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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: longnshort who wrote (755466)12/1/2006 8:30:33 PM
From: Stan  Respond to of 769670
 
For Christmas or any time, really: An easy way to send a care package to a soldier. They have packages which were selected by soldiers. You pay online, or mail a check; and they ship the package themselves. If you have a soldier in mind, you put his info in page 2 in the comment section of the checkout routine.

treatanysoldier.com



To: longnshort who wrote (755466)12/2/2006 1:33:28 AM
From: DuckTapeSunroof  Respond to of 769670
 
Congressman Ron Paul: No Draft!

We're hearing calls for a return to military slavery -- i.e., the draft -- from
both the left and the right these days. Indeed, some powerful Democrats are
making this a major issue.

Libertarian Congressman Ron Paul (R-TX) responded to this last week:

"Once again the possibility of reinstating a military draft is being discussed
in Washington, and while the idea seems remote it is not unthinkable.

"Democratic Congressman Charles Rangel of New York, soon to be a powerful
committee chair, has openly called for reinstating the Selective Service
System. Retired Army General Barry McCaffrey claims that our ground forces in
both Afghanistan and Iraq are stretched far too thin, and desperately need
reinforcements. Meanwhile, other political and military leaders suggest that
several hundred thousand additional troops might be needed simply to restore
some semblance of order in Iraq. We are nearing the point where a choice will
have to be made: either decrease our troop commitments in Iraq and Afghanistan
significantly, or produce thousands of new military recruits quickly. So a
discussion of military conscription is not purely academic.

"Yet the Department of Defense remains steadfastly opposed to a draft. A
Pentagon report stated that draft registration could be eliminated "with no
effect on military mobilization and no measurable effect on military
recruitment." Most military experts believe a draft would actually impair
military readiness, despite the increase in raw manpower, because of training
and morale problems.

"So why is the idea of a draft even considered? One answer is that our military
forces are spread far too thin, engaged in conflicts around the globe that are
none of our business. With hundreds of thousands of troops stationed in
literally hundreds of foreign nations, we simply don't have enough soldiers to
invade and occupy every country labeled a threat or deemed ripe for regime
change. Given the choice, many in Congress would rather draft more young bodies
than rethink our role as world policeman and bring some of our troops home.

"Military needs aside, some politicians simply love the thought of mandatory
service to the federal government. The political right favors sending young
people to fight in aggressive wars like Iraq. The political left longs to send
young people into harm's way to save the world in places like Darfur. But both
sides share the same belief that citizens should serve the needs of the state --
a belief our founders clearly rejected in the Declaration of Independence.

"To many politicians, the American government is America. This is why, on a
crude level, the draft appeals to patriotic fervor. Compulsory national
service, whether in the form of military conscription or make-work programs
like AmeriCorps, still sells on Capitol Hill. Conscription is wrongly
associated with patriotism, when really it represents collectivism and
involuntary servitude.

"I believe wholeheartedly that an all-volunteer military is not only sufficient
for national defense, but also preferable. It is time to abolish the Selective
Service System and resign military conscription to the dustbin of American
history. Five hundred million dollars have been wasted on Selective Service
since 1979, money that could have been returned to taxpayers or spent to
improve the lives of our nation's veterans.

"Ronald Reagan said it best: "The most fundamental objection to draft
registration is moral." The notion of involuntary servitude, in whatever form,
is simply incompatible with a free society."