"They have always taught and trained you to believe it to be your patriotic
duty to go to war and to have yourselves slaughtered at their command. But in
all the history of the world you, the people, have never had a voice in
declaring war, and strange as it certainly appears, no war by any nation in
any age has ever been declared by the people": Eugene Debs
Analysis of Military Recruiting in 2005
Ten
Points To Consider Before You Sign A Military Enlistment Agreement
Remember to ask the recruiters - IN FRONT OF
THE KIDS - if they are on commission. Ask them how much they earn,
IN ADDITION TO their regular pay, when they exceed quota. Ask them
WHAT THEIR CURRENT QUOTA is, and what happens when they don't meet it.
Ask them what schools they are sent to to learn COMMISSIONED SALES.
Ask them if they have an EXPENSE ACCOUNT to pay for attending extracurricular
school activities and social events DURING NON-SCHOOL HOURS (and you thought
he went to Johnny's school play just because Johnny was so special!).
Anti-Military Recruitment Campaign from United for
Peace and Justice
Questions
to Ask Yourself Before Signing Up
A
Primer on Draft Resistance
Articles About Military Recruitment in High Schools
Iraqi Veterans Against The War Web Site
Here are some of the
issues that a guidance counselor should
present to students BEFORE they consider enlistment in either the Delayed
Entry Program or directly into a branch of the armed services:
*Educational Benefits and Paying for Higher Education*
The military offers recruits up to $50,000
for higher education, but only about five percent of all those who sign
up actually receive that amount(by passing tests and accepting certain
Military Occupation Specialties), another twenty percent get about $25,000,
about 25 percent receive about $5,000, and the remaining fifty percent
get no education benefits at all. All enlistees pay about $1,200 into
an education fund, but only half get any money out.
*Job training and experience*
As Vice President and former Secretary of
Defense Dick Chaney has said, "the reason to have a military is to
be prepared to fight and win wars...it's not a jobs program." Most
military job skills are not transferrable to civilian careers, and veterans
earn 11-19 percent less than non-veterans from similar backgrounds. Additional
training is required; veterans will need to go back to school or enter
job training programs. All promises by recruiters or a military service
about job placements, even those in writing, are null and void if there
is a military action such as those in Iraq and Afghanistan.
*Discrimination*
Both women and recruits who are African-American,
Latin-American, or Native American are under-represented as officers,
compared to their numbers as enlisted personnel. Women experience
high rates of sexual harassment (as high as 90 percent) and about one-third
reported being raped while in the military. Persons who are gay, lesbian,
or bisexual cannot be open about their sexual orientation ("Don't
Ask, Don't Tell) and are discharged if that is discovered.
*Civil rights*
The Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ)
does not provide soldiers with the same rights they would have in a civilian
court of law. Recruits cannot simply quit the military if they don't like
it. Freedom to come and go is restricted; free speech is limited, and
soldiers can be punished without trial or jury. People in the military
are on-call 24 hours a day for much of their service.
*Health and Safety*
Soldiers serving in the 1991 Gulf War have
experienced high rates of "Gulf War Syndrome," even those who
never went into battle. US military use of Depleted Uranium endangers
anyone serving in a war zone. There are few guarantees of enlistees being
able to serve in a safe area, especially given current international tensions
in so many parts of the world. Soldiers have had their health damaged
by atomic testing, Agent Orange, experimental vaccines, and toxic weapons.
Military service is as hazardous as working in the Maine woods and more
dangerous than most other jobs, even when not in a war zone.
*Job Satisfaction*
The purpose of the military is not to provide
a career, or to offer travel and adventure, or to help pay for higher
education. The purpose is to kill an enemy and defend the United States
and its interests throughout the world. Not every recruit is comfortable
with the military's emphasis on training to kill, which is what recruits
are taught in basic training. They are told what to do as soon as
they enter the service, and questioning authority is not tolerated. Serving
in the military can be dangerous; fighting in a war means the chance being
killed or killing others, and those who live may suffer bodily or psychological
damage from their experiences.
For more information, contact: Larry Dansinger, Maine
Draft and Military Counselors, PO Box 776, Monroe, ME 04951, (207) 525-7776,
invert@acadia.net
"Few of us can easily surrender our belief that
society must somehow make sense. The thought that the state has lost its
mind is intolerable, and so the evidence has to be internally denied."
- Arthur Miller
how to stay out of the
military
primer on draft
resistance
by David
Wiggins
please note: all articles, information, agencies, paperwork,
and other resources mentioned here are located at the bottom of this page.
