Mandatory National Military Service Is a Bad Idea
Donald Trump's acting Secretary of Defense Christopher Miller advocated the plan this week, which Trump later called a "ridiculous idea."

In December, the Department of Defense revealed that it had missed its collective recruitment goals for the armed forces by 41,000; among the separate military branches, only the Navy and Space Force met their individual goals.
Given that, according to FiveThirtyEight, President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump are running nearly dead even in their respective bids for a second term, either man is as likely as the other to be called upon to address that shortfall.
One former Trump Cabinet secretary is pushing national mandatory military service. If elected, Trump would do well to reject the idea.
Christopher Miller served as Trump's acting Secretary of Defense for roughly two months, between the 2020 election and Biden's inauguration. In a December 2023 interview with Hugh Hewitt about Cabinet appointments in his potential second term, Trump said that Miller "did a very good job" and could potentially be reappointed.
Miller told The Washington Post that a national mandate on military service should be "strongly considered," adding, "Why wouldn't we give that a try?"
The Post also quotes other Republicans in support of the idea, including Sen. J.D. Vance (R–Ohio), a potential Trump running mate, who advocates some form of "skin in the game," potentially through mandatory service.
After the Post story was published, Trump pushed back, calling it a "ridiculous idea" in a post on Truth Social. "The Story is completely untrue," Trump wrote. "In fact, I never even thought of that idea."
Good. Because mandatory national military service is inherently antithetical to American liberties, and Miller is wrong to propose it.
To answer Miller's question most directly, the idea of mandatory service inherently contradicts the idea of a "volunteer" military, which the U.S. has had since it abolished the draft in 1973.
But more broadly, the idea "undermines one of the fundamental principles of a free society: that people own themselves and their labor," writes Ilya Somin, a law professor at George Mason University. "We are not the property of the government, of a majority of the population, or of some employer. Mandatory national service is a frontal attack on that principle, because it is a form of forced labor—literally so."
Indeed, we would rightly condemn any effort to force most Americans to spend a hurricane season deployed with the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) or to serve a stint at the IRS processing tax returns. So why, then, should we be okay with a forcible tour of duty?
Advocates say that mandatory service would create a sense of national unity; Miller told the Post that military service "reinforces the bonds of civility." At the 2012 Aspen Ideas Festival, Gen. Stanley McChrystal advocated a national service program beginning at the end of high school or college, "because once you have contributed to something, you have a slightly different view of it. And I think that it would be good to have a shared experience." (McChrystal was talking about more than just military service, though he did also advocate bringing back the draft.)
But unity is not a sufficient reason to press people into service. "We could achieve even greater national unity by suppressing dissenting speech and religion," writes Somin. "Yet we rightly recognize that unity is not a valid justification for violating these fundamental human rights. The same goes for the right to be free of forced labor. A unity achieved through coercion is not worth the price."
The idea is fortunately not popular among peer nations. "The 60 or so countries that still require armed servitude to the state are largely impoverished authoritarians like Cuba, Turkmenistan, and Iran," Reason's Matt Welch wrote in 2022. "Of the richer world exceptions, most live in a state of real or perceived existential threat on their borders—Israel, Estonia, Taiwan, Singapore, and South Korea." Thankfully, neither of those scenarios describes us.
It's worth remembering psychologist Abraham Maslow's famous axiom that "it is tempting, if the only tool you have is a hammer, to treat everything as if it were a nail." When McChrystal advocated a form of national service, he prefaced it by observing that "we've never done an extended war with a professional army like this"—referencing the War in Afghanistan, which had lasted for a decade already and would not end for nearly a decade more.
McChrystal noted that while the U.S.'s all-volunteer army "performs magnificently…we're running it very, very hard, and at a certain point you just can't expect it to go forever." Perhaps that's a good thing: If fewer people are available to fight the nation's wars, then maybe lawmakers will be less inclined to start them.
