America Doesn't Need Pete Buttigieg's Forced Labor Scheme
“What is freedom? It is the right to choose one’s own employment. Certainly it means that, if it means anything,” thundered Frederick Douglass.

Is forced labor on behalf of the federal government slavery? Democratic presidential hopeful Pete Buttigieg obviously doesn't think so. Fretting to MSNBC's Rachel Maddow about what he sees as the country's lack of "social cohesion," he called for one year of national service as a solution. No doubt he would take offense at any comparison of his scheme to chattel slavery—a comparison such as that offered by former slave Frederick Douglass.
"What is freedom? It is the right to choose one's own employment. Certainly it means that, if it means anything," Douglass thundered in response to Union General Nathaniel P. Banks's policy as military commander of Louisiana of extracting one year of forced agricultural labor from freedmen on behalf of the federal government. "And when any individual or combination of individuals, undertakes to decide for any man when he shall work, where he shall work, at what he shall work, and for what he shall work, he or they practically reduce him to slavery."
Frederick Douglass, who had personal experience of the horrors of slavery, knew how the institution differs from temporary forced national service—and yet he directly compared them and objected to both.
Strictly speaking, the 37-year-old Buttigieg didn't explicitly call for conscription to build "social cohesion." He allowed himself a little deniability by telling Maddow, "One thing we could do that would change that would be to make it, if not legally obligatory, but certainly a social norm that anybody, after they're 18, spends a year in national service."
Does that mean Buttigieg wants a draft or not? It sounds like he wants 18 year-olds to just load themselves on the buses without the muss and fuss of an enforcement mechanism—but he'll consider some arm-twisting if focus groups voice enthusiasm for the idea.
That enthusiasm may not be forthcoming. A 2017 survey by Gallup found 49 percent of Americans favoring the idea and 45 percent opposed. Unsurprisingly, support for mandatory national service rises among older cohorts who are highly unlikely to ever receive a draft notice, winning the nod from a solid two-thirds of those over 65. By contrast, the 18- to 29-year-olds actually targeted by forced labor schemes despise the idea by 57 percent to 39 percent.
Buttigieg seems to think that allowing a choice of civilian or military tasks to fulfill the whims of politicians addresses concerns about mandatory national service. But for many people it's the "mandatory" part that poses the problem.
After General William Westmoreland objected that he did not want to command "an army of mercenaries" as he characterized paid volunteers when he and Milton Friedman famously sparred (PDF) over ending the draft during the Vietnam War, Friedman riposted, "would you rather command an army of slaves?"
Friedman's effort to end the military draft was supported by economist Walter Oi, who argued on dollars-and-cents grounds but had personal experience with the evils of compulsion. At the age of 13, he'd been scooped up by the United States government and forced into an internment camp with roughly 120,000 other Japanese-Americans. "He had some pretty strong feelings about his imprisonment," David R. Henderson, who knew Oi, wrote after the man's death in 2013.
The roughly four million former slaves freed, as Frederick Douglass had already freed himself, from forced labor by the Civil War undoubtedly had "pretty strong feelings" about their former status (even as the freedom they gained remained incomplete). Describing slavery as "robbing the laborer of the hard earned results of his patient industry," Frederick Douglass went on to tell his former master, in an 1855 letter, "In leaving you, I took nothing but what belonged to me, and in no way lessened your means for obtaining an honest living. Your faculties remained yours, and mine became useful to their rightful owner."
While their bondage was nominally limited in duration, such sentiments would have been recognized by American sailors snatched by British press gangs leading to and triggering the War of 1812. While 9,991 Americans formally protested their conscription by British ships, perhaps 20,000 Americans were forced into service overall, making the practice the first-cited grievance by President James Madison when calling for war against Britain. Impressment was no more popular with Britons—Admiral Horatio Nelson estimated that 40,000 sailors deserted the conscription-dependent Royal Navy between 1793 and 1801.
Later, the U.S. military had its own problems with unwilling conscripts (as well as regretful enlistees). Over 420,000 soldiers, sailors, marines, and airmen deserted between 1966 and 1972, during the Vietnam War.
Forcibly extracting labor from the unwilling has a long history in this country, as does resistance to the same.
