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Marenco
02-28-2019, 01:34 AM
The Draft Should be Abolished for Everyone — Not Just Women

(MI) — On Friday, Federal Judge Gary Miller declared the federal government’s policy of male-only conscription to be unconstitutional. Miller ruled that past prohibitions on women in combat may have legally justified the all-male policy, but since the military has integrated women into combat positions, the past policy can no longer be constitutionally justified.

The ruling can be taken two ways. It can be seen as a ruling that expands federal powers to conscript through the Selective Service system, and thus expand the military’s power over the everyday lives of Americans. This is true in the strictly legal sense. On the other hand, the ruling could be interpreted as a political blow against conscription since the number of voters negatively impacted by conscription is now far higher than before. Apparently sympathetic to this latter interpretation, USAToday described the ruling as “the biggest legal blow to the Selective Service System since the Supreme Court upheld the draft registration process in 1981.” After all, those who brought the lawsuit, an organization called “The National Coalition for Men” was expressly attempting to highlight the injustice — from a male point of view — of being the only group legally obligated to submit to what is essentially registration for possible future slave labor. (Miller, however, does not actually order to the Pentagon to expand Selective Service eligibility. Any concrete legal action will likely come in the future, but those seeking to make such a move will be emboldened by Miller’s declaration.)

Experience suggests, however, that an expansion of the Selective Service requirement will manifest itself largely as a matter of “equality” rather than as a ploy to highlight the general injustice of conscription overall.

The “Equal Right” to be Enslaved by the Draft

For example, during a 2016 GOP presidential debate the candidates were asked if they would support mandatory registration for women with the Selective Service System now that women are allowed combat positions in the US military.

Most of the candidates applauded the idea while Ted Cruz denounced the notion. But, as is often the case, Cruz was right for the wrong reasons. Cruz seemed to base his reaction on sentimentalism and gender politics. However, he should have opposed an expansion of the draft not the the basis of some arcane idea of chivalry, but for the simple reason that conscription imposes enormous costs on private individuals by depriving them of control over their own labor.

Chris Christie, on the other hand, pounced on the issue of female conscription and declared it’s important that “women in this country understand anything they can dream, anything that they want to aspire to, they can do.”

After hearing this, one is left wondering if Christie is aware that there’s a difference between being a soldier and being forced to be a soldier by the state.

This sort of confusion is likely to continue.

But Make no mistake about it. Expanding Selective Service from 50 percent of young adults to 100 percent is not about equality, or progress, or patriotism. While these notions will no doubt be used to bully people into supporting such a move, the real-world effect will be a massive expansion in government power over the lives of the population. Conscription, after all, is simply a draconian tax on the conscripts who lose their freedom for the duration, but who may also be coerced into being killed in order to promote the state’s policy agendas:

“Conscription is slavery,” Murray Rothbard wrote in 1973, and while temporary conscription is obviously much less bad — assuming one outlives the term of conscription — than many other forms of slavery, conscription is nevertheless a nearly-100-percent tax on the production of one’s mind and body. If one attempts to escape his confinement in his open-air military jail, he faces imprisonment or even execution in many cases.

Conscription remains popular among states because it is an easy way to directly extract resources from the population. Just as regular taxes partially extract the savings, productivity, and labor of the general population, conscription extracts virtually all of the labor and effort of the conscripts. The burden falls disproportionately on the young males in most cases, and they are at risk of a much higher tax burden if killed or given a permanent disability in battle. If he’s lucky enough to survive the conflict, the conscript may find himself living out the rest of his life as disfigured or missing his eyesight and limbs. He may be rendered permanently undesirable to the opposite sex. Such costs imposed on the conscript are a form of lifelong taxation.

Fortunately for those who escape such a fate, the term of slavery ends at a specified time, but for the duration, the only freedom the conscript enjoys is that granted to him by his jailers.

We’re likely to hear a lot about how “fairness” and egalitarianism requires an expansion of the Selective Service System. But those claims are all distractions from the central issue here, which is the state’s power over the citizen.

After all, if women want to go help terrorist groups in Syria (which is what the US is doing there), they are free to volunteer. Whether or not women can be directly involved in blowing up revelers at Afghani weddings is a completely separate issue from conscription and the Selective Service.

