kerry, the 2004 Democratic presidential candidate, outraged voters of all political persuasions with his comments made at a rally in support of California gubernatorial candidate Phil Angelides that military personnel were uneducated, National Public Radio followed Kerry’s lead when they aired a segment by correspondent Mandalit del Barco during their Morning Edition program, claiming that Puerto Rican military recruits are being duped into military service by unscrupulous recruiters using promises of huge signing bonuses.

For her report, del Barco traveled to two small Puerto Rican towns, Mayaguez and Quebradillas, both of which have lost three local men each during the Global War on Terror. The report begins with a major factual error: del Barco makes a claim that 55 Puerto Rican soldiers have died in combat in Iraq, but a review of current statistics finds that only 25 have been killed while serving in Iraq and another 6 have died during operations in Afghanistan.

An initial claim made in the NPR segment was that Puerto Ricans are being victimized and disenfranchised by the US Government. The introduction to del Barco’s piece opens by making that very point:

Puerto Ricans are U.S. citizens, but they lack some of the rights of citizenship, including the right to vote for president. Yet they have served, and died, in the military for generations.

The implication is, of course, that there is some sinister Rovian scheme to deny Puerto Ricans their most basic rights under the US Constitution while Donald Rumsfeld and his minions prey upon the hapless Puerto Rican youth. This theme is brought up again by del Barco herself mid-way through the segment:

Altogether, more than 150,000 Puerto Ricans served in World War II, Korea and Vietnam. But as Maria Munoz notes, they’re from a territory, not a state, and they can’t send a voting member to Congress or vote for commander-in-chief.

What isn’t mentioned in the report, however, is that rather than disenfranchising Puerto Ricans, the US is honoring two separate plebiscites taken twice in the past 40 years where they have democratically decided to remain a Commonwealth territory. In 1967, an overwhelming 60 percent of Puerto Ricans voted for commonwealth status, as opposed to becoming a state or receiving their independence from the US. Then again in 1993 (during the Clinton Administration), they chose to remain a Commonwealth. Apparently for NPR, Puerto Ricans just aren’t smart enough to know what they were missing by not being able to vote for John Kerry in 2004.

But del Barco’s report is intended to make the case that the US military is exploiting disenfranchised, low-income Puerto Ricans. One example she cites in the case of Pedro Munoz, who was killed in action in Afghanistan in January 2005. Speaking with his family, del Barco reports,

Maria Munoz says her brother volunteered for the Army because he wanted to be able to support his family in a way he couldn’t in Puerto Rico, where people earn about half what they make in the poorest U.S. states.

This is evidently conclusive proof for del Barco that Donald Rumself is taking advantage of poor Puerto Ricans by luring them into the military by paying them more than they could probably ever make back home. But is it really true that Sergeant First Class Munoz was unwittingly lured into the military for purely economic motives? Even NPR has to admit that this isn’t the case when they explain that Munoz grew up always wanting to be a soldier, admiring and emulating his father’s military service during the Korean War.

In fact, after Munoz had served in Special Forces during the Gulf War, he not only reenlisted, but volunteered to be paratrooper, eventually earning a spot on the Golden Knights – the prestigious (and dangerous) US Army Parachute Team. And a report on the Special Forces website says that Munoz’s teenage daughter, Dalia, recently won an essay competition expressing her desire to follow in her father’s footsteps. None of that was mentioned in del Barco’s NPR report, however.

But del Barco hits pay dirt when she talks with the parents of Spec. Alexis Roman Cruz, who she explains are “still upset with military recruiters who promised their son $20,000 to enlist”,

“They bought his life,” says Roman de Jesus, whose eyes are red from tears. He says he stares at the shrine every day and sobs, remembering how he and his son used to go fishing and play music together.

“I lost my son and I feel like nothing. Like nobody,” he says. “I lost the greatest man in the world and I blame the U.S. for that. I blame Bush.”

Hearing tales of George Bush’s evil war and Donald Rumsfeld’s blood money from the lips of a grieving family of a fallen hero would warm the cockles of the heart of any NPR correspondent; but once again, the facts don’t support del Barco’s narrative.