If forcing people to do labor that they wouldn't do of their own accord is nothing new, neither is Buttigieg's social-engineering grandiosity in pronouncing national service a boon to "social cohesion." Such force-'em-for-their-own-good sentiments echo a 1967 Selective Service document that pronounced even the mere requirement of draft registration as a goad to "more effective human beings."
But if history is any example, the only cohesion to be found will be that of shared resentment. And if the conscripts become more effective at anything, it will likely be defiance and escape.
It's odd how a country with a miserable history of forced labor and two wars fought over the issue keeps revisiting the idea as if it's a newly minted work of genius. But here we are, with Pete Buttigieg joining a long and disreputable list of pundits and public officials in polishing off this ancient policy turd and passing it off as a solution to what supposedly ails America.
Maybe Buttigieg and his ilk will decide that he never meant the idea of national service to be mandatory at all—or, at least, that it's a good idea to distance themselves from the idea of extracting forced labor from the unwilling. Younger Americans will be able to relax again, at least for a while. And the rest of us will rejoice that decency has prevailed a little longer. The spirit of Frederick Douglass would likely join the celebration.
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"Fretting to MSNBC's Rachel Maddow about what he sees as the country's lack of "social cohesion," he called for one year of national service as a solution."
'National service' = indoctrination.
I have no desire to achieve 'social cohesion' with very many people of my acquaintance.
Does anyone else picture Buttmunch leaning over to Maddow after the interview and whispering "Hail Hydra" into her ear?
Yes. Yes I do.
But, but, but, BUTT HEAD said he was all for Freedom & Liberty when he launched his campaign!
I wonder what him & hubby think about Govt. FORCING Christian bakers who do not want to bake them an anniversary cake to make said cake?
yes lets hear for Soviet style re-education camps. His father was a co-founder of the Gramsci International Society ... So Pete knows a thing or two about indoctrination
"His father was a co-founder of the Gramsci International Society …"
I did not know that.
Gramsci: The leader of the Italian branch of screwy econ theories!
go to the page they have posted an obit for him
Usually, when a politician starts talking about "social cohesion," it indicates that they don't really have a damn clue as to how that is created. Nice to see that Buttigieg isn't breaking that streak.
He's obviously thinking back to the New Deal government make-work programs like the CCC, PWA, and WPA, but people didn't join those organizations out of a sense of social solidarity, they did it because they were desperate for work to feed themselves and their families. They were paid comparatively shit wages (about $6000 a year in inflation-adjusted terms), lived in tents and tarpaper-covered shacks, worked with almost no safety regulations at all, and most of their money was sent home.
Try to get the average college student today to get within shouting distance of that work environment, and they'd desert within a week.
Within a day, nay, an hour
I love the word 'ilk'. It conjures up just the right amount of creepiness that needs to be associated with such nonsense.
How would Butthead propose to pay for such a program, because I can tell you right now that such a program would not generate positive cashflow. Unless, of course, you are going to rent out this conscripted workforce to the highest bidder. Which would be an interesting way to get white folks picking lettuce and eliminate the need for immigrants to do 'those jobs'.
Paying for it is only the half of it. How would he ensure that these work camps where the prols got lots of fresh air and hard work were not just rape camps? How would you ever keep the criminal element under control in such an environment?
I assumed, of course, that rape camps were the intended outcome. Once you do away with the notion of consent being necessary before requiring a person's involvement in work activities, doing away with the necessity for consent in sexual activities isn't far behind.
"I can tell you right now that such a program would not generate positive cashflow."
Don't you realize that digging holes and filling them back in is highly lucrative?
Hmmm sounds suspiciously like another PB.
Could be the same guy. Does our PB like little boys, or little girls? That might be a clue.
Meanwhile in America...
Private payrolls grew by 275,000 last month, the biggest increase since July, when they expanded by 284,000.
Services-providing jobs increased by 223,000 in April, led by a gain of 59,000 jobs in professional and business services.
http://www.cnbc.com/2019/05/01/private-payrolls-surge-by-275000-in-april-blowing-past-estimates-and-the-biggest-gain-since-july.html
When you get down to it, this creepy little bastard, and my God is creepy, is offended by this and wants to ensure as many people as possible are dependent upon the government and under his creepy little thumb as possible. That is all "social cohesion" means; under the control of creepy fucks like Buttigieg.
