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#51
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![]() "In 1973, the draft ended and the U.S. converted to an All-Volunteer military. The registration requirement was suspended in April 1975. It was resumed again in 1980 by President Carter in response to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. Registration continues today as a hedge against underestimating the number of servicemen needed in a future crisis." http://usmilitary.about.com/library/...afthistory.htm or... "The military draft ended thirty years ago when the U.S. armed forces pulled out of Vietnam." http://grassley.senate.gov/won/2003/won02-01-10.htm As no one has been drafted since 1973, don't you think it is a bit silly to say that we have a draft when all we have is a registration requirement? On Wed, 11 Feb 2004 20:06:16 -0800, "Michael" wrote: And most folks would be wrong. The only change was the final step was temporarily put on hold. Don't you get those ads on TV telling the kids to sign up. You know the ones. "It's the right thing to do and IT'S THE LAW!" "felton" wrote in message .. . On Wed, 11 Feb 2004 16:44:04 -0800, "Michael" wrote: El wrongo....Selective Service Act is still in force and males attaining age 18 or above are required to sign up. It can be used at any time. It never went away. Did you really not KNOW that? Try calling the local high school. That and the post office is where the kids get the sign up forms . . .and it' aint voluntary. No sign up, no federal benefits which to many youngsters means . . .no college. M. Are you saying that a mandatory 15 minute trip to the Post Office to fill out a form is the same thing as a two year tour with the Army? Well, I guess some Post Offices are slow and have been known to be dangerous, but your apples and oranges won't float. If no one is drafted most folks would say we don't *currently* have a draft. wrote in message .. . On Wed, 11 Feb 2004 10:09:54 -0800, "Michael" wrote: What do you mean 'if we still had the draft?' The Selective Service System is alive, well and ready to be used when needed. All 18 and older males are still required to register for universal conscription. When cannon fodder is needed . . . . .re-activating the system is but a computer push button away. We do not currently have a draft, and it would take a bit more than a push of a button to create one. BB |
#52
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No. Of course not. However, there's a big difference between
getting a blow job and screwing a couple of nations. Was that better? "Michael" wrote in message ... Translation: "But What ABOUT the REEEEpublicans? Who cares? They are just politicians like the Democrats ergo not 'worthy' people. Citing evil is not an excuse for evil. Sniveling is not a valid point of discussion. And using your own negatives to describe someone else is sort of silly don't you agree? OK took a while but I understand the point . . .finally. Soo. .. you excuse the misdeeds of your guy by citing the misdeeds of someone else's guy? Try harder, I expected better. M. "Jonathan Ganz" wrote in message ... Not that well... morals... hmmm... like Bush's daughters getting busted. Or, Gingrich telling his wife in the hospital that he's dumping her? Or, maybe it's Rush's multiple marriages. Or, possibly Hatch releasing classified information when he wasn't supposed to. Or, Ashcrap "anointing" himself with oil when he was picked to be AG (well, that's not amoral, just bizarre). Or, Henry Hyde's mistress. Oh, I know what you mean... Bill and Hillary actually raising an intelligent, thoughful daughter inside the political fishbowl. "Michael" wrote in message ... The most amusing part is a Democrat being silly enough to comment on military service at all. Next thing you know they'll be talking morals, values, and standards. Bwa Ha Ha HA Ha . . . .. (damn this filling in for Neal is HARD!) How'd I do? "SAIL LOCO" wrote in message ... The most amusing part about the Bush military issue is that he failed to show up for his physical. You don't know this. Everything I have seen or read up intill LAST NIGHT states they are still looking for the records. S/V Express 30 "Ringmaster" "No shirt, no skirt, full service" |
#53
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And, I still like the idea. I think that the privileges or citizenship
require some sacrifice. Serving in the military seems reasonable to me. "Michael" wrote in message ... Deferment or not it's still conscription which is taking people against their will. Another word for slavery no matter how well it's disguised. Resorting to which is proof the societal system has failed and is not worth saving. Such systems have always deferred the elite and drawn heavily from the defenseless masses. Think a minute. If the prosecution of the wars in Kosovo or Iraq was dependent on the soldiers voting with their feet (Go Home or Go To War) Or for that matter if the same was used in WWI, WWII, Korea,Viet-Nam what would the vote have been? Hint: In WWII the majority of those in uniform were drafted. Tell you something? Now as a professional soldier I looked at it a bit differently. I didn't come forward for love of anything more than a paycheck. Well . .at first I did but I learned fast. So there are three choices. a. One is military slavery as you seem to be promoting. It's the system used by failures with big guns and bigger jails to coerce support. Can't stand alone and needs professionals (see part b) to make sure they toe the line. b. One is using a professional military, mercenaries is a good word. Buying loyalty with money in other words. Not bad if you are the highest bidder and the end product is