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Suit Claims Defense Dept. Data Use Illegal | |||
2006-04-25 | |||
![]() The New York Civil Liberties Union sued on behalf of six high schoolers, saying the department is ignoring privacy rules set by Congress regarding the collection and distribution of students' personal information. Military officials have said they have about 30 million names in the database. The Pentagon said last year the list includes high school students ages 16-18 and college students, and includes such information as the students' Social Security numbers, gender and race. Hope Reichbach, a 17-year-old senior at Hunter College High School in Manhattan and a plaintiff, said she contacted the NYCLU after she had tried unsuccessfully to get her name removed from lists and databases that she said subjected her to repeated phone calls from military recruiters."I want them to leave me and other students alone," Reichbach said.
Megan Gaffney, a spokesman for the U.S. Attorney's office, declined to comment on the lawsuit Monday.
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Posted by:Steve White |
#12 trailing daughter #1 did pretty well on her PSATs last autumn. University seduction letters (including several of the military programs) and invitations to various expensive youth leadership conferences started arriving in the mail box about two weeks later, long before we or the high school were informed of her scores. Which implies that informing the seducers is a higher priority for the SAT/ACT people than is informing the test takers. *shrug* It's all part of the game. |
Posted by: trailing wife 2006-04-25 19:40 |
#11 Wow, I figured it was a 2 year deal. That's crazy. |
Posted by: 6 2006-04-25 19:09 |
#10 Steve, My tour ran from Sept.9, 1989 to Sept 17, 1993, and every bit of it was a nightmare. Seventy hour weeks were the rule, and the leadership was a disgrace to the USAF. Recruiting duty is so miserable that a few years ago when some NCOs with 10-12 years in were ordered to recruiting posts (it is normally a voluntary slot in the AF), they left the service rather than do the time. Mike |
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski 2006-04-25 12:49 |
#9 When I was a junior, the mail spam started rolling in. The only way they could have gotten my info was from the school. Just throw the crap away, don't sue. Morons. This is nothing more than an anti-military bash by loons. |
Posted by: DarthVader 2006-04-25 10:20 |
#8 Until your fingers wear off. |
Posted by: Steve White 2006-04-25 10:01 |
#7 was expected to make roughly 200-300 calls per day Jeebus, how long does that tour last? |
Posted by: 6 2006-04-25 08:59 |
#6 NYCLU = New York Commie Lawyers for the Ummah |
Posted by: DanNY 2006-04-25 08:41 |
#5 Thanks, Mike. |
Posted by: Deacon Blues 2006-04-25 08:17 |
#4 Deacon, USAF recruiting procedure is that you cold call EVERY name on every list, and woe unto the poor SOB who doesn't. I worked what was at the time the largest single recruiting zone in the largest flight in the largest recruiting squadron in the USAF, and I was expected to make roughly 200-300 calls per day. Things have probably changed considerably with the advent of the net and some major changes in the way the USAF advertises (at the time, they REFUSED to buy TV or radio time - policy was that the stations should do their patriotic duty and PSA it. This resulted in recruiting commercials at 0330 local.)and there may be less emphasis on calls, but it will still be one of the pillars. Mike |
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski 2006-04-25 08:01 |
#3 A young man who does not have what it takes to perform military service is not likely to have what it takes to make a living. --John F. Kennedy-- |
Posted by: Besoeker 2006-04-25 07:52 |
#2 Schools do more than sell lists to advertisers. My wife was Puerto Rican so my daughters are considered Hispanic by the school systems here. In her Senior year my youngest started getting solicitations in the mail from Hispanic magazines and Hispanic organizations wanting her to join. The only way they could have got her information was from the school system. I confronted them and they did admit they sell lists to a lot of organizations. I blew up. They sell the names, addresses, and racial make-up of their students. In my view a very sordid practice. She never got phone calls from military recruiters but did get mail, which I don't mind. I would not like a phone call. I don't know any recruiters who make phone calls unless the potential enlistee has previously contacted a recruiter. I don't think that is a common practice. Does somebody know for certain? |
Posted by: Deacon Blues 2006-04-25 07:49 |
#1 ...Okay, reality check: The 'database' is no more and no less than the student rosters for each school. The overwhelming majority of schools in each state kick 'em out every summer for the recruiters. A lot of school systems wouldn't give them to us except for one dirty little secret: They sell the lists to advertisers. Guessing you won't see that mentioned much though. Mike |
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski 2006-04-25 06:39 |