Did you just post something good about the economy? You know any good economic news should still be credited to Obama right?
Is your parody mask slipping? Cause this reads like sarcasm.
Cut him some slack, most of these people are beyond satire. OBL has a tough job.
Yeah - should be more like "the unexpectedly good numbers just show that the foundation laid by Obama is so strong that despite the expectations of some of the world's leading economists, even Trump has been unable to sabotage it."
Or better "...imagine how much better it would be if Trump was not actively sabotaging it."
I thought the same earlier today; he posted something along the lines of anything good about the economy must be attributed to Obama. Not parody at all.
Progressive idiocy knows no bounds and has no shame
"Not parody at all."
Hard telling. He did let the mask fall once about 6 months ago and posted a direct repeat of a commie-kid comment (remember him?); more than a little suspicious.
I'm thinking it might be less parody and more simple trolling.
When you get down to it, this creepy little bastard, and my God is creepy,
He looks more like a walking, talking ventriloquist's dummy... like Disney's Pinocchio became a real politician.
That is a good description of him. He just makes my skin crawl. As evil as she is, I would rather have to put up it Harris as President. Seeing her on the news every day would enrage me but it wouldn't be as unpleasent as seeing Buttigieg every day.
Hit the nail on the head. The question now is who's hand is up is ass.
Assuming lack of "social cohesion" really is a problem, it can best be remedied by a Koch / Reason open borders immigration policy. The more diverse our country becomes — the more religions we follow, the more languages we speak — the stronger the bonds between us.
I realize this sounds counterintuitive, but scientific research confirms it.
You need to up your game or take a break or something.
Like John noted, OBL has a tough job. Every day someone goes off on him as though he would serious.
No doubt he would take offense at any comparison of his scheme to chattel slavery
Seriously, why compare it to chattel slavery when you can just compare it to the draft.
While the majority of Venezuelans suffer, Maduro dines at luxurious restaurants and treats his family to extravagant skydiving adventures. The president’s corrupt behavior is a reflection of his inner circle, which is composed almost entirely of crooks. To name a few, Diosdado Cabello, Chavismo’s second in command, who served as president of the Constituent Assembly under Maduro, is the head of an international drug-trafficking organization known as the Cártel de los Soles (Cartel of the Suns), along with Néstor Reverol, minister of the interior and justice. Maduro’s nephews, known in the media as the narco sobrinos, are imprisoned in the United States for their involvement in the same drug trade. Meanwhile, Maduro’s former vice president, Tareck El Aissami, now Minister of Industries and National Production, has effectively acted as an ambassador to the terrorist organization Hezbollah, inviting its militants to train with FARC rebel forces in Venezuela. These are just some of the people who have led the country into chaos and who have dutifully followed Maduro while the rest of the country suffers under starvation, looting, illness, and extreme poverty.
http://news.yahoo.com/economics-tyranny-venezuela-103004780.html
Everything this creepy little shit says is just a ruse put up in hopes of looting the country.
Wait a minute Maduro is doing this for the people.. all socialist/communist corruption is for the good of the people.
Mayor Pete knows this and also knows the proletariat is mindless and vote for because he is a clean, articulate white married gay guy that checks a lot of boxes ... But he is dangerous
you can just compare it to the draft
Which, shockingly, the Boomers no longer consider such a bad idea.
One of the things that drives me crazy about the people who want to bring back the draft is their complete ignorance of how brutal a draft military has to be. With a volunteer force, the threat of kicking someone out is a real deterent and means of maintaining dicipline. But if everyone there or most are drafted, they want to get out. So, the threat of kicking them out doesn't work. If we had a draft the military would have to go back to punishments like forced labor and bread in water and things like that to maintain dicipline. The people who want a draft have no clue what that means.
Of course if this creep ever got his way, we would have a civilian "service corps" that had to do the same thing. I wish someone would ask him how he would handle people who refused to do this or refused to work once they got there.
But if everyone there or most are drafted, they want to get out. So, the threat of kicking them out doesn’t work. If we had a draft the military would have to go back to punishments like forced labor and bread in water and things like that to maintain dicipline. The people who want a draft have no clue what that means.