fantastically good at what it does. They don't question the job, they just perform, get paid, and go on vacation. c. Finally, seeing if what you are going to war about will get voluntary support in sufficient numbers. Which is the most democratic? (Small "d".) Which is the most dictatorial? I know, it's obviously rhetorical. I'll try again. Which group would you trust the most with a loaded weapon, in the middle of Kansas? M. "Jonathan Ganz" wrote in message ... You shouldn't be surprised. He was advocating a non-deferment draft, wherein those who have privilege aren't exempt. Seems right to me. "Michael" wrote in message ... Yes I was surprised that Rangle of all people supported a return to active conscription. Another term for slavery. I think what it takes is either a declaration of war by the Congress (and one of the reasons they didn't) or a Presidential order/decree whatever they call it. Whatever, the youth of the country are very much on the hook. M. "Jonathan Ganz" wrote in message ... It would take an act of Congress. I believe Rangle (sp?) has introduced such legislation. wrote in message ... On Wed, 11 Feb 2004 10:09:54 -0800, "Michael" wrote: What do you mean 'if we still had the draft?' The Selective Service System is alive, well and ready to be used when needed. All 18 and older males are still required to register for universal conscription. When cannon fodder is needed . . . . .re-activating the system is but a computer push button away. We do not currently have a draft, and it would take a bit more than a push of a button to create one. BB |
#54
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ahhahaaaa... ok
"felton" wrote in message ... On Wed, 11 Feb 2004 18:21:13 -0800, "Jonathan Ganz" wrote: No. Impossible. I can't be right in your view. YOU WIN TOO! Strange bedfellows in an election year ![]() election correctly... ![]() wrote in message .. . On Wed, 11 Feb 2004 16:44:04 -0800, "Michael" wrote: El wrongo....Selective Service Act is still in force and males attaining age 18 or above are required to sign up. It can be used at any time. It never went away. Did you really not KNOW that? Try calling the local high school. That and the post office is where the kids get the sign up forms . . .and it' aint voluntary. No sign up, no federal benefits which to many youngsters means . . .no college. There is no draft, and there has not been a draft for a long time. As Gayanzy pointed out, it would require an act of congress to start a draft. BB |
#55
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No way! Carter was a liberal. I guess the exception proves
the rule. "felton" wrote in message ... "In 1973, the draft ended and the U.S. converted to an All-Volunteer military. The registration requirement was suspended in April 1975. It was resumed again in 1980 by President Carter in response to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. Registration continues today as a hedge against underestimating the number of servicemen needed in a future crisis." |
#56
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"felton" wrote
......., but for me, 600 is too many if we didn't have a justifiable reason to go. Not to mention the huge expenditure of our tax dollars. The justification is that we eliminated a threat to Israel - period! I wonder how the American sentiment would view this war and our elected leadership if we still had a draft and it *might* affect all the young folks, instead of the few. I doubt there'd be much difference thanks to our vast weapon superiority. There wouldn't have been near the protests had we over ran North Viet Nam in a month, with few losses, then jailed the communists, installed a puppet government and left - instead of spending years and 50,000 American lives trying *unsuccessfully* to "pacify" the place. |
#57
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On Wed, 11 Feb 2004 10:09:54 -0800, "Michael"
wrote this crap: What do you mean 'if we still had the draft?' The Selective Service System is alive, well and ready to be used when needed. All 18 and older males are still required to register for universal conscription. When cannon fodder is needed . . . . .re-activating the system is but a computer push button away. I just got a letter from the Selective Service System today. This signature is now the ultimate power in the universe |
#59
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No matter how many times you "go down" to the Army recruiting
office, they're going to tell you no. "Horvath" wrote in message ... On Wed, 11 Feb 2004 18:18:40 GMT, wrote this crap: On Wed, 11 Feb 2004 10:09:54 -0800, "Michael" wrote: What do you mean 'if we still had the draft?' The Selective Service System is alive, well and ready to be used when needed. All 18 and older males are still required to register for universal conscription. When cannon fodder is needed . . . . .re-activating the system is but a computer push button away. We do not currently have a draft, and it would take a bit more than a push of a button to create one. Think again, bozo. This signature is now the ultimate power in the universe |
#60
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No . ..you are think of the wrong box. They are in the box with the
Kosovo mass graves. You guys gotta get a better filing system. M. wrote in message ... On 11 Feb 2004 18:03:54 GMT, (SAIL LOCO) wrote: The most amusing part about the Bush military issue is that he failed to show up for his physical. You don't know this. Everything I have seen or read up intill LAST NIGHT states they are still looking for the records. Last time I saw them, they were in a box with Iraq's WMD's. BB |
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