Who Are the Recruits? The Demographic Characteristics of U.S. Military Enlistment, 2003–2005 by Tim Kane, Ph.D.
The Heritage Foundation provides an intellectual laxative to flush that icky Kerryism out ofthe body politic.
Over the past three years, the quality of recruits to the U.S. military has improved, a finding contrary to the conventional wisdom that troop quality has declined.
“Those who have been so quick to suggest that today’s wartime recruits represent lesser quality, lower standards, or lower class should be expected make an airtight case,” Tim Kane writes. “Instead, they have cited selective evidence, which is balanced by a much clearer set of evidence showing improving troop quality.”
Kane’s analysis considers the household income, level of education, race and ethnicity, and regional origin of military recruits.
“U.S. military recruits are more similar than dissimilar to the American youth population,” Kane finds. “The slight differences are that wartime U.S. military enlistees are better educated, wealthier, and more rural on average than their civilian peers.”
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