• @bitwaba
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      1410 months ago

      There’s nothing wrong with mandatory military service if your military doesn’t pick fights with everyone else’s.

      • @aidan
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        910 months ago

        Yes there is, because forced labor is slavery.

      • @[email protected]
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        810 months ago

        Voluntarily discipline style camps sure.

        Mandatory would backfires on me. I am happy to help but to command my body around requires my consent and respect for my pacifist boundaries.

        • @bitwaba
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          410 months ago

          It’s not an exclusive thing. Most European countries with forced service allow alternate forms of service as well. My coworkers worked with an emergency medical service instead.

          It’s really moe like forced community service, but one of the ways you can serve your community is learning to defend it in a time of war.

          • @[email protected]
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            10 months ago

            I am a huge fan of community service but you’d have to be specific about forced or i regard it the same thing.

            I love my real life job but i hate that i need it to earn a wage, because i need a wage to survive and i would deliver better work if i could do it just because it enjoy it (and choose my own workhours)

            I admit i am a bit of an edge case, if i broke the law i would gladly serve a sentence if they can convince me with logical argument that i made the wrong choice and can be improved.

            If they cant convince me of that i means i am punishment while believing my innocence, it would be the most definitive proof of evil an immorality baked into the social contract and fuel me to use the few rights i would still have in jail to radicalize myself further within anti-centralized-state ideology

        • @jj4211
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          410 months ago

          Well, depends.

          Note that US military history picks me from trusting them in this fashion, but if mandatory military service were: -severely limited term -purely domestic (prepare for defense from active attacks, relief, and rescue) -not used in any vaguely law enforcement capacity.

          Then I could see that as possibly reasonable.

          Of course I’d be skeptical that a nation would display that sort of restraint, but just saying I could imagine a hypothetical that included that

          • @[email protected]
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            10 months ago

            I think you just described most military services actually (from democratic nations at least)

            • @TheControlled
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              210 months ago

              HA! Sure, like countries that are protected by the US military? Like countries insulated on all sides by close allies? C’mon.

              Also, America is the superpower. Nobody comes close to their wealth and power and military technology, and superpowers don’t become or stay superpowers by being totally chill and getting cats out of trees. I would fucking love that alt-universe though. Sadly, it’s power by force or show-of-force. USA kinda straddles the line of both. But so does France, India, and Finland, to name a few.

        • @[email protected]
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          1710 months ago

          Compulsory customer service for a couple years might make retail customers less miserable to deal with overall.

        • @Chocrates
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          710 months ago

          I have not served but I did feel that mandatory civil service (outside of the military) that included getting you trained in a 4 year degree would do a lot of good.

          I haven’t really thought about that in a while though, to see how that would backfire.

        • @aidan
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          010 months ago

          No, slavery is slavery, even if its for a noble cause.

            • @aidan
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              -310 months ago

              Slavery requires a lack of compensation,

              No, that is a definition that was constructed as apologism for various different forms of forced labor

                • @aidan
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                  110 months ago

                  A lot of reasonable people define forced labor as slavery:

                  The condition of a slave; the state of entire subjection of one person to the will of another.

                  A condition of subjection or submission characterized by lack of freedom of action or of will.

                  Forced labour, or unfree labour, is sometimes used to describe an individual who is forced to work against their own will, under threat of violence or other punishment. This may also include institutions not commonly classified as slavery, such as serfdom, conscription and penal labour. As slavery has been legally outlawed in all countries, forced labour in the present day (frequently referred to as “modern slavery”) revolves around illegal control.

          • @[email protected]
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            310 months ago

            So you see no distinction between…

            “chain around your neck, abducted from your place of birth, sailed across the world stuffed into a deck 2 foot high, sold to the highest bidder, brought to a farm, whipped until you’re bloody, served gruel, tortured at will, killed if you escape, never being compensated for your labour, worked until you die or killed off when no longer economically useful”

            … and …

            “joining the forces for 9 months, fully paid, or become a conscientious objector and file books in a library for 9 months; in either case your full legal rights remain”

            ?

            • Uriel238 [all pronouns]
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              110 months ago

              There’s a wide spectrum of bonded servitude between plantation slavery circa 16th century and the Levée en masse. Regardless, when jobs are obligatory, and the option to change jobs is difficult or impossible, it opens the victims up to abuse, which develops universally.

              So while I can see you’re trying to make a case for the latter, as if it isn’t cause for harm, invariably it will drift towards the former, and history has demonstrated it time and again. The United States, especially cannot be trusted; if we wanted a truly professional military force, we would utilize poverty and lack of civilian opportunity to drive our recruitment. To the contrary we’d full transparency that our soldiers are treated well from recruitment to death.

              The United States should have let sexual assaults get out of hand. They should have been generous to their wounded the shell shocked and the families of the fallen. There shouldn’t be a running litany of officers who bully the ranks beneath them, sometimes to the extent of extortion and violence.

              Not that it will stop the US from restoring the draft once it neuters democracy and becomes a one-party autocracy. But when that happens it will be only months before Fall Weiß.

            • @aidan
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              010 months ago

              I didn’t say I see no difference? Killing someone by slowly torturing them over years and just shooting them is different. They’re both still murder though. Forced labor is slavery, some slavery is worse than others- but all slavery is bad.

      • @[email protected]
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        210 months ago

        There very much is.

        For starters, should things actually go south, they’ll send you to war. I don’t want nor plan to partake in this festival of turning people into slabs of bloody meat. I’m an aggressively pacifist civilian, and fuck everybody who tries to turn me into a soldier.

        Second, no work should be mandatory. Turning it into a “duty” is essentially stealing my autonomy and forcing me to do things against my will. This is institutionalized slavery.

      • @TheControlled
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        110 months ago

        I mean, the US doesn’t. It just drone strikes them. Picking a fight presumes it’s a fair fight.

        • @bitwaba
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          110 months ago

          All’s fair in love and war?

          • @TheControlled
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            110 months ago

            Sometimes, sometimes not. That’s why books are written and classes are created and endless debates are had on the subject.

            • @bitwaba
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              110 months ago

              Bomb them. No more debates.