i think the government should start drafting kids again. that's the only way we'll be politically active again. as long as it's a volunteer force . . . the majority of families affected are minorities and poor whites. until more people of the upper middle class are dying there won't be political activism amongst the youth of today.i'm a conservative and this is how I feel. also I served my country proudly ......... FIN
9/12/2006 4:44:04 PM
i wish we would start rationing shit off too...like during ww2it'd make us stronger
9/12/2006 4:45:13 PM
9/12/2006 4:45:18 PM
if you dont realize how stupid it would be to force a bunch of people who dont want to be soldiers to defend this country, then there's really no hope for you.
9/12/2006 4:50:16 PM
Amsterdam this argument is stupid. First you have to explain why being politcally active matters. I mean, is it really that important that people vote?More importantly, if only military service can cause people to get politically active, and the current system majorly affects minorities and poor whites, then why is it that minorities and poor white have such abysmal voter turnout as it is?Thank you for serving the country, I appreciate that.
9/12/2006 4:59:31 PM
I'd have to find the demographics again, but middle-class white kids are over-represented in combat forces. Most of the minorities and poor whites fill support positions (medical, supply, etc)
9/12/2006 4:59:54 PM
9/12/2006 5:02:01 PM
A Tanz, that directly contradicts what Reverend Jesse Jackson has told me and therefore it cannot be correct.
9/12/2006 5:02:42 PM
Actually, it wasn't Jesse Jackson, but a Congressman who spurred me to find demographics on the military. I don't remember where (this was a couple of years ago) but I did find them on the DOD website.
9/12/2006 5:06:35 PM
stupid people cant be officers on Nuclear Subs and shit.
9/12/2006 5:06:50 PM
my uncle captained a nuke sub. he'd probably beat your ass for suggesting we put a drafted crew under his command.[Edited on September 12, 2006 at 5:11 PM. Reason : ,]
9/12/2006 5:11:15 PM
ha my dad was an officer on a nuke, maybe they were butt buddies.
9/12/2006 5:13:11 PM
I'm trying to go subs after I get commissioned. I guess I'm destined to be a butt buddy.
9/12/2006 5:17:52 PM
THINK ABOUT IT. say if the draft came and like moderately intelligent people like tdubbers had to go serve. do you have any idea how many more parents and teens, etc would be involved in the political process.so many liberals disagree with govn't policies, etc . . . and the youth have no interest at all. so there's no voice. the only way i think people will be active again is if kids are being drafted.
9/12/2006 5:56:54 PM
i'm gonna say take your draft and suck dickwe wouldn't be short on troops if we weren't nation building (destabilizing) all over the fuckin place
9/12/2006 6:04:17 PM
Thats not a draft.Thats conscription.
9/12/2006 6:56:52 PM
^^
9/12/2006 7:43:34 PM
9/12/2006 9:31:41 PM
SERVICE GUARANTEES CITIZENSHIP.
9/12/2006 9:34:59 PM
IM DOING MY PART!http://maxdoeshispart.ytmnd.com/[Edited on September 12, 2006 at 10:12 PM. Reason : .]
9/12/2006 10:09:29 PM
^^^ while you have a valid point, we thankfully have a democratic republic, representative democracy, or whatever you want to call it, and don't depend on every last dumbass without a clue to call the shots.
9/12/2006 10:17:54 PM
But why is voter apathy not viewed as a problem to be investigated?
9/12/2006 10:31:33 PM
Because you have not demonstrated it to be a "Problem" Democracy is not perfect, but not once in history (that I can think of) has it produced bad results because of low turnout. The election that appointed Adolf Hitler did not suffer low turnout, neither did the one that appointed FDR and Hamilton. You find it morally reprehensible that most people don't vote. That is fine for you but controversial for most everyone else. I don't care if most people don't vote, a lot of people don't care. So why should the government spend effort fixing something that only a few nuts (such as yourself) consider a "Problem"? Might energy not be better spent tracking down and cutting wasteful government programs? And suggesting that we should violate the most basic of human rights (self determination) by instating a draft in pursuit of bettering an issue most don't even recognize. Low voter turnout may be a big issue for you, but surely it would not compare to arresting a large portion of the adult male population and imprisoning them in military service having committed no crime beyond being born?