Corporal punishment or foolish military adventurism... whatever thins the ranks.
Maybe the old British military toast?
"Here's to bloody wars and sickly seasons."
But if everyone there or most are drafted, they want to get out. So, the threat of kicking them out doesn’t work.
My father-in-law's story is instructive that way. He was drafted, and they tried to make him an MP, but he kept screwing things up on purpose to make sure they took that job away from him. Then they sent him to Vietnam as a sniper, but he never shot anybody. He would just sit in a tree and listen to music on headphones. Then they put him in the general infantry, where he would refuse to carry a gun or to follow much of any orders.
When they would threaten to discipline him he would say "what are going to do, send me to Vietnam?"
What they can do is shoot him. And that happened more than the country likes to admit. The draft creates a brutal military and is something that should only be resorted to in the most dire of emergencies.
Honestly, I think modern weapons have gotten so lethal that we will never be able to use giant armies again and the draft will likely never be necessary.
What they can do is shoot him. And that happened more than the country likes to admit.
Indeed - IMHO he's lucky to be alive considering what a dick he was to his fellow soldiers.
I think modern weapons have gotten so lethal that we will never be able to use giant armies again and the draft will likely never be necessary.
Agreed.
Yeah, that unit cohesion can be a bitch during a draft.
Had a friend one time whose guard unit got an all expense paid tour of southeast Asia. They had a guy like that, kept screwing up, and in ways that endangered the whole squad. One patrol my friend figured out that the several weeks of training had pretty much been telling him any problem can be solved with an M-16. So next patrol when there was a shot heard, and everyone was flat on the ground, he shot the fuck up in the leg.
He will bring on the brown shirts
The problem wasn't the draft, the problem was the draft being used to oppose the commies.
Meh - I think it's considerably more venal than that. My own Boomer father is quite anti-commie, and thinks the US was 100% in the right in Vietnam, but did whatever he could to avoid getting drafted in the '60s. By the time of Gulf I, he was unironically arguing for conscription to fight off the global threat of Sadam Hussein. I pointed out his hypocrisy, but I don't think he heard me.
The problem was the draft being used to implement a strategy of "winning hearts and minds" WITH NAPALM.
Not having to pay soldiers what their service was worth made it easy to make war without thinking about the costs or effectiveness.
Or you know, serfdom.
America Doesn't Need Pete Buttigieg's Forced Labor Scheme
We need Bernie's forced labor scheme!
Come on Unicorn. The camps will give you fresh air, lots of invigorating hard work, and a chance at being reducated to end your false consciousness. What is not to love?
We need Bernie’s forced labor scheme!
Are we at the point where there are more candidates on the left who've proposed
forced laborsocial cohesion camps than haven't?Since both parties are equally evil and stupid where's the GOP's answer to these calls for concentration/conversion camps? Seeing the Democrats plunge ahead in such endeavors undaunted, I'm even more disappointed in Trump's abject failure to deliver on his promises of cattle cars and concentration camps.
I've seriously seen comments from Trump supporters which go like, "I hate the Chicoms, but they're doing great things to the Uighurs."
I’ve seriously seen comments from Trump supporters which go like, “I hate the Chicoms, but they’re doing great things to the Uighurs.”
I've seriously seen retards suffering from TDS embarrass themselves by alluding to almost entirely unrelated comments made by Trump supporters... but I wouldn't hold that against Democrats.
Err, I was responding to the last sentence in the post. I assure you that I do not suffer from TDS; I’ve had so much winning that I’d ask him to slow down.
he called for one year of national service as a solution.
OK, Pete--step up and set the example. Take a year off now and volunteer for, oh, the Peace Corps.
He's devoted his whole life to public service, not just a single year as he's asking our spoiled young people to do (after voting for him).
I hope to God I don't need a /sarc tag for that.
Never tell them if it is sarcasm, or even parody.
If they don't know, they deserve to have the heart attack.
Sounds like Americorp. And the idea is to give young people an alternate route towards service than the military. If voluntary and paid for by redirecting $ from Labor, Education, HHS, etc, then why not?
I don't think he would make this voluntary.
I'm pretty sure that congress and SCOTUS would have something to say about forced labor. Although I guess he could just declare a bogus national emergency like his predecessors.
