Trump Ramps Up Steel Tariffs After Promise in Pittsburgh
This Comedian Pointed out the 'Craziest Narrative' About the 2024 Election
Elon Musk Breaks His Silence on Trump's 'Big, Beautiful Bill.' It Was Totally...
Ted Cruz Roasts Senator 'Spartacus' During Fiery Exchange About Threats to Judges
WATCH: Ted Cruz Has Had Enough of These Activist Judges
Networks Shame Themselves Retracting False Gaza Reports, and CNN Fires Reporter Behind Def...
CEO of Health Care Software Company Convicted in $1 Billion Medicare Fraud Scheme
'Lamest Opposition in America': JD Vance Responds to Democrats Trying to Troll Trump...
Male Student 'Switches Gender' During School Day To Watch Girls Change in Locker...
FBI Uncovers Chinese Biopathogen Smuggling Plot at University of Michigan
Californians Eye Kamala Harris 2028 Rumors with Shrugs, Sighs, and Skepticism
Party's Over: Nightclub Full of Illegal Immigrants in South Carolina Raided
WH Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt Calls Out BBC for Libelous Claim About IDF...
First Round of DOGE Cuts Headed to Capitol Hill
Scott Jennings Does Not Mince Words When Speaking Out on Terrorist Attacks Against...
OPINION

Uncle Sam Wants to Nationalize You!

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
AP Photo/Mindaugas Kulbis

Before “privatization” became a hot topic in the 1980s, our most important “resource” was, in effect, privatized. 

Our children.

Actually, I mean, our young adult children.

Advertisement

Or, in truth, us

Yes, we were privatized. Given back our lives and our sovereignty. The general government ceased subjecting we-the-people of my generation — and generations after — to the nationalization that is conscription. Sure, President Carter brought back registration for the draft and President Reagan flip-flopped on a campaign pledge to end it, so that aspect of the program continues...to this day.

Nonetheless, the draft itself gave way to what most professional soldiers prefer, an all-volunteer, professional armed forces.

Yet now there is a movement to re-nationalize young adults. 

Last week, I gave a day of my life and took up a few minutes of the time and attention of the National Commission on Military, National, and Public Service, at its second public hearing at American University, entitled, “Should Service be Mandatory?” This commission has been charged by Congress to look into a perennially bad idea: Drafting the young for exploitation by the state.

Will forced service again become a rite of passage into adulthood — or death? The notion being considered is to slap 12 months of “service to the nation” on our kids right as they get through high school or college.

Why? The Commission’s staff report noted that supporters believe a mandatory national service requirement “increases patriotism and provides the citizenry with a shared experience that strengthens national cohesion.” Some “experts” even argue that we must use compulsory “service” to help foster young people’s appreciation for...freedom.

Advertisement

Does this make any sense?

No. 

Not even to the folks at the National Commission on Military, National, and Public Service. Appointed to advise Congress on whether to end draft registration or expand it to women, and whether to force all young people to give up a year of their lives doing military or civilian “national service” for the federal government, the commissioners sure appear to eschew compulsion. 

Their emails and their website address expresses “inspire2serve.gov”...not “force2serve.gov.” Because inspiring people is noble, while conscription is despicable and wrong. 

Commissioners talk about a “personal commitment,” “a culture of service,” and the “overwhelming desire to serve” they’ve found among young people. Is it all just a rouse in route to a recommendation to Congress that young people should be forced against their will into government service?

And though conscription is anathema to the idea of freedom without regard to reason why, we are not talking about using the draft to repel invading hordes, or for any real emergency, but for basic government make-work and pretend nation-building here at home.

It is an old idea, you will recall.

“Washington is a divided town in a very politically divided nation,” Dan Glickman wrote in The Hill last year. “From the confirmation of Brett Kavanaugh, to the extreme rhetoric on social media, to the bombs mailed to public officials, to the mass shooting in Pittsburgh, to the inability of our elected leaders to reach consensus on nearly all major issues facing the country, it is not easy to see a way out of this mess.”

Advertisement

Nonetheless, he’s found one: less freedom.

“Not only does this benefit the individual,” asserts this current Executive Director of the Aspen Institute Congressional Program and former Cabinet Secretary, “but helps our national community move away from division and towards a more cohesive society.”

The thought that this might unite the nation seems more than dubious to me. Well, maybe it would unite the young against the government. But nationalizing people is not why we Americans instituted a government of strictly enumerated powers. Involuntary servitude is both unconstitutional and immoral.

Take a step back. Think about the assumptions here. The exceptionally well-connected Glickman and friends screwed up our world. So they should make young people pay for their mistakes?

It would make more sense to draft 74-year-old Glickman and his cronies, who actually helped cause our national problems, our divisions.

Or even 58-year-old me, who tried but couldn’t stop them.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement