As South Korea faces a military manpower shortage due to its low birth rate issue, opinions have emerged suggesting the recruitment of women or the male individuals aged 55 to 75 to fill the gap. However, public opinion in Korea remains divided on these proposals, and debates surrounding military service are expected to continue.

Choi Young-jin, a professor of Political Science and International Relations at Chung-Ang University, criticized the policy of women’s military service in a column contributed to Hankyoreh on Jan. 31. He argued that it is not a solution for a country that needs to focus all its efforts on increasing the birth rate.

Previously, the New Reform Party, under the leadership of Lee Jun-seok, announced that they plan to implement a policy that would require women to serve in the military as early as 2030 if they wish to become police or fire service officers.

Choi argued that women’s military service is not the most efficient solution to address the manpower shortage. According to him, to secure 10,000-20,000 military resources, the government would have to allocate a budget ten times more than the current level. Choi also criticized that advocating for women’s military service under the pretext of gender equality is a narrow perception of the world.

Choi suggested that there is a simpler and more effective solution to the problem of manpower shortage, which is to conscript healthy senior citizens who are willing to volunteer for service. He pointed out that there are currently around 6.91 million men between the ages of 55 and 75 in S. Korea, and a significant number of them are prepared to join the army again for the country.

“If 1% of the 6.91 million volunteers, we could secure about 70,000 in reserve forces. We could even easily mobilize 200,000-300,000, if we pay them as much as the current soldiers,” said Choi.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    385 months ago

    I looked at the picture in the preview and thought, those are the smooth wrinkles that AI thinks old people have. Yup. He’s got 3 fingers and if you go to the site there is a disclaimer under the picture that isn’t visible on Lemmy. I’m sure that won’t be an obvious problem in the future.

    • @MrMeanJavaBean
      link
      English
      65 months ago

      So many of these “AI” pictures have the same style. It’s funny that they are now feeding on other “AI” images. I can’t wait till they become the stupid version of Micheal Keaton from Multiplicity.

    • @fluxion
      link
      English
      2
      edit-2
      4 months ago

      Classic AI. Looking forward to seeing what other sorts of glitches it has in store for us as businesses continue to haphazardly use it to save money.

      I guess finding a picture of an old Korean soldier is hard work.

      • [email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        24 months ago

        Weird wrinkles, weird smooth cheeks, weird number of fingers, cigarette phasing between dimensions, left hand is actually a right hand,

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        24 months ago

        Shit. When you look at these pictures you almost forget what humans look like and start to miss really basic stuff.

  • Quokka
    link
    fedilink
    English
    125 months ago

    conscript healthy senior citizens who are willing to volunteer

    Umm voluntary conscription?

  • Infiltrated_ad8271
    cake
    link
    fedilink
    84 months ago

    Forcing men to take on responsibilities or enslaving them and throwing them into the meat grinder is fine, even if they are elderly; but don’t even think of giving a woman truly equal treatment! Equal rights, not equal responsibilities!