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posted by martyb on Thursday November 12 2015, @03:32AM   Printer-friendly
from the they-have-to-come-from-somewhere dept.

VICE News reports

An information and intelligence shift has emerged in America's national security state over the last two decades, and that change has been reflected in the country's educational institutions as they have become increasingly tied to the military, intelligence, and law enforcement worlds. This is why VICE News has analyzed and ranked the 100 most militarized universities in America.

Initially, we hesitated to use the term militarized to describe these schools. The term was not meant to simply evoke robust campus police forces or ROTC drills held on a campus quad. It was also a measure of university labs funded by US intelligence agencies, administrators with strong ties to those same agencies, and, most importantly, the educational backgrounds of the approximately 1.4 million people who hold Top Secret clearance in the United States.

But ultimately, we came to believe that no term sums up all of those elements better than militarized. Today's national security state includes a growing cadre of technicians and security professionals who sit at computers and manage vast amounts of data; they far outnumber conventional soldiers and spies. And as the skills demanded from these digital warriors have evolved, higher education has evolved with them.

The 100 schools named in the VICE News rankings produce the greatest number of students who are employed by the Intelligence Community (IC), have the closest relationships with the national security state, and profit the most from American war-waging.

[...] Twenty of the top 100 schools that instruct people working in intelligence agencies, the military, and the worlds of law enforcement and homeland security--including their private contractor counterparts--are effectively online diploma mills. Twelve are for-profit companies; several didn't exist before 9/11. The schools have become so important that two of them, American Military University (No. 2) and the University of Phoenix (No. 3), rank near the top of the list based on the sheer number of their graduates working in the Top Secret world.

Seventeen of the 100 top schools are in the Washington, DC area, reflecting the concentration of all things national security around the nation's capital. The University of Maryland handily outranks all other schools at number one, while Georgetown University (No. 10), George Washington University (No. 4), and American University (No. 20)--all considered among the country's 10 best schools for the study of international relations--rank among the top 25 most militarized schools.


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  • (Score: 2) by Thexalon on Thursday November 12 2015, @04:28PM

    by Thexalon (636) on Thursday November 12 2015, @04:28PM (#262201)

    Wouldn't that mean we have nothing to fear because the spys are all incompetent?

    That the spies are incompetent is not news to anyone who's been paying attention. The overwhelming impression you get when looking at the history of US covert ops is that the only thing that they can really do with any kind of consistency is get a bunch of people killed (usually but not exclusively in faraway places), many of whom presented no threat whatsoever to the US or its interests. And more than a few of the people getting killed in US covert ops are people who knew too much about past US covert ops (and of course, whoever finds out about the covert ops to kill the people who knew too much about the covert ops now also have to be killed, in an endless cycle).

    --
    The only thing that stops a bad guy with a compiler is a good guy with a compiler.
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