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THE NFL SHARES AN UNDUE BURDEN OF THE WAR EFFORT! Out of 951 total deaths in Iraq and Afghanistan, 1 was an NFL player in 2001. That's 0.105% of the total casualties. On the other hand, out of 293,631,711 total people in the US, there are only 2144 NFL players, or 0.00073% of the total population. That means the NFL's burden is 144.01 times what it should be!!!!
Can you believe that evil president Bush? BUSH IS EVIL!!!!!!!!!!!
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Gooberman wrote:you could pay to not be drafted.... Did you guys think this was fair?
Fair? No, of course not -- the poor couldn't afford to pay, but the rich could.
But then, you'll find I don't particularly care if things are "fair" or not -- I don't think fairness is a good quality to apply to arbitrary situations, and I'll often argue against things being arbitrarily made "fair". For example, it's not fair that I have the PhD sk1llz in math and you don't, but there's nothing *wrong* with that. It's not fair that Xciter has a ton of computers and I don't, but there's nothing wrong with that either. It's not fair that some of us have big families and some have small families, but there's nothing wrong with that either. It's not fair that my friend is crazy and I'm sane, but again, there's nothing wrong with that. It's not fair that some people have injuries that make them unable to fight in the army, while others do not -- but there's nothing wrong with that. Something being unfair does not automatically make it bad or wrong.
It's only when a thing *should be* fair and it isn't that we think that's a problem. For example, the justice system should be fair, and if it's not, there's something wrong. But there's no reason I should be fair in considering whether to give a nice piece of jewelry to my wife or some random other woman, and nobody will look down on me for giving more to my wife than I give to others.
Fairness is not a virtue in and of itself -- it is only a virtue in certain situations.
Now, with respect to being able to pay to avoid fighting in the army: clearly, that's not fair. But I can't determine whether or not it's wrong, because I don't have enough facts -- I don't know what sort of benefit that rich person's money would have had to the army. I don't know if, by paying not to be drafted, that person financed the army to be able to hire 3 soldiers in his place (which would be a good thing -- he's enabling the army to be more effective) or if the payment was insufficient to even fund a replacement (which would be wrong -- he's harming his country's ability to fight.)
With respect to the current army, the system is totally fair -- everyone, right or poor, gets the same benefits if they're in the army. It happens that the poor are more likely to desire those benefits, but it's completely fair to everyone who joins in that they all get the same benefits.
If you really want to make the war volentary, pay our soldiers minimum wage, don't offer these other benefits, and with the money we save start scholorship programs for the needy. Create a true volunteer army.
But, you see, this would be *wrong*. It would still be fair -- everyone who was in the army would get the same pay -- but it would be *wrong* to not pay the soldiers a reasonable amount for their service to their country. You were just complaining that the poor have too much of the burden -- yet now you suggest that, perhaps, those who choose to carry the burden should have to make themselves poor in order to do so.
before you ask, "how else would we get soldiers to enlist?" First ask, "is it right to exploit the needs of the poor, to get them too enlist."
I don't care how we get people to enlist.
What I care is that, once they're enlisted, they're paid a reasonable amount for the service they do.
Before you go talking about how that's not a "volunteer" system, and how "volunteers" would work for no pay, I suggest you look up "voluntary" in the dictionary and notice that "done of one's own free will" is the first definition while "done without pay" is the second. It's a true volunteer military as long as nobody is forced into it -- even if the pay is excellent.
So, Goob, let me ask this again:
are you suggesting that blacks are getting too many free college educations through service in the US military? (And don't keep giving me this "separate point" garbage -- this is entirely relevant to the statement that "poor blacks are sharing an unequal percentage." Also, if the real point is "the poor are sharing an unequal percentage" and the race thing is incidental, then face up to the fact that inclusion of the word "blacks" was either a mistake or an outright lie.)