UK: Cadet Forces in Schools Would Restore Discipline Says Union

July 29th, 2008

Ordo ab chao. The dribble bib nanny state advocates wreck the place, and then the overt fascists come in to “restore order.” Or, vice versa. Same monster, two heads.

Maybe get the Climate Cops involved! Clean, green fascism is the synthesis we’re seeing. The main problem is that the British people know they’re just being robbed.

Well, if people won’t swallow the fart taxes, I guess They can always queue the aliens.

Via: Telegraph:

Military cadet forces should be set up in schools to restore discipline and control unruly pupils, a teaching union will hear this week.

Voice, which has 38,000 members, will discuss a motion that it should welcome the establishment of cadet units in state schools.

This clashes with the stance of the NUT, the biggest teaching union, which voted in March to oppose military recruitment campaigns in schools. One teacher told that debate that military cadet forces should be barred from schools because they were used for recruitment.

But two months later, a report commissioned by Gordon Brown said more cadet corps should be set up in schools, and recommended the inclusion of lessons on the Armed Forces’ role in society in the national curriculum. It also said more military personnel should visit schools.

This has found favour with Peter Morris, the retired teacher who is making the latest proposal.

He will tell the Voice annual conference on Wednesday that a military presence at school would foster patriotism, integrity, loyalty and courage.

“Society as a whole is becoming less disciplined,” he is due to say. “As a profession, we continually complain about the indiscipline of pupils. The establishment of cadet units will, I am sure, help with discipline in our schools. They will give pupils an insight into the role of the armed forces.”

Research Credit: DAVID100

One Response to “UK: Cadet Forces in Schools Would Restore Discipline Says Union”

  1. anothernut says:

    The militarization of… everything… seems inevitable. If this initiative fails, another will come along soon enough.

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