9/12/2006 10:49:46 PM
9/12/2006 10:58:22 PM
9/12/2006 11:05:47 PM
LONESTAR . . . your hometown is fayetteville. that's home of the 82nd. YOU SHOULD KNOW BETTER !!!1
9/12/2006 11:06:55 PM
No, I'm sorry, you did not understand my wording. Let me try to explain it better to you. Let us imagine we are talking about me and I am being drafted. Now, at this point I want to go to Mexico, but you have arrested me for failure to appear before the draft board and then sent me to Iraq. I never agreed to go to Iraq, there was no meeting of the minds on this issue, you just kidnapped me. We used to do this a lot awhile back, it was called slavery.It doesn't matter what you are having me do, carry a riffle or harvest cotton, the immoral principle is exactly the same. You and the U.S. Government have revoked my right to decide my own fate and imposed your own and no matter how lofty your goals it is still slavery and I will still fight you to the death to preserve the liberties of me and my fellow country men.
9/12/2006 11:25:01 PM
Draft = Slavery, plain and simple. What were we fighting for, again?[Edited on September 13, 2006 at 12:26 AM. Reason : sdfsdf]
9/13/2006 12:25:58 AM
20 people in a cave in pakiturkmanistani
9/13/2006 1:17:02 AM
9/13/2006 10:02:55 AM
Wow. LoneSnark spent 188 words ignoring the fact I said it ought to be investigated and didn't propose or praise any one solution whatsoever.gg manTurn my curiosity into an attack.
9/13/2006 2:54:03 PM
9/13/2006 3:19:45 PM
Look at me, I can say that voter apathy has caused problems just as easily as LoneSnark can say it hasn't.I think it's awesome when ~30% of the public says a guy should lead the rest, another ~30% say he shouldn't, and ~40% express a statistically uncategorizeable opinion on the matter.Net effect: ~30% decide who leads the other ~70%.
9/13/2006 3:38:00 PM
ONE THING'S FOR SURETHEY'LL KEEP FIGHTING AND THEY'LL WIN
9/13/2006 3:42:12 PM
wait, gamecat == Amsterdam718? now I get it. Anyway, you said it should be investigated and so I investigated it. Turns out the draft is just another form of slavery, only instead of enslaving people based on race you are doing based on a lottery and instead of harvesting cotton they are carrying a riffle. As for the "problems" you claim to know, I don't see them. Sure, the laws are being made by people that were only voted upon by 30% of the population. It is an odd fate of humanity that Democracy really doesn't seem to matter to people, all that matters to people is the content of the law, not who wrote it. People in the United States respect the law, regardless of the process used to determine it. Hell, we revere our practice of "Common Law" which was not and never has been put in place based on a democratic vote. When polled the most trusted branch of government is the least democratic, the Supreme Court. Other countries with much higher voting rates are also more likely to suffer corruption and illegality (Europe's black-market is almost twice the size of America's). So no, you have named NO problem caused by a lack of voter turnout, not a single one beyond your philosophical objections. So, get over your quibbles and stop suggesting we make government worse.
9/13/2006 9:13:51 PM
^bingo
9/13/2006 9:29:19 PM
I'm not Amsterdam.You didn't investigate shit. I said voter apathy was a problem to investigate. I didn't say that conscription was a good idea. Ever.Black markets exist most prominently in countries where bad men encourage more men to exercise freedom more often than the bad men in our own do. Interesting. So why not educate enough of the public about the effect they can have on their Democracy to make the idea of trying to change things attractive enough to act on? Perhaps they wouldn't do such stupid things as they do in those other countries. And in our own.[Edited on September 13, 2006 at 9:41 PM. Reason : ...]