An article in the St. Petersburg Times published just days after Cruz’s death features an interview with his widow and mother of his two children, where she relates that rather than feeling victimized, her husband “was very grateful for what military life was able to give him.” The St. Petersburg Times article also states that “with his salary from the military, they were able to buy a house and car” in addition to the other benefits the family received that they never would have been able to obtain elsewhere. NPR must prefer that the Cruz family had continued to wallow in poverty back home rather than improve their lot in life.

We also learn that Spec. Cruz was not wooed away from the supposedly carefree Caribbean lifestyle of Quebradillas, Puerto Rico by sinister military recruiters, but that he and his family had already moved to Florida in order to make a better life on the mainland. It was only after Cruz had spent time working in construction that he decided that military life would allow him to better provide for his family.

But a critical question remains: is the claim made by Sen. Kerry and NPR (and also the Washington Post, Los Angeles Times and New York Daily News) that the war-time recruiting is attracting lower quality recruits and that the military is preying disproportionately upon minority and low-income populations true? A new study released last week by Tim Kane of the Heritage Foundation, Who Are the Recruits? The Demographic Characteristics of U.S. Military Enlistment, 2003–2005, finds that the liberal conventional wisdom is contrary to reality:

In summary, the additional years of recruit data (2004–2005) sup¬port the previous finding that U.S. military recruits are more similar than dissimilar to the American youth population. The slight dif¬ferences are that wartime U.S. mil¬itary enlistees are better educated, wealthier, and more rural on aver¬age than their civilian peers.

Recruits have a higher percent¬age of high school graduates and representation from Southern and rural areas. No evidence indicates exploitation of racial minorities (either by race or by race-weighted ZIP code areas). Finally, the distri¬bution of household income of recruits is noticeably higher than that of the entire youth population.

The statistics provided in Kane’s new study might threaten to shatter the ideological reality of liberals if they really had any concern for the facts. But as long as they can identify grieving widows, brokenhearted parents and orphaned children to give them the sound bites they need to promote their anti-war narrative, it’s doubtful that the facts will play even a minor role in shaping the reporting of the war by the mainstream media.

As the Greek poet, Aeschylus, said long ago: “In war, the first casualty is truth.” If anything, John Kerry and NPR have proven him right.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Front Page News; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: bnedictarnold; kerry; npr; troops
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To: Question Liberal Authority
If you study and work hard to make yourself smart, you can do well. If you don't, you wind up spewing leftist crap on the radio at taxpayer expense.

So true.

21 posted on 11/03/2006 4:58:11 PM PST by FourPeas (The right thing to do never requires any subterfuge, it is always simple and direct. Calvin Coolidge)
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To: Lando Lincoln; onyx; smoothsailing

Hey!!!!!.... John O'neill (swiftboats) add two more chapters to your book so there will be enough money to finish this scumbag off in court........I bought 20 copies and spread-em around last time. Your book helped keep him out of the Whitehouse..... I think that Jack Murtha may be sent down the road this Thursday.... He's next......


22 posted on 11/03/2006 4:58:44 PM PST by GitmoSailor (Diana Irey Will Win. Freepers in AZ love her also.)
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To: Lando Lincoln

23 posted on 11/03/2006 5:06:25 PM PST by SMM48
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To: Lando Lincoln

I'm surprised they didn't manage to get some sort of homosexual theme in their so-called "report."


24 posted on 11/03/2006 5:10:29 PM PST by hsalaw
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To: Lando Lincoln
Mandalit del Barco

Seeing the name in print does not give you the full effect of the accented R-rolling pronunciation of her name, along with the undiluted accent with which she broadcasts. NPR has always had a thing about any Central or South American accent being broadcast undiluted, whereas accents from other geographical locations are anglicized.

25 posted on 11/03/2006 5:13:54 PM PST by Plutarch
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To: caisson71
Japanes in Hawaii - a territory at the time with no presidential voting rights- joined and formed the 422 Infantry Brigade comprised of mostly Japanese-Americans.

Didn't you mean to say the 442nd Combat Infantry Brigade?

26 posted on 11/03/2006 5:15:54 PM PST by afnamvet (It is what it is.)
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To: Lando Lincoln

Why is NPR still funded? Air America isn't. You would think that a Republican Congress, Senate and Executive could at least reduce their funding to about two dollars and twelve cents.


