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is it a good ideal to bring back the draft?

I disagree. A draft is needed in large-scale situations like WWII. People will do their Patriotic duty when asked, though they will not necessarily volunteer. Wars are mostly unwanted in any case, but I don't think most of the people who waited to be drafted in WWII thought the war was unnecessary or that their service was unwarranted.
None the less, they didn't choose to enlist. They were forced to by their government to further its own ends... and I'm sure many of them would've preferred not to serve, though doubless many thought it was right (but perhaps not right for them). I don't believe a democratic government has any business forcing its people to do anything - especially to fight for it.
Of course they would have preferred not to serve. Who in their right mind wants to fight in a war? And the draft is enacted through the same Democratic processes as any other law-- which, in their multitude, force citizens to do millions of things from stopping at red lights to paying taxes to refraining from murder.

The first is that I believe the draft is unconstitutional in principle. The 13th Amendment prohibits "involuntary servitude" except as punishment for a crime. While I'm well aware that courts haven't agreed with me, if being drafted isn't involuntary servitude, I don't know what is.
This was a reference to indentured servants; it was not the intent of the framers to outlaw the Draft.

The second reason I'm opposed is that I believe it's unconstitutional in practice. Even if the 13th Amendment argument fails, there's a reasonable 14th Amendment argument that it denies men the equal protection of the laws. (Since men are subject to the draft and women are not.)
That doesn't make the Draft inherently unConstitutional; it just means the Military is inherently chauvinistic. But it's less chauvinistic than it used to be. The last Draft ended over thirty years ago; if it were to come back, women would undoubtedly be included.


You do know that the framers of the constitution had nothing to do with the 13th Amendment? It was added to the Constitution in 1865 and had pretty much nothing to do with indentured servants, but was intended to eliminate slavery. Indentured servants as a class pretty much disappeared during the colonial periord/early Revolutionary era.
 
I don't think it's necessary. I don't think there will be any more wars like WWII that need that sheer volume of bodies... beyond that, the volunteer force we have is far superior to any mass conscripted forces in the world.

Wanna test that theory against China? ;)

I can't imagine China and America ever getting into a serious war. A few border skirmishes? Sure, why not. But a full scale war? Not a chance.
 
By the framers, RJDiogenes was referring to the framers (aka drafters) of the 13th Amendment, not of the original Constitution itself.

While I'll admit that the intent of the drafters of the 13th Amendment is a weakness in my argument, it's not dispositive. We recognize several rights that are found nowhere in the original intent of the drafters. (Whether that's a good idea or a bad idea is a subject for another debate.) Some 14th Amendment examples include the right to marital privacy (as seen in Griswold v Connecticut), and the right to engage in consensual sexual relationships (as seen in Lawrence v Texas).
 
Why would it only have to be military service? Forest service, Coast Guard, Census Takers, Embassy staff, etc. Anything involving travel. Two years of volunteer work might expand young peoples horizons and make them appreciate what we have here just a bit more.

Spoken like a true 47 year old. :)
 
No, I don't want to be forced to fight in a slave army.

If we were involved in a war so huge that the fate of our country was at stake and there weren't enough people volunteering to let us win...then frankly we don't deserve to survive as a country.
 
No, I don't want to be forced to fight in a slave army.

If we were involved in a war so huge that the fate of our country was at stake and there weren't enough people volunteering to let us win...then frankly we don't deserve to survive as a country.
Well I would tend to think that at that point it would be every man for himself and his family, fuck the nation.
 
what is your take! good or bad ideal?
Bad idea. The US Army couldn't handle it and the command structure steadfastly doesn't want it. Being a former NCO there is no way in hell I would want to deal with conscripts who don't want to be there. Conceptually I am against it as well. If a nation can't even raise enough volunteers, no matter the cause, then perhaps it needs to fade away.
 
I agree with you Frontline. Dealing with volunter Soldiers with attitudes is painful enough. I sure as heck don't want to deal with draftees who don't care at all.
 
And just for the record, Combats Arms has always surpassed its recruiting goals since 9/11. We do have a good amount of young men who want to go out and kill bad guys.

It is only support jobs that often suffer from manpower shortages.
 
The first is that I believe the draft is unconstitutional in principle. The 13th Amendment prohibits "involuntary servitude" except as punishment for a crime. While I'm well aware that courts haven't agreed with me, if being drafted isn't involuntary servitude, I don't know what is.
This was a reference to indentured servants; it was not the intent of the framers to outlaw the Draft.

Well, it was a reference to slavery, actually, and it wasn't added by the framers. Clearly it wasn't intended to outlaw the draft since it was implemented shortly after a war was won through conscription. But that doesn't mean the language in the amendment shouldn't prohibit the draft.

