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REGISTERING FOR THE DRAFT

Started by Cassi, March 20, 2018, 05:21:13 PM

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Kylo

I remember what the EU used to be and it's essentially attempting political hegemony at this point. Why does it think it needs an army, exactly? Why does it want millions of migrants from the third world to come in specifically and turns away migrants from places like Ukraine? Why does it insist on free movement as part of the trade deal?

Political hegemony and to depress wages and up the competition for employment. I've watched it myself over the last 20 years, watched the situation go from it being easy to get any sort of low level job to practically impossible because for every job going there's 100 people applying, and more than half of them will probably have applied from Europe. That the average 'liberal' person thinks this situation has improved their lot is amazing. It's improved the government's lot, it's improved the lot of employers who don't want to employ Brits particularly, but for the next generation their lot hasn't improved, unless they look forward to a future traipsing across Europe looking for anything they can get just like the Eastern Europeans have to. You're telling me this rule doesn't cause any harm? You should look more closely. Or are you one of those people who lives in a gated community and not next to a sink estate, competing with 100 other people for every crap job that comes up? Because they're the only people who think all this is wonderful. You're telling me the EU rules haven't decimated things like our fishing industry? Or the EU rules over the migrant crisis haven't caused escalating crime, rape, social tension and mis-management of the situation elsewhere in Europe? You don't just import millions of people into another country or threaten that country's population with fines and sanctions if they don't, like they're doing to the Visegrad, and expect no resistance.

I used to support the EU but no longer will because ultimately the only ones benefiting greatly here are the large corporations and the political elite, dressing their greed up in "humanitarianism" and claiming anyone who doesn't agree with all this is a racist. The rest of us have to look forward to the unfolding of the absolute mess they have created, and an abysmal job market with wages to match. And I'm not sure the Euro currency itself was a successful financial experiment at this point, are you? Poorer European countries are eager to sign up for the $$$ they will get but what they will actually get is a shafting when big EU companies move in and start hacking up their forests and hauling them off to Austria like they do in Romania. I think a nation should decide what it wants to do with its natural resources, not find themselves handing them over for a measly EU "paycheck". And then there's Greece, what a success. Yes, I'm sure the EU is a real powerhouse, hence the absolute hysteria among the financial class when Brexit became a real possibility.

Naturally it has its "perks" in the short-term. In the long term for the average citizen, it's a sinking ship. And that's not even scratching the surface of the insidious regulations the EU is cooking up to control free speech on social media and criticism of German policy online lately. Oh, I wonder where this could possibly all be headed?

But hey, I'm sure the populations of Italy, Poland and the UK expressing their displeasure democratically of late has nothing to do with any of that, eh.
"If the freedom of speech is taken away, then dumb and silent we may be led, like sheep to the slaughter."
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alex82

Quote from: Cassi on March 21, 2018, 02:18:51 PM
Thanks!  I got into genealogy a few years back. A wealth of information on my paternal side being from Germany/Prussia and blue bloodies :)

My paternal grandmother had the English bloodline.

On the maternal side, always believed they were mostly native american but again, it was my sister who insists on the Scotish heritage.

On the maternal side,

It's a fascinating hobby, many a happy hour spent doing that.
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alex82

#42
Quote from: Kylo on March 21, 2018, 02:19:46 PM
I remember what the EU used to be and it's essentially attempting political hegemony at this point. Why does it think it needs an army, exactly? Why does it want millions of migrants from the third world to come in specifically and turns away migrants from places like Ukraine? Why does it insist on free movement as part of the trade deal?

