Posted on Mar 11, 2016
COL Mikel J. Burroughs
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This question is for our Vietnam era Veterans here on RallyPoint. Share with us what your feelings were when you first received and opened your draft notice.

The Comments Here are Historical and Awesome!

What was your stance on the war? Explain your opinion

Did your parents put ideas into your head about the war that you didn't nessisarly believe in?
Edited 4 y ago
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Responses: 917
MSG Intermediate Care Technician
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While I can't say what it felt like to open my draft notice, I can say it was rather annoying to fill out one Selective Service Registration while in Basic Training..........only to come home and receive another notice that I need to register for the Selective Service.
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SSgt Wes ODonnell
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Warms my heart to hear from all of these 'Nam veterans. Love my brothers-in-arms.
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CPT Pedro Meza
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The drafted had ended in 72, and I turned 18 in 73 but was required to go to the draft board and pick up my draft card when I enlisted into the delay entry program in Oct 73, I say both RA number and SSN all the time, worst was the gas chamber.
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COL Mikel J. Burroughs
COL Mikel J. Burroughs
8 y
CPT Pedro Meza Thanks for sharing your story and thank you for your service!
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CPT Pedro Meza
CPT Pedro Meza
8 y
COL Mikel J. Burroughs - Thank you for staring this thread and for your service too.
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PO1 William "Chip" Nagel
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Day Late and a Dollar Short. Stopped the Draft just following Vietnam and I was one of the Early Non Draft Volunteers in 76.
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COL Mikel J. Burroughs
COL Mikel J. Burroughs
8 y
PO1 William "Chip" Nagel Thanks for your service - just ahead of you in 1975!
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MSgt Michael Bischoff
MSgt Michael Bischoff
7 y
Me too, missed it by that much (1976)
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MSgt Michael Bischoff
MSgt Michael Bischoff
4 y
Me too:)
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Capt Jim Ross
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My wife and I returned home from eloping. I was 19 and underage in Illinois to get married without the parents consent and mine did not want me to get married. My wife, by the way was 18 and legal. I knew I was to was suppose to let the draft board know of any changes to marital status, so I went to the court house to let them know and they told me they had mailed it out the prior week. (We had eloped over the Christmas shutdown at the factory I worked at, so the mail was slow due to the holiday rush.) I left the court house and went straight to the Air Force recruiter, took the AFQT, passed and was sworn into the AF 24 hours prior to having to be in Chicago to be sworn in the Army. I as a mustang Captain after 21 1/2 years (almost evenly divided between enlisted and commissioned) and we are still married after celebrating our 48th anniversary this past Christmas Eve.
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LCDR Retired
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Heh, heh. Judging by other comments here, I reckon my experience wasn't unique. I had been on active duty for about six months when my notice arrived to my home of record.
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SFC Drill Sergeant
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I was a volunteer, but my Dad's story about his draft notice was pretty epic. Back in town from a while at sea with the merchant marine, my pop calls my grandparents to see about swinging by for dinner. "That's great, Son, but you had better call the draft office. They have been looking for you." So he gets the number and calls straight away from the phonebooth. "Where have you been, Brabenec? We were going to swear out a warrant for your arrest." His brilliantly simple reply, "Saigon." I know that was not exactly the question asked, but I had to share.
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PO2 Marc Gunter
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I'm post-op Vietnam but I entered boot camp at Great Lakes four weeks before my 18th birthday...three days after my birthday, Company Commander called me to go to personnel and sign my Selective Service papers. I asked if he was serious and his reply was "I don't make the dumbass rules, I just make sure you follow them. "
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PO2 Marc Gunter
PO2 Marc Gunter
7 y
That should be Post-Vietnam... stupid phone.
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PO1 Jack Voigt
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I never got one. Coming from a military family, both parents served during WWII and father was career Air Force, I was taught that it was not the military's place to question orders but to carry them out. I actually volunteered for the Nam. I still blame the politicians for that fiasco and the fact that many good men and women sacrificed for what was essentially nothing.
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Cpl Armando Mireles
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In 1970 my number came up, I could have been college exempt. Instead I volunteered for service.
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