The legal requirement to register for the draft demands
a decision: give up your freedom and your conscience, or conscientiously
resist. All the good reasons that would prevent a free man from volunteering
for military service, also apply to resisting the draft. How in a "free
country" can the first requirement of a young man, when he comes
of age, be to sign up to accept orders to kill for the state in an organized
way? There is never a need to compel a free man to take up a cause that
is both necessary and just; but a man who is drafted is never free, and
thus his cause can never be assumed to be either necessary or just.
The draft is not simply an academic interest. There is not
enough military manpower to sustain the commitments the President has
already undertaken. We constantly hear that our troops are "stretched
too thin." To assist the United States, both the President and Secretary
of State have made serious requests for significant military manpower
contributions from other nations. These requests have largely fallen on
deaf ears. The President has repeatedly stated he will not "back
down" meaning, we must assume, that the military forces will continue
to be "thinly stretched." Where will they find relief? It appears
they are looking at young Americans who are free to volunteer for military
duty, but in good conscience, choose not to do so.
With certain exceptions, all men residing in the United
States are required to register for the draft within 30 days of their
18th birthday. The obligation of a man to register is imposed by the Military
Selective Service Act, which establishes and governs the operations of
the Selective Service System.
In addition to the Military Selective Service Act, the "Health
Care Personnel Delivery System" was authorized by Congress in 1987
to deal with large-scale casualties that outstripped the active-duty military's
ability to handle them. If implemented, the bill would require a mass
registration of male and female health care workers between the ages of
20 and 45. At this time; however, the Selective Service has no statutory
authority to draft medical personnel. That authorization would be provided
by legislation to be introduced and passed in Congress at the time of
a national defense mobilization. That "M-Day" legislative package
has not been made available for public comment or congressional debate.
See the Center on Conscience and War’s "Health Care Professionals
and the Draft" for details regarding the Health Care Personnel Delivery
System.
The Pentagon is considering other "special skills"
drafts, to include military linguists, computer experts, or engineers,
which could arise from other immediate needs. "We're going to elevate
that kind of draft to be a priority," said Lewis Brodsky, acting
director of the Selective Service System.
A bill before the House Armed Services Committee would
require the induction of young men into the military "to receive
basic military training and education for a period of up to one year."
Representatives Nick Smith and Curt Weldon sponsored the bill, called
the "Universal Military Training and Service Act," introduced
last fall. The measure is currently before the Armed Services Committee.
Youth & Militarism Magazine, published by the American Friends Service
Committee, contains an excellent article, "It’s Not Your Father’s
Draft," describing this proposed draft.
Deciding What To Do
Deciding what to do when faced with Registration or the
Draft can be a difficult and life-altering decision. If you choose to
resist, it is helpful to keep two things in mind:
First, if you stand by your convictions, you cannot lose,
and the government cannot win. The government may handcuff you or lock
you up, but they cannot make you fight. If you give up any freedom, it
is completely on your terms. In contrast, if you allow yourself to be
coerced into military duties you risk death, disease, and disability,
all for a cause you do not believe in.
Second, if you choose to resist, you will be treated as
an adversary by the government. The government is no longer your friend
? if it ever was. You can expect the Selective Service to use every legal
method and argument at their disposal to get you to abandon your convictions
and to follow orders.
Keep records carefully, and make your own file of every
transaction with the Selective Service, including phone calls. Do not
rely on oral promises from Selective Service officials. Put things in
writing, and attach receipts and even envelopes to the correspondence
in your file. A second set of those records should be in the custody of
someone you can rely on to forward copies as needed. When you make a record
of a transaction with Selective Service, you should send a copy to Selective
Service for inclusion in your file with the Area Office. When local boards
become operational, you can see and copy information in your file. You
can authorize others to do so on your behalf. Send your letters and claims
to Selective Service by Certified Mail, Return Receipt Requested. Observe
all deadlines scrupulously. Be sure to include your Selective Service
number. Sign and date all papers submitted.
Get help. Check out how the counselor you are consulting
was trained. Most attorneys know nothing about Selective Service law;
ask their qualifications. Draft counselors will tend to know about qualified
attorneys. There are two qualified national counseling organizations:
The Center on Conscience & War (CCW), and the Central Committee for
Conscientious Objectors (CCCO).
Choosing To Not Register
On a percentage basis, not registering is the most likely
way to prevent you from being drafted. The book Chance and Circumstance
states that between 250,000 and 2 million males did not register for the
draft during the Vietnam War. According to reports from the Selective
Service System, forty percent of the men who are required to register
for the draft don't register in the sixty-day time period required by
law. At least one or two percent still haven't registered by the time
they are twenty. At age 26 they are no longer allowed to register. Thus,
the number of permanent non-registrants increases daily. There is a known
minimum of at least 300,000 people, perhaps a million, who are becoming
permanent non-registrants.