Political hegemony and to depress wages and up the competition for employment. I've watched it myself over the last 20 years, watched the situation go from it being easy to get any sort of low level job to practically impossible because for every job going there's 100 people applying, and more than half of them will probably have applied from Europe. That the average 'liberal' person thinks this situation has improved their lot is amazing. It's improved the government's lot, it's improved the lot of employers who don't want to employ Brits particularly, but for the next generation their lot hasn't improved, unless they look forward to a future traipsing across Europe looking for anything they can get just like the Eastern Europeans have to. You're telling me this rule doesn't cause any harm? You should look more closely. Or are you one of those people who lives in a gated community and not next to a sink estate, competing with 100 other people for every crap job that comes up? Because they're the only people who think all this is wonderful. You're telling me the EU rules haven't decimated things like our fishing industry? Or the EU rules over the migrant crisis haven't caused escalating crime, rape, social tension and mis-management of the situation elsewhere in Europe? You don't just import millions of people into another country or threaten that country's population with fines and sanctions if they don't, like they're doing to the Visegrad, and expect no resistance.

I used to support the EU but no longer will because ultimately the only ones benefiting greatly here are the large corporations and the political elite, dressing their greed up in "humanitarianism" and claiming anyone who doesn't agree with all this is a racist. The rest of us have to look forward to the unfolding of the absolute mess they have created, and an abysmal job market with wages to match.

As a social worker I work alongside a lot of serious disadvantage. I would normally resent being told I was a liberal elitist in a gated community, but that's been Brexiters stock slur for two years now.

The Visegrad countries signed up to the same common standards that we all did. They cannot expect to leave it all for Italy and Greece to handle the overcrowded boats of Africans either sinking or landing in those (the first countries they reach within the EU). The UK pulled out of funding for Frontex so we've no moral high ground to take.

Free movement works both ways. I've used it myself and hope to again. There is a serious knock on here for British higher education - currently one of the best.

If people who grew up in rich and stable social democracies, in a peaceful Union, with free health and education, cannot compete with a recently arrived migrant who can hardly speak English then they should probably look to themselves as to why they aren't succeeding at those interviews.

Ukraine is in crisis because of Russia and we are already having serious problems with Russia. Third world immigrants have run our hospitals and transport systems for decades, while sending the second generation to higher education. This country would be immeasurably poorer without the largest Indian population outside India, the largest urban Carribean population outside the Caribbean  - they are fully British and have added wonderful things to this country.

The abysmal job market in some regions has been caused by neoliberal policies pursued at a national level, notably in the north of England and the midlands, and Wales, along with Spain. Those were national policies not EU ones, and they will be continuing in earnest after Brexit. Greece created it's own mess - you can't borrow hundreds of billions on the never never and then say 'sorry, we aren't paying it back'. That is a problem for Greece to resolve as the sovereign state it is.

Fishing industries - no, the EU didn't do that. It asked for quotas to prevent overfishing and the U.K. agreed. It could've refused. It as a sovereign state was allowed to handle this agreement in practice in its own way. The British fisherman chose to sell their quotas to trawlers registered in other EU countries so they could lay off the staff, sell the boat, and take a profit for doing bugger all - neoliberal capitalism (as practiced by the UK) is the culprit there - not the EU. Even Michael Goves father who was a rich fishing businessman, agrees with that and has called his sons lies out.

Edit - no I'm not convinced by the Euro as a currency and never was.
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Kylo

Quote from: alex82 on March 21, 2018, 02:47:18 PM
As a social worker I work alongside a lot of serious disadvantage. I would normally resent being told I was a liberal elitist in a gated community, but that's been Brexiters stock slur from two years now.

Slur?

QuoteThe Visegrad countries signed up to the same common standards that we all did. They cannot expect to leave it all for Italy and Greece to handle the overcrowded boats of Africans either sinking or landing in those (the first countries they reach within the EU). The UK pulled out of funding for Frontex so we've no moral high ground to take.

Yes they did, and if they pull out they will have to manage on their own. But if they want to pull out because they don't want a "quota" of migrants foisted on them that should be their choice.

QuoteFree movement works both ways. I've used it myself and hope to again. There is a serious knock on here for British higher education - currently one of the best.

