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To: Chainmail
It looks like you are simply picking & choosing what you wish to take out of my comments & questions, kinda how the Left reacts when their narrative is already set & then they look for excuses to make things look according to plan. Please forgive me if I am talking over your head.

Maybe I should have worded the question differently. I thought I was asking a question by saying "is it not?" at the end of the sentence. Silly me, I should have known better. I sincerely apologize. I also added the "benefits" part at the very end of a sentence which had other reasons in which people join the Military, & you may not be aware of this, but usually when people list several things w/in a sentence it is oftentimes done in terms of priority, w/ the last one being the least important...& that's where the benefits part was written, at the very end. There's no need to be upset about that, 'cuz whether you are willing to admit it or not, people DO join the Military for that reason, & whether the %'age of that is high or low, I'm not sure.

When it comes to the definition of "involuntary servitude", I will go back to the people who wrote the 13th Amendment in order to find out for myself, thank you very much. I myself am an Originalist by nature, & I believe that the Constitution should be followed to the letter, exactly as those who wrote it intended. BTW...since the phrase "involuntary servitude" is completely separate from slavery & jail/prison incarceration in the 13th Amendment, WHAT ELSE could it be used for? What other types of involuntary servitude are there? Why would a forced Military Draft NOT be among the items that were prohibited by the Involuntary servitude Clause? Are Military Drafts voluntary or involuntary? I'm not taking sides, I'm just asking an honest question that you may or may not be able to handle.

THANK YOU for your service.

41 posted on 04/05/2015 5:17:07 PM PDT by Liberty1st
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To: Liberty1st
You are welcome.

The draft was intended as a national obligation to select, train, and organize young men for war. A national obligation in the sense that paying taxes and duties was required of a free people to sustain their nation. Those young men who were drafted into the services were part of a pool of candidate citizens who were physically and mentally qualified for the rigors of combat service. All of those young men understood that it was part of their citizenship and the needs of their country and I will always admire those who were drafted and served with honor (both of my grandfathers were drafted into the army in WW I).

You have misconceptions about the service, too. Being in the armed forces is not slavery. As an old-time Marine once told me, "all Marines are equal in value: some are rendered respect because they have greater responsibilities and they are required to return that respect back to you". That's why all salutes are returned by officers. As a Marine enlisted man, I had the absolute right to see the Commanding General and everyone in between if I believed I had been wronged by a superior - it's called "Request Mast". I never had to use it because I was always treated fairly and my leaders always shared the same dangers and more than I did. We had rights and respect that civilians have never dreamed of.

Warfare is and always will be a requirement to protect what we have and who we are. Sometimes, the obligation to serve and defend this country has to be more sweeping than ordinary times and when that obligation is called for, it should be fair and universal.

It is never slavery - and those who call it that are probably only justifying their own cowardice.

42 posted on 04/05/2015 5:39:22 PM PDT by Chainmail (A simple rule of life: if you can be blamed, you're responsible.)
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