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Given the actions of the current potus pushing for air strikes against Russia from NATO bases, it may be necessary…
No one would miss Russia--not even the Russians!
Fuck off, Joe McCarthy. You don't get to have a war.
More Russians enlisted in their army in one month than Americans enlisted in the US army in the last year. Think about that for a second.
The US military is bloated, corrupt, inefficient, driven by far-left DIE political commissars and hasn't won a conflict against a serious foe (and even 3rd world country) since WW2 (notwithstanding every 10 year or so spanking of some Central American country).
Pentagon budget is 200% in real dollars than during Ike's admin and we have a navy 1/4 the size, an airforce 1/3 the size..where is the money going?
No sane youngster should enlist in US military as they (esp if they are European American) are hated by the senior officer and civilian leaders to fight wars for AIPAC and neocons who want to rule the world...start a draft and watch all the Ukrainian flags disappear. Start a draft and see how the neocon/neolib elite kids get deferments or jobs at the CIA...fuck them all...
Nothing defends freedom like involuntary servitude.
Slavery is Freedom.
"In the course of his [Westmoreland's] testimony, he made the statement that he did not want to command an army of mercenaries. I [Milton Friedman] stopped him and said, 'General, would you rather command an army of slaves?'" -- Milton Friedman
"I also think there are prices too high to pay to save the United States. Conscription is one of them. Conscription is slavery, and I don't think that any people or nation has a right to save itself at the price of slavery for anyone, no matter what name it is called. We have had the draft for twenty years now; I think this is shameful. If a country can't save itself through the volunteer service of its own free people, then I say: Let the damned thing go down the drain!" -- Robert A. Heinlein
Beat me to it.
That final sentence has always stuck with me since whenever / wherever it was I first read it.
At times I wonder if it’s too strong, but somehow it always comes back to being the logical outcome of a libertarian set of postulates.
The same principle should apply to taxes. Instead of holding us hostage and stealing our money the government should be asking for donations. If it can't get the money to prosecute a war or to play foreign aid games then maybe the people really don't support the idea. Thomas Jefferson thought a nation should be so wonderful that it's citizens would line up to happily pay for their honest share.
Somehow I doubt that would work with any of the regimes since... er.. well... probably Thomas Jefferson.
Fuck off, slaver.
You prefer bottles over draft?
Who still drinks bottles?
It’s easier to wrap the paper bag around a bottle.
I guess maybe they still don't make 40 oz cans.
Was this something that was actually said, or is another “anonymous sources close to X” situation?
In an interview, Miller said a national service requirement should be “strongly considered.” He described the concept as a common “rite of passage,” one that would create a sense of “shared sacrifice” among America’s youth.
“It reinforces the bonds of civility,” Miller said. “… Why wouldn’t we give that a try?”
"Said" for a given definitions of "said". Need original transcript. "..." has been used by some reporters to remove paragraphs before.
Right. Maybe this guy said exactly this, or maybe it's the equivalent of how Trump admitted to sexually assaulting several women. I don't trust it without a full audio or a complete transcript these days.
At least the ignorant lunatics who keep screaming about banning "assault weapons" (sic) would finally find out what they were, and that there aren't any assault weapons owned by the public. Education would be dangerous to their confirmation bias. But the heads exploding from cognitive bias might be mistaken by the enemy as an attack.
The article is actually kinda insane in this regard. It's worse than Katie Couric's gun control episode. Like, this message has been brought to you by Joe Lancaster and Reason Magazine.
Imagine going back to 2023, plucking something out of an employee review and then holding the company's HR department to account for that non-committal statement even though the employee doesn't work for the company any more. It's insane. Even more insane than the floated Cancel Culture idiocy "Trudeau should be removed from office because he wore black face."
Even as far as retroactive continuity goes, it's a poor attempt.
I waiting for someone on the Reason staff to say that compulsory military service is very bad, but not as bad as Trump.