27 posted on 11/03/2006 5:16:26 PM PST by Colorado Doug
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To: afnamvet

They were the most highly decorated in WWII. They served their country well, and of course I mean the U.S. Japan was the former country of their parents, but these Nisei were all Americans. I play golf with 3 of them here in Hilo, HI. Their combined age is 256 years. You can take it from me that they are 100% loyal to our country.

Mahalo


28 posted on 11/03/2006 5:31:27 PM PST by Islander2
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To: Lando Lincoln
I was born in NYC and my father was born in NYC but his father was born in San Juan and worked as a welder in the Brooklyn Navy Yard in WWII.

My grandfather on my mothers side was in the American army stationed in PR .

My uncles and brothers have served in Vietnam and Iraq and Kuwait.

To HELL with the communists at NPR and to Hell with the DONKOCRAP party.

29 posted on 11/03/2006 5:37:26 PM PST by Rome2000 (Peace is not an option)
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To: Islander2
Mahalo Islander2. The American Nisei were excellent troops and heroes all.
30 posted on 11/03/2006 5:39:51 PM PST by afnamvet (It is what it is.)
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To: Islander2

Gee this brings back memories. My Dad was stationed in Japan 1956-58. I was in the fourth grade and just hearing about Pearl Harbor for the first time. We went on field trips and met with Japanese kids who seemed just the same as us. But it was only when I got to know Nisei folks who were 100% American and who only looked Japanese that I realized what being an American really is.

BTW, wasn't it the 442d Regimental Combat Team that became known as the `Purple Heart Batallion'?


31 posted on 11/03/2006 6:06:01 PM PST by elcid1970
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To: FrPR

Maybe you should get some photos.


32 posted on 11/03/2006 6:11:47 PM PST by sageb1 (This is the Final Crusade. There are only 2 sides. Pick one.)
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To: al baby
Lousy FNPR

.

(F'N.P.R. for those of you not playing along at home. go ahead, sound it out while nobody is looking)

33 posted on 11/03/2006 6:13:31 PM PST by bpjam (Vote. Vote Now. Drag your neighbors along.)
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To: george76

Kerry should apologize for being Kerry , but that wont happen either .


34 posted on 11/03/2006 6:52:49 PM PST by redside
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To: redside

When someone makes a clear and concise statement and then tells me "they regret that I misinerpreted their statement", that only furthers their insult.


35 posted on 11/03/2006 7:28:00 PM PST by george76 (Ward Churchill : Fake Indian, Fake Scholarship, and Fake Art)
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To: caisson71

Well, Puerto Ricans ARE serving, and serving proudly alongside their fellow American citizens in Iraq and Afghanistan. My niece just got back from her tour in Iraq. 100% American, Puerto Rican and Marine.


36 posted on 11/03/2006 9:18:15 PM PST by voiceinthewind
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To: SandRat

Sadly we in the military overseas are subjected to at least 3 hours a day of their news programming on AFN.


37 posted on 11/03/2006 9:55:58 PM PST by Notwithstanding (Post-9/11 Volunteer Active Duty OEF Vet Lawyer (who is too dumb to understand Kerry's apology))
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To: sageb1

I have often thought that tailing journalists and reporting their dirt is a sure way to defeat them.


38 posted on 11/03/2006 9:58:11 PM PST by Notwithstanding (Post-9/11 Volunteer Active Duty OEF Vet Lawyer (who is too dumb to understand Kerry's apology))
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To: bert

Good Lord! Isn't she about 65 years old?!?!?


39 posted on 11/03/2006 10:02:49 PM PST by top 2 toe red (To the enemy in Iraq..."Don't bet on American politics forcing my hand!" President Bush)
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To: Notwithstanding
It is so ironical that without brave and honorable people such as yourself, NPR would be hard pressed to spew the ideology masquerading as news they are known for...

Y'all just ignore their nonsensical blather as much as possible and know there are millions and millions of us who thank you from the bottom of our hearts for your service and sacrifice to our country.

I am, but, one of those...THANK YOU!!!

Oh...and as for Jon Carry, just remember he's so brilliant, he has no clue he stuck his foot in this mouth so far that he still can't understand why his chin is dragging the ground everytime he tries to take a step!

Stay safe and hurry home!!!

40 posted on 11/03/2006 10:46:39 PM PST by top 2 toe red (To the enemy in Iraq..."Don't bet on American politics forcing my hand!" President Bush)
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