The second reason I'm opposed is that I believe it's unconstitutional in practice. Even if the 13th Amendment argument fails, there's a reasonable 14th Amendment argument that it denies men the equal protection of the laws. (Since men are subject to the draft and women are not.)
That doesn't make the Draft inherently unConstitutional; it just means the Military is inherently chauvinistic. But it's less chauvinistic than it used to be. The last Draft ended over thirty years ago; if it were to come back, women would undoubtedly be included.

It wouldn't make it inherently unconstitutional, but it could make it unconstitutional in practice (it can be both chauvinistic and unconstitutional).
 
The government works for us, we don't work for it. Drafting its people to get killed in order to further its own ends is the mark of a tyrannical government.

QFMFT. A government that seeks to make slaves of its citizens is illegitimate and should be opposed by any means necessary. Over my mind and body I alone am sovereign.
 
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The government works for us, we don't work for it. Drafting its people to get killed in order to further its own ends is the mark of a tyrannical government.

QFMFT. A government that seeks to make slaves of its citizens is illegitimate and should be opposed by any means necessary. Over my mind and body I alone am sovereign.
Couldn't agree more.
 
The government works for us, we don't work for it. Drafting its people to get killed in order to further its own ends is the mark of a tyrannical government.

QFMFT. A government that seeks to make slaves of its citizens is illegitimate and should be opposed by any means necessary. Over my mind and body I alone am sovereign.

Unless what you are doing poses a danger to your body or the bodies of others.
 
Who in their right mind wants to fight in a war?
Lots of people, if they believe the war is right. Back in World War 2 signing up was very popular. People wanted to go and kill the enemy.
Wanting to and believing it's necessary are two different things. And obviously enough people weren't signing up.

And the draft is enacted through the same Democratic processes as any other law-- which, in their multitude, force citizens to do millions of things from stopping at red lights to paying taxes to refraining from murder.
I disagree. All those things are necessary for a civilized society to exist. For a government to force its people to die overseas to project a political agenda that many of those people may not support is inherently wrong. It might be different if the war was defensive, and thus necessary to defend one's way of life, but not much. Those who want to defend their government or fight to execute its policies globally will do so. Those who do not should not be made to. As for democratic principles, my neighbor has no more right to force me into service and death than I have to force him. It is inherently immoral and unjust.
Sometimes, sadly, it is necessary to fight to preserve the existence of your civilized society. And, as I said, in a Democracy your neighbor "forces" you to do countless things.

By the framers, RJDiogenes was referring to the framers (aka drafters) of the 13th Amendment, not of the original Constitution itself.
Yes, that's right; I thought it was obvious. :D

While I'll admit that the intent of the drafters of the 13th Amendment is a weakness in my argument, it's not dispositive. We recognize several rights that are found nowhere in the original intent of the drafters. (Whether that's a good idea or a bad idea is a subject for another debate.) Some 14th Amendment examples include the right to marital privacy (as seen in Griswold v Connecticut), and the right to engage in consensual sexual relationships (as seen in Lawrence v Texas).
Indeed. But interpreting it to include supporting the country itself would also outlaw everything from Jury Duty to paying any form of taxes. The abolition of slavery wasn't intended to dismantle the country. ;)

Well, it was a reference to slavery, actually, and it wasn't added by the framers.
No, it references both slavery and involuntary servitude separately. Involuntary servitude has been interpreted in multiple ways.

Clearly it wasn't intended to outlaw the draft since it was implemented shortly after a war was won through conscription.
Exactly.

But that doesn't mean the language in the amendment shouldn't prohibit the draft.
But as I said, that interpretation is a slippery slope that would end all requirements of civic duty.

It wouldn't make it inherently unconstitutional, but it could make it unconstitutional in practice (it can be both chauvinistic and unconstitutional).
No, it just makes that method of implementation unConstitutional.
 
And obviously enough people weren't signing up.
Then that's just too damn bad for the military and the government. Either offer better incentives, convince people its right and they need to do it for their own sakes, or make do with what they have. Conscription is never an acceptable answer.
 
I spoke with my Uncle a few years back-- part of an AP class in history-- and he told me that they [meaning his unit] absolutely hated draftees. If they weren't working the system to try to find a way out, pissing themselves and complaining about being drafted, refusing to follow orders, or trying to get wounded so they could get shipped back home they were so piss poorly trained or dumb as a post that they actually endangered the unit. Said if he wouldn't have been the one to go to the stockades, he would have shot most of the draftees himself.
 
^^ Draftees had to pass the physical and go through training and so forth. Not everybody made it by far.

There's no need for a draft right now, not even close. We'd have to be involved in a major war for that to be necessary.
Its never necessary. People sign up when they believe in what they're doing, because they think its right and good. If a government doesn't have enough troops to pursue a war, they should take that as a sign that the war is unwanted by the people and act accordingly.

