Veterans are not surprised to find that George W. Bush and
John McCain oppose Senator Jim Webb’s new G.I. Bill. G.I. Bill S22. The
Post-9/11 Veterans Educational Assistance Act, authored by Sen. Jim Webb, D-Va,
will increase founding for educational aid received by veterans, but it will
revise the allocation methods. The bill would drastically upgrade the
Montgomery G.I. Bill; their plan is to offer most veterans who serve in the war
compensation for the most expensive public schools in their state, but also a
living stipend.
Sen. John McCain opposes the bill, saying the measure could
hurt retention in a time of war. McCain, along with Sen. Lindsay Graham,
R-S.C., and Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C., introduced his own plan, which would
encourage troops to stay in the military because it would increase benefits
more for troops who serve 12 years or more.
“McCain, Graham and Burr want to reward members. If they
serve longer, they get increased benefit,” said Kevin Bishop, spokesman for
Senator Lindsay Graham.
The Montgomery G.I. Bill was initially projected as e set of
rules designed to help veterans assimilate into civilian life; the law’s key
points were education and training, loan guaranty for homes, farms or business,
and unemployment pay. Millions of veterans had the chance of redemption after
they returned from World War II. In 1947, veterans accounted for 49 percent of
college admissions; in eight years, the number increased to 7.8 million of 16
million World War II veterans.
Webb and others said the education of veterans is an
investment and the country's troops deserve a good education when they
return home.
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