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Army Jails Soldier for Singing Against Stop-Loss Policy

army_specialist_and_iraq_war_veteran_marc_hall_150by: Dahr Jamail, t r u t h o u t | Army Specialist and Iraq war veteran Marc Hall was incarcerated by the US Army on December 11, 2009, in Liberty County Jail, Georgia, for recording a song that expresses his anger over the Army’s stop-loss policy.

Stop-loss is a policy that allows the Army to keep soldiers active beyond the end of their signed contracts. According to the Pentagon, more than 120,000 soldiers have been affected by stop-loss since 2001, and currently 13,000 soldiers are serving under stop-loss orders.     

Hall, (aka hip hop artist Marc Watercus), who is in the Army’s 3rd Infantry Division, was placed in Liberty County Jail for the song (click

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to listen to "Stop-Loss," by Marc Watercus), in which he angrily denounces the continuing policy that has barred him from exiting the military.

Military service members do not completely give up their rights to free speech, particularly not when they are doing so artistically while off duty, as was the case with Hall. He is charged under Article 134 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice, which covers "all disorders and neglects to the prejudice of good order and discipline" and "all conduct of a nature to bring discredit upon the armed forces." The military is claiming that he "communicated a threat" with his song. Hall mailed a copy of the song to the Pentagon after the Army unilaterally extended his contract for a second Iraq deployment.

Hall planned to leave the military at the end of his contract on February 27, before his commander, Captain Cross at Fort Stewart, moved to have him incarcerated for the song. The military currently intends to keep Hall in pre-trial confinement until he is court-martialed, which is expected to be several months from now.

Jim Klimanski, a civilian military lawyer, member of the National Lawyers Guild and the Military Law Task Force, who is closely following Hall’s case, told Truthout that he feels the military is overreacting to the case, and that it is simply a matter of free speech and that the Army’s actions violate his First Amendment right to free speech.

"It’s a political case, and the military should know that," Klimanski explained, "I think they are overreaching and overreacting because of Maj. Hassan (who went on a shooting spree at Fort Hood on November 5), and I can understand that to some degree, but cooler heads should prevail and they should deal with stop-loss, and maybe we’ll get the case thrown out. One would hope that common sense would prevail."

Hall is opposed to the occupation of Iraq, and had told his commander he would not deploy if ordered. His unit deployed to Iraq without him in mid-December, but this is not why Hall is in jail, as he was jailed before his unit was sent to Iraq.

"The military never ordered him to go [to Iraq], they put him in jail before that," Klimanski continued, "They can’t charge him with missing movement, because he couldn’t go because they put him in jail. He told them he wanted out, he wouldn’t go, but they didn’t put him in jail for not going."

In a statement on January 5, Hall said, ""My first sergeant called me into his office to discuss the song’s nature. I explained to him that the hardcore rap song was a free expression of how people feel about the Army and its stop-loss policy. I explained that the song was neither a physical threat nor any threat whatsoever. I told him it was just hip-hop."

Hall added, "My first sergeant said he actually liked the song and that he did not take it as a threat. He and my commander at the time just recommended me for mental counseling and evaluation."

Truthout obtained a redacted copy of the Army’s Charge Sheet against Hall, filed by Marcus Seiser, that includes five charges. On the sheet, Hall is accused of telling someone he would "go on a rampage," that "the song makes threats of acts of violence," and that Hall is accused "of planning on shooting the brigade or battalion commanders."

Jason Hurd, an Iraq war veteran who has been assisting Marc Hall, told Truthout that he believes the military is overreacting to Hall’s song due to the November 5 shooting at Fort Hood.

"It really frustrates me that they [military] are reacting in such an excessive way," Hurd, a member of Iraq Veteran’s Against the War, told Truthout, "When you are talking about communicating a threat, a threat has to be at something or someone. If you listen to Marc’s song, he’s not saying he wants to kill someone in his chain of command, he makes broad artistic expressions of anger. The military likes to keep a lid on things, and it’s now very frustrating they are taking such extensive measures to save face, and they are afraid after the Ft. Hood shooting. So as a result of Ft. Hood, they have persecuted Marc, and now he’s incarcerated."

Hurd also feels the case underscores an underlying hypocrisy within the military.

"From a military that has us, while we’re jogging, chant in cadence about killing babies, to then come down on someone for writing an angry song, is ludicrous," Hurd added, "Marc is just expressing the anger that 13,000 soldiers are feeling right now, because there are currently that many who are stop-lossed. All he did was make his opinion heard."

According to Hurd, who has been speaking with Hall regularly via telephone, Hall told him that how the military has handled his case "really got me thinking about the whole situation, and how we acted like thugs over there [in Iraq]. In good conscious I could not go back over there and do it again."

Jeff Paterson, the founder and director of the soldier advocacy group Courage to Resist, which is assisting Hall, told Truthout, "Marc’s case is unique in that the military hasn’t shown a propensity to go after these political speech cases for several years. Here, since he’s an angry man who recorded a song, they are making him a target for having expressed his anger in an artistic way. We think this is an important case because it could set precedent for free speech rights for those in the military."

Klimanski, along with underscoring the importance of the case for the First Amendment, thinks the case highlights the military’s ongoing use of stop-loss, which also contributes to how they have responded to Hall’s song.

"It’s a song, and he puts it out to the public," Klimanski told Truthout, "We’re not talking about a Major Hassan who is quietly plotting violence … this is political hyperbole. This is his rant on stop-loss. It’s political speech."

Klimanski said that by nature, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan will not end, and Hall’s song expresses concern over the possibility of his never being discharged from the military.

