WHERE DO YOU STAND: SHOULD MILITARY SERVICE BE MANDATORY?

Congressman Says He Would Like To Restore A National Draft

By Todd Wilkinson, 11-20-06

Congressman Charlie Rangel is convinced that if more of his colleagues on Capitol Hill and their close friends were forced to make their own kids eligible for military service in Iraq and other violent hotspots around the world, American leaders would find greater pause in deciding whether to have the U.S. go to war.

Rangel, a Democrat from New York, a Korean War veteran, and the soon-to-be-new chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, intends to introduce legislation that would reinstate a national draft requiring that all men and women turning 18 in America be available for possible military duty. Rangel believes that the current all-voluntary military is tilted too heavily toward lower and middle class soldiers letting well-to-do kids, who may support the war in Iraq, off the hook. A draft would also help replenish a military force that he believes of overextended around the world.

Rangel has tried unsuccessfully in previous years to get similar bills passed.

Do you agree that a mandatory draft would change the way Congress thinks about committing U.S. troops to combat service? [End of article]
Comment By SHARON BLEVINS, 11-21-06

NO!!!!!!!!!!!!!! my son just came back from iraq and we all went through hell,most of all his two children

Comment By Craig Moore, 11-21-06

Military service demographics. http://www.heritage.org/Research/NationalSecurity/cda06-09.cfm

>>>>>>
In summary, the additional years of recruit data (2004–2005) sup­port the previous finding that U.S. military recruits are more similar than dissimilar to the American youth population. The slight dif­ferences are that wartime U.S. mil­itary enlistees are better educated, wealthier, and more rural on aver­age than their civilian peers.

Recruits have a higher percent­age of high school graduates and representation from Southern and rural areas. No evidence indicates exploitation of racial minorities (either by race or by race-weighted ZIP code areas). Finally, the distri­bution of household income of recruits is noticeably higher than that of the entire youth population.

Demographic evidence discredits the argument that a draft is necessary to enforce representation from racial and socioeconomic groups. Addition­ally, three of the four branches of the armed forces met their recruiting goals in fiscal year 2005, and Army reenlistments are the highest in the past five years. A draft is not necessary to increase the size of the active-duty forces. Our analysis using Pentagon data on wartime volunteers effectively shatters the case for reinstating the draft.
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Comment By jeff, 11-21-06

Draft equals defeat at the polls for whichever party institutes it.

Comment By Randy, 11-22-06

I agree with Jeff that pushing a draft would be political death for a party. So it's never going to be done.

But it seems to me that it would be much less likely that this or any administration (or congress, if it had the courage to exercise its constitutional duty) would commit the biggest foreign policy blunder in our nation's history (2,867 American deaths, ~50,000 Iraqi deaths, $344 billion spent and counting fast, all for a quagmire with no hopeful exit strategies) if they were sending their sons or daughters (wassup, Jen and Barb?) to die.

If we REALLY believed that war is the answer, we'd stand up and volunteer to to die on foreign soils, or at least sacrifice our children. Like our grandfathers and fathers (honorably and rightly) did in WWII.

So yeah, I'd like to see a draft. No deferments, whether National Guard or college or anal cysts (wassup, Rush?). Maybe then the chickenhawk congressmen, instapundits, thinktankists (what does heritage say about the war now?), and AM radio jocks would think twice about throwing their geopolitical temper tantrums and instead settle down and grow up and get real(ists).

Comment By Marion, 11-28-06

I think good ol Charley has every intention of pushing thru a draft and then blame it on the Republicans. If you remember when he started talking about this a couple of years ago, he was saying the Repubs would have to restart it because there were not enough young people to sign up. That is proving false so now he is going to try to another tac, but blaming Republicans is key to his plan.
He didn't want to believe that patriotism is still big in this country despite all of the libs in education. And he just can't accept the fact that our armed forces are the professionals that they are.

Comment By jimmy pinny & Howard Rejackoff, 3-04-08

hey sexyy
The draft makes us horny

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