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Posted >1 y ago
Responses: 12
This is a part of the reason the Founding Fathers were wary of a standing military. They preferred the citizen soldier in which all able bodied citizens did their part in the defense of the nation.
A standing military can become a separate society with less in common with the population than with one another; this is starting to happen today.
The danger is that a separate military class might come to look at the undisciplined masses as a group to be held in line rather than as members of their own families. If given the order to fire upon people just like their own family, few would obey the order. But if the military looked at the public as a separate and potentially disruptive force they might just carry out such orders, and our freedoms would be at great risk.
Although draftees that don't want to be there might not become the dedicated soldiers we get with an all-volunteer force, the draft at the very least produced a public very much aware of the needs and responsibilities of the military. And the citizens as well as our politicians were much the better off for having the military experience.
A standing military can become a separate society with less in common with the population than with one another; this is starting to happen today.
The danger is that a separate military class might come to look at the undisciplined masses as a group to be held in line rather than as members of their own families. If given the order to fire upon people just like their own family, few would obey the order. But if the military looked at the public as a separate and potentially disruptive force they might just carry out such orders, and our freedoms would be at great risk.
Although draftees that don't want to be there might not become the dedicated soldiers we get with an all-volunteer force, the draft at the very least produced a public very much aware of the needs and responsibilities of the military. And the citizens as well as our politicians were much the better off for having the military experience.
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SGT David A. 'Cowboy' Groth
Thank you Captain for mentioning citizen soldiers, I was of that group for 24 yrs. now IRR. We are all brothers .
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Thanks for the great article. Reminded me of "Warrior Ethos" in that we are warriors living in a non-warrior (moving toward an anti-warrior) culture. I agree the ability of the public and media to joke about and interact personally with the military is a very good sign, and we are seeing less of it. The self-satisfied smug elites on our coasts are the best argument for a year of compulsory service (any service, not necessarily military) following high school.
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"Citizens notice when crime is going up, or school quality is going down, or the water is unsafe to drink, or when other public functions are not working as they should. Not enough citizens are made to notice when things go wrong, or right, with the military. The country thinks too rarely, and too highly, of the 1 percent under fire in our name."
I really liked this paragraph. It's something people often overlook, we, as military members, are taken for granted, and when unfortunate events occur in the States, they forget about those defending their freedom and focus on the events that have disrupted their daily routine. Long but great article!
I really liked this paragraph. It's something people often overlook, we, as military members, are taken for granted, and when unfortunate events occur in the States, they forget about those defending their freedom and focus on the events that have disrupted their daily routine. Long but great article!
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