It appears that the Defense Department's DEI indoctrination program is failing to reach enough straight white males because telling them that they are the source of all evil tends to discourage them from enlisting.
Since the SWMs are rejecting college as well, there may well be no choice but to conscript them but first, they will have to go to Re-education Camps where they will broken down and made to repent their whiteness, straightness or any-ness that rejects undeserved guilt.
Involuntary servitude in the military was ended in 1973? The LP was against conscription and POOF! away it went after the electoral votes of the 1972 election were counted. The same thing happened with girl-bullying abortion laws. It's almost as if the LP, by reviving the sensible planks of Ann Arbor's Human Rights party and the Eatonville Buffalo Party (featuring The Strawberry Alarm Clock), actually lent spoiler clout to those planks BEFORE our vote share increased by a factor of four thousand six hundred (4600%) by next election season. What a twofer! https://libertariantranslator.wordpress.com/2024/05/15/1976-libertarian-campaign/
I signed up for selective service after that date...
1972 and 1973 must have been great years for old Hank. He mentions the almost as much as Comstock and the Corn Laws.
It was when he became eligible for social security.
Yeah Nixon ended the draft for reasons both cynical and good. The Libertarian party had absolutely nothing to do with it.
Well, since you brought him up...
While it may seem odd that several of his MAGARINO associates advocated this compulsory national service idea, but he shot it down at the first opportunity, the critical distinction between Trump and them is that they are ideologues of a Nat-C bent, but Trump never has been an ideologue of any kind (apart from "orange supremacy", which is, of course, just a joke, but a joke backed by a kernel of truth).
Trump is not a Nat-C, and the Nat-Cs clearly don't control Trump--which is the only silver lining of a potential Trump re-presidency. Unfortunately, because he has no principles and no ideology, he can spin like a top at any time--and probably will.
The draft was the reason for the protests against repelling northern aggression against South Vietnam.
As soon as Nixon ended the draft, the protests were left with nothing but communists and anti-capitalists of varying stripes.
I am surprised there were zero incidences of violence against draft enforcers.
The rest voted Libertarian, the slope of the vote growth graph from 1972 to 1976 being 88.8 degrees. That's a pretty steep slope, no? This was before communist anarchists came rushing at us howling "We're your friends! Don't run away!" Oh, and Ayn Rand spat on Ronnie Reagan's girl-bullying involuntary servitude. Immediately YAF sent scouts out to "former" nazi Germany to find markety-sounding economists that were okay with just a little bit of slavery, like at Krupp, Farben and Teedy Roosevelt's war on race suicide.
Has anything happened since the seventies, Hank?
He doesn't know. He still thinks it is the 70s.
He's one of those guys who holds on to what he thought was "cool" at some point in his youth and never lets go, even when nobody else knows what the fuck he's talking about anymore. Like, if he was 20 in 2013 he'd still be dabbing all the time and constantly trying to locate the very best Harlem Shake video on the internet.
“Harlem shake” sounds vaguely girl-bully-ish.
Wonder if hank likes diddy.
I think that military types, like McChrystal, should be conscripted and forced to write essays on the evils of conscription and the gross stupidity and malice of the current military leadership.
I think that putting their heads in cages with hungry rats would be a good first incentive. 1000 Volts to the genitals would also be an attention getter.
Um... so you call THAT thinking?
I’m guessing miller guy’s kids are too old to be drafted.
it undermines one of the fundamental principles of a free society: that people own themselves and their labor
This has literally never been true in the US.
"We are not the property of the government, of a majority of the population, or of some employer. Mandatory national service is a frontal attack on that principle, because it is a form of forced labor—literally so."
How do you feel about mandatory medical experiments?
How is the draft different from
"Donald Trump's acting Secretary of Defense"
Maybe you missed it, Joe.
Trump lost.
He has no acting SecDef.
Do try to keep up.
I know. That's really pretty weird.
