If the war on terror is the defining struggle of our time, the outcome of which will literally dictate the future of civilization, the president has called on Americans to do precious little about it. Bush has not called on Americans to sacrifice much of anything — aside from maybe “peace of mind” while watching the news.
With this in mind, there was one puzzling idea presented in the State of the Union this week.
“[A] task we can take on together is to design and establish a volunteer Civilian Reserve Corps. Such a corps would function much like our military reserve. It would ease the burden on the Armed Forces by allowing us to hire civilians with critical skills to serve on missions abroad when America needs them. It would give people across America who do not wear the uniform a chance to serve in the defining struggle of our time.”
Apparently, this would be some kind of not-entirely-peaceful Peace Corps? Maybe an offshoot of the Army Corps of Engineers, with international missions?
Unfortunately, given the president’s description, the audience had no idea what the Civilian Reserve Corps would actually do. As it turns out, neither does the White House.
President Bush’s proposal in his State of the Union speech to establish a “Civilian Reserve Corps” marks the latest call to mobilize Americans following the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, but like other calls to national service by Bush and both parties in Congress — most of which have not materialized — it is heavy on rhetoric but lacks an actual plan. […]
[W]hen asked yesterday to provide details on the president’s proposal, White House aides had little to offer.
“How this corps would be designed and established, and how [government] resources would support this effort, would need to be determined,” White House spokeswoman Emily Lawrimore said yesterday. “We are looking forward to working with interested members of Congress on how best to develop this idea.”
In other words, the president unveiled a new national service program, but hopes someone might fill in the details for him later — such as how it would work and what it would do.
Do you get the sense that maybe, just maybe, the White House threw the line into the speech so it could sound as if the administration still takes the idea of public service seriously?
Frankly, the Bush gang can allude to as many vague ideas as they want, but it won’t change the record. This White House, despite promises to the contrary, dramatically cut the AmeriCorps national service program (twice) with the intention of shutting it down entirely.
Every year, the SOTU features a few words about national service, and every year, the words are forgotten the next day. If the president really believed the nation were in the midst of a fight for civilization, one might assume he’d take the issue a bit more seriously.