I’m pretty sure that congress and SCOTUS would have something to say about forced labor.
And that something is 'laborhesion'.
Nice!
It's exactly like Americorps, except it uses force.
That would make it not voluntary for the people funding this.
"Sounds like Americorp. And the idea is to give young people an alternate route towards service than the military. If voluntary and paid for by redirecting $ from Labor, Education, HHS, etc, then why not?"
Well there are a few problems here. First and most glaring is why in the fuckity fuck is digging ditches in a national park providing better "service" than getting a paying job as a nurse or software engineer? There is nothing about a government labor camp that provides better service to society at large than an actual job would. After all people are willingly paying you to do that stuff unlike these labor camps.
That leads to the second problem. Instead of me voluntarily paying one of these young people for things I want like medical service or perfectly cooked french fries I am being forced to pay for shit I don't want like painting the walls at the Che Guevara Heroism Memorial museum or whatever they would be using my money for.
Society expresses what is of service by willingly offering money to do things they find valuable. This is paying people and wasting resources on shit nobody wants and using force to either collect the resources to pay for it or force to get people to work or both.
BS. If government isn't doing it, it's not worth doing.
There should be reparations for anyone who was conscripted into the military.
That's an interesting thought. Of course conscripts did get paid, and swore an oath.
Well, swore, anyway - - - - - -
1. Slaves received compensation also. Some even got paid.
2. 'Swear this oath or get locked in a cage' means the oath is, like any contract agreed to under coercion, invalid.
And the reparations should be paid by women, since they benefited from the draft but were not subject to it.
Perhaps Buttigieg just wanted 18 year olds to service him (under threat of force, of course, otherwise where's the fun?), and you are all yammering about Frederick Douglas and Enlightenment values.
Why limit involuntary servitude to the young? Instead, just pick all able-bodied adults who have not already served in the military. And make sure this includes former politicians and judges.
Excellent. And what's magic about "a year"? Make it at least a *decade*. Let's fucking build up that "social cohesion"!
You guys are thinking too small.
Why limit it to people who haven't served in the military? Why limit the duration at all. Just think of the public works that could be accomplished if you could pull anyone, anywhere, at anytime - to serve the public, of course.
"Sotomayor said, “I believe in forced labor,” and. “If I had my way, I would make pro bono service a requirement.”"
https://tinyurl.com/y2ocxvft
if you could pull anyone, anywhere, at anytime – to serve the public
It's called "jury duty".
Now we can expand it to digging ditches and a new Presidential Mansion!
"Unsurprisingly, support for mandatory national service rises among older cohorts who are highly unlikely to ever receive a draft notice, winning the nod from a solid two-thirds of those over 65. By contrast, the 18-29 year-olds actually targeted by forced labor schemes despise the idea by 57 percent to 39 percent."
Curiously, the patterns seems reversed when it comes to socialism - aka stealing from business (and worse). Young people like the idea, older people - maybe because they're more likely to have stuff worth stealing - are more likely to be against it.
A Venn diagram of 18-29 year-olds targeted by forced labor schemes who despise the idea and a similar age group who supports socialism would form a nearly perfect circle.
Every one of these sorts of policies will not be coerced. We will just somehow get everyone to agree with us that this is important, in a society where we supposedly are severely lacking in social cohesion. Wait, how does that work?
Young people should give up a year of their lives, medical professionals should just accept that they should be paid less without changing how they work. People on a UBI will volunteer more. Everybody will do what we want them to, because that is how people work.
Some dipshit millenial journolister was claiming that you could cut doctor pay by 1/3rd to achieve medicare for all because "they would get over it".
Oh, they'd "get over it", alright. 8-(
It is something that is jaw droppingly incomprehensible that someone could actually put that forward as a serious proposal.
Yeah, they would get over it alright.
Last thing you hear as you go under the anesthesia is "what shall we do to this one?".
The hilarious thing is, if everyone agreed that this sort of thing was important - there'd be no need to do it.
They do not seem to understand the relationship between cause and effect.
Sorry it took me so long to comment on this article. I returned to my apartment about an hour ago. It turns out that an involuntary psychiatric patient can be released from the county hospital without signing the discharge papers if the treating psychiatrist is so against providing her services to him that she calls security to escort me off the hospital grounds.