9/13/2006 9:36:26 PM
Then you understand my confusion. My statements that "Draft == Slavery" were directed against those that suggested a draft, namely Amsterdam. Therefore, since that was not your suggestion, the only point of mine that mattered to you was "You find it morally reprehensible that most people don't vote. That is fine for you but controversial for most everyone else. I don't care if most people don't vote, a lot of people don't care. So why should the government spend effort fixing something that only a few nuts (such as yourself) consider a "Problem"?"In other words, I have investigated low voter turn-out and found that it is irrelevant. It is a waste of time to do anything, and since "doing nothing" is a valid option then I suggest we take it. And since you have responded the same way multiple times, I'll explain yet again that a philosophical objection does not count as a Problem. I don't care if you are happy, I only care about real problems. Examples would include "Low voter turn out kills 1000 Americans every year" or "if not for low voter turn out Vietnam and Iraq would have been avoided"30% are rulling 70% is a complaint, not a problem.
9/13/2006 10:16:57 PM
The fact though, LoneSnark is that your argument is inherently philosophical in nature as well. Trust some armchair economist's unscientific speculation.I have huge difficulty accepting that you simply summoned data from the effects of high and low voter turnout in the modern United States about the effects it has had. Nor do I think your analysis addressed the potential effects of allocating at least a jet fighter or two towards a scientific study on the matter.Where is the economist in you?I'm arguing there's an opportunity cost to doing nothing. Do you deny that?If you fear a voting public, I fear for our future.You say high turnout doen't tend to produce good results. I can just as logically say that high turnout is often a product of corruption, AND a result of it. That would be a more complex cause than your simplistic: "High turnout causes corruption" bullshit. In other words, your nutty ass is creating a huge logical fallacy here by asserting that your data represent more than a correlation. And so could I, if I believed I knew for sure. The difference is, you are.Correlations aren't great for philosophy, LoneSnark. They do not establish causes.I'd also assert that another variable I'm sure you've ignored is the state of accurate information available to the average voter. Educating the average voter, or at least seeing to it that they have accurate information about their candidates by Election Day, would alleviate pretty much every fear I can imagine you have about high turnout.What's so frightening about solving the problem of the opportunity cost of uneducated voters?
9/13/2006 10:36:40 PM
Gamecat, [expletive removed] I did not posit a correlation to argue causation, I did so to prevent you from arguing one. It is obvious to me that if high voter turnout produces better government then it should be correlated, but since it is not either way then the two must be uncertainly linked, potentially independent. I said explicitly that high or low voter turnout is irrelevant. Do I need to define the word irrelevant for you?
9/13/2006 10:51:45 PM
Perhaps if they had accurate information they would care. That's my hypothesis. That, and that they'd be able to make sound, informed decisions about who's best to lead the country, state, or district in which they live.Corruption is already a problem in government. Even with low turnout.If turnout's irrelevant, I'm establishing that a voter's access to accurate information may be.Nonetheless, until we define voter apathy as a problem worth investigating, or whose effects are worth scientifically establishing at all, you certainly aren't free to argue that your view makes any sense.Again, the difference is that I'm arguing it's worth discovering. You are arguing that you know already.
9/13/2006 11:02:08 PM
9/13/2006 11:23:38 PM
I lack the resources to educate them.The federal government does not.Period. I refuse to accept your premise on faith alone.
9/14/2006 12:00:20 AM
9/14/2006 7:19:07 AM
vietnam
9/14/2006 3:26:11 PM
9/14/2006 7:25:02 PM
Dude, you've gone off the deep end already. You have restated the same points numerous times without yet swaying into anything concrete. The U.S. Government spends a shit-ton of money every year on educational programming, every cent of which was probably wasted. Yet, this is what it sounds like you want more of. But like I said this is not a field where government belongs. It is not Government's job to teach us what is important in life because government is not just people it is politicians and politicians deal with politics. And as my favorite philosopher P.J. O'Rourke said, "Politics are a lousy way to get things done. Politics are, like God's infinite mercy, a last resort." Do you really want George Bush teaching your children what is important in life? Your kids will run off and join the military, kill brown people, and appoint Harriet Miers. Is that really the America you want to live in?
9/14/2006 9:16:32 PM
9/14/2006 9:36:13 PM
I'm pretty satisfied by having people there that wanted to be therethey took the job knowing what it would entail... and many did it because it is a great chance to make something of themselvesif there ever were to be a draft, I'd join as soon as the first person I knew was drafted
9/14/2006 10:21:54 PM
9/14/2006 10:31:53 PM