And it's not like he said it while he was working for Trump either.
But Koch said to orangemanbad, so Joe's going to orangemanbad.
I have heard sitting Democrat members of Congress propose various coerced National Service schemes, but an out of office former Trump acting secretary suggests a draft without Trump's support and we get a pearl clutching article. Amazing.
The former acting secretary of defense for Donald Trump who held the office for a short time before Joe Biden took the office.
That's a lot for the title of an article.
I take it Joe Lancaster isn't a veteran.
Don't ask, don't tell.
Why does that matter?
I served a term in the Army, which people say doesn't make me a "veteran" either. I've no idea what that makes me. I also don't care. I qualified for a VA home loan but not for medical care at a VA hospital or for dialysis at a VA dialysis center.
Strange comment. Did you serve in the armed forces and then discharged as anything other than dishonorable?
If yes then you are a veteran.
The other issues arise due to time in service and campaign factors.
See, that's what I've said. But most people who disagree think you need to retire, not simply separate, from the military after 20+ years. I don't know what they think a single term military guy is supposed to be called.
38 U.S.C. § 101(2) provides:
The term "veteran" means a person who served
in the active military, naval, or air service, and
who was discharged or released therefrom
under conditions other than dishonorable.
Net Federal Active Service: If the time
reflected on the DD-214 is less than basic
training (approximately 8 weeks), then the
individual may need to provide additional
documentation showing that the net service
time was for other than training.
• A person without active duty time who was
injured during training may still qualify as a
Veteran.
Also found this:
In Service Before September 8, 1980
There is no minimum length of service required to be considered a veteran for most VA benefits.
Enlisted after September 8, 1980
A minimum service requirement exists. Service members must have served a minimum of 24 months of active duty to be considered a veteran. If the service member becomes disabled because of their time in the service, there is no minimum length of service to qualify for VA benefits.
I served a term in the Army, which people say doesn’t make me a “veteran” either. I’ve no idea what that makes me. I also don’t care. I qualified for a VA home loan but not for medical care at a VA hospital or for dialysis at a VA dialysis center.
Probably someone who didn't serve, or who served "in a combat zone" but always totally safe, like an aircraft mechanic on a carrier.
A veteran is a person who served in a branch of the armed forces, unless they lose that privilege via dishonorable, or certain medical, discharge. VA benefits for healthcare are not tied specifically to being a veteran. I don't know all of the requirements, but it's not as simple as having served. The VA home loan is great though. And the upgrades to the GI Bill. I missed the Forever GI Bill, but the Post-9/11 version was a sweet upgrade.
I'm an honorably discharged veteran, and in 1 term, along with my unit, was awarded, Combat Action, Presidential Unit Citation, GWOT-E and GWOT-S, Iraq Campaign with 2 stars, Good Cookie, Sea Service with 2 stars, and several others I can't recall. When I EASd, the Iraq Campaign Medal didn't exist yet. So, I requested my DD215 in the late 2000s. But, I only served 1 term, so I guess I'm not a veteran either. /shrug
There's also a regulation, which I can't seem to find at the moment, that as an honorably discharged Marine combat veteran, I am allowed to refer to myself as USMC Retired.
Why does it matter that Joe Lancaster isn't a veteran? I suspect that veterans are more likely to be in favor of national service than non-veterans. I think the author was disingenuous to focus on military service only. There are many other forms of national service. Not everybody is cut out for the military.
So what is the libertarian position on draft in the case of total war? Relying on the market may not be a solution. In the case of a truly devastating war, I don't think any country could afford to increase salaries to a market rate that would convince all young, able bodied individuals to sign up
If there is a real total war that must be fought, I think other incentives for volunteering for service come into play besides pay rates.
I tend to agree with the Heinlein quote someone posted above. If the people of a country aren't willing to fight for it when it really matters, then is it really a country worth defending? If people are that unwilling to defend the place, you really don't have much of a country.