Anyway ... yeah, forced economic relationships are a bad idea, but they are the core of the Democratic Party's platform these days.
Strong work. Welcome back to the living.
It's odd how a country with a miserable history of forced labor and two wars fought over the issue keeps revisiting the idea as if it's a newly minted work of genius.
Maybe that's because the kernel of the idea is why this country was FOUNDED. We were not founded as a place where individuals would build a nest in the wilderness in order to become self-reliant hermits. We were founded on the notion that any society/community worth a shit would also have to find a way to make itself successful by leveraging the freely-chosen talents of individuals. From Franklin's Junto to the militia to the FreeMasons to Toqueville's 'civic associations' to yes even the way that our citizen-soldiers put Europe back together after Europe obliterated itself.
There is nothing 'easy' at all about this. All of our attempts to 'make it happen' rather than help to 'let it happen' have been utter failures. And among a people who have now become stupid as dirt, it's no surprise that only those who offer something that stupid people can understand now voice their idea of the 'choice' in front of us - become a bunch of individualist hermits or coerce ourselves into a 'mass'.
Congrats Tuccille. You have now joined the utterly worthless looking for easy tropes/cliches.
Can someone translate this gibberish for me?
Apparently, it wasn't good enough that Steve Rogers volunteered to join the Army and for the Super Soldier program. JFree thinks that unless he signs the Sokovia accords, his service isn't really on behalf of the world, just for himself and his friends.
Hail Hydra, JFree, hail Hydra.
'Voluntary association' is the rainbows and unicorns of libertarianism. Buttigeg's comment (mandatory or social norm) opened the door to what COULD HAVE BEEN an actual article about how voluntary association can be made the basis for community/national (define your level) service. How it used to work in this country - how it died - how it can work BETTER than mandatory. Hell anything. Maybe he could have even influenced a pol to change his own proposal in a libertarian direction while it's still half-baked.
Tuccille chose instead to overtly distort what the pol said (and admit that he distorted it). In order to do some libertarian virtue-signalling and fling poo at his straw man. Demonstrating once again why libertarians seem to have nothing to offer but 'get off my lawn'.
You actually read the article?
Yeah
Strictly speaking, the 37-year-old Buttigieg didn't explicitly call for conscription
Those aren't my words. They are Tucille's. Who then proceeds to build an entire article around the assumption that he did explicitly call for conscription (if not outright chattel slavery). It's dishonest and contemptible. Esp since he also then completely wastes any opportunity to do anything but yap on about the irrelevant and fling poo around. Which isn't really a surprise since that seems to be the sum total of libertarianism in these parts.
JFree
May.1.2019 at 10:10 pm
"Strictly speaking, the 37-year-old Buttigieg didn’t explicitly call for conscription"
"Those aren’t my words. They are Tucille’s. Who then proceeds to build an entire article around the assumption that he did explicitly call for conscription (if not outright chattel slavery)."
Either the English language is a mystery to you, or you're an outright liar. Or both.
No, Tucille did not build an article around the assumption that the lefty twit *explicitly* called for conscription. The lefty twit gave himself an 'out' by never doing so, but by *implicitly* calling for conscription.
You might try an ESL course...
Sounds like JFree's got a boner for Mayor Peter-puffer Ballgag and is really pissed that Tucille is making fun of something he said.
Those are mutually contradictory.
...social-engineering grandiosity in pronouncing national service a boon to "social cohesion."
More for Biden to dissemble. Seriously, at what point does the Democrat Party reign in these unbounded candidates with their rampant wish lists of anything and everything that pops up among the chattering class of social media? Or [as I hope] are they going to careen headlong into an actual political race with these memes?
>>>"One thing we could do that would change that would be to make it, if not legally obligatory, but certainly a social norm that anybody after they're 18 spends a year in national service."
"we" who? another thing we could do is not be a power-creeper, weirdo.
Wrong.
Mr. Buttpig's plan for forced labor is long overdue.
Forced labor worked wonders in Hitler's Germany, Stalin's Soviet Union and Mao's China.
Just think of the wonders it will do here in America.
Quit being so negative.
