I Remember JFK

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When There Was a Bad Draft in the Air

Heading from an order to report for a draft physicalThe older members of the Boomer generation got to see lots of cool things. They watched Howdy Doody. They wore coonskin caps. They got to play with baking powder submarines.

However, they also held a dread of one day turning eighteen. The draft was on, and a particularly nasty war was ongoing. Kids (and I mean that literally, as I was certainly a kid when I was eighteen) had to make profound decisions. Would they opt for ROTC? Would they volunteer for a more appealing form of service than the swamp-wading, booby-trap avoiding Army grunt? Or would they stay in school, or apply for CO status, or, head for Canada?

TraineesThe draft began with a proclamation signed by Abraham Lincoln during the Civil War. Back then, a one-time payment would exempt you from having to serve.

After that, drafts would be implemented during times of war and suspended afterwards. In 1940, FDR signed the Selective Training and Service Act which created a draft during a time of peace, although the writing was clearly on the wall regarding the US's future involvement in WWII.

But after the War, the draft stayed. Fewer young men were drafted in peacetime, but the possibility was there nonetheless. As wars like Korea and Vietnam escalated, more and more youths were sent the dreaded letter from Uncle Sam.

In 1969, a lottery was held which you did NOT want to win. Up until then, the government's policy was to draft older individuals first as needed, meaning the odds would increase that you would be called up until you reached whatever cutoff year was in place. But the lottery chose birthdates at random as the primary prerequisite of when you would be selected. The later your birthdate was drawn, the less likely you would be called.

Twenty-year-olds were the primary target of the lotteried draft. If you turned twenty on September 14, 1969, you were virtually guaranteed being called up. That was the first date drawn. June 8 was drawn 366 (it was a leap year), so you had a pretty good chance of avoiding the dreaded letter if you were born on that day.

1969 draft lottery drawingThe draft started with twenty-year-olds, then progressed through each older year until 25. Then it dropped to nineteen, then eighteen.

However, even though both forms of the draft were set up to spare eighteen-year-olds, the fact is that many of them were still drafted. Curious.

As Vietnam slowed down, so did the draft. In 1973, it was discontinued altogether. I was fourteen. I was very, very happy. So was every other Boomer male who had evaded compulsory military service. In 1975, even registration was stopped.

But in 1980, Jimmie Carter reinstated registration due to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. He intended to send a message to the Kremlin. Of course, now the Soviet Union is no more, and Russia is a democracy, and WE'VE invaded Afghanistan. Despite those strange twists of political intrigue, registration continues.

But today's youths largely view it as a mere rite of passage. We who remember JFK, however, can recall a time when "draft" had a much more sinister connotation than a good cold beer or a chilly breeze in one's house.

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Comments (2)

scott:

I turned 18 in 1980, so
I was the first group
required to register.
I remember my family freaking out a bit, as they didn't quite understand the connotations, and sort
of considered it a draft of sorts. Lets just say that we weren't sure if they would escalate it to a full draft, and whether
we would be the first to get the call-up.
I remember kids goofing around singing the Canadian National Anthem
in class in senior year
(BTW, the canadian anthem is hands down the worst sounding anthem extant. It sounds like a third-rate
Irish drinking song.
another BTW.....the star
spangled banner and
Auld Lang syne were both celtic drinking songs. Thanks to all of you Irish drunks throughout history. America and Guy Lombardo thank you.)
So, yeah, we were scared. Reagan came out with STAR WARS, and started rattling sabers,
so we had no clue. All those nasty little wars started the as well in central america, etc.
Reagan was a bonehead, but I'll give him kudos for the "Tear down that wall, Mr. Gorbachev" sound bite. It had the tone of one of those great Charlton Heston
one-liners, ala "Damn you ALL to hell", "Soylent Green
is PEOPLE", etc.
Well, after all was said and done, Reagan and the movie "Top Gun"
made the military cool again(along with a little ditty by Lee Greenwood called "God
Bless the USA".)
Bottom line...I did not get drafted, but I'm still pissed that we
pulled out of the olympics....think of it this way. If James Earl sent mary lou and friends to Moscow that year, and let the russkies finish knocking off the Mujadeen and B. ladin,
we'd prob have no war right now. pretty circulat logic, I know, but think that one over a bit!

CL1053 KS:

Because I grew up in a time & state (Kansas) where the drinking age was 18, & our driver's license didn't have our picture on it, one way we had to prove our age to drink was to show our draft card. That was the only advantage I ever found for registering. I don't know what the girls did. I guess if they were pretty enough, the bartender would let them slide.

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This page contains a single entry from the blog posted on August 28, 2007 12:08 AM.

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