Families, communities, and nations are stronger when men are men and women are women. However, society today often makes it difficult to be who we are. Elizabeth Lapporte, Grace Blythe, and Wilson Beaver shared a recent example of how messed up society has become.
A
piece of legislation was left unaddressed in the U.S. Senate when senators left
on a monthlong August recess. The bill is the annual National Defense
Authorization Act (NDAA) – sometimes known as “Draft Our Daughters.” The
authors shared the following information.
“The Senate defense bill’s provision for
mandatory registration of all young women for conscription puts ‘fairness’ over
military necessity,” notes Victoria Coates, The Heritage Foundation’s vice
president for national security. “It would waste time and resources during a
war in order to evaluate and train thousands of draft-age women to find the
subset qualified for the requirements of military service. Including women in
the selective service is pointless virtue-signaling form those who believe the
military should be a social experiment and not a lethal fighting force.”
“Draft Our Daughters” is just the
beginning. The provision alters the language of the Selective Service Act by
replacing the word “man” with “person,” equating gender equality with sameness
while ignoring the diverse and different ways in which men and women may
contribute to national security.
Intentionally ambiguous language like this
expands woke ideology, which undermines military readiness and distracts the
military from its core mission: Defend America and its interests by deterring
or killing its enemies.
The
authors explained that the last military draft was held in the U.S. in 1973, when
volunteers began to make up the entire armed forces. However, Congress and the
U.S. President retained the authority to use a draft in case of war or national
emergency.
However,
the U.S. military faces “substantial recruitment challenges” to maintain armed
forces. In 2023, the Army, Navy, and Air Force missed their recruiting goals by
41,000 recruits.
In this context and amid a more dangerous
security landscape globally, some argue that expanding the draft to include
women is a necessary step to address these shortfalls. However, including women
in the draft wouldn’t resolve the fundamental problems leading to today’s low
recruitment numbers, nor would it improve the existing system of voluntary
recruitment.
This provision overlooks deeper, systemic
issues that deter young Americans from enlisting in the first place. Some of
these issues include fewer young men who qualify, more opportunities in
civilian careers, and fewer instances of families with a history of military
service.
Rather than addressing the root causes of
recruitment struggles, this provision opts for a superficial solution that
raises both ethical and practical concerns.
The idea to draft our daughters comes from the same
cesspool that breeds other terrible ideas – the principle of equity. Supporters
of this wrong idea argue that women should be subject to the draft IF men and
women are truly equal.
Such thinkers do not consider that men and women “are
innately different.” Therefore, such their ideas are divisive and politicized
but do nothing to solve the problem of creating the military that America
needs.
The authors suggest that the idea to register all women
for the draft should be discarded. Instead, they suggest that Congress should instead
“focus on enacting measures that support military recruitment, such as
quality-of-life improvements for service members.”
Governments should recognize that women and men are not
the same, but they should be given equal opportunities to reach their full potential.
Families, communities, and nations are stronger when the unique qualities of
women are recognized.
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