Besides, if fairness is a concern, there’s an easy way to achieve fairness on this issue: abolish the Selective Service for everybody. It’s as easy as that. It wouldn’t even cost a dime of taxpayer money. Simply shred the records, fire everyone who works for Selective Service, and lease out the office space to organizations that do something useful. Then, we won’t have to hear anything about “discrimination” or the alleged sexism implicit in a policy that outrageously neglects to force women to work for the government against their will.

But Isn’t This Just a Symbolic Gesture?

Some who want to expand Selective Service for egalitarian reasons are claiming that it’s all just symbolic anyway, because the draft “will never happen.”

“The US hasn’t had the draft since the early 1970s,” one columnist loftily intoned as if that were evidence that the draft could never return. Wow, the 1970s? Did they even have electric lights back then?

Moreover, it’s a mistake to think that the draft could never return because people would overwhelmingly oppose people being forced into combat. Even if that is the case, there is no reason at all why conscription could not be used to draft people for non-combat positions. After all, only a very small portion of the military ever sees combat. The vast majority of soldiers are involved in logistics, transportation, and desk jobs such as computer programming. According to one report sponsored by the Naval Postgraduate School, “only 17% [of active-duty military personnel] are identified as performing combat specialties.”1 Long gone are the days of pouring fresh conscripts into fox holes with little more than a rifle and a shovel.

Only a small portion of military deaths occur in combat. Most deaths in the military are due to accidents.

Additionally, there is no reason that Selective Service could not be modified to be used to draft people for so-called “national service” positions in which conscripts would perform non-combat bureaucratic and manual-labor jobs. Austria and Switzerland (which have conscription) allow this option for those morally opposed to combat. And historically — such as during World War II — “service” was imposed on conscientious objectors who were forced to work on farms or perform other types of manual labor in special camps.

So no, the draft is not “hypothetical,” “symbolic,” or something that “will never happen.”

Numerous countries in Latin America, Europe, and Asia still employ conscription, and it is hardly some kind of never-used relic from the distant past.

Alas, much of the opposition to the expansion of Selective Service has taken the form of National Review’s opposition which is based on the idea that conscripting women is some kind of special unique evil, quite unlike conscripting men. Military service is one thing, the editors write, but forcing women into it is “barbarism,” they admit. They’re half right. It is barbarism to force women to fight wars for the state. But the same is also true of conscription for men.

Ryan McMaken (@ryanmcmaken) is a senior editor at the Mises Institute. Send him your article submissions for Mises Wire and The Austrian, but read article guidelines first. Ryan has degrees in economics and political science from the University of Colorado, and was the economist for the Colorado Division of Housing from 2009 to 2014. He is the author of Commie Cowboys: The Bourgeoisie and the Nation-State in the Western Genre.

https://thefreethoughtproject.com/draft-slavery-abolished-totally/

UWDude
02-28-2019, 02:51 AM
I say, men aren't good enough for wars.
I say, if Armies were all women, there would be no more wars.
So I say, draft ONLY women into the military.

goldenequity
03-01-2019, 08:21 PM
1101547481706516481
https://twitter.com/RonPaul/status/1101547481706516481

Zippyjuan
03-01-2019, 08:41 PM
The US has not had a military draft since 1973.

kcchiefs6465
03-01-2019, 08:55 PM
The US has not had a military draft since 1973.
And I am sure Selective Service Registration is simply for appearance.

Danke
03-01-2019, 08:57 PM
The US has not had a military draft since 1973.

So why does the government get involved with private citizens' lives and make life difficult if young men don't register?

Most sign up to serve in the military for opportunities/benefits because of federal government regulating what was once a free market. Opportunities that would have been available for a free people that is now highly control by a central government.'

Krugminator2
03-01-2019, 11:00 PM
The draft is the most evil thing a government can do its citizens. It is interesting how many regressive leftists are in favor of both women having to register for selective service and how many favor an actual draft because they think the military is disproportionately poor and minority. So they favor slavery in the name of social justice. Just awful people.

Anti Globalist
03-02-2019, 09:10 AM
Fuck the draft.

Superfluous Man
03-02-2019, 10:26 AM
The US has not had a military draft since 1973.