I really hope we don't get to find out.
If we get into a 21st Century total war and are not very, very lucky, it really won't matter who joins up and who does not; we'll likely all be dead once the first nuke is used.
(Of course, Heinlein did suggest that a nuclear war might actually select for the survival for those who were smarter, more civic minded, stronger, etc. because they would be in the military and might be in better defended positions.... But I don't want to test that hypothesis)
Calls to mind the lyrics of Tom Leher's "World War III Folk Song." Which closes with the lyric "I'll look for you when the War is over, an hour and a half from now."
Then there are the time constraints mentioned by mathematics Prof. Tom Lehrer https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yrbv40ENU_o
Let's discuss what you mean by a "Total War" before I offer an opinion.
Miller told The Washington Post that a national mandate on military service should be "strongly considered," adding, "Why wouldn't we give that a try?"
Because it would be involuntary servitude, possibly outright slavery, prohibited by the 13th Amendment. As for the Selective Draft Law Cases, 245 U.S. 366 (1918), that was during a war (WWI) and was handed down by a Supreme Court that held individual rights in contempt (e.g., Schenck v. United States and Buck v. Bell). This proposed draft would be unrelated to any war and the Supreme Court has greatly expanded its view of individual rights since 1918.
"The Story is completely untrue,"
Oh, whew. For a minute there I was thoroughly convinced that The WaPo wouldn't never print a wholly fabricated narrative or contrived falsehood.
Thank heavens, once again, Trump was there to remind us that the journalist class doesn't, by some divine right, own the unadulterated and unquestionable truth.
I was just yesterday formatting a translation of Switzerland's constitution from a few years back. Fortress Switzerland does today still have compulsory military service. For a neutral country this is not burdensome. Furthermore women are exempted from military service and also have the benefit of Roe-like protection from compulsory reproduction. The Libertarian platform recommended 100 days' immunity from coercion, the Roe decision increased this by a week or two. The Swiss government will come down hard on anyone bullying a pregnant woman during the first twelve weeks (84 days). "Men and women have equal rights." You can see how Switzerland is justly rated among the world's freest nations. The constitution is written in four languages with every canton participating in its formation.
See my post below. Their military service is only truly compulsory for the three day weekend where the power that be sell the yoots on their three options - six months military service, 1 year alternative service, 13 years of an income tax supplement.
The armed forces have a current recruiting goal of about 100,000 per year.
What are they going to do with the annual cohort of 4,000,000 each year who come of age for mandatory universal conscription?
They can't all be building EV chargers.
It is called "Selective Service" for a reason. You get to select your service. First question on enrollment form: "Do you want to go to college for free and promise to vote Democrat?" or "Do you want an all expense paid trip to Ukraine or Iran?"
Will we still be expected to say "Thank you for your service."?
Indeed, we would rightly condemn any effort to force most Americans ... to serve a stint at the IRS processing tax returns.
Just a doggone minute. *That* has potential, if you catch my drift.
the idea of mandatory service inherently contradicts the idea of a "volunteer" military, which the U.S. has had since it abolished the draft in 1973.
It depends on what is considered mandatory. Switzerland retains a militia system not a volunteer standing army system. Like all militia-based systems, it has a great big 'should' at the heart of that. The term militia describes an organisational principle common in Swiss public life, which is founded upon the republican idea that every qualified citizen should take on public offices or duties in a part-time or voluntary capacity (from Historical Dictionary of Switzerland).
The source of the 'mandatory' is not really legal. It is economic/financial. Specifically, if a community's defense can be covered by people choosing to spend their time contributing to it, then the costs of that can be pretty cheap (even with an incentive structure) and the decisions about scope of defense are made by those who contribute their time. If a community's defense can not be covered by people choosing to spend their time contributing, then the community has to move to a volunteer/mercenary standing army and the costs go up a lot and decisions about scope of defense are made by those who contribute taxes/debt.
