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http://www.antiwar.com/orig/ferner.php?articleid=3996

Sign Here, Kid
by Mike Ferner

He trolled for teenagers in North Carolina high schools, barked orders at
recruits in boot camp, and pulled charred civilian corpses out of cars in
Iraq. Now Jimmy Massey is making good on his promise to tell the whole
world what he learned as a Marine.

For the first 10 years, Massey loved being in the USMC. With a quick mind
and an easy manner, he and his superiors knew he'd make a great recruiter.
And by the luck of the draw, he was assigned to the area around Asheville,
N.C., not far from where he grew up.

"It was an advantage being a recruiter in this area. I understand the
mentality of mountain people. When we'd talk about topics like the economy
and industry around here, I knew what people were talking about. And too,
people here usually don't open up to strangers."

Contrary to what some believe, Marine Corps recruiters don't get paid
commission for going over quota, the 32-year-old former staff sergeant
explained. "My monthly quota was three in the summer and two in the
winter. You could get five one month but still go from hero to zero next
month when you started over again."

Recruiters are, however, "one of only three Military Occupational
Specialties (MOS) in the Marines that get Special Duty Assignment (SDA)
pay – an extra $475 a month when I was in – to offset the higher cost of
living when you're a recruiter," he said. "An E-5 recruiter would make
about $1,500 every two weeks including SDA pay. But being a recruiter is
expensive. There's extra costs. When you're a recruiter, you've got to
play the part."


Bling, Promises, and the "Moment of Truth"

"For example, you have to have a nice car – you can't go rolling down the
street in some old family wagon. You can't be sittin' there talking to a
kid about financial stability and driving an old Ford Ranger. That just
don't get it!" He said he drove a Mustang for his personal car, and Army
recruiters he knew drove "decked-out Expeditions with 20-inch rims. You
have to have a little 'bling' [gold, jewelry, etc.] on you … that kind of
thing. I made sure I always dressed nice when I was off duty. You gotta
play the part. Young kids are really materialistic minded."

Then there's the everyday expenses of recruiting, "like taking a guy to
Hooters for some wings. The government gives me a credit card, but it's in
my name and the bill comes to me. I have to pay it and then get
reimbursed."

Often the biggest enticement a recruiter can offer young men and women
trying to escape poverty is the promise of job training, even more
appealing when it's for a MOS in data systems, aircraft electronics,
aircraft crew chief, or other sought-after specialties. But as Massey
acknowledged, "The Marine Corps can guarantee you a job all day long, but
that doesn't mean you're going to actually get it."

A common way to swindle recruits out of promised jobs is the "Moment of
Truth" exercise in boot camp. New recruits are taken to a room where their
DI (drill instructor) tells them to "really think about it" and see if
they've lied while enlisting or filling out their application.

"They'll ask the recruits if they lied about things like ever having
smoked grass, or maybe how many times they've smoked, and ask them to
raise their hand if they've lied any time in the recruiting process,"
Massey said. When the hands go up, the DI looks at them and says, "Listen.
This is what's gonna happen now. You lied to us. You can either quit in
disgrace now, or since you signed a contract to be a Marine, you can stay
in, but we're not going to let you have the job you asked for."


"Investigations" and Private Eyes

"There's a whole network within the community to enable recruiters to make
their quotas – the sheriff's department, police department, schools … all
the way up to the local congressional office."

Massey recalled that at one point, "There was a congressional
investigation brought up against me. … I enlisted someone who was
handicapped. I should have been in deep sh*t, but the Marine Corps swept
it under the rug by stating that the kid had fraudulently enlisted. I got
a call from Congressman Charles Taylor congratulating me on the work I had
been doing, and he sent me an autographed picture."

"A recruiter is like a private eye," Massey said. "They know everything
about the kids they're recruiting."

For example, he learned the names of virtually every graduating high
school senior in his seven-county district – about 1,000 youngsters
annually in that largely rural area.

And high school students weren't the only people he got to know well. "We
knew the names of the district attorneys [DAs] in every county and went to
them to get certain charges reduced or dismissed on kids we were
recruiting. We took flowers to the secretaries in the clerk of courts
offices. The clerk of courts can make a lot of things appear and
disappear. We got to know people working in hospital medical records so we
could check out, say, if a certain kid had asthma or not. We'd ask other
kids 'what about Johnny Smith?' to find out if he had problems or if he
might be interested."

He explained the Marines' Systematic Recruiting method that includes use
of a working file of Prospective Applicant Cards on which information is
routinely entered. "I'd put all the information down that I knew … maybe
Johnny Smith had some problems with the law. That's when I'd go to the DA
and ask if Johnny was salvageable. If he was, I'd tell the DA, 'well, I
talked with Johnny and he's thinking of going into the Marine Corps.' More
likely than not the response I got would be, 'Oh yeah? Well, that's just
great!'"

