The government targeted disabled people from some of the poorest communities in the country, who McNamara referred to as, “the subterranean poor.”

Many of those drafted were illiterate, they had to be taught to tie their shoes, and they didn’t know things like who the president was, even as they were being sent to kill and die on his orders for an imperialist war, for reasons they could not understand.

A book called McNamera’s Folly records some stories of those recruited in the program. One thought a nickel was worth more than a dime, because it was bigger. One of them failed to attend training and was sentenced to four years of labor in prison, and the sergeant asked if anyone “wanted to join them in the stockade.” Another conscript didn’t know what the word “stockade” meant and thought it meant going home, so he said yes - he received the same sentence.

If you can believe it, this was actually sold to the public as a “progressive” program, as part of Johnson’s “War on Poverty.” The claim was that this would be a way to help the conscripts learn useful skills. in reality, a study by the DoD itself found:

Comparisons between Project 100,000 participants and their non-veteran peers showed that, in terms of employment status, educational achievement, and income, non-veterans appeared better off. Veterans were more likely to be unemployed and to have a significantly lower level of education. Income differences ranged from $5,000 [to] $7,000 in favor of non-veterans. Veterans were more likely to have been divorced.

Obviously.

  • drolex@sopuli.xyz
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    21 hours ago

    I know this sounds cartoonishly evil, but please consider how the unemployment rate went down drastically within this subpopulation.

    Now about my newest idea ‘tunnel-sized toddlers with claymore mines’

    • khepri@lemmy.world
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      13 hours ago

      Yeah this is the kind of shit you literally couldn’t put into a fictional movie because viewers would not buy that a first-world democracy would do that to their citizens. You’d need an intentionally over-the-top cartoonishly evil fictional entity like Vault-Tec to even approach a “Moron Corps” scenario in fiction…

    • OBJECTION!@lemmy.mlOP
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      21 hours ago

      Maybe the real problem was that there weren’t enough civilian jobs that could make use of the valuable skills they were taught, like, “how to get shoved into the line of fire while the rest of us run away.”

      • Machinist@lemmy.world
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        17 hours ago

        Didn’t they recruit little people to be aircraft mechanics in WWII? They could fit inside fuselages and wings?

        • DagwoodIII@piefed.social
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          13 hours ago

          I never heard that. They’d have had normal sized women and it’s more likely that they’d plan around the building than to rely on little people. Remember that the US was building thousands of planes and ships and needing extra small folks would have created a massive bottleneck.

          I did a quick search and nothing came up.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ovitz_family

          Family of ‘dwarves’ who survived the concentration camps.

          • Machinist@lemmy.world
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            12 hours ago

            Very possible it’s some crazy shit I was told as a kid. I’ll have to do some digging.