Other countries considering a bad idea doesn’t make it a good idea.
This isn’t talking specifically about the UK, and nor was I.
Other countries considering a bad idea doesn’t make it a good idea.
This isn’t talking specifically about the UK, and nor was I.
Don’t worry, you don’t need to admit you were wrong for you to be wrong.
Other countries considering a bad idea doesn’t make it a good idea.
“Conscription is always a bad idea” is an objectively incorrect sentiment.
In a war, the bulk of Finland’s force will be made up of conscripts. Or more accurately, people who were conscripts.
The career military men will be the officers. If you look at their officer to non officer ratio in peacetime it will be absolutely bananas compared to the UK’s. Because if they do get invaded by Russia, they’ll immediately call up their reserves (which due to conscription is their entire eligible population) and the ratios will make more sense.
Because their long term military strategy changed.
Conscription makes perfect sense if you’re setting yourself up to fight a defensive war. E.g., Finland’s entire military is more or less built for a defensive war against Russia, so they conscript.
Because they built it into their long term strategy, like I said in my original comment.
Germany used to conscript, because there was this thing called the USSR that represented a very real and existential threat right next door. Then that stopped being the case, so their long term doctrine changed from defensive to expeditionary, so they stopped conscripting.
Given that expeditionary wars in the middle east are becoming a bit faux pas, and “being invaded by your neighbour” is back in fashion, I imagine more places will shift doctrine again and conscription will start seeing a return. Then again it might not because of how fundamentally unpopular it is with the population.
And the military leadership of every country where conscription is a thing disagrees with you.
All it dose is create ill motivated unskilled labour.
If you think military conscription is for the here and now you unfortunately don’t know what you’re talking about.
Conscription is so that if you need to mobilise quickly, all of your eligible population are already trained, have units to report to, officers etc.
If you’re building a defensive military, it makes perfect sense, because in a defensive war motivation more or less ceases to be an issue.
The UK’s military is far more expeditionary, so it doesn’t make sense unless you build it into your long term plan, which is exactly what I said in my original comment.
Conscription isn’t fundamentally a bad idea it just needs to be built into your long term defense strategy
In what world would any person make that argument ?
because Biden might actually listen,
Why would he listen if he knows he can have your vote regardless
That was a lot of words to not even attempt to answer a very simple question
Bad-faith, accelerationist
I like the self awareness displayed by calling me bad faith and then immediately reiterating the thing you just made up about me and decided was true based on what seems to be a deliberately bad interpretation of my original comment.
Contrapoints didn’t make that video in the context of a genocide.
Clinton lost 2016 in part because people were unhappy with her over Sanders
Why would the democratic party listen to anything you have to say if they know you’ll vote for them regardless?
That’s not what not voting is, no
Do you acknowledge that voting for a candidate enacting bad policies is voting for those bad policies
Yes the point of my comment was that I want fascism faster well done
I’m not noticing any part of “I’ll accept anything” that’s particularly conducive to fixing things
You acknowledge that you’re voting for a slightly slower descent into fascism but that you’ll continue to do so?
Didn’t Legoland give permission
Alternative title:
U.K. makes Google remove search results going to illegal prescription drug website
is a comment that attempts to resolve the people in power of any wrongdoing over the situation
“enforcing the law” is not a justification when the people enforcing the law also happened to write it
Largely, but I was responding to the specific sentence I highlighted.
The UK has favored a doctrine of a small, well trained, professional army since before WW1. It’s also tended to be more expeditionary. Both of these conflict with the benefits of conscription.
That doesn’t mean it’s an outright superior system. It has its own drawbacks and benefits compared with alternative systems. Sometimes you send that force into a meatgrinder because the fighting calls for more manpower than it can supply, regardless of technology. It depends on the war you’re fighting.
Weirdly enough, fighting a defensive, existential war tends to solve the motivation problem pretty quicky.
Also, if you’re calling up previously conscripted troops when shit hits the fan, they will have been trained for far, far longer than if you try to enlarge the size of your fighting force from scratch.
I feel like your knowledge of conscription comes entirely from the Red Alert 2 unit of the same name. Don’t confuse peace time conscription with war time conscription. They’re incredibly different things.
You’re really just running down the bingo board of one-liners that betray a complete unfamiliarity with what you’re trying to talk about.
No military budget is infinite. You decide the type of military you want to build, and you build it in the most effective way possible. Sometimes conscription fits in with that. Sometimes it doesn’t.
Tick another one off the bingo board.
We’re talking about conscription in peace time.
That’s literally what a military is.
Conscripts receive the same training as career professionals.
Why wouldn’t it result in a ground war? NATO isn’t going to want to escalate into full apocalypse unless they absolutely have to.
There’s a reason the UK didn’t nuke Argentina when it took the Falklands.
The UK’s two most recent trident tests both failed.