If you refuse to register with Selective Service, you'll
receive threatening letters, at first politely reminding you to register,
then threatening prosecution, finally informing you that your name has
been turned over to the Department of Justice for possible prosecution.
These sound scary, but they're mostly bluff. No one has been formally
charged since 1986.
In the early 1980s, 21 men were indicted for refusal
to register: 19 of those 21 were public resisters. Wherever there were
trials, the rates of registration actually went down. This resistance
halted prosecutions
Penalties for Failure to Register
The penalty for failing to register can be up to five years
in jail and/or a fine of up to $250,000. In peacetime, with registration
only, the regular maximum penalties are four months and/or $2500. If you
don't register, you become ineligible for federal student aid, federal
job training or civil service employment. Below, is a summary of the penalties
you will face:
STUDENT FINANCIAL AID
Men, born after December 31, 1959, who aren't registered with Selective
Service won't qualify for Federal student loans or grant programs. This
includes Pell Grants, College Work Study, Guaranteed Student/Plus Loans,
and National Direct Student Loans.
CITIZENSHIP
The U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) makes registration
with Selective Service a condition for U.S. citizenship if the man first
arrived in the U.S. before his 26th birthday.
FEDERAL JOB TRAINING
The Workforce Investment Act (formerly called the Job Training Partnership
Act ? JTPA) offers programs that can train young men for jobs in auto
mechanics and other skills. This program is only open to those men who
register with Selective Service. This applies only to men born after December
31, 1959.
FEDERAL JOBS
A man must be registered to be eligible for jobs in the Executive Branch
of the Federal government and the U.S. Postal Service. This applies only
to men born after December 31, 1959.
Some states have added additional penalties for those who
fail to register. See State Legislation.
A tactic used by many states is to require driver license
applicant’s to register. These states require a consent statement on all
applications or renewals for driver’s permits, licenses, and identification
cards. The statement tells the applicant that by submitting the application
he is consenting to his registration with the Selective Service if so
required by Federal law. Transmission of applicant data to the Selective
Service is accomplished electronically through an existing arrangement
each state has with the data sharing system of the American Association
of Motor Vehicle Administrators.
As of August 28, 2003, 32 states, 2 territories, and the
District of Columbia have enacted driver's license laws supporting SSS
registration. They are: (1) Enacted and Implemented ? Alabama, Arkansas,
Colorado, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas,
Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, New Hampshire, New Mexico, New York,
Ohio, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia,
West Virginia, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, the Virgin
Islands, and the District of Columbia; (2) Enacted But Not Yet Implemented
- Arizona, Kentucky, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina,
and Wisconsin
Aid for Those Who Do Not Register
The good news is that there are alternative funds for financial
aid for those who cannot register for war because they believe registration
is wrong. A few colleges will provide scholarships to make up for the
government money denied. Mennonites, the Church of the Brethren, Quakers,
Presbyterians and Lutherans have such limited assistance funds to support
non-registrants in their own groups. There is a general fund, the Fund
for Education and Training (FEAT), which supports those who do not qualify
for the other programs. FEAT also would aid those who are denied job-training
programs for refusing to register for the draft.
Appealing the Penalties for Failure
to Register
A non-registrant may not be denied any benefit if he can
"show by a preponderance of evidence" that his failure to register
was not knowing and willful. You will have to describe, in detail, the
circumstances you believe prevented you from registering and provide copies
of documents showing any periods when you were hospitalized, institutionalized,
or incarcerated occurring between your 18th and 26th birthdays. If you
are a non-citizen, you may be required to provide documents that show
when you entered the United States
The benefit agency official handling your case, not the
Selective Service, will determine whether you have shown that your failure
to register was not a knowing and willful failure to register. The final
decision regarding your eligibility for the benefit that you seek will
be made by that same agency, (for example, for student financial aid,
this would be the Department of Education.) With some agencies, an appeals
process is available.
Registering Late, Change of Address
Legally, at any moment until your twenty-sixth birthday,
Selective Service must accept your draft registration card. Some young
men delay registration until the year in which they turn 21, or even until
just before turning 26. This method takes advantage of the way the draft
lottery works.
A lottery based on birthdays determines the order in which
registered men are called up by Selective Service. The first to be called,
in a sequence determined by the lottery, will be men whose 20th birthday
falls during that year, followed, if needed, by those aged 21, 22, 23,
24 and 25. In other words, under present law, which might change with
a new draft, Selective Service would first select randomly among those
who turned 20 in the calendar year of the call-up. In practice, while
it's possible that a draft could move beyond the age-20 selection group,
the odds are against it.
It is important to remember that, once registered, even
if it is the day before your 26th birthday, you are once again eligible
for federal and state assistance.