Massey said three years as a recruiter taught him "the power of the
English language."

"One way we used it was to identify 'tangible and intangible traits' in
applicants. We would use cards with words printed on them, like 'self
confidence,' or 'financial security' and ask an applicant to pick ones
they were concerned about. That way, if a kid picks 'self confidence,'
he's telling you he feels like he's lacking in self confidence and you can
work him from that angle."

For potential recruits with a record of criminal convictions, Massey
pointed out that, "Anything is pretty much waivable in the Marine Corps –
even up to one felony."

Potentially life-threatening medical conditions were also waivable,
according to Massey. "Johnny might come to see me his senior year and say,
'Sarge, I'm wondering if I might have something that might disqualify me …
I've got asthma.'"

"I'd ask him if he uses an inhaler. If he answered 'yes,' I'd tell him
that if he controlled it with an inhaler then he really didn't have
asthma. Then I'd tell him to give me 10 pushups. If he did that with no
trouble, I'd say, 'See, you don't have asthma!'"

He described his time as a recruiter as progressively more and more
difficult. By his last year at it, 2002, he was "tired of lying. I felt
like I was close to a nervous breakdown from the stress. I started seeing
a psychiatrist, was diagnosed with major depression and put on medication
for it. I wrote a letter to my commanding officer about how Marine Corps
recruiting should be changed to be more ethical. The Recruiter Instructor
they sent out to monitor my efforts ended up telling me he thought it was
one of the best statements anyone had ever written about recruiting
practices."

Massey decided to quit being a recruiter but also to reenlist to get back
to "the regular Marine Corps duty" he enjoyed. Leaving behind the deceit
and stress of recruiting made him feel much better – "good enough to get
off anti-depressants." But soon he got orders to northern Kuwait and
within two months was invading Iraq with 130,000 other U.S. troops.


"We Just Lit 'Em Up"

As he made his way north toward Baghdad, through the towns of Safwan and
Basra, "our main job was to set up roadblocks. We had permission to fire
on anyone who got through them."

It was this experience, barely an instant compared with his dozen years in
the Marines, that showed him a side of the military he'd not seen as an
instructor at Parris Island or a recruiter.

"In one 48-hour period, we killed over 30 civilians in vehicles that got
past our roadblocks. We just lit 'em up with gunfire. But when we went to
pull the charred corpses out of the cars we never found any weapons. They
were just civilians. I could start feeling the depression come back. I
knew what it was from."

In a meeting one day, his lieutenant asked him if he was feeling OK.
Massey replied no, and told the lieutenant that "we're committing genocide
and leaving enough depleted uranium around to continue genocidal activity
for a long time."

"Do you really believe that?" the lieutenant asked.

"Yes," replied Massey, "or I wouldn't have said it."

"I knew my career in the Marine Corps was over at that point," he added.

Sent back to the States for medical reasons, Massey returned to the Marine
base at 29 Palms, Calif., and was told to report to the mental health
clinic. There, the first psychiatrist he spoke with told him, "I don't
deal with conscientious objectors [COs]."

"I knew right away we were going to have a problem," Massey said, "because
my response to her was, 'Well, if you call not wanting to kill innocent
civilians being a CO'… and she came back with, 'Need I remind you that you
are still in the military?'"

Refusing to back down, Massey retorted, "Woman, this isn't my military
because the Marine Corps I enlisted in was run by the Geneva Conventions.
We didn't kill civilians, and we damn sure didn't cover it up."

Later, in a meeting with a senior non-commissioned officer (NCO), he was
asked, "What's wrong?" But when Massey responded, the NCO interrupted him
so he could open a desk drawer and turn on a tape recorder. Massey told
the NCO he knew he was soon on his way out of the Marines, and told him,
"I don't want your money. I don't want your benefits … nothin'! Not with
what y'all did over there in Iraq killing civilians."

Massey said he knew he would need an attorney before talking with his
superiors again, so he located one in a copy of the Marine Corps Times.
"Next meeting I had with the psychiatrist, my attorney talked with her on
the phone. She was completely different when she got off the phone with
him."

Asked what advice he would give to a teenager thinking of visiting a
military recruiter, Massey thought a moment and answered, "Take a veteran
with you to the recruiter. We're never going to stop that one kid bound
and determined to play Rambo, but getting the facts out, educating kids on
what really goes on is important. That's why I keep speaking out."

Indeed, Massey put the Marines on notice just before he left. He informed
a colonel, "The moment I get out of here I'm going to tell the whole world
what I've learned."

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