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Command Post What is this?
Posted on Nov 19, 2018
Maj Michael Haynie
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PO2 Margaret Randle
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Good ideas! I can relate - am an old Navy vet and it is not confined to returning home. I would be in full uniform standing beside my Navy FMF Corpsman husband also in uniform. People would greet him and chat with him and ignore me as if I was invisible. Unfortunately, that has changed very little. We are lacking in adequate medical services, schooling opportunities, and just general recognition.

The caliber of the recent enlisted has declined markedly. Funding is always the excuse - not true. Something needs to be done and if necessary, I will vote for the draft. Interestingly enough, we women are the ONLY members of the military who have NEVER been conscripted in any way!! WE have ALWAYS VOLUNTEERED!!
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GySgt Robert Brigati
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I have been the recipent of one of the worse epidemics to hit the USA. It sounds luficrous, however it's true. It is Invisibility. I speak not of the action hero super power genre. I refer to becoming invisible to other human beings. Anonymity is the PC term for it. Regarding other people as non-existent is the reality of it. After being the recipent of this and talking to many others, who have had a similar experience, it's best to understand this offense to your personal humanity is wide spread and crosses many occupations. There in lies the basic problem. Although a person may not try to find recognition for service, it won't be offered to you except, for rare occasions, as genuine. Standing in the face of this blight will get you knocked over in a tsunami of political correctness. It has to be stood against one incident at a time. I can offer a statement that helps me get through it. "It's not where you've been, it's how you've been there that makes a difference." This statement helps you center on the Warrior within you so, you can fight the battle agsinst indifference.against
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CPT Daniel Cox
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Maj Michael Haynie You have an interesting take on the wars of the last 19 years that I for the most part agree, though I do not think there is any correlation between Draft and Volunteer services for actions of the United States Military.
I think some of your numbers are skewed. You stated that since 1973 we have used force on 220 separate occasions. Having enlisted in 1974 and medically discharged in 1988 I remember the incursion into Grenada to rescue the medical students from ‎25–29 October 1983 was the only major military activity since the end of the Vietnam war in 1975. 20 December 1989 – 31 January 1990 saw Operation Just Cause, where the US invaded Panama so Manuel Noriega could be captured. The First Gulf War, from 2 August 1990 to 28 February 1991 where multi-national, coalition forces reversed Iraq's annexation of Kuwait. From 1992 to 1995 the US forces were part of the NATO intervention in Bosnia and Herzegovina. How many of your 220 operations make up those events?
I really would like to see your list of 244 military actions in the four plus decades since the end of the Vietnam Conflict.
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CPL Edwin Johnston
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Edited >1 y ago
One of our former Presidents Eisenhower proposed this , I think it was called the Eisenhower Doctrine. a two-year mandate for everyone to serve our country. The premise was that there was some type of Job in the military that anyone could qualify for and fulfil. Serve two years then every year a month or two weeks. Didn't go over very well . He also warned us about the Military Industrial Complex that now controls our Military.
During Viet Nam, the Politicians took over our fighting forces with directives and orders to control, our Military leaders on how to fight, what to fight with ,who we could engage with and where we could engage . Result Peace treaty and reunification of Vietnam as a communist country 60,000 lives lost billions spent on Military weapons and machines. Lots of people got very rich.
Desert storm was the last time we showed the world how effective our fighting forces can be. When They were are unleashed to accomplish a very defined mission. liberate Kuwait.
Give them the specific mission to rid Afganistan of the Taliban ,once and forever, Stay the hell out of their way and they will accomplish their mission. Quickly and effectively. However, this isn't going to happen as long as The Military Industrial Complex is involved. !7 years now No end in sight. Thousands of lives lost again, many more maimed and wounded. Billions of dollars spent on Military machines and equipment. Soldiers still dying and lots of people getting rich.
Same story different place.
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Capt Daniel Goodman
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It is an interesting piece....
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SSgt Richard Kensinger
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A very pertinent and critical narrative. I am a clinical psychologist and professor. I also served as a AF ER medic from 1969 to 1973. Keep in mind that combat is gory, not glory. And many civilians are killed as well. In fact, more civilians were killed during Vietnam than combatants on both sides!

Those in combat experience layers of trauma and so do their loved ones. Please see LTC Dave Grossman's "ON KILLING" and TJ Brennaan (w/ Finnbar O'reilly) "Shooting Ghosts". And BTW our current C in C never served. Neither did Nixon who was C in C when I served. On a positive note, more vets are serving in Congress!

However, Congress has not declared war since WW2?
Rich
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SSG Greg Dodson
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Two points, I agree, there should be a mandatory two years active duty service. We are the only country with a standing military that does not have some form of mandatory service. Second point, I'm not sure what you're referring to mandatory donations to military organization. I know of no organizations that you are required to donate too. Although in Courage to join, no veteran is required to join or donate to any organization.
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LTJG Sandra Smith
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While I understand the problem and agree too much of America is now far too disconnected from the costs of war, I do NOT see "throwing" money at it to be a useful solution. A suggestion of 2 years of conscription for all HS graduates or drop outs, whether in the military or one of the civilian corps like Vista or the Peace Corps should be required of every able bodied citizen; they can choose which. And that includes the young ladies as well as the young men.
During the earliest wars in which the US or what would become the US, was involved, they were here on our soil, and civilians were involved, like it or not. That stopped being the case with the Spanish American war in 1898, and forward. WW I and II did involve the citizens on the "home front" more than even the Korean War, although I do remember making up Red Cross care packages for the troops there, in school, and seeing the reports of that war on the evening news. During the ongoing Cold War, and during the Vietnam conflict, and subsequent wars have even faded from our evening news reports, almost completely; the citizens at home, who don't have family in the military aren't involved even to that extent any longer, and they SHOULD be.
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CW5 John Vassar
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Edited >1 y ago
Many years ago, I read a paper on this subject written by the late COL David Hackworth, INF, US Army. He indicated in his experience that combat units made-up of draftees, when properly led (by predominantly Reserve Component Officers and NCOs) performed as well as Regular units in Combat. In fact, he cited as an example an Infantry Battalion he observed in Vietnam that was the the best he encountered during that particular tour. As COL Hackworth was an outspoken public critic of the US Military, and the Army in particular, I found his comments on this subject quite surprising.
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CAPT John Kittler
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You may find that such a law REDUCES the contribution of contractors. Do you have any data?
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