|
Four Step to Saving Live and getting
the TRUTH OUT
STEP ONE: Gather help if you, if you can’t then go ahead
on your own. You can get in contact with your local Veterans for Peace group.
(or contact us we have lists around the country) This can be just one individual
in your small town or a neighboring town if you're not in a big city. You then
reach out to anyone you know. Ask them the questions "Do you think the
military has the right to not tell our young people the whole truth? Do you
think military recruiters have the right to our children's school records?"
Then you ask student or parent or any one concerned; "if they would
committee just one hour of their time a week and a couple of dollars for
printing some information, to hand out, for saving a young persons life?"
STEP TWO: schedule one meeting for one hours worth of business, that business
will cover organizing, the time for the first hand out of information to the
students. The best time is after school when students are going home. Tell the
people and organizations that after the business part of the meeting is over
they can have a discussion period. But you've told people that the meeting is
set for an hour to actually plan and set a date for your action.
AT THIS MEETING: Plan the first action if you can for the first day of school
this fall. This is very important. The first week of school we want as many
students and parents to sign an OPT OUT letter as possible. On September the 24th
we will announce while the first national protest are going on all the OPT OUT
letters that have been signed. We will then demand our legislators support the
"Student Privacy Protection Act" that would turn current policy
around, allowing the military to talk only to students whose parents approve of
such contact. Instead of having the responsibility of opting out, Parents should
be asked to opt-in. Critics charge that this will make it far harder for
recruiters to discuss military careers with the nation's high school students,
so be it. We will also demand that all previous information be scrubbed from any
military of private files.
If you have a group that wants to start this summer, at events that high schools
students might attend. Print out an OPT OUT letter that can be filled out by pen
and does not require a computer. (See earlier example or contact us.) Have some
literature that you or your group has studied to hand out. If possible have a
Peace Veteran at hand to speak to the students. Have a leaflet that has the next
time and place a meeting is available, and where a student and their parents can
speak with a Veteran. Also have on the meeting leaflets the GI Rights Hotline
800-394-9544.
STEP THREE: Start Talking with the Students and Parents.
You have the right to stand on a public sidewalk in front of your school and
hand out this information to students or any public place. Have OPT OUT LETTERS,
information, a sign up sheet for those who want to help or set up a club and a
leaflet of your informational meeting.
This direct contact may be out of some peoples comfort zone. However, this is
the most important part. The only way to reach these students is eyeball to
eyeball. You must show them that you care enough about their lives to stand
there and talk with them. If they say they don't care if they die in war you
must tell them "you care for them and that's why your there." You
don't tell them that they can't join the military. This is a free country and
they have the right to do as they wish. These young people are smart, once you
get them past the propaganda, which they are constantly bombarded with they will
make the right decision.
Just ask them would they buy something important on a slick sales pitch or would
they want the truth about what they are getting into before they make a life
changing decision?
STEP FOUR: The week after the school action you have the meeting you called for
in your leaflet you handed out. You have a Peace Veteran there. Keep it
informal, this is a time the student, their parents and the veteran should have
to dialogue with each other. It is important to have a sign up sheet. Ask
students if they would like to start a club on campus that talks about peace and
alternatives to war?
|