Our move to a volunteer/mercenary force merely meant that we could jack up our 'defense' (spending and wars) to whatever money interests want to raise. The US is now their private army.
The mandatory element of the Swiss militia is limited to - literally - the three day weekend where young men (maybe women now) are given a sales pitch that explains the six month military enlistment (or the one year alternative service - or an income tax surcharge for 15 years or so). From that point - they can choose the option they prefer.
The reason the US went to a mercenary army is not because it was some libertarian idea. It's because selling people in militia duty that involved going to Vietnam and killing foreigners en masse for an average of 240 days in combat with a 10% casualty (killed and wounded) rate turned out to be a shitty deal. Instead of asking 'libertarian' questions like wtf are we doing in foreign countries killing foreigners, we chose to be the useful idiots of empire, permawar, and MIC corruption.
Not sure I've ever agreed with you in the past but I think you nailed that down.
“Acting” Secretary of Defense?? The coup has already begun.
Doesn’t that make Trump acting president?
"We could achieve even greater national unity by suppressing dissenting speech and religion," What kind of utter buffoon thinks that suppressing speech and religion produces national UNITY? It beggars the imagination to visualize what contortion of logic arrives at that conclusion.
It might, among those who succumb, and while the armed gestapo is watching, APPEAR to produce unity, but it is certain to produce, when no one is looking, not only a lack of unity among and between the people, but also a more significant lack of unity between the people and their "government."
That is, if not an outright revolution - a real one, not a fabricated febrile fantasy, like the hamburger-flippers that served us up the dish of January 6th being an "insurrection," with a side of propaganda, tried to pass off as reality.
Coerced unity - that's a new one. Among free people, that is. Visions of wailing and screaming by the North Koreans when Kim Jong Il died keep popping into my head. Unity.
But forcing everyone to serve in the military against their will somehow does create unity...
This might not go over well but I would be OK with some sort of service, maybe not just military, being required to vote. This would not be a requirement for citizenship, only for voting. It could also be required for holding office as well. Yes. It's the "Starship Trooper" thing. I am inclined to think, though, that some sort of commitment should be required to acquire the privilege of voting, which is NOT a natural right but a privilege that is meaningless in the absence of the state.
Universal suffrage is one of the things I disagree with Thomas Jefferson. He wanted all men to be voters, not just land owners. I disagree and even disagreed when I was a renter. I think property ownership means you have a greater stake in the well being and governance of a city, state or nation.
I know when I inherited 150 acres of farmland when father died it made me sit back and think more about the kinds of things I was voting for and against. I also tend to think more about the future and the world my son will inherent from me. Buying a house made me really think about the consequences of political choices.
I think there does need to be some "investment" to be able to vote. Since land ownership was the original requirement because land owners paid the taxes that support the government I think the Income Tax is the modern equivalent. To vote show your final signed sheet of your 1040 form which shows how much you paid in, how much you owed and how much more you had to pay or the refund you got. As long as the amount owed is larger than 0 then you can vote. If it is negative or you don't even file because you are on welfare or are not a legal citizen then you can't vote. Anyone can register to be a voter but without proof of having paid taxes you don't get to cast that vote.
Seems fair to me.
I agree sort of. If I was king I’d limit voting to net taxpayers. If you get more back than you pay in, no vote for you. Also no voting if you work in or for government. I’d outlaw public unions as well.
So the only people with a say in who spends taxes would be those without something to gain.
One more thing. I’d tie voting age to the age required to hold the office.
"So the only people with a say in who spends taxes would be those without something to gain."
Not true. The scheme would require an army of bureaucrats (tens of thousands?) at least one per voting station, whose job it would be to check and approve of voter eligibility. (And who may or may not even be eligible to vote themselves.) There's also the matter of privacy. Every voter would have to divulge potentially sensitive information to a stranger, or someone you'd prefer not to have it for whatever reason, something that isn't required of them at the present.