Yes it does. Too bad with so many people getting that higher education the competition being so high as it is for the "decent paid" job afterwards most successive generations will find themselves being required to leave this country to find work.

QuoteIf people who grew up in rich and stable social democracies, in a peaceful Union, with free health and education, cannot compete with a recently arrived migrant who can hardly speak English then they should probably look to themselves as to why they aren't succeeding at those interviews.

Really. What kind of social worker are you? Let me guess. One who believes in the fabled all-conquering white privilege or something like that? Poor people in "rich" countries don't exist?

You should have been around in 70s and 80s Liverpool. Oh we had a blast pretending to be poor, jobless and disadvantaged in this rich country. Childhood poverty - what a laugh! As for me, I've obviously spent quite a few years pretending to be down and out, eh?

Where's your logic? That's a crass generalization on your part and not one I'd expect from someone who deals impartially with the disadvantaged.

A lot of smaller employers in this country favor the migrants over the natives because they know they can get "more" work out of them, as many don't know their lawful entitlements as well as we do, or they choose to waiver them to work more days and hours and so on. I've been there and seen it myself, I've worked alongside Eastern Europeans, and they do indeed get priority quite often over natives. I live in a village of 2000 people in the middle of nowhere. When I applied for a job across the street in a bar a few years back, guess who was being employed from halfway across the continent in advance despite it being a walk-in position? Yep, Polish and Bulgarians. These employers whine the moment anything threatens their supply of cheap, precarious labour. Now I worked with these economic migrants at the bar and I like them a lot, I like them more than the English bosses because they're personable and hard-working people instead of snobs. If I were them I'd do the same thing, get over here and make money while the going is good. But at the end of the day the village is full of native kids fresh out of school who need jobs too and they're all on the dole when they could be doing these jobs. Not ideal. It's happening all over. As a social worker I'm sure you must be aware of the modern day slavery problem we have in the UK as well; a farm nearby just got busted recently for housing a few hundred illegal workers in terrible conditions. Yes, I think we have a problem here as to why many native employers seem to be "favoring" foreigners, and it's nothing to do with healthy competition.

Quote
Ukraine is in crisis because of Russia and we are already having serious problems with Russia. Third world immigrants have run our hospitals and transport systems for decades, while sending the second generation to higher education. This country would be immeasurably poorer without the largest Indian population outside India, the largest urban Carribean population outside the Caribbean  - they are fully British and have added wonderful things to this country.

Can you explain why refugees from Ukraine are apparently less welcome in the EU than ones from Africa or the Middle East, then? Why they get refused?

QuoteThe abysmal job market in some regions has been caused by neoliberal policies pursued at a national level, notably in the north of England and the midlands, and Wales, along with Spain. Those were national policies not EU ones, and they will be continuing in earnest after Brexit.

The migration into this country has been practically open door for the last few decades. This creates a surplus of labour and devalues it. Simple economics. Oh I know, this government and the other one has no intention of applying Brexit to the effect of restricting migration. Nobody up in the corridors of power wants an employee's market. It's the incorrect assumption of the masses that Brexit would a) not be sabotaged politically b) was anything much to do with immigration anyway.

QuoteFishing industries - no, the EU didn't do that. It asked for quotas to prevent overfishing and the U.K. agreed. It could've refused. It as a sovereign state was allowed to handle this agreement in practice in its own way. The British fisherman chose to sell their quotas to trawlers registered in other EU countries so they could lay off the staff, sell the boat, and take a profit for doing bugger all - neoliberal capitalism (as practiced by the UK) is the culprit there - not the EU.