"He’s over there saying I have no control over my life. I could be in here forever. We’re not talking about a war that is going to be over next year. We’re talking about a war that could go on forever. So poor old Marc Hall could possibility be in the military forever. Once enlistment starts dropping, the Army maintains troop levels by keeping the ones they have. If you’re not going to go to one place, you’re going to another, but you’re not going to get out. I see this as an issue of political speech. The military may not like what they’re hearing, but that’s what it is. There are people in the military saying their being in it is/was wrong, and they want out."

Short URL: http://www.veteranstoday.com/?p=10066

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Posted by on Jan 8 2010, Filed under Politics. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. Both comments and pings are currently closed.
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6 Comments for “Army Jails Soldier for Singing Against Stop-Loss Policy”

  1. Here are the lyrics from a famous and popular civil war song that was song by Union Troops throughout the war.

    GRAFTED INTO THE ARMY.
    Words and Music by HENRY C. WORK
    Published 1862 by Root & Cady

    [Verse 1]
    Our Jimmy has gone for to live in a tent;
    They have grafted him into the army;
    He finally pucker’d up courage and went,
    When they grafted him into the army.

    I told them the child was too young, alas!
    At the captain’s forequarters, they said he would pass,
    They’d train him up well in the infantry class,
    So they grafted him into the army.

    [Chorus]
    Oh Jimmy, farewell!
    Your brotheers fell Way down in Alabarmy;
    I thought they would spare a lone wider’s heir,
    But they grafted him into the army.

    [Verse 2]
    Drest up in his unicorn dear little chap;
    They have grafted him into the army;
    It seems but a day since he sot in my lap,
    But they grafted him into the army.

    And these are trousies he used to wear,
    Them very same buttons, the patch and the tear,
    But Uncle Sam gave him a bran new pair,
    When they grafted him into the army.

    [Chorus]

    [Verse 3]
    Now in my provisions I see him revealed,
    They have grafted him into the army;
    A picket beside the contented field,
    They have grafted him into the army.

    He looks kinder sickish, begins to cry,
    A big volunteer standing right in his eye!
    Oh what if the ducky should up and die,
    Now they’ve grafted him into the army.

    [Chorus]

    Now tell me, what is the difference between this popular song of 1862-1865 and what this young soldier has written?

    CWO3 Tom Barnes, USCG (Ret.)

  2. And here is another Civil War song, VERY famous and very popular among the conscripted Irish regiments.  It remains so popular even today that Sinead O’Connor has recorded it.  Here is Paddy’s Lament.

    Well it’s by the hush, me boys, and sure that’s to hold your noise
    And listen to poor Paddy’s sad narration
    I was by hunger pressed, and in poverty distressed
    So I took a thought I’d leave the Irish nation

    Here’s to you boys, now take my advice
    To America I’ll have ye’s not be going
    There is nothing here but war, where the murderin’ cannons roar
    And I wish I was at home in dear old Dublin

    Well I sold me ass and cow, my little pigs and sow
    My little plot of land I soon did part with
    And me sweetheart Bid McGee, I’m afraid I’ll never see
    For I left her there that morning broken-hearted

    Well meself and a hundred more, to America sailed o’er
    Our fortunes to be made [sic] we were thinkin’
    When we got to Yankee land, they shoved a gun into our hands
    Saying "Paddy, you must go and fight for Lincoln"

    General Meagher to us he said, if you get shot or lose your head
    Every murdered soul of youse will get a pension
    Well meself I lost me leg, they gave me a wooden peg,
    And by God this is the truth to you I mention

    Well I think meself in luck, if I get fed on Indian buck
    And old Ireland is the country I delight in
    With the devil, I do say, it’s curse Americay
    For I think I’ve had enough of your hard fightin’

    Now I ask you, if this was written anonymously apparently by a Union Soldier who was a recently Irish conscript and sung throughout the war, what is wrong with this young soldier who has been placed on Stop Loss from penning his own rebellious song?  What he has done has a fine old pedigree in the armed forces among conscripts.

    He needs to be released from confinement immediately.

    CWO3 Tom Barnes, USCG (Ret.)

  3. And finally, the absolute signature song for the Doughboy of World War 1 written by non other than the most famous American songwriter of the day, Irving Berlin, who at that time was serving as a private in the U.S. Army.  I give you "Oh How I hate to get up in the morning!"  Notice in the song the violent threats.  It is a song!  He is using dramatic license!

    "Oh! How I Hate To Get Up In The Morning (revised)" Ringtone to your Cell Ringtones

    [Verse:]
    I’ve been a soldier quite a while and I would like to state
    The life is simply wonderful, the Army food is great
    I sleep with ninety-seven others in a wooden hut
    I love them all, they all love me, it’s very lovely but

    [Refrain:]
    Oh! How I hate to get up in the morning
    Oh! How I’d love to remain in bed

    For the hardest blow of all
    Is to hear the bugler call
    You’ve got to get up
    You’ve got to get up
    You’ve got to get up this morning

    Someday I’m going to murder the bugler
    Someday they’re going to find him dead

    I’ll amputate his reveille
    And step upon it heavily
    And spend the rest of my life in bed

    [Alternate lines in 2nd Refrain:]
    And then I’ll get that other pup
    The guy who wakes the bugler up

     

    Release that young man now.  He has done nothing more than Irving Berlin did while he was serving as a private in the U.S. Army in World War I.  This is an outrage.

    CWO3 Tom Barnes, USCG (Ret.)

  4. Heres a music video that eaplains eactly what this means.
    It’s called Rambo 2- Welcome to Hell
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n3oOwwcIBvo&feature=related

  5. David was/is (Cort)right.

  6. [...] This is a follow-up of an earlier report posted on Veterans Today by Staff Writer Mike Leon in Army Jails Soldier for Singing Against Stop-Loss Policy. [...]

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