The Draft Is And Always Will Be Slavery
May 13, 2013
Anthony Gregory
Obama says some Americans
are paranoid, fretting about an imagined tyranny lurking behind the
corner. Progressives cheer as he mocks his lowly subjects. Yet some
among them embrace one of the most despotic state powers imaginable: the draft.
The draft is military slavery. It cannot
be justified on any basis. Ever. It is wrong in and of itself, just
like aggressive war. It is true that the Vietnam
war did end partly because of the draft—but only after the draft had
allowed for a much larger war in the first place, entailing the death of
millions of Southeast Asians and tens of thousands of Americans.

Progressives always seek to cure evils caused by the state by running
to the state and asking it to resemble fascism even more than it
already does. If you hate war, hate the state. If you can’t bring
yourself to turn against modern corporate
liberal imperialism, then just back off. If you vote for people like
Lyndon Johnson and Barack Obama, who promise more war and deliver more
war, a program 100% consistent with their agenda at home, then you have
no business forcing millions of Americans to die and commit murder on behalf of your beloved government in some twisted, too-clever-by-half scheme
to stem the predicable evils that are not peripheral but intrinsic to
the type of government you favor. You want a government that manages the
economy, takes care of us all, stands
up to every real and perceived evil of social power? Then you get mass
murder. You don’t get to relieve your guilt by forcing young Americans,
under threat of imprisonment, into the horrors of war that inexorably
follow from your own agenda. Slash and smash the state. It is the
problem. Giving it the power of military enslavement is not just
self-defeating; it makes you a party to atrocity on a mass scale.
Now, short of abolishing the state or
military, we could conceive of a reform that at least moves things
toward freedom. Despite the pro-draft propaganda, we don’t have an
“all-volunteer” military. People in any other sector have a right to
quit their jobs at will. They might be in violation of contract to do
so, but they are not thrown in cages for quitting.
The military is the only institution, or
at least the major one, that still utilizes indentured servitude. This
is inconsistent with freedom and human rights. Soldiers should be free
to quit. If they were, these wars would be much harder to sustain.
During the Iraq war, many soldiers are marines were forced to return to
combat two, three, or six times under Stop Loss Orders. They should have
been free simply to say, “No.”
If you want to stop wars by tweaking
with military personnel policies, establishing a truly volunteer
military, where people can quit at will, would be the single best
reform. It would also reduce the many problems of military recruitment,
which uses dishonest and shady methods to ensnare young Americans into
the Armed Forces. There would still be a lot of awfulness, including the
military’s tendency to draw on the poor who have few other options, but
there is simply no way to make the intrinsically hierarchical and
regressive military into an egalitarian institution. A draft too will
always hit the poor much harder than the politically connected.
Calling
for military conscription to stop wars is wrongheaded in many ways.
More important, the draft is a form of slavery, and simply evil from top
to bottom. If you want to reform the system and strike a blow against
perpetual war, fight for the right of soldiers to quit their jobs at
will. It is consistent with human rights and peace, and shrinks the
power of the military state rather than doing the opposite. If your true
interest is in ratcheting back imperialism and discouraging
particularly disastrous wars, rather than in glorifying the state, work for greater recognition of the dignity and liberty of those who find themselves stuck in the Armed Forces, not less.
This article first appeared at the Center for a Stateless Society.
No comments:
Post a Comment