• warm@kbin.earth
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    3 months ago

    Perhaps they will reconsider the ‘need’ for it with their new NATO membership. Will be hard to remove something so ingrained in their culture though.

      • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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        3 months ago

        The United States has had the luxury of an all-volunteer military for slightly longer than I’ve been alive. My name went on the Selective Service roster. They keep that list. They’re having recruitment and retention problems. And the United States has a much bigger population than the likes of Finland.

        • Maggoty@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          We had recruiting problems because we had unrealistic medical standards. For decades people just lied about what they could. Then we decided to use a system that could actually check the records of recruits.

          Once waivers were made easily available, instead of months of admin work, recruiting goals were magically met again.

          • yeather@lemmy.ca
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            3 months ago

            Now we are having recruiting problems for entirely different issues. It also just so happened the easier waivers coincidentally went into affect when we were already going to meet recrui goals. Nowadays a draft would mean the end of America. Something like 70% of all Americans are unable to be drafted for one reason or another, and the last 30 would more than likely riot and shoot recruiters at the first opportunity.

            • Maggoty@lemmy.world
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              3 months ago

              Something like 70% of all Americans are unable to be drafted

              Under the widest interpretation of the strict medical rules. This has been blown way out of proportion. Also much of the number is supposedly excluded under the height and weight standards which we know don’t even correlate with PT scores outside of run time. And god forbid we have people who run their 2 mile a tad slower when we know combat is sprinting, and sprinting is muscle.

              Rant aside, busting tape isn’t even disqualifying. Which is why that number is misinformation at best.

              • addictedtochaos@lemm.ee
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                3 months ago

                you have to take in account that of all those people, there are babies, people over 55, schoolchildren, and what have you.

                and try to draft a politician or a steelt factory worker, or an electronic specialist. that will not happen.

                • Maggoty@lemmy.world
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                  3 months ago

                  The study they’re referencing is specifically 17-24 but they’re also severely misquoting it. Which isn’t surprising because conservative news sources spent a lot of time trying to use it to paint our youth as useless layabouts.

                  • addictedtochaos@lemm.ee
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                    3 months ago

                    ah, sorry, i didnt look that far. i should have. maybe its because of obesity? also, iq under 80 is not draftable.

              • yeather@lemmy.ca
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                3 months ago

                According to the 2020 Pentagon Qualified Military Available Study. 77% of American 17 to 24 are not qualified, of that 77%, 11% are overweight beyond a waiver, 8% cannot due to alcohol or drug abuse, 7% cannot due to mental or physical health, aptitude or conduct was 2%, and multiple reasons was listed at 20% including a combination of the above and factors like prior convictions.

                So low end 48% of 17 to 24 year olds are inelligble. This doesn’t include specific draft exemptions like being in college or working with critical infrastructure which have always been exempt from selective service.

                • Maggoty@lemmy.world
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                  3 months ago

                  The topline of the study is specifically the percentage of 17-24 year olds who can join without a waiver. There is no “beyond a waiver” category in the study. Surely some of them are beyond a waiver, but the study does not make that distinction.

                  And it straight up says the reduction of availability is because of an increase in standards, not a decrease in the population’s capacity.