Change of Address
Registrants are required to notify Selective Service
within ten days of any changes to any of the information provided
on the registration card, such as a change of address. According
to the Center on Conscience and War, very few registrants are doing so.
A registrant must report changes until January 1 of the year he turns
26. To notify Selective Service, mark your change(s) on the Change Information
Form attached to the Registration acknowledgment Card and mail it to Selective
Service, or complete a Change of Information Form, SSS Form 2, which you
can obtain at any U.S. Post Office or U.S. Embassy or Consulate office.
You may also notify Selective Service of any change by letter, but be
sure to include your full name, Social Security Account Number, Selective
Service Number, and date of birth, as well as your new mailing address
If the registrant forgets to notify the Selective Service
of any address changes, or if the Selective Service loses that notification,
the Selective Service may have difficulty finding and notifying the registrant
of induction in case of a draft.
If you don't register before you turn 26, you will not be
allowed to register, even if you change your mind. You'd then be permanently
barred from such benefits, unless Congress or the courts act to change
the law. A person who fails to register by age 26 may use the same appeals
process as described above, under the section "Choosing To Not Register."
Registering But Resisting
Induction
If you decide to register:
• Find a post office for your registration that has an accessible
photocopier.
• Print in legible black ink across the middle of the registration form:
I AM A CONSCIENTIOUS OBJECTOR TO WAR IN ANY FORM. This is not a classification,
but it may help you later to document your position as a CO. Selective
Service makes no record of this declaration in its computer files, but
they do make a microfilm record of the registration card. You should make
a copy of your card for your file.
• Make a photocopy of your registration form for your own records. Date
it, fold and seal it, and mail it to yourself. The postmark confirms the
date.
• Put a complete statement of your conscientious objector beliefs on file
with your religious body, the CCW, the CCCO, or any other counseling agency.
After registration, Selective Service will send a "registration
acknowledgement" letter, which repeats the information the registrant
gave on the form and supplies a Selective Service Number. If any of the
information is incorrect, the registrant may return the accompanying Form
3B to correct any mistakes. The registrant can retain this letter, Form
3A, as proof of his registration.
Before anyone can be drafted, Congress and the President
would have to enact legislation authorizing new draft calls. If this happens,
one can apply for various postponements and reclassifications to delay
induction, or to avoid it entirely.
Filing for postponement or reclassification
Selective Service regulations are filled with loopholes,
postponements, and reclassifications for those who will not or cannot
be drafted. A registrant can file a claim only after receipt of an order
to report for induction and before the day he is scheduled to report (this
means within 10 days). If you were called up, you would receive an induction
notice requiring you to report on a certain date not less than 10 days
from the date of the notice, to a Military Entrance Processing Station
(MEPS) unless you filed a claim for exemption or deferment. Filing a claim
involves no more than checking a box on a form, and submitting it to the
Selective Service.
After the Selective Service receives the claim, they will
send you more forms to complete. You must apply for any and all exemptions
for which you think you may qualify, and/or for classification as a conscientious
objector. A registrant automatically gets his induction delayed if he
files a claim for reclassification. He is also entitled to file for a
postponement if he is a student or if he has an emergency beyond his control,
such as a serious illness or death in his immediate family. The induction
date will be postponed until the draft board evaluates the validity of
the claim. The Selective Service publishes a booklet titled "Information
for Registrants" which lists each category of claim for postponement
of induction into the armed forces and each type of reclassification to
become exempt from the draft. Under each heading (accessible by the web)
is a detailed description of the qualifications and requirements for each
category. The major headings are listed below.
Postponements
1. Student Postponements
2. Emergency Postponements
3. Religious Holiday Postponements
4. Other Postponements
-State or National Examination Scheduled
-Military Academy Acceptance
-Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) Applicant
-Acceptance for Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) Program
Reclassifications
1. Members of the Armed Forces of the United States, the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration or the Public Health Service
(Class 1-C)
2. Deferment of Certain Members of a Reserve Component or Students Taking
Military Training (Class 1-D-D)
3. Exemption of Certain Members of a Reserve Component or Student Taking
Military Training (Class 1-D-E)
4. Conscientious Objectors Available for Noncombatant Military Service
Only (Class 1-A-O)
5. Conscientious Objectors to All Military Service (Class 1-O)
6. Conscientious Objectors to All Military Service (Separated from Military
Service) (Class 1-O-S)
7. Registrant Deferred Because of Study Preparing for the Ministry (Class
2-D)
8. Registrant Deferred Because of Hardship to Dependents (Class 3-A)
9. Registrant Deferred Because of Hardship to Dependents (Separated from
Military Service) (Class 3-A-S)
10. Registrant Who Has Completed Military Service (Class 4-A)
11. Registrant Who Has Performed Military Service for a Foreign Nation
(Class 4-A-A)
12. Official Deferred by Law (Class 4-B)
13. Alien or Dual National (Class 4-C)
14. Treaty Alien (Class 4-T)
15. Minister of Religion (Class 4-D)
16. Registrant Exempted from Service Because of the Death of His Parent
or Sibling While Serving in the Armed Forces or Whose Parent or Sibling
is in a Captured or Missing in Action Status (Class 4-G)
17. Registrant Not Acceptable for Military Service (Class 4-F)
For a hard copy of the above information, write to Consumer
Information Center, Pueblo, CO 81009, and ask for "Information for
Registrants." Enclose $1 for processing, payable to Superintendent
of Documents. The CCCO, CCW and other counseling agencies will probably
also have copies of this document available.