I'm sure after our government betters got the taste of enslaving citizens, they'd totally decide that a year of that is plenty
You ignored an important question: Does this actually work? Would any kind of conscription actually increase social cohesion? How do you measure social cohesion? What exactly is social cohesion?
Social cohesion is a term invented by focus groups paid by Butt's campaign managers. It is useful because it is so far unique among the Dem candidates, and has a progressive communitarian sound that may garner votes among the 18-37 yo Dem/Independent crossover demographic.
Yep.
Bullshit from inception; a buzz-word now run up the flag pole to see who salutes.
There’s a core of an idea there.
Drop the force part, and then make all walfare and benefits contingent on it.
Rules for Peace: Don’t use, or threaten to use, violence to achieve personal, social, or political goals. Corollary: Don’t hit me or take my stuff. Nuff said!
Strictly speaking, the 37-year-old Buttigieg didn't explicitly call for conscription to build "social cohesion."...
J.D., when you wrote this statement, it should have been a big red flag to you that you were about to embark on some intellectually dishonest bullshit.
Your Godwinning here is cute and all, but maybe instead of making hysterical comparisons to slavery and internment camps, you could have spent a few minutes looking at modern examples of national service to see whether they work more or less well.
"Your Godwinning here is cute and all, but maybe instead of making hysterical comparisons to slavery and internment camps, you could have spent a few minutes looking at modern examples of national service to see whether they work more or less well."
You fucking ignoramus, whether they 'work' or not is irrelevant; they are slavery.
Fuck off you pathetic piece of shit.
Slavery worked very, very well. Ask any plantation owner. It worked so well that the South seceded to preserve it.
Of course productivity was minuscule, free blacks in the North were far more productive. The overall standard of living was well below that of the North. The culture that supported the idea of racial hierarchies was utterly depraved. Arguments were settled with pistols (or swords) at dawn.
"Worked" is a non-concept since the criteria for "working" always goes unnamed. That's because if the criteria were made public the public would storm the plantation with torches and pitchforks. The real criteria is always "I get to tell everyone else where to work, how to work, when to work, what work to do and where to send the product of their work".
The only proper answer to any kind of forced service is "Fuck you!"
Mayor Pete doesn't have to send armed thugs to kidnap people into his social service press gangs. All he has to do is deny driver's licenses to those unwilling to serve. Maybe a hit to your credit report for good measure. Want to buy a gun? Not if you don't serve. Maybe no in state tuition at any college accepting federal funds.
There are plenty of ways to get you to "volunteer". Mayor Pete knows them all.
Forced labor by the Federal government is nothing new, remember the draft?
I think it is a fine idea balanced against "free stuff" - such as college, etc. You take free stuff; you work off at least some of the cost. If you pay your way, you don't have to. Fact is, Americans are shitty, lazy citizens/sheep, so he's dead on in that respect.
Mark me down as a cynic, but whenever a politician starts jabbering bout 'Social Cohesion', I head him whining "They just don't do what we TELL them to!"
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[…] to slice it up. The USSA seems a more appropriate acronym to use when democrats discuss ideas. As Reason so aptly put it: no doubt he would take offense at any comparison of his scheme to chattel slavery—a comparison […]
[…] to slice it up. The USSA seems a more appropriate acronym to use when democrats discuss ideas. As Reason so aptly put it: no doubt he would take offense at any comparison of his scheme to chattel slavery—a comparison […]
[…] slice it up. The USSA seems a more appropriate acronym to use when democrats discuss ideas. As Reason so aptly put it: no doubt he would take offense at any comparison […]
[…] to slice it up. The USSA seems a more appropriate acronym to use when democrats discuss ideas. As Reason so aptly put it: no doubt he would take offense at any comparison of his scheme to chattel slavery—a comparison […]
[…] to slice it up. The USSA seems a more appropriate acronym to use when democrats discuss ideas. As Reason so aptly put it: no doubt he would take offense at any comparison of his scheme to chattel slavery—a comparison […]
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[…] As Reason so aptly put it: no doubt he would take offense at any comparison of his scheme to chattel slavery—a comparison such as that offered by former slave Frederick Douglass. […]
[…] like this plan because it encourages volunteering without coercion like Pete Buttigieg (D-Indiana) proposes. Moreover, rewards points work, I often shop at Kroger and Safeway Stores to collect them. Thus, […]