To support the draft our situation would have to warrant one. As of right now, we have a stellar volunteer army. There are certainly socio-economic arguments to be made with some validity, but not in a way that would validate government mandated military service at this time.
 
In general draftees make poor soldiers compared to volunteers.

This is untrue. Consider this: in an all-volunteer military, is the force composed of a cross-section of society, or are those most likely to be successful underrepresented in its ranks? A recruiter who has supervised the administration of the ASVAB (Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Batter) tends to find that the center of mass of the students interested in military service is lower than that of the population who took the exam - and that the highest-scoring students are the least likely to become soldiers. Since the start of the Iraq War, we have reduced the standards of admission to the US Army; is there any reason our standard's couldn't have remained higher if we had a conscripted force?

Note that I don't argue for a draft, only that a draft produces better soldiers on average if the size of the Army remains the same. The military ceases to be the domain of the underprivileged, and is escaped by no one.

I was in the ROTC in college, but I never served on active duty. I'm opposed to the draft for two reasons. (What follows is only applicable to American law, which is my current field of study.)

The first is that I believe the draft is unconstitutional in principle. The 13th Amendment prohibits "involuntary servitude" except as punishment for a crime. While I'm well aware that courts haven't agreed with me, if being drafted isn't involuntary servitude, I don't know what is.

The logic used by the Supreme Court in this matter is very reasonable. The Northwest Ordinance of 1787 proscribed slavery in the Northwest territory with the following language:
"There shall be neither slavery nor involuntary servitude in the said territory otherwise than in punishment of crimes whereof the party shall have been duly convicted."
The similarity of this language to that of the 13th Amendment is striking. The Amendment reads:
"Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction."
In 1799, the legislature of the Northwest Territory passed an act which required two days work on the territorial road system by every male citizen over 21. It used the following language:
That all male persons of the age of twenty-one years, and not exceeding fifty, who have resided thirty days in any township of any county within this territory, who are not a township charge, shall, over and above the rate of assessment hereinafter mentioned, be liable, yearly and every year, to do and perform two days' work on the public roads, under the direction of the supervisor within whose limits they shall be respectively residents.
This law was accepted by Congress and by the Executive, and was unchallenged by any citizen of the territory. The service it requires is clearly involuntary, but it would not reasonably be considered involuntary servitude.

Why? Because service and servitude are not equivalent terms, despite their common origin in the Latin servus (slave). "Service" comes to us from Old English, in which it described religious devotion (i.e. devotion so complete as to be a willing slave to the holy). Eventually, it came to refer to the work done in observance of that devotion, and today refers, in this sense, only to work done for something or someone other than oneself. It maintains, in formal usage, a sense of ultimate benevolence.

"Servitude," in contrast, has arrived almost intact from the Late Latin servitudo (a condition of slavery), passed into Middle English through Old French (servitude). The word's modern meaning is "the state of being a slave." "Slave" is formally defined as either "a person who is the legal property of another and is forced to obey them" or "a person who works very hard without proper remuneration or appreciation." I don't think it could be argued that a soldier is either of these.

The second reason I'm opposed is that I believe it's unconstitutional in practice. Even if the 13th Amendment argument fails, there's a reasonable 14th Amendment argument that it denies men the equal protection of the laws. (Since men are subject to the draft and women are not.) Sex discrimination laws are analyzed under what is called "intermediate scrutiny", which basically means that the law must be substantially related to an important government goal. I'm unaware of any cases specifically on point, but I could easily see this failing. (While the goal of having a properly staffed military likely will qualify as important, I doubt that a male-only draft would qualify as substantially related.) Intermediate scrutiny is a really fuzzy area of constitutional law, though, so it's unclear how a case would come out.

You almost certainly have a point, though an argument relying on the 14th Amendment argument is invalid (because the 14th Amendment applies only to the states). An argument against sex discrimination by the Federal government must rely on the 5th Amendment. The relevant clause is this Amendment's "due process" statement, which reads:
"No person shall . . . be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law"
The Court decisions in Frontiero v. Richardson, Califano v. Jobst, and several other cases have applied this clause to prohibit discrimination on the basis of sex - which is, by its nature, conducted without due process of deprivation at trial. In Frontiero, a case which prohibited sex discrimination in the disbursment of military dependent benefits, the Court wrote:
"The sex characteristic frequently bears no relation to ability to perform or contribute to society. As a result, statutory distinctions between the sexes often have the effect of invidiously relegating the entire class of females to inferior legal status without regard to the actual capabilities of its individual members."
The case further established that due process concerns ajudicated under the due process clause of the 5th Amendment are subject to the "strict standard" test, not the "intermediate standard" of judicial review which applies to the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment. (This has not been overturned, but that may be a simple case of the distinction between the standards having been overlooked.)
 
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