Conscientious Objectors
Conscientious Objection is the category of reclassification
of most interest to the majority of draft resisters. In fact, every draft
resister is a conscientious objector in his own way. According to the
Selective Service, a conscientious objector is one who is opposed to serving
in the armed forces and/or bearing arms on the grounds of moral or religious
principles. Beliefs which qualify a registrant for CO status may be religious
in nature, but don't have to be. Beliefs may be moral or ethical, but
according to the Selective Service, a man's reasons for not wanting to
participate in a war must not be based on politics, expediency, or self-interest.
In general, the man's lifestyle prior to making his claim must reflect
his current claims.
Be aware that, while similar, regulations regarding Conscientious
Objection differ for members of the military forces. For more information
on claiming Conscientious Objector status while a member of the Armed
Forces, see "Advice For Conscientious Objectors in the Armed Forces"
by Robert Seeley on the CCCO website.
Conscientious objectors should begin to document their claims
well in advance of being drafted since otherwise, their time will be very
limited. COs should have prepared in advance a file which documents their
beliefs. At the minimum, this file should include the photocopy of the
registration card, a comprehensive statement of beliefs, and letters of
support for this statement. The CCW website has articles with detailed
instructions on how to prepare your statement of beliefs and letters of
support. There, you may also sign on to the Conscientious Objector Affirmation.
Such evidence can be presented to the local board that will hear the claim
for a CO classification. Compiling this file should be done with supervision
from a qualified draft counselor or agency such as CCW or CCCO.
If you have one, get on record with your religious organization,
especially if there is an official registrar. File a provisional version
of your claim with them and/or with the CCW or CCCO. Request an analysis
of your claim with your counselor. Arrange for letters of support (signed
and dated) and documentation of your belief and a life-style consistent
with your claim. Arrange for witnesses and an advisor in advance of your
hearing.
If you don’t have legal advice, get it. Keep your own file
about your beliefs about war and the draft. Keep records of all transactions
with the Selective Service System. Many local peace centers have information.
The Center on Conscience & Warfare (CCW) provides a counseling service
by mail and phone, and publishes aids for thinking out what you believe
and what to do. So does the CCCO, the Central Committee for Conscientious
Objectors.
Be sure to learn the procedure for obtaining conscientious
objection status.
In general, once a man gets a notice that he has been found
qualified for military service (i.e., receives an induction letter), he
has the opportunity to make a claim for classification as a conscientious
objector (CO). If a registrant believes he can qualify for Class 1-O,
he should complete the Claim Documentation Form, Conscientious Objector
(SSS Form 22), provided by his Area Office and return the form to the
Area Office with documents and written statements to support his claim.
Form 22 asks the applicant to answer three questions.
1. Describe your beliefs that are the reasons for your claiming
conscientious objection to combatant military training and service or
to all military training and service.
2. Describe how and when you acquired these beliefs
3. Explain what most clearly shows that your beliefs are deeply held.
You may wish to include a description of how your beliefs affect the way
you live.
You should begin preparing answers to these questions as
soon as you decide to claim Conscientious Objector status. The Center
on Conscience and War provides an excellent worksheet to help you.
A registrant making a claim for Conscientious Objection
is required to appear before his local board to explain his beliefs. Claimants
for hardship or ministerial classification may also request a personal
appearance. At a personal appearance you will have at least twenty minutes,
and may present up to three witnesses. You may be accompanied by an advisor,
and may request that the meeting be open. You cannot use a recorder at
the meeting; but you can submit your own summary within five days after
the hearing.
If a claim of conscientious objector status is granted,
Selective Service regulations state that the registrant must perform alternative
service. Of course, one may also choose to resist or refuse alternative
service for reasons of conscience. Likely Alternative Service jobs are
in the fields of conservation, caring for the very young or very old,
education, or health care. Length of service in the program will equal
the amount of time a man would have been assigned to the military.
