Dedman wrote:I found this in Yahoo News. Fun stuff

I would be interested to hear Bold Deceiver's take on this.
I'm flattered you would like my take on this (though I'm not sure why).
I agree with Pebkac, who has covered the bases quite well.
On the other hand, I find Roid's "rant" difficult to follow. If I understand Roid correctly, he objects to the government collecting information that might later be used to determine, at least as to males, compliance with the Military Selective Service Act, which requires young men of a certain age to sign up for selective service. The website author appears to object to military recruitment contact with any potential candidate who is a minor, of any gender.
Roid contends that if the Department of Defense is permitted to gain information in this way, then the Department of Education should also be permitted to gain access to information procured by the Department of Defense.
Roid fundamentally misunderstands the nature of American government. Departments do not pass laws. The Congress passes laws. They are elected by the people of this country for that purpose. The notion that the Department of Education should be entitled to some kind reciprocal benefit of information from the DOD, therefore, is untenable on its face. Congress makes such decisions, not Departments or disgruntled individuals.
As Pebkac correctly notes, the federal government is under no obligation to provide educational funding to the states. When it does so, it is entirely permissible (and oftentimes appropriate) to impose conditions on such funding. For instance, during the Carter Administration, there was great concern about a shortage of fossil fuels. Congress passed a law denying highway funds to states that refused to lower their speed limits to maximum of 55 MPH.
Here, it is unclear, specifically, what kind of information is being collected about these students. The person authoring the website only refers to it as "private contact information", which I take to mean the minor's address. The author's main objection seems to be permitting the government to contact his or her minor child, presumably regarding a career in military service, without parental consent.
The author assumes that a minor's "private contact information" (name and address?) is private. This is questionable, but let's assume that's true. The next question is whether the military actually initiates direct contact with minor children based on the use of this information, and then -- whether that's wrong.
The first question isn't addressed anywhere that I can see on my scan of the website.
The answer to second question, whether it would be wrong to do so, is no. The military can't sign up anyone until they reach the age of majority. Until then, I can't see the harm in, say, sending literature to high school seniors about the military. On the other hand, I might be more concerned if a military recruiter was aggressively and covertly initiating personal contact (telephone calls, surreptitious meetings) with targeted individuals who were, say, 14 or 15 -- with a view toward getting that child's enlistment contract signed on his or her 18th birthday -- without his parents knowing it. But I see no evidence of that.
Roid's motion to initiate and maintain wild-eyed conspiracy theories is therefore DENIED.
Pebkac is entitled to COSTS for defending against illogical gibberish, payable in thirty-days after approval of Pebkac's cost bill.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
BD