You didn't even spend 5 seconds skimming the article you're replying to.

oyarde
03-02-2019, 12:08 PM
So why does the government get involved with private citizens' lives and make life difficult if young men don't register?

Most sign up to serve in the military for opportunities/benefits because of federal government regulating what was once a free market. Opportunities that would have been available for a free people that is now highly control by a central government.'

I never registered for the draft . I got a letter about too when I was at Fort Sill . I gave it to muh Platoon Sgt who took it to the First Sgt who took it to the XO and they told me not to worry about it . I told them I was not worried about it .

TheCount
03-02-2019, 03:27 PM
I don't see how it's difficult to simultaneous believe that there should not be a draft, but that if there is, that it should be egalitarian. This reminds me of the old 'government should not be involved in marriage, therefore I oppose gay marriage' argument.

Swordsmyth
03-02-2019, 04:04 PM
I don't see how it's difficult to simultaneous believe that there should not be a draft, but that if there is, that it should be egalitarian. This reminds me of the old 'government should not be involved in marriage, therefore I oppose gay marriage' argument.
There are physical and psychological differences between men and women and for the sake of both women should never be put into combat unless your side has almost lost the war.

That means an egalitarian draft would have to give them all of the non-combat jobs whether they were the best choice for them or not.

Drafting anyone is wrong but drafting women before you are desperate is even more wrong.

Zippyjuan
03-02-2019, 04:50 PM
Drafting soldiers makes war more difficult than if you just use volunteers. People care more about war when their family or loved ones may be forced to go fight it. With an all- volunteer army it is "So what? They want to go fight- let 'em." War protests pretty much ended when the draft ended.

Swordsmyth
03-02-2019, 05:03 PM
Drafting soldiers makes war more difficult than if you just use volunteers. People care more about war when their family or loved ones may be forced to go fight it. With an all- volunteer army it is "So what? They want to go fight- let 'em." War protests pretty much ended when the draft ended.
The war protests never stopped a single war but millions of men throughout history were enslaved and sent to their deaths.
The draft also allows wars to be fought that are unpopular enough that people won't volunteer.
A draft would only even be debatable as a last ditch emergency option when your country was about to be conquered by a hostile enemy intent on occupying your territory and abusing your people.

Zippyjuan
03-02-2019, 05:08 PM
The war protests never stopped a single war but millions of men throughout history were enslaved and sent to their deaths.
The draft also allows wars to be fought that are unpopular enough that people won't volunteer.
A draft would only even be debatable as a last ditch emergency option when your country was about to be conquered by a hostile enemy intent on occupying your territory and abusing your people.

That is how it is now. Congress would have to decide that we are in such an emergency that the existing system was failing and inadequate. They would have to pass a law in both Houses and have it signed by the President to start up the draft again.

https://www.sss.gov/About/Sequence-of-Events


Sequence of Events
Overview of What Would Occur if the United States Returned to a Draft:

Number 1 Congress and the President Authorize a Draft

A crisis occurs which requires more troops than the volunteer military can supply. Congress passes and the President signs legislation which starts a draft.

Number 2 The Lottery

A lottery based on birthdays determines the order in which registered men are called up by Selective Service. The first to be called, in a sequence determined by the lottery, will be men whose 20th birthday falls during that year, followed, if needed, by those aged 21, 22, 23, 24 and 25. 18-year-olds and those turning 19 would probably not be drafted.

Number 3 All Parts of Selective Service are Activated

Selective Service activates and orders its state directors and Reserve Forces Officers to report for duty. See also Agency Structure.

Number 4 Physical, Mental, and Moral Evaluation of Registrants

Registrants with low lottery numbers are ordered to report for a physical, mental, and moral evaluation at a Military Entrance Processing Station to determine whether they are fit for military service. Once he is notified of the results of the evaluation, a registrant will be given 10 days to file a claim for exemption, postponement, or deferment. See also Classifications.

Number 5 Local and Appeal Boards Activated and Induction Notices Sent

Local and Appeal Boards will process registrant claims. Those who pass the military evaluation will receive induction orders. An inductee will have 10 days to report to a local Military Entrance Processing Station for induction.

Number 6 First Draftees are Inducted

According to current plans, Selective Service must deliver the first inductees to the military within 193 days from the onset of a crisis.