Appealing a Claim That Is Denied
The local board will decide whether to grant or deny a CO
classification based on the evidence a registrant has presented. If your
claim is rejected, you will receive a new induction date. The CCCO, CCW,
and others can help you find lawyers and/or counselors to help you through
the lengthy appeals process. The board must give reasons for rejection
of your claim. You may appeal a Local Board's decision to a Selective
Service District Appeal Board. If the Appeal Board also denies your claim,
but the vote is not unanimous, you may further appeal the decision to
the National Appeal Board
Refusing Induction
You do, in good conscience, object to Registration and the
Draft. This does not change simply because the Selective Service denies
your claim. Since there is currently no draft, there are no rules governing
those who refuse induction. Historically, draft resisters have been prosecuted
and penalized in some manner. You can expect the same. If you choose to
refuse induction or were successful using one of the methods described
above, you will join a long line of conscientious objectors proud to have
defended their freedom to make their own conscientious decisions, and
your freedom to do the same. For their stories, check out one of the many
books currently available on conscientious objectors and conscientious
objection. If you let your conscience be your guide, not your fear or
doubt or uncertainty, you will always make a good decision, you will always
be free, and you will never regret it.
Contact Information
• Center on Conscience & War (NISBCO)
1830 Connecticut Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20009
202-483-2220
800-379-2679
Fax: 202-483-1246
nisbco@nisbco.org
• Central Committee for Conscientious Objectors (CCCO)
1515 Cherry St., Philadelphia, PA 19102
215-563-8787
Fax 215-567-2096
info@objector.org
• CCCO West
630 20th Street Oakland, CA 94612
510-465-1617
Fax 510-465-2459
info@objector.org
References
Organizations
• The Selective Service System
• The Center on Conscience & War (CCW)
• The Central Committee for Conscientious Objectors (CCCO)
• The American Friends Service Committee (AFSC)
Articles
• "Medical Workers Face Military Draft" WorldNet
Daily
• "It’s Not Your Father’s Draft" Youth & Militarism Magazine
Appendix 1: SEQUENCE OF EVENTS
Here is a brief overview of what would occur if the United
States returned to a draft:
1. CONGRESS AND THE PRESIDENT AUTHORIZE A DRAFT
(see draft
on this site)
A crisis occurs which requires more troops than the volunteer military
can supply. Congress passes and the President signs legislation that starts
a draft.
2. THE LOTTERY
The lottery would establish the priority of call based on the birth dates
of registrants. The first men drafted would be those turning age 20 during
the calendar year of the lottery. For example, if a draft were held in
1998, those men born in 1978 would be considered first. If a young man
turns 21 in the year of the draft, he would be in the second priority,
in turning 22 he would be in the third priority, and so forth until the
year in which he turns 26 at which time he is over the age of liability.
Younger men would not be called in that year until men in the 20?25 age
group are called
3. ALL PARTS OF SELECTIVE SERVICE ARE ACTIVATED
The Agency activates and orders its State Directors and Reserve Forces
Officers to report for duty. See also Agency Structure.
4. PHYSICAL, MENTAL, AND MORAL EVALUATION OF REGISTRANTS
Registrants with low lottery numbers are ordered to report for a physical,
mental, and moral evaluation at a Military Entrance Processing Station
to determine whether they are fit for military service. Once he is notified
of the results of the evaluation, a registrant will be given 10 days to
file a claim for exemption, postponement, or deferment. See also Classifications.
5. LOCAL AND APPEAL BOARDS ACTIVATED AND INDUCTION NOTICES
SENT
Local and Appeal Boards will process registrant claims. Those who pass
the military evaluation will receive induction orders. An inductee will
have 10 days to report to a local Military Entrance Processing Station
for induction.
The registrant appeal process begins when a registrant is
dissatisfied with his Local Board’s decision about his reclassification
request and initiates an appeal. The first line of appeal is to the District
Appeal Board. In the case of non-unanimous decisions of the District Appeal
Board, the registrant may appeal to the President through the National
Appeal Board.
6. FIRST DRAFTEES ARE INDUCTED
According to current plans, Selective Service must deliver the first inductees
to the military within 193 days from the onset of a crisis.
September 16, 2003
David Wiggins [send
him mail] is a West Point (United States Military Academy) distinguished
graduate and an honors graduate of New York Medical College. He left
the Army as a Conscientious Objector, resigning his commission as an
Army Captain on the Iraqi front lines during Operation Desert Storm.
He is currently an Emergency Physician.
Copyright © 2003 LewRockwell.com
LINKS REFERRED TO IN THIS ARTICLE
Click on active link
or cut and paste.
