WAS ENDING THE DRAFT A MISTAKE?

59 comments

Posted on 10th May 2013 by Zarathustra in Economy

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I have always been opposed to conscription, thinking it a form of servitude.  I graduated from high school in 1975, the same year the Vietnam War finally ended.  I was issued a draft card, but there was no lottery and had been none since 1973.  My form of juvenile protest was to write the phone numbers of friends all over it.  My high school years were also the time of Watergate, and I really thought Nixon would re-escalate the war in order to create the military emergency that might save his presidency.  I’m glad I was wrong about that, but if it were 1973/4 again, I would still think it a reasonable possibility.  

While I remain opposed to a military draft, I think of it in the context of a fairly “normal,” civilized country…not the lawless, global hegemon that the United States has degenerated into.  For our times, this guy may be right.  We desperately need a new antiwar movement in this country.  Millenials, repeat after me, “HELL NO, I WON’T GO!”

THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013 05:00 PM PDT

Without conscription war has become an abstraction, enabling a new “era of persistent conflict”

BY 

Was ending the draft a mistake?
U.S. Army helicopters pour machine gun fire into tree line to cover the advance of South Vietnamese ground troops in an attack on a Viet Cong camp near the Cambodian border, in March 1965 during the Vietnam War.(Credit: AP/Horst Faas)

Few probably recall the name Dwight Elliott Stone. But even if his name has faded from the national memory, the man remains historically significant. That’s because on June 30, 1973, the 24-year-old plumber’s apprentice became the last American forced into the armed services before the military draft expired.

Though next month’s 40-year anniversary of the end of conscription will likely be as forgotten as Stone, it shouldn’t be. In operations across the globe, the all-volunteer military has been employed by policymakers to birth what Gen. George Casey recently called the “era of persistent conflict.” Four decades later, we therefore have an obligation to ask: How much of the public’s complicity in that epochal shift is a result of the end of the draft?

There is, of course, no definitive answer to such a complex question. However, a look back at some lost history shows that today’s public acquiescence to militarism was exactly what the government wanted when it ended the draft.

That loaded term — “militarism” — was, in fact, a prominent part of the 1970 report by President Nixon’s Commission on an All-Volunteer Force. In its findings, the panel worried about “a cycle of anti-militarism” in a nation then questioning America’s increasingly martial posture.

Noting that “the draft is a major source of antagonism” toward the growing military-industrial complex, the report praised the fact that “an all-volunteer force offers an obvious opportunity to curb the growth of anti-militaristic sentiment.”

Nixon’s commission did devote some empty rhetoric to downplaying “the fear of increased military aggressiveness or reduced civilian concern” about military actions in the event of an all-volunteer force. But the report’s political conclusions were clear: By disconnecting most Americans from the blood-and-guts consequences of war, the end of the draft would “decrease dissent stemming from conscription” and “close one of the channels” of antiwar organizing.

Today, such conclusions read like prophecy. Though polls showed that many Americans opposed the Iraq War, that invasion and occupation was historically unprecedented in length and yet never generated the kind of mass protest that earlier, shorter wars evoked. Same thing for the Afghanistan War. Same thing for all the forward deployments to far-flung bases and one-off missions.

The pattern suggests that in the absence of conscription, dissent — if it exists at all — becomes a low-grade affair (an email, a petition, etc.) but not the kind of serious movement required to compel military policy changes. Why? Because as former Defense Secretary Robert Gates put it, without a draft “wars remain an abstraction — a distant and unpleasant series of news items that does not affect (most people) personally.”

The danger, says West Point’s Lance Betros, is that Americans then “reflexively move towards a military solution before they will try all the other elements of national power.”

That reality has prompted some lawmakers in recent years to propose reinstating the draft. They argue it is the only way to compel Americans to truly care about the foreign policy and national security decisions of their government.

Well-meaning people can certainly disagree about whether a modern-day draft is a good idea or not (and it may not be). But 40 years into the all-volunteer experiment, it is clear that ending conscription was as much about giving citizens the liberty to abstain from as about quashing popular opposition to martial decisions. By design, it weakened our democratic connection to the armed forces, a connection that is the only proven safeguard against unbridled militarism.

 

David SirotaDavid Sirota is a nationally syndicated newspaper columnist, magazine journalist and the best-selling author of the books “Hostile Takeover,” “The Uprising” and “Back to Our Future.” E-mail him at ds@davidsirota.com, follow him on Twitter @davidsirota or visit his website at www.davidsirota.com.

And you thought Colombia only had Cocaine to offer!

24 comments

Posted on 18th August 2012 by PlatoPlubius in Economy

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I stumbled upon this two part video series from Vice.com on Zombie-inducing drug known on the streets of Columbia as the Devil’s Breath.

Part I

http://www.vice.com/vice-news/colombian-devil-s-breath-1-of-2

 

Part II

http://www.vice.com/vice-news/colombian-devil-s-breath-2-of-2

 

I wonder if McDonald’s and Coke have put this Scopolamine in their Coca Cola fountain drinks?!  This would be better than Cocaine!  After all Coke is so 80s!

WHAT IF?

27 comments

Posted on 13th February 2012 by PlatoPlubius in Politics

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According to Judge Napolitano’s Facebook page, his final episode airs February 13th, 2012.  Rumors are circulating that he has been fired by Fox Business.  Some members of the blogosphere have suggested that the below video is the cause.  I highly recommend watching the video!  Judge Napolitano doesn’t pull any punches in this 4 minute bashing of the American political system!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gOLWMABtEVM&feature=g-all-f&context=G2c9d654FAAAAAAAAAAA



 

His “what ifs” are scarily accurate and more than a little frustrating!

Hear all about it! Hear all about it!

20 comments

Posted on 20th August 2011 by MuckAbout in Economy

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Just a Saturday funny for my buds on TBP..
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A Harley Biker is riding by the zoo in Washington, DC when he sees a little girl leaning into the lion’s cage. Suddenly, the lion grabs her by the collar of her jacket and tries to pull her inside to slaughter her, under the eyes of her screaming parents.

The biker jumps off his Harley, runs to the cage and hits the lion square on the nose with a powerful punch.

Whimpering from the pain the lion jumps back letting go of the girl, and the biker brings her to her terrified parents, who thank him endlessly. A reporter has watched the whole event.

The reporter addressing the Harley rider says, ‘Sir, this was the most gallant and brave thing I’ve seen a man do in my whole life.’

The Harley rider replies, ‘Why, it was nothing, really, the lion was behind bars. I just saw this little kid in danger and acted as I felt right.’

The reporter says, ‘Well, I’ll make sure this won’t go unnoticed. I’m a journalist, you know, and tomorrow’s paper will have this story on the front page… So, what do you do for a living and what political affiliation do you have?’

The biker replies, I’m a ex-U.S. Marine and a Republican

The journalist leaves.

The following morning the biker buys the paper to see if it indeed brings news of his actions, and reads, on the front page:

U.S. MARINE ASSAULTS AFRICAN IMMIGRANT AND STEALS HIS LUNCH

…and THAT pretty much sums up the media’s approach to the news these days…