Page 1 of 1

Military Families Have Lower Morale

Posted: Sat Jul 14, 2007 11:22 pm
by Doug
Among military members and their immediate families who responded to a national New York Times/CBS News poll in May, two-thirds said things were going badly, compared with just over half, about 53 percent, a year ago. Fewer than half of the families and military members said the United States did the right thing in invading Iraq. A year ago more than half held that view, according to the a similar poll taken last July. The May poll had a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 7 percentage points.

Recruiting efforts are also suffering. Despite granting more waivers for recruits with criminal backgrounds, offering larger cash bonuses, loosening age and weight restrictions, and accepting more high school dropouts, the Army said it had missed its recruiting targets in May and June. Pentagon officials say resistance from families is a major recruiting obstacle. Membership is also increasing among antiwar groups that represent the active military and veterans. Military Families Speak Out, one such group, which was started in the fall of 2002, now has about 3,500 member families. About 500 of them have joined since January.

Nancy Lessin, a founder of the group, said it was noteworthy that about a hundred military wives living on bases had joined in the last three months. Wives living on bases, she said, are more reluctant than parents of soldiers to speak out.

For Beth Pyritz, 27, who recently joined the group, the turning point came last month when her husband, an Army specialist, left for Iraq for his third deployment.

“I voted for Bush twice,” said Ms. Pyritz, seated with her five children in their home at Fort Eustis near Virginia Beach. “I backed this war from the beginning, but I don’t think I can look my kids in the eyes anymore, if my husband comes home in a wooden box, and tell them he died for a good reason.”

She said her views began changing late last year as the administration seemed slow to release information about the chaos unfolding in Baghdad and crystallized when military deployments were extended to 15 months from 12 months.

Paul Jones, 51, a social worker who for three years has been counseling members of the National Guard and Army Reserve, said he had seen a growing number of troops who were angry and on edge, which is fueling dissent within military families.

Read the rest here.

Posted: Sun Jul 15, 2007 1:49 am
by Dardedar
"I received an email before the news conference from as rock-ribbed a Republican as you can find, a Georgia woman (middle-aged, entrepreneurial) who'd previously supported him. She said she'd had it. "I don't believe a word that comes out of his mouth." I was startled by her vehemence only because she is, as I said, rock-ribbed. Her email reminded me of another, one a friend received some months ago: "I took the W off my car today," it said on the subject line. It sounded like a country western song, like a great lament."

link

Posted: Sun Jul 15, 2007 2:11 am
by Doug
Darrel wrote:"I took the W off my car today," it said on the subject line. It sounded like a country western song, like a great lament."
DOUG
That DOES sound like a good song idea.

But for a country-western song, it should be a truck, not a car.

Posted: Mon Jul 16, 2007 12:05 pm
by Barbara Fitzpatrick
The fact that they are doing it is really significant. Disaffected Rs are our only hope for impeach-remove. The Dems will not do the former if they can't do the latter and they can't do the latter without the Rs. My son says he thinks, "Traitor" every time he sees a W sticker. I haven't been able to stand the sound of the man's voice for years. My thoughts don't tend to stop at a word, like my son's, but wander back and forth between "stupid sucker" and "fascist".