" I’d tie voting age to the age required to hold the office. "
If you're really serious about reducing the number of eligible voters, how about limiting the presidential vote to those who are 35. No younger, no older. Americans would have at most one shot at voting for president, and most wouldn't have any shot at all.
See, this is why it was a good thing the Republicans nominated Trump in 2016. There was a good chance that otherwise we'd've wound up with a pro-draft president.
Tell us again, bloggers, why Trump was a bad pick for the GOP. Without a candidate who had a chance to be elected to coalesce libertarian sentiment around, who would we have gotten? The most moderate Democrat, Biden, turns out to be horrendous. The other Republicans have been interested primarily in BS like this or restricting abortions.
"Coalesce libertarian sentiment around".
What do you mean by that? I seriously want to know what you mean by that and not just the dictionary definition of the words and an analysis by an English major diagramming the sentance. Please expound upon this phrase if you will.
Get enough libertarian votes to make a difference.
I'm not sure how one applies to the other.
I abhor the idea of either civilian or military coerced service. Either is anathema to a free people. That said, IF you have such service, I can at least think of a borderline argument for military service. If one is going to claim a polity, some possibility of an ultimate commitment to that polity in its defense is arguable. Free (or coercively discounted) labor for the latest boondoggle is coercion for coercion’s sake.
Odd that we have a long winded article about military conscription without mentioning the current Biden regime financed conscription being carried out as we speak in Ukraine. 60 years old? Into the meat grinder. No push back from the population because elections aren't necessary per Blinken. Dual citizenship? State department declares that you're on your own because the regime can't defend Americans in Ukraine. Strategic, queasy and reluctantly Reason editors supported conscription. What are you bitching about?
Donald Trump's acting Secretary of Defense Christopher Miller
Pretty sure a private citizen doesn't have an active SecDef.
Or, are you implying that Trump is the rightful President??
Because mandatory national military service is inherently antithetical to American liberties
Especially now that we've made a complete mockery of the armed forces by making it as gay and lame as possible.
Technically, he was the former President's acting Secretary of Defense (for about two months in 2020-21).
I think most readers would have understood that Trump is not currently the President. Not even Trump claims that he is currently the President (just that he won the election).
Hey. Folks want big government? Give it to them.
There is precisely one good argument for universal mandatory military service, and that is to prevent one political faction from becoming so dominant in the military that they face no real opposition to total party control of the country.
For example, if Venezuela had universal military service, they wouldn't be in the situation they are today.
""Of the richer world exceptions, most live in a state of real or perceived existential threat on their borders—Israel, Estonia, Taiwan, Singapore, and South Korea.""
I doubt any of these nations require mandatory military service. Israel exempts Muslims and Orthodox Jews. South Korea exempts gifted students and athletes. The other nations doubtless have other exemptions.
There are benefits to public service, but not sure enough to outweigh the opportunity of abuse. Perhaps working on the incentives would be more prudent.
I see nothing wrong with mandatory service. First, it's not "forced labor" to the extent that enlistees are in fact compensated for their work with pay and benefits. In addition, given that parents in this country are largely failing to instill basic life skills in their children, the military would provide much needed training like: physical fitness, respect, honor and work ethic. Perhaps they could provide the moral compass that today's parents have failed to convey. Then, of course, there is the very real issue of combat readiness and the ability to protect the liberties that everyone seems to hold so dear. If we want those things as a nation, we must be prepared to fight for them and based on these numbers, we may not be able to.
> Donald Trump's acting Secretary of Defense
Sorry, Donald Trump is not the president, nor is he president elect. Hell, he hasn't even been nominated yet, ballots aren't even printed. So why the fuck are you calling this guy the "acting Secretary of Defense"? Holy shit, Reason, get an editor!
Bring back the draft has to be one of the stupidest ideas I've heard in years.
What next?
Give the most corrupt regime in Europe $120 billion?