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Command Post What is this?
Posted on Nov 19, 2018
Maj Michael Haynie
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Good article, my thanks. I like your suggestions for both defense contractors and for colleges & universities. I'm OK with taxing all American households as you suggest, exempting military households - as they are or already served!! One of those proposed revenue streams should fund VA medical shortfalls, and specifically - thousands of medical position vacancies, to include (notably) mental health professionals and women's health practitioners.

One small correction - roughly 70% of our youth are ineligible to enlist -- without a waiver. The number is still alarming but many 17-24 yr olds can and do get waivers for various reasons - mostly to do with childhood asthma and the use of certain steroid-based meds; diagnosis of children attention-deficit type disorders and the med associated with that; childhood obesity; and a few other types of medical issues that have exploded in the last 10-20 years; along with character, drug use, and educational deficiencies, of course. The other factor in the services struggling with recruiting goals has to do with the economy, which, when improving - effects that propensity to serve. More perceived opportunity in the civilian world = less interest in the volunteer military.
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CPT Gurinder (Gene) Rana
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We learn from the experiences of others, which prepares us better for the situation and in finding the best solution for that problem, Maj Michael Haynie Sir.
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SGT Walter Lester
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I also agree that freedom is not shared by the American public. My daughter gave me a T shirt that says I'm a Vietnam Veteran and that Freedom is not Free, I paid for it. We all paid for it, veterans and active service alike. If we reinstate the draft system, it will save us money in wasted cost of the legal system having to process and incarcerate drug and violence to support the drug use. We need a backup to the military system for a ready reserve of fighting personnel. After these persons serve their period of the draft, then offer them a what ever we can to keep them in service. After their service period they may change their mind and opinion of the military. I was drafted and it worked for me.I had to put a few things on hold until I got out. Most of them were just dreams.
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Edited 7 y ago
Well said!!!!!
SP5 Michael Chambers
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There used to be a solution for this...our elected officials would never have gotten elected unless they were veterans. I would mandate service for all government positions. And if we were really going out on a limb then every member of Congress in order to vote to go to war should have to give a member of thier family to go fight. That is the historical approach. Sounds harsh. It also made people consider much more carefully before wanting to go to war. If this seems to drastic for anyone...then do what you can under the system we have...go vote.
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CPO Michael Hatten
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I think the population should actually feel the cost of going to war. I would like to see two things:
1. Taxes to pay for the wars. Wars are expensive and we shouldn't pass all the debt on to our children.
2. Return of the draft. Make sure the fighters come from every neighborhood instead of getting so many from economically stressed areas.
People might think twice if the war cost them money and their own kids might be sent to fight.
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Cpl Bill Johnson
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Stop getting into unnecessary wars. if we stop supporting politicians who send our young people to war, we will have fewer disconnected veterans. Supporting soldiers has to mean more than shouting USA! USA! like a bunch of idiots.
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SFC David Dean
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Let's understand reality. First, our country's tenor will not likely support in the near or foreseeable future any type of conscription short of a war on the scale of a country attacking the United States similar to Japan's Second World War surprise in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. That being said, it should come as no surprise to anyone that so few will volunteer to serve. I personally served as an Army Recruiter in California's Bay area from 1983 to 1986 and I will tell anyone that the military was not and continues to be a choice that is unlikely to be taken by most youth. In essence we have the same sense of entitlement that pervasively runs through our country and culture that is "let those who can do nothing else serve in the military" and they want much given to them (those who refuse to serve) with no cost involved to their time or lives. I served 20 years on active duty from 1973 to 1993 and saw this firsthand and heard the sentiments echoed many times by these folks. As for forcing organizations to contribute, I would profer that it would not be far-removed from the very concept that our country was founded; Taxation without representation. One stellar aspect of many that marks our country is we have sought to avoid such tyrrany that this concept engenders.
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Nicole Thomas
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Sir, without having access to this whole article, I first commented that We Do. Now having been able to read this entirly. I agree with you 100%.
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CW3 Kevin Storm
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I was deeply disappointed that the leadership of this nation did nothing from the on start of the wars to make the American people be a part of the Wars. During WWII their was rationing, did anyone have a hard time getting anything in this country? Hell we gave tax incentives to buy fuel inefficient automobiles. No we made a colossal mistake not forcing Americans to give something up for the War IMHO.
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