- Feb 18, 2005
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Curious. I had it queued in my netflix watch instantly queue and it popped up while I was working on a project. I typically listen to various Netflix b-rate movies just to have some ambient noise while I work instead of music, but this one caught my attention pretty good for the first 20 minutes or so of it I had to watch before leaving my office.
It really got me thinking, just how realistic would a draft be in the near future? After all the years women spent fighting for their rights, would they be included in a future draft or would they escape it? How easy would it be to enforce something like this if say 8/10 Americans believed the draft wrong, or the war they were fighting wrong?
I'm younger, and I never experienced any of the Vietnam era outside what I read from history. However - I'd venture to guess that opinion of the Government today is far different than it was then, due to various factors of media, and current mistrust of the POTUS.
I don't really think this belongs in P&N because this is a question I ask on a very individual and personal level - how do you think your life would be effected today if you or someone very close to you was drafted? How would corporate America react if they lost key people and had to scramble to figure out what to do with revenue-generating work that they now have completely stagnant and locked out.
How would it effect our economy? Jobs, wages, and industry?
I'd really like to hear some opinions from basically all sides of the fence. And don't hold back.
P.S. - If you have Netflix, queue this thing up and give it a glance. Even just the first 30 minutes have quite a bit of emotion and intellectual probing to really get you thinking. It may not be an Oscar performance, and hell, for all I know it might as well be blatant propaganda, but with the looming actions of our government and military on foreign soil and the threat of future endeavors, I think these issues are definitely something many of us would not think about unless asked.
It really got me thinking, just how realistic would a draft be in the near future? After all the years women spent fighting for their rights, would they be included in a future draft or would they escape it? How easy would it be to enforce something like this if say 8/10 Americans believed the draft wrong, or the war they were fighting wrong?
I'm younger, and I never experienced any of the Vietnam era outside what I read from history. However - I'd venture to guess that opinion of the Government today is far different than it was then, due to various factors of media, and current mistrust of the POTUS.
I don't really think this belongs in P&N because this is a question I ask on a very individual and personal level - how do you think your life would be effected today if you or someone very close to you was drafted? How would corporate America react if they lost key people and had to scramble to figure out what to do with revenue-generating work that they now have completely stagnant and locked out.
How would it effect our economy? Jobs, wages, and industry?
I'd really like to hear some opinions from basically all sides of the fence. And don't hold back.
P.S. - If you have Netflix, queue this thing up and give it a glance. Even just the first 30 minutes have quite a bit of emotion and intellectual probing to really get you thinking. It may not be an Oscar performance, and hell, for all I know it might as well be blatant propaganda, but with the looming actions of our government and military on foreign soil and the threat of future endeavors, I think these issues are definitely something many of us would not think about unless asked.