My response to that article was as follows:
As Major General Smedley Butler said back on 1935, "War Is A Racket". It was true then, and is true now, *a fortiori*.
I will note that bringing back the draft would not really solve anything. Conscription did not prevent Vietnam from dragging on, and even (largely) universal conscription still doesn't prevent Israel from their own perpetual war against Palestinians and occasionally other neighbors as well. And plenty of non-imperialisitic countries have all-volunteer militaries currently, because they know it's a strategically superior choice in the 21st century.
And then, there is that annoying little detail that conscription is a form of slavery, of course. And the working class would still bear the overwhelming brunt of it, while the elites would still find a way to stay out of harm's way. The middle class, however, would be further hollowed out.
Would it heal our divided nation if brought back today? That is very doubtful. I think it would look far more like the (often very racist) 1863 Draft Riots of NYC than the anti-war protests of the Vietnam era.
In other words, the grass may look greener on the other side, but it still has to be mowed all the same.
One good idea though would be my own variant of General Butler's idea, "consensual conscription", where for all wars going forward, it should be put up to a vote by those of military age. Those who vote no will be exempt, while those who abstain or vote yes will be eligible to be drafted into that war. And renew the vote every year. If the majority vote no, the war must end within 90 days, period. Also, raise the eligibility age to include people in their 40s, 50s and even early 60s. You know, those who are of the age to start the wars but not actually serve in them. Those who are 4F or CO would join the newly-created Human Shield Brigade, which is exactly what it sounds like: a sort of Peace Corps on steroids whose primary purpose is to nonviolently put their bodies on the line to protect civilian populations wherever they are deployed.
Everyone would have skin in the game, and yet no one would be forced or coerced into participating in a war they do not believe in, or any war for that matter.
And eradicating poverty with UBI, free college, single-payer Medicare for all, and stuff like that would also end the so-called "poverty draft" as well. Of course, that would mean we would have to (gasp!) pay our troops what they are actually worth, that is, significantly more than they are currently being paid. And since the federal government is Monetarily Sovereign, they could easily print their own money to do so.
Problem solved.
More details, not included in my response:
The Selective Service System should be put back into "deep standby" like it was from 1975-1980, where all registration is suspended. Only reactivate the registration requirement when an actual draft is either in effect and/or likely will be in the near future. And yes, if that ever does happen, women should be included as well. It's really only fair, right? What's good for the goose is good for the gander, and if you really want equality, you got it, Toyota!
For the record, the TSAP of course does not support bringing back an actual draft. A country that needs a draft to defend itself deserves to lose, and any fair-weather "allies" unwilling or unable to defend themselves without the help of foreign conscript armies from halfway around the world also deserve to lose as well. And if there were a truly "just war", conscription would be unnecessary, as volunteers would be plentiful. But in those vanishingly rare instances where we are actually in a war of necessity, and volunteers are no longer enough, the sacrifice should be shared equally. Not only in terms of gender, but also age, class, race, and so on as well.
If anything, the billionaires should go first, THEN we can talk about drafting the broader working class.
Regardless though, any conscription for the sole or primary purpose of social engineering, as opposed to absolute necessity for defense as a last resort, has absolutely zero place in a free society. It is an alien culture that ultimately belongs to totalitarians.
Also, the half-century old War Powers Resolution of 1973 needs to be updated and tightened so the President cannot just start indefinitely undefined wars willy-nilly, and the President should be held fully liable for any damages resulting from the abuse of this power. Wars or any war-adjacent military actions in foreign countries lasting more than 90 days should require a formal and official declaration of war by Congress per the Constitution, and if not it must be halted within 90 days, no exceptions. No more indefinite or nebulous AUMFs without a very strict sunset clause. No more decades-long quagmires ever again. Like, EVER. And the nuclear launch codes must be taken off of "hair trigger alert", and only given when the President's senior advisers approve.
And of course, the profit needs to be taken out of war. The crony capitalism of the mercenary-industrial complex needs to end yesterday, full stop. And all it would take would be a few tweaks of the tax code, plus the intestinal fortitude to actually enforce it.
As General Butler famously said,
"TO HELL WITH WAR!"
"TO HELL WITH WAR!"
"Either war is obsolete, or man is."
-- Buckminster Fuller
"War, what is it good for? Absolutely NOTHING!"
-- Edwin Starr
"Come the war, come the avarice, come the war, come hell...Come attrition, come the reek of bones, come attrition, come hell...This is why, why we fight, why we lie awake...And this is why, this is why we fight..."
-- The Decemberists
"Now the labor leader's screaming when they close the missile plant, United Fruit screams at the Cuban shore. Call it peace or call it treason, call it love or call it reason, but I ain't marching anymore."
-- Phil Ochs
"I declare the war is over, it's over, it's over..."
-- Phil Ochs
"But the hardest thing I'll ask you, if you would only try, is take your children by their hands and look into their eyes. And there you'll see the answer you should have seen before. If we win the wars at home, there'll be no fighting anymore"
-- Phil Ochs
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