Military
Selective Service Act
http://www.sss.gov/PDFs/MSSA-2003.pdf
Health
Care Personnel Delivery System
http://www.sss.gov/FSmedical.htm
Health
Care Professionals and the Draft
http://www.nisbco.org/HCPDSWWW.htm#_Hlk51211599
other "special skills" drafts
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=33754
Selective
Service System
http://www.sss.gov/
It’s
Not Your Father’s Draft
http://www.afsc.org/youthmil/200202/notdraft.htm
The
Center on Conscience & War
http://www.nisbco.org/
Central
Committee for Conscientious Objectors
http://www.objector.org/
Chance and Circumstance
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0394412753/lewrockwell/
State
Legislation
http://www.sss.gov/fsstateleg.htm
Fund
for Education and Training (FEAT)
http://www.nisbco.org/FEAT.htm
Information
for Registrants
http://www.sss.gov/regisrantsbk.htm
accessible
by the web
http://www.sss.gov/regisrantsbk.htm
Student
Postponements
http://www.sss.gov/regisrantsbk.htm#StudentPostponements
Emergency Postponements
http://www.sss.gov/regisrantsbk.htm#EmergencyPostponements
Religious Holiday Postponements
http://www.sss.gov/regisrantsbk.htm#ReligiousHolidayPostponements
Other
Postponements
http://www.sss.gov/regisrantsbk.htm#OtherPostponements
State or National Examination Scheduled
http://www.sss.gov/regisrantsbk.htm#StateorNationalExaminationScheduled
Military Academy Acceptance
http://www.sss.gov/regisrantsbk.htm#MilitaryAcademyAcceptance
Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) Applicant
http://www.sss.gov/regisrantsbk.htm#ReserveOfficerTrainingCorps
(ROTC)ApplicantA
http://www.sss.gov/regisrantsbk.htm#AcceptanceforReserveOfficerTrainingCorps
(ROTC)Program Acceptance for Reserve Officer Training Corps(ROTC) Program
http://www.sss.gov/regisrantsbk.htm#AcceptanceforReserveOfficerTrainingCorps
(ROTC)Program
Members of the Armed Forces of the United States, the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration or the Public Health Service (Class 1-C)
http://www.sss.gov/regisrantsbk.htm#(Class%201-C)
Deferment
of Certain Members of a Reserve Component or Students Taking Military
Training (Class 1-D-D)
http://www.sss.gov/regisrantsbk.htm#(Class%201-D-D)
Exemption
of Certain Members of a Reserve Component or Student Taking Military Training
(Class 1-D-E)
http://www.sss.gov/regisrantsbk.htm#(Class%201-D-E)
Conscientious
Objectors Available for Noncombatant Military Service Only (Class 1-A-O)
http://www.sss.gov/regisrantsbk.htm#(Class%201-A-O)
Conscientious
Objectors to All Military Service (Class 1-O)
http://www.sss.gov/regisrantsbk.htm#(Class%201-O)
Conscientious
Objectors to All Military Service (Separated from Military Service) (Class1-O-S)
http://www.sss.gov/regisrantsbk.htm#(Class%201-O-S)
Registrant
Deferred Because of Study Preparing for the Ministry (Class 2-D)
http://www.sss.gov/regisrantsbk.htm#(Class%202-D)
Registrant
Deferred Because of Hardship to Dependents (Class 3-A)
http://www.sss.gov/regisrantsbk.htm#(Class%203-A)
Registrant
Deferred Because of Hardship to Dependents
(Separated
from Military Service)(Class 3-A-S)
http://www.sss.gov/regisrantsbk.htm#(Class%203-A-S)
Registrant
Who Has Completed Military Service (Class 4-A)
http://www.sss.gov/regisrantsbk.htm#(Class%204-A)
Registrant
Who Has Performed Military Service for a Foreign Nation (Class 4-A-A)
http://www.sss.gov/regisrantsbk.htm#(Class%204-A-A)
Official
Deferred by Law (Class 4-B)
http://www.sss.gov/regisrantsbk.htm#(Class%204-B)
Alien
or Dual National (Class 4-C)
http://www.sss.gov/regisrantsbk.htm#(Class%204-C)
Treaty
Alien (Class 4-T)
http://www.sss.gov/regisrantsbk.htm#(Class%204-T)
Minister
of Religion (Class 4-D)
http://www.sss.gov/regisrantsbk.htm#(Class%204-D)
Registrant
Exempted from Service Because of the Death of His Parent or Sibling While
Serving in the Armed Forces or Whose Parent or Sibling is in a Captured
or Missing in Action Status (Class 4-G)
http://www.sss.gov/regisrantsbk.htm#(Class%204-G)
Registrant
Not Acceptable for Military Service (Class 4-F)
http://www.sss.gov/regisrantsbk.htm#(Class%204-F)
Advice
For Conscientious Objectors in the Armed Forces
http://www.objector.org/advice/contents.html
the CCCO website
http://www.objector.org/
comprehensive
statement of beliefs
http://www.nisbco.org/co_worksheet.htm
letters
of support
http://www.nisbco.org/Letters_of_Support.htm
CCW website
http://www.nisbco.org/
the
Conscientious Objector Affirmation
http://www.nisbco.org/CO_Affirmation.htm
to
learn the procedure
http://www.sss.gov/regisrantsbk.htm#(Class 1-0)
worksheet
http://www.nisbco.org/co_worksheet.htm
find books online (key word search: conscientious objection)
emergency financial assistance
purchase books online
alternative direction
Center
on Conscience & War (NISBCO)
http://nisbco.org/
nisbco@nisbco.org
mailto:nisbco@nisbco.org
Central
Committee for Conscientious Objectors (CCCO)
http://www.objector.org
info@objector.org
mailto:info@objector.org
CCCO
West
http://www.objector.org
info@objector.org
mailto:info@objector.org
The Selective
Service System
http://www.sss.gov/
The
Center on Conscience & War (CCW)
http://www.nisbco.org/
The
Central Committee for Conscientious Objectors (CCCO)
http://www.objector.org/
The
American Friends Service Committee (AFSC)
http://www.afsc.org/
Medical Workers Face Military Draft
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=33754
It’s
Not Your Father’s Draft
http://www.afsc.org/youthmil/200202/notdraft.htm
Agency
Structure
http://www.sss.gov/struct.htm
Classifications
http://www.sss.gov/classif.htm
send
author mail
mailto:dwiggmd@yahoo.com
Find this
article at:
http://www.lewrockwell.com/orig4/wiggins5.html
There
is no “period of adjustment” during which you may
request and receive an immediate honorable discharge.
Once you have left
for basic training, you must fulfill the entire number of years (usually
eight, with some of these in the Reserves) on your enlistment contract. You cannot
leave of your own free will. In contrast, however, the military may
decide you are “unsuitable” and discharge you without your consent.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ten Points to Consider Before You Sign a Military Enlistment Agreement
Do not make a quick decision by enlisting the first time you see a recruiter or when you are upset.
A recruiter is a salesperson who will
give only a positive, one-sided picture of life in the military. Don’t make this important decision when
you are depressed, hard up for work, confused, unsure about your future,
or pressured by your family. This decision affects many years of
your life; don’t make it lightly.
Take a witness with you when you speak with a recruiter.
There is a lot of information to take in. A friend can take
notes and help you ask questions.
Talk to veterans.
Veterans can give you their view of military life, good and bad.
Consider your moral feelings about going to war.
The mission of the military is to prepare for and wage war. Are
you willing to kill another person if ordered to do so? Would you be willing
to fight in any war, no matter what the reason? If you would have trouble
engaging in war or in killing, you should not consider enlisting. If you
become opposed to war after you join, you may try to get a discharge, but it is
a long, difficult, and uncertain process.
Get a copy of the enlistment agreement.
Read the fine print carefully, especially the part about what
the military can order you to do. You have a right to take it home,
look it over, and ask others about it.
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Get all your recruiter’s promises in writing,
but also remember that the military can change the terms—such as
pay, job, or benefits—of your work. Though there are no guarantees, a
written statement may offer you (as a service member) some protection if promises are not met. However, the enlistment agreement is more binding on you than on the military. You are ultimately
responsible for information on the form, so don’t tell lies, even if pressured.
There are no job guarantees in the military.
The military is not required to keep you on a full-time or
permanent basis in the job you trained for. In fact, most recruiters were
assigned to recruiting jobs against their will. The kind of job you get depends mostly
on what jobs the military needs to fill. Most military jobs are in areas
that account for only a small percentage of civilian jobs.
Military personnel may not exercise all of the civil liberties enjoyed by civilians.
You will not have the same constitutional rights. Your rights to
free speech, assembly, petition, and exercise of individual
expression, such as clothing or hairstyle, will be restricted. You will be required
to follow all orders given to you, whether you agree with them and consider
them right or fair.
Many other opportunities exist for you to serve your community and enhance your skills.
Before you decide to enlist, check out other options that would
help you “be all you can be.” Travel, education, money for school, job
training, and adventure can all be found in other ways. Your local community
may even have opportunities that you haven’t considered.
Learn more
To learn more about these issues, check out our web site. It
offers up-todate information about military recruitment, what it is like inside
the military, and alternatives to the military.
www.afsc.org/youthmil.htm
American Friends Service Committee
National Youth and Militarism Program
1501 Cherry Street, Phila., PA 19102
Phone: 215/241-7176
E-mail: youthmil@afsc.org
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