Hmm, tell that to the Cornish people around here.
"If the freedom of speech is taken away, then dumb and silent we may be led, like sheep to the slaughter."
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V M

Hi Friends  :police:

Time to get back on topic please

The topic of this discussion is REGISTERING FOR THE DRAFT

I did have to register as a teen but that is irrelevant now
The main things to remember in life are Love, Kindness, Understanding and Respect - Always make forward progress

Superficial fanny kissing friends are a dime a dozen, a TRUE FRIEND however is PRICELESS


- V M
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Cassi

Quote from: V M on March 21, 2018, 09:49:13 PM
Hi Friends  :police:

Time to get back on topic please

The topic of this discussion is REGISTERING FOR THE DRAFT

I did have to register as a teen but that is irrelevant now

Did you get a Draft Card??????
HRT since 1/04/2018
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Jennifer W

Quote from: Kylo on March 20, 2018, 06:05:34 PM
Probably because successive generations forget the value fought for, or maybe a serious economic slump will trigger it. When I was a kid I thought we'd learned something from WW1 and 2. Now it looks like a lot of people learned bugger all and we're going to end up going through it all again. Only with drones and robots and possibly nukes.

Why they stopped teaching Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four in school here is anyone's guess. It's more relevant than ever.
Absolute Truth..

Sent from my LG-TP260 using Tapatalk

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V M

Quote from: Cassi on March 21, 2018, 09:51:08 PM
Did you get a Draft Card??????

I did receive a reply but I don't remember very well exactly

Some kind of verification letter and a hole punched card I think
The main things to remember in life are Love, Kindness, Understanding and Respect - Always make forward progress

Superficial fanny kissing friends are a dime a dozen, a TRUE FRIEND however is PRICELESS


- V M
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Cassi

They obviously didn't like me at the Selective Service because they wouldn't give me one.  I tried to register five times and each time, NO, NO, NO!!!!!

Felt soooooooooooooooooooooooo rejected!
HRT since 1/04/2018
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Cassi

Quote from: V M on March 21, 2018, 10:03:54 PM
I did receive a reply but I don't remember very well exactly

Some kind of verification letter and a hole punched card I think

They obviously didn't like me at the Selective Service because they wouldn't give me one.  I tried to register five times and each time, NO, NO, NO!!!!!

Felt soooooooooooooooooooooooo rejected!
HRT since 1/04/2018
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V M

Quote from: Cassi on March 21, 2018, 10:09:44 PM
They obviously didn't like me at the Selective Service because they wouldn't give me one.  I tried to register five times and each time, NO, NO, NO!!!!!

Felt soooooooooooooooooooooooo rejected!

Anyway the U.S. hasn't drafted since the Vietnam era but Uncle Sam likes to keep that option open

We've been able to maintain an all volunteer service for years

Last time I went to re-up I was rejected do to my age and injuries incurred
The main things to remember in life are Love, Kindness, Understanding and Respect - Always make forward progress

Superficial fanny kissing friends are a dime a dozen, a TRUE FRIEND however is PRICELESS


- V M
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Cassi

Quote from: V M on March 21, 2018, 10:19:41 PM
Anyway the U.S. hasn't drafted since the Vietnam era but Uncle Sam likes to keep that option open

We've been able to maintain an all volunteer service for years

Last time I went to re-up I was rejected do to my age and injuries incurred

I know, 70-82.  But I still wanted a Draft Card.  All the Kewl Guys in 11th grade at school had them.  Wait a minute, 11th grade, draft card at 18? Graduated at 19?

Heck, I was cooler then them, I graduated at 17 and when they were in 11th grade I was a Corporal? and Sergeant at 19?  Go figure.  Never mind, they can keep their dumb draft cards :)

I was way way way cooler then them and I got to shoot people and get paid for it!
HRT since 1/04/2018
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V M

I've never really cared much about being cool other than staying hydrated and not getting burnt to a crisp

There are some aspects I would rather not discuss

Thank you
The main things to remember in life are Love, Kindness, Understanding and Respect - Always make forward progress

Superficial fanny kissing friends are a dime a dozen, a TRUE FRIEND however is PRICELESS


- V M
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Deborah

I took the oath of office into the Army when I was 17 so I never had to register for the draft. 


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Love is not obedience, conformity, or submission. It is a counterfeit love that is contingent upon authority, punishment, or reward. True love is respect and admiration, compassion and kindness, freely given by a healthy, unafraid human being....  - Dan Barker

U.S. Army Retired
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V M

I don't remember how old I was but I think it was during my first or second year of highschool that I received the notification to register

I was planning to go anyway so all that got lost somewhere along the timeline of past history

LOL... Maybe I should go to Hollyweird and make a movie about it  :D
The main things to remember in life are Love, Kindness, Understanding and Respect - Always make forward progress

Superficial fanny kissing friends are a dime a dozen, a TRUE FRIEND however is PRICELESS


- V M
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Cassi

Quote from: Deborah on March 21, 2018, 10:51:48 PM
I took the oath of office into the Army when I was 17 so I never had to register for the draft. 


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Go for it Deb!

I had everything done when I was 16 1/2 and wanted to be sworn in on my 17th birthday but draftees were inducted the 1st of each month.  So, I was swore in on the day after my birthday.  Both of my 6 year Honorable Discharges on dated on my birthday - HQMC gave me two birthday presents.  I had been taking extra classes so I graduated a semester early or before my Class.  The day before graduating from Infantry Training was my high school graduation and my parents bugged the Marines so much that they gave me liberty from 4pm to 12am to go from Pendleton to Long Beach.  Of course, I was in uniform; what we called Trops back then (khali long sleeve, tie, not cotton) and no hair, lol.
HRT since 1/04/2018
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Deborah

I swore in on 7 July 1977 and didn't see the outside of the Army again until the summer of 2001.  Lots of things changed during that time.  When I joined we were going to fight the Russians in an apocalyptic battle on the plains of Germany.  When I finished we were just doing peacekeeping here and there.  And then 9/11; but that was after my time.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Love is not obedience, conformity, or submission. It is a counterfeit love that is contingent upon authority, punishment, or reward. True love is respect and admiration, compassion and kindness, freely given by a healthy, unafraid human being....  - Dan Barker

U.S. Army Retired
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Cassi

Quote from: Deborah on March 22, 2018, 12:04:21 AM
I swore in on 7 July 1977 and didn't see the outside of the Army again until the summer of 2001.  Lots of things changed during that time.  When I joined we were going to fight the Russians in an apocalyptic battle on the plains of Germany.  When I finished we were just doing peacekeeping here and there.  And then 9/11; but that was after my time.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Nice adventure had you!  During my day, military in general was not held in high esteem and I spent 4 1/2 active and the remainder of the 12 total was in and out of the reserves because employers weren't too supportive like they are now.  And for most of the 80s things became really boring.
HRT since 1/04/2018
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SonadoraXVX

I think if there is another war, ala Persian gulf, vietnam or even 911, where the military will be needed, I think a draft may have to be implemented, the military is not very popular with anyone nowadays. The new generation, like the millennials, are very independent minded and will not like to be told what to do, especially with convoluting policy on tg's. I joined in 1986, right out of high school, and was conflicted out of high school, but I still joined to prove myself, 5 years. Wars have always been unpopular, except WWI and WWII.

Time will tell.
To know thyself is to be blessed, but to know others is to prevent supreme headaches
Sun Tzu said it best, "To know thyself is half the battle won, but to know yourself and the enemy, is to win 100% of the battles".



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Cassi

Quote from: SonadoraXVX on March 22, 2018, 12:45:19 AM
I think if there is another war, ala Persian gulf, vietnam or even 911, where the military will be needed, I think a draft may have to be implemented, the military is not very popular with anyone nowadays. The new generation, like the millennials, are very independent minded and will not like to be told what to do, especially with convoluting policy on tg's. I joined in 1986, right out of high school, and was conflicted out of high school, but I still joined to prove myself, 5 years. Wars have always been unpopular, except WWI and WWII.

Time will tell.

Very true Devil Dog!
HRT since 1/04/2018
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