Thanks for the links, Redbird. Not only do they provide insightful information, they both show that my statement of "many of those that join are from certain places in the South" was, indeed, correct.
The relevant part of the first link: in 1999, 42.2% of enlisted recruits were from the South and in 2003, 41.1% of enlisted recruits were from the South.
The relevant part of the second link: "The South is overrepresented among military recruits."
I will concede the point but you left out the following comments in that paragraph which said that Montana, Alaska, Wyoming and Maine, hardly "southern states", had much higher than proportional rates. The south has long had a history of military service, something also that the study mentions when it writes there was an exceptional tendency for lower than average military service.
It also states
again, hardly southern states.Due to the lack of comparable data for other years, it is unclear whether this movement is signifÂicant or even suggestive of a pattern. However, states with the most positive upward movement in their enlistment ratios after the war on terrorism began were Iowa (+0.21), Wisconsin (+0.17), KanÂsas (+0.16), Washington (+0.15), and Arizona (+0.14).
This chart ( http://www.heritage.org/Research/NationalS...a05-08_fig5.gif ) at first glance appears to show that those states that lean toward the Republican party have a higher enlistment rate while those under the Democrat tent show a lower enlistment rate.
I guess I have to fall back on your initial assertion which, possibly poorly phrased, seemed to imfer that the uneducated made up the mass of recruits as one does not normally (rightly or wrongly) associate the terms "south" and "Detroit" as institutes of higher learning... much like one often (rightly or wrongly) associates parts of the northeast as homes to the effete' consumed